Rhubarb. Roasted. Honey-Glazed. Sigh.

Bemidji’s Natural Choice Farmers Market opened for the season yesterday. I was there with my market bag, filling it with fresh butter lettuce, baby turnips, green onions and beautiful rosy red radishes. Oh, and I can’t forget the homemade bread.

I spotted long, slender stalks of rhubarb, too. I didn’t need to buy that, though. A friend supplied me with several pounds of beautiful rhubarb, one of my favorite vegetables of spring.

Vegetable, you ask? Yes. As Kim Ode, author of the recently published cookbook, “Rhubarb Renaissance,” explained in a class she taught at Byerly’s in St. Louis Park last week, since we are accustomed to using rhubarb in desserts sweetened with sugar, we think of it as a fruit. In fact, it is a vegetable that was first used for medicinal purposes centuries ago.

Other things I learned about rhubarb from Ode:

  • Rhubarb is almost 95% water. It’s not necessary to use a lot of liquid when cooking the tart vegetable. It releases moisture as it breaks down during the cooking process.
  • To make an eye-pleasing batch of rhubarb sauce, stir in a tiny bit of red food coloring paste.
  • Although the combination of rhubarb and strawberries is classic (I still have dreams about my grandma’s strawberry-rhubarb pie), it’s become a little tired. Ode suggests stepping out of the traditional rhubarb (dessert) box and exploring new flavor combinations that result in savory appetizers, salads, side dishes and entrees. She offers many savory rhubarb recipes in her book.

I never buy rhubarb. Rhubarb is a lot like zucchini — people who have it growing in their garden usually have plenty to give away. Some years I must work harder than others to find a source for my favorite spring and early summer vegetable. If all else fails, I buy it at the farmers market.

When I have a generous amount of rhubarb, I use some of it to make Roasted Honey-Glazed Rhubarb Sauce. Roasting rhubarb in the oven brings out its flavor and allows it to hold its shape. When chunks of rhubarb are cooked on the stove, it breaks down and becomes a stringy compote.

This time, I added some pomegranate molasses to the sauce as it cooled in the baking dish. That’s another tip I gleaned from my time in Ode’s rhubarb class. Pomegranate molasses, often used in Middle Eastern cooking, is a thick, slightly sweet syrup that adds a sophisticated depth of flavor to rhubarb sauce. Pomegranate molasses is stocked in most supermarkets these days. I found my bottle in the section with all of the syrups.

Honey sweetens the juicy rhubarb as it spends time in the oven. Adding pomegranate juice to the baking dish enhances the color of the sauce and helps create deliciously syrupy juices. A split vanilla bean added to the roasting dish contributes luxurious mellow creaminess to the mouth-watering sour-fruity rhubarb.

I use a little cornstarch to barely thicken the sauce as it bubbles in the oven. If you like a thicker sauce, use an additional teaspoon or two of cornstarch.

Just as rhubarb itself, Roasted Honey-Glazed Rhubarb Sauce is versatile. Spoon it over angel food cake or pound cake. Eat it for breakfast with yogurt and granola. It makes a delicious topping for ice cream, pancakes and waffles. When you make Brenda Langton’s Rhubarb Cake that I have in my column this week (click here for that recipe), float pieces of the cake in shallow pools of Roasted Honey-Glazed Rhubarb Sauce and top each piece with a puff of sweetened whipped cream.

It’s traditional rhubarb sauce with a twist — definitely not tired.

Rhubarb recipes you might enjoy from some of my earlier blog posts:

Rhubarb Ginger Tart

Glorious Day Rhubarb-Strawberry Muffins

Bickey Bender’s Rhubarb Nut Bread

Old-Fashioned Rhubarb Peach Coffee Cake

Rhubarb Blueberry Nut Muffins

Good Neighbor’s Rhubarb Dessert

Rhubarb Cream Scones with Orange Thyme

Better-Than-A-Biscuit Strawberry Rhubarb Scones

Rhubarb roasts in a mixture of honey and pomegranate juice in a glass baking dish.

