{"id":756,"date":"2010-08-27T07:49:00","date_gmt":"2010-08-27T07:49:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2010\/08\/27\/but-then"},"modified":"2016-02-11T15:47:54","modified_gmt":"2016-02-11T20:47:54","slug":"but-then","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2010\/08\/but-then\/","title":{"rendered":"But then"},"content":{"rendered":"

I can\u2019t believe we haven\u2019t talked about berry cobbler yet. August 27, and we haven\u2019t talked about berry cobbler. I\u2019ve got to fix that.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>
\nFor a long time, I didn\u2019t get terribly excited about cobbler. I think you\u2019re either
a cobbler person or a crisp person<\/a>, the same way that you\u2019re either a cake person or a pie person<\/a>. My mother is a crisp person, and that\u2019s what I grew up eating. I can be swayed by crumbles as well, mostly because they\u2019re often indistinguishable from crisps, and also because crumble<\/span> is such a nice word for a dessert. It sounds exactly like it tastes. (On a side note: did you know that French speakers pronounce it crum-bell<\/span>? It\u2019s awesome. I\u2019m pretty sure Crum Bell is related to Tinker Bell<\/a>, only she dresses a lot frumpier.) But more generally, in the matter of cobbler versus crisp, I lean consistently in the direction of crisp. It\u2019s hard to beat anything involving streusel.<\/p>\n

But then.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>
\nI met my friend
Hannah<\/a> a few years ago, and one day not long after, one completely normal day that was not even remotely near my birthday or any other holiday or special occasion, she gave me a copy of Chez Panisse Desserts<\/span><\/a>. It was a first-edition copy, no less, a hardcover with the original Wayne Thiebaud jacket<\/a>! I still feel a little faint when I think about it. Hannah didn\u2019t know this at the time, but I had learned about Wayne Thiebaud<\/a> in high school, and I loved his work so much that I bought a Wayne Thiebaud calendar and a Wayne Thiebaud day planner and spent most of a semester attempting to imitate him, outlining the objects in my paintings with thick, brightly colored strokes, and as a result, making a lot of regrettable artwork that now resides in a landfill somewhere. I loved<\/span> Wayne Thiebaud. I loved this cookbook.<\/p>\n

It had been her grandmother\u2019s, Hannah told me. When Hannah was a kid, she used to spend weekends at her grandmother\u2019s house. Sometimes she would try on her grandmother\u2019s jewelry, and sometimes they would sit on the couch together, Hannah\u2019s head on her grandmother\u2019s lap, watching Julia Child, or Doctor Who<\/span>, or golf. Hannah tells me that her grandmother would scratch her back as long as she wanted without ever complaining, which, as everybody knows, is the universal sign of a first-rate person. Sometimes the two of them would cook together. Hannah\u2019s grandmother would stand her up at the kitchen counter on an upturned two-gallon bucket and let her help to measure, pour, and stir. Her grandmother had a huge collection of cookbooks, and I think Hannah would like me to put special emphasis on the adjective huge<\/span>. It was huuuuuge. A few years ago, her grandmother began getting rid of some of her possessions, making her life a little smaller, and she told Hannah that she should take some of the cookbooks. Hannah went through the titles and, naturally, took home a stack of Julia Child books. She also spotted Chez Panisse Desserts<\/span>, and she thought I might be able to do some good with it. So she took it home, and then she gave it to me. I keep it on the shelf next to the stove, and whenever I see it, I think of Hannah\u2019s grandmother. I will probably never meet her, but I like to think that we know each other now somehow, that we\u2019re connected in some small way. I wonder if she is a cobbler person or a crisp person.<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>
\nA couple of weeks ago, I had a surplus of berries lying around and felt like baking. I pulled out Chez Panisse Desserts<\/span>. I opened it up to the berry chapter, and the first recipe was for a simple cobbler. I guess I could have kept looking, poking around for a crisp or a cake or something else, but this cobbler sounded right. It sounded honest, not at all flashy, just a biscuit-like dough enriched with butter and cream, baked over sugared berries. There were no unusual flavorings or spices or flours or grains. I liked that. I liked that it was confident in its simplicity. So I tried it.<\/p>\n

I know there are a million recipes out there for cobbler, and that what the world probably wants is some kind of new and different spin on the concept, but that\u2019s not what this recipe is about. It doesn\u2019t reinvent anything, and it\u2019s not going to tie your shoes for you. That\u2019s not what it\u2019s meant to do. It\u2019s meant to be an excellent cobbler, and it is. The topping is both light and rich, the way a good biscuit should be, and the fruit is only gently sweetened, its juices barely bound up with a spoonful of flour. It gets everything right. You could serve it warm with a splash of cold cream, or you could eat it warm with nothing, and the next day, you can stand at the counter and eat it from the pan, the way I did. In return, it made a cobbler person of me.<\/p>\n\n

\n
\n
Recipe<\/div>\n

Berry Cobbler<\/h2>\n

Adapted from Chez Panisse Desserts<\/span><\/a>, by Lindsey R. Shere<\/h3> \n \n <\/header>\n\n
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