Note: During these unsettling times of staying at home, many of us are spending a lot of time in our kitchens. So it's a perfect time for trying new Polish heritage recipes. For the next several weeks we will be reprising some of our favorite recipes for Polish comfort food.
Witamy!
I don't know for sure if this recipe is truly Polish, but I do know that strawberries are a favorite fruit in Poland. And the number of recipes for strawberry dishes could stretch from Belarus to Germany or from the Baltic Sea to Slovakia - many times over. Here in central Virginia, where we now live, the first crops of strawberries are just being picked.
We visited a near-by farm yesterday and picket a couple of buckets of fresh, warm juicy berries - right off the vine. In fact we got these berries before the local farmers market had any, so we really lucked out. On the way home Laura asked if I had any requests for the berries and I chose her strawberry pie in a nano-second because it is absolutely to die for and super-easy to make. Truth be told the recipe below is not a heritage Polish recipe but it is Laura’s heritage recipe which she has tweaked and perfected over time.
As soon as we got home, we wanted to taste-test the farm-berries against some berries we had bought at the grocery store just the day before. These were imported from California, and while they looked picture-perfect on the outside, that’s where the similarities ended.
Both samples were cut in half – the imported berries were quite pale in the center and the farmer’s berries were deep red throughout. We bit into each and rolled the fruit around our taste-buds, just like a fine wine. The “shipped-in” berries were rather bland and did not have that intense strawberry flavor simply because they were picked before their time. But the farmer’s berries on the other hand, were juicy and had that bright sweet flavor that let us know they were still on their stems just earlier that morning. There’s an obvious moral to this story…if you have access to a berry farm or a farmers’ market, it’s well worth the extra pennies to buy berries that are totally satisfying.
Laura’s Strawberry Pie
(serves 8)
1 9-inch baked pie crust (homemade or purchased)
2 quarts fresh strawberries
3 tablespoons corn starch
½ to 1 cup sugar (depending on the sweetness of the berries)
1 cup water
1 teaspoon butter
Wash the strawberries and remove the hulls. Mash enough of the strawberries to make one cup. Put the mash with one cup water in a 1-quart or larger glass measuring cup. Add sugar ¼ cup at a time, mix and taste until you achieve the desired sweetness.
Microwave the strawberry mixture on high for 4 to 6 minutes or until the mixture is boiling. Watch carefully so the mixture does not boil over.
Soften the corn starch in a couple of tablespoons of water and whisk quickly into the strawberry mixture. Microwave the mixture another 2 to 3 minutes on high or until mixture thickens. Stir in the butter.
Let the mixture cool completely. Cooling may take 30 minutes or longer.
Arrange the remaining strawberries, either whole or sliced, in the baked and cooled pie crust. Pour the cooled strawberry glaze mixture evenly over the top of the berries. Refrigerate until set, about 3 hours, before serving. Garnish with whipped cream, if desired.
Smacznego!
Friends: This is a great time for exploring your Polish roots by trying some new heritage recipes. Our books each have 45 traditional Polish dishes that have been handed down from our family or our friends’ families. They’ve been updated for modern kitchens, so no more “pinch” of this or “glass” of that. And each has been extensively tested, much to the delight of our friends and neighbors. Each recipe is accompanied by beautiful photography. Each book contains poignant family stories about growing up Polish. And each book is full of helpful hints and tips to help make your dishes successful. The books are available autographed and personally dedicated, on our website (in the U.S.) or a bit cheaper from any online bookseller such as Amazon (worldwide). Your family will love you for it.