Roasted Honey-Glazed Rhubarb

  • 2 pounds trimmed and washed rhubarb, cut into 1-inch pieces (it will measure about 7 1/2 cups)
  • 3/4 cup honey, preferably local
  • 1/2 cup pomegranate juice plus 2 tablespoons
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 3-inch piece vanilla bean, split open down center
  • 3 tablespoons pomegranate molasses

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Place rhubarb pieces in a large mixing bowl. Add honey and stir until rhubarb is completely coated with honey. Add 1/2 cup pomegranate juice and stir. Dissolve cornstarch in remaining 2 tablespoons pomegranate juice. (I do this in a custard cup and use my  clean finger to mix it up.) Add the cornstarch mixture to the mixing bowl and stir until it is blended evenly into the rhubarb mixture.

Dump rhubarb mixture into a shallow glass baking dish. A 13- x 9-inch baking dish works well. Push the split vanilla bean into the mixture.

Bake in preheated 350-degree oven for about 25 minutes, gently stirring every 10 minutes. Mixture should bubble and begin to thicken slightly. Rhubarb should be very tender.

Remove dish from oven. Add pomegranate molasses and gently stir to blend. Allow mixture to cool in dish at room temperature. Store, tightly sealed, in refrigerator. Makes about 4 cups.

Tip from the cook

  • Add a sprig of fresh lemon thyme to the roasting rhubarb for lovely aroma and flavor.

 

 

Weekend Baking: Orange you glad it’s thyme for rhubarb scones?

There’s a new kid in my garden. Can you see that dainty little sprig of green right on top of that pretty scone? Well, that’s it. That’s the new kid. His name is Orange Thyme of the Thymus family. I’ve known his cousin, Lemon Thyme, for many years. For several summers, Lemon Thyme has been a favorite visitor in my kitchen, adding shindig to my sugar cookies, cha-cha to chicken, liveliness to my lemon bread and sassy flair to my salads. I love Lemon Thyme. When she’s not in my kitchen, she’s just outside the door basking in the sunshine.

And then, last weekend I spotted tiny Orange Thyme at the Kingfield Farmers Market in Minneapolis. I snapped up the potted herb and found a spot for it very near to Lemon Thyme. If all goes well, Orange Thyme should be making a perennial appearance in my garden.

I could not wait to snip a few stems of Orange Thyme and start baking. With a few stalks of rhubarb still in my refrigerator, I chose to make Rhubarb Scones with Orange Thyme, using my favorite base recipe for scones. I added a bit more sugar to balance the tartness of the bits of rhubarb that I stirred into the batter. Since I didn’t want to take too much from my newly planted Orange Thyme, I only added a tightly-packed 1/4 teaspoon. Next time I might use a full teaspoon in order to get more of its light citrus tang. Bright and zesty Lemon Thyme would also work well in this recipe. But, if you don’t have either one, just use a 1/2 teaspoon of grated orange zest and these scones will still be wonderful, because the star is tart rhubarb.

These scones will make you so happy. Warm from the oven, they are so moist with almost a creamy texture. Each bit of soft, tart rhubarb will send bubbles of joy from your taste-buds to your tummy. Break through the crunchy sweet sugar sprinkled over the top of the scone and your lips will become a smile. You’ll just want to keep eating more. Really. That’s how good they are. Even the next day after baking, these scones bring sighs of joy.

I couldn’t help shooting a few pictures of some sweet flowers in my garden as I was out taking a picture of Orange Thyme. These flowers make me smile, too.

Blooming flax, the color of beautiful blue sky on a perfect summer day:

I think this one is called a Pincushion flower, a perennial I bought a few years ago.

Yesterday Gracie was outside with me and she pulled one of those flowers out by its root. The bud hadn’t opened yet. I brought it in and put the stem in some water. Today the bud is open.

Gracie is forgiven. Just look at that face. I’m sure she thought that flower was a weed and she was just helping me get the job done…

The forget-me-not plants my neighbor dug from her garden to share with me are still blooming and just as cute as can be.

There you have it. Summer flowers and rhubarb scones. I’m smiling. How about you?

