Recipes, Photography, Musings

Author: Dragonfly Home Recipes (Page 27 of 32)

Rhubarb Pie Filling

Rhubarb Pie Filling

  • Print

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups chopped rhubarb
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup flour

Directions:

Wash the rhubarb stalks, then chop the rhubarb into one-inch pieces.  In a large mixing bowl, stir together the sugar and flour.  Add the rhubarb and toss until the fruit is coated with the sugar mixture.  Continue as you would to make a fruit pie.  I have two favorite pie crust recipes, which I will add in separate posts. 

 

Beautiful Rhubarb

ImageRhubarb is one of my favorite foods.  Maybe this is because rhubarb is the first thing I can make a pie out of in the spring.  (I love to make and eat pies).  Maybe it is because by the time rhubarb can be harvested, we are craving fresh food, and the zingy flavor of rhubarb hits us just right.  Rhubarb gives us a fresh infusion of vitamins and minerals, which we all need after a long winter.  According www.organicfacts.net, rhubarb contains lots of fiber, vitamin K, vitamin C, plus antioxidants.  The stalks of the rhubarb plant are the edible part, but the leaves can actually be toxic due to the amount of oxalic acid in the leaves.  So unlike a lot of plants, we cannot eat the leafy parts.  The stalks are pretty sour-tasting if eaten raw, though I used to eat them raw when I was a kid, and the younger the stalk, the less sour the taste.  Now I prefer to bake the rhubarb (mixed with some sugar and flour) either in a pie, or as rhubarb crisp.  Strawberries are a common fruit to add with rhubarb because they are sweeter, and I do like to add strawberries to a rhubarb crisp sometimes.  (Plus they add pretty red color).  But my favorite way to eat rhubarb is in a straight-rhubarb pie.  I will include the recipe for the rhubarb pie filling in a future post.   To me, rhubarb is so rejuvenating and energizing, and I love the tender green-pink color of the rhubarb when it is baked.  My husband and kids also love rhubarb pie.  We look forward to this every year.

DSC_0272DSC_0295 DSC_0289

Recipe for Cucumber Cheddar Boats

Cucumber Cheddar Boats

Ingredients:

  • six Kirby or other type of pickling cucumbers
  • eight ounce block of cheddar cheese
  • toothpicks

Directions:

Thoroughly wash and pat dry the cucumbers.  Slice them in half lengthwise, so they form a boat shape.  Cut the cheese into the shape of a triangle so it looks like a sail.  Place the toothpick into the cheese triangle sail and place the other end of the toothpick into the cucumber boat.  You may have to experiment with the size of the triangle until you find the size that is big enough, but will not tip the boat over.  Also, the size of cucumbers varies, so you may have to experiment with the number of cucumbers needed.  Photos of the finished cucumber cheddar boats are in my post by the same title, as an example.  It probably goes without saying that these treats taste best when they are cold, so try to keep them in the refrigerator or a cooler until you are ready to serve them.  Enjoy!

 

« Older posts Newer posts »