Rhubarb Cream Scones with Orange Thyme

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup sugar plus more for sprinkling
  • 1/4 teaspoon, packed, orange thyme leaves
  • 1/2 cup cold butter, cut into small (1/2-inch) chunks
  • 2 cups finely chopped fresh rhubarb
  • 1 cup pecans or walnuts, broken
  • 1 cup heavy whipping cream
  • 1/2 cup plain whole milk yogurt

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.

Sift flour, baking powder, salt and 1/2 cup sugar into a large mixing bowl. Add butter and orange thyme leaves. Use a pastry blender (or two table knives) to cut butter into dry ingredients until mixture resembles coarse meal. Stir in rhubarb and nuts. Add whipping cream and yogurt. Stir just until combined.

Drop 1/2-cup mounds of batter onto prepared baking sheets. You should have 4 or 5 mounds on each sheet. Sprinkle each mound with 1 1/2 teaspoons granulated sugar. Bake 20 minutes, until puffed and dark golden. Transfer to a rack and cool to warm, about 10 minutes (if you can wait that long), before serving. Makes 8 to 10 scones.

Moist and Marvelous Rhubarb Blueberry Nut Muffins

This time of year I can’t get enough rhubarb. Between the fresh perennial herbs I’m snipping out of my flower garden and the lovely stalks of rhubarb coming my way from friends, I’m enjoying lots of playtime in my kitchen.

I’ve often adapted my favorite blueberry muffin recipe, using it as a base for a swirl of rhubarb and fresh strawberries. But, it’s not strawberry season around here. Yet. With lots of blueberries stashed in my freezer, I decided to partner them with some finely chopped rhubarb and bake up some muffins.

I baked these muffins on Friday night and savored each warm bite of sweet blueberries and tart rhubarb in a taste-test before going to bed. They sat on the counter overnight to cool. One went down on my way to the farmers market yesterday morning where I did a cooking demonstration. The remaining muffins rested on the cooling rack on the counter. From the farmers market I was off to an asparagus-pickling party. Finally, when I returned home around 5:00, the lovely muffins went into a container. I was hoping they hadn’t dried out.

I just ate another one with my first cup of coffee of the morning. Even after being treated with neglect, they are still moist. With a brief warm-up in the microwave, they were as good as just-baked.

Next time I’ll just use all rhubarb and leave out the frozen blueberries. Those berries gave the batter a slight tint of purple.

I’ve packed up the remaining muffins to take back to the asparagus pickling party that is continuing this morning. Who knew it would take so long to pickle 60 pounds of asparagus? Good grief.

Enjoy the muffins. If you love rhubarb desserts, you must check out the recipe for Rosemary-and-Honey Infused Rhubarb Dream that I have in my column this week.

Rhubarb-Blueberry-Nut Muffins

  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups finely chopped rhubarb
  • 1 cup blueberries, frozen or fresh
  • 1/2 cup chopped nuts
  • Extra sugar for sprinkling over muffins

With a spoon, mix butter and sugars in a mixing bowl. Add eggs, vanilla and buttermilk and stir to blend. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together. Add all at once to mixture in bowl. Stir just until almost completely incorporated. Add rhubarb, blueberries and nuts. Gently stir to mix in. Fill paper-lined muffin tins almost to the top with batter. Sprinkle each muffin with 1 teaspoon of sugar. Bake in preheated 375-degree oven for 20 to 30 minutes, depending on size of muffins. Makes about 14 to 16 traditional-sized muffins.

 

More edamame (and some rhubarb, too)

Today was the first day of sessions at the International Association of Culinary Professionals conference in Portland, Oregon. I’ve been here long enough to check out a few great places to eat. But first, I just had to tell you about our lunch today that was sponsored by Le Creuset. Beautiful salads and soups, with consideration for all of those who are vegan, vegetarian and gluten-free. It was the most healthful meal I can remember in the last four years that I’ve attended the conference. I took a picture of my favorite salad. Yes, it was an Asian-inspired edamame salad with flavors of ginger and sesame complementing the edamame, carrots, red pepper, bamboo shoots. I had a little bit of some herbed taboulleh and a bowl of white bean soup. What a great lunch. I think you could toss steamed shelled edamame with the same ingredients as this salad holds and toss it with your favorite stir-fry sauce to make a similar salad.

Do you wonder why the whole pod edamame aren’t used in this kind of salad? Edamame pods are fuzzy and very fibrous. No matter how much you chew the furry tough pod, it just won’t work. You won’t be able to chew it up. Edamame pods are nothing like tender sugar snap pea pods.

 Oh, lucky me — rhubarb is in season in Portland and many of the restaurants are serving freshly made rhubarb jam atop beef, rhubarb sauce with pork and rhubarb desserts that would make you salivate. I broke down and had a rhubarb dessert at Clyde Common, an energy-filled restaurant in Portland. Layers of thinly sliced sponge cake, white chocolate cream and fresh rhubarb sauce topped with vanilla bean ice cream, sprinkled with their own toffee pecan bits. All I can say is, YUM! And, I can’t wait for the rhubarb in my garden to be ready to harvest.

Have a happy Earth Day!

Whisk it Wednesday: Road-Trip Rhubarb Cake

Last Friday, my two biking partners and I headed down to Red Wing, Minn. We were on our way to do the Tour de Pepin, an organized bike ride beginning in Lake City. We chose the 32-mile route that would end in Stockholm, Wisconsin.

Not unlike any girlfriends road trip, we braked often for antique shops, any other cute little shops, and food. I’m always on the lookout for darling little props to use in food photographs. I found a few pieces that I couldn’t live without. A stop at an antique shop on Highway 10 in Motley and cute little Weekend Cottage in Clear Lake had all three of us adding shopping bags to the back of our vehicle.

An old fluted cake pan seemed like it would be perfect for baking quick breads. The scalloped-edge Syracuse bowl was irresistible. I wish there had been more. It seems like the perfect size for big scoops of ice cream. I’ve already had it on my counter filled with malted milk balls and chocolate-covered banana chips. And the floral pattern on the plate just grabbed me.

The old-fashioned cream-whipper may be my favorite treasure from the trip. See it in the photo with the cake?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We arrived in Red Wing just in time to be able to spend about an hour at Falconer Vineyards. When we pulled into

the parking lot at the winery, the Falconers were out watering all the plants and their golden retriever, Cedar, was happily watching them. They have a beautiful spot tucked into the hills. We sat in the sunshine at one of their outdoor tables with a bottle of North Star Red, some cheese and  some crackers. It’s a place to put on your must-visit list when you are in the Red Wing area.

On Saturday morning we wound up pedaling 32 miles through raindrops and very cool temps in the low 50′s. We were soaking wet and freezing by the end of our ride. After changing into dry clothes in the bathroom of the Dollar Store (the guy there felt sorry for us and invited us to use the employee bathroom as a changing room) we headed for a great homemade lunch at Chickadee Cottage Cafe in Lake City.

I was anxious to try out my new little (old) cake pan. My friend, Jodi, shared one of her favorite rhubarb bread recipes with me. She says it came from an old (1993ish) Betty Crocker Fresh! Spring Recipes book. I’ve adapted the original recipe, which called for pears. I also added some pumpkin pie spice that I had on my shelf. I sprinkled a mixture of sugar and butter over the top, stealing the idea from Bickey Bender’s recipe that I shared on my previous post. I baked part of the batter for Old-Fashioned Rhubarb-Peach Coffee Cake in my new pan and still got nine big muffins and a tiny individual-sized loaf. I call it old-fashioned just because I baked it in an old pan. I love the flavor of rhubarb and peach together. I use that combination in my Crisp, too.

If you have an old-fashioned cake pan, pull it out to bake this coffee cake. And if you don’t just bake the batter in two loaf pans.

Enjoy.

Old-Fashioned Rhubarb-Peach Coffee Cake

  • 1 1/2 cups finely chopped rhubarb
  • 1 1/2 cups finely chopped fresh peaches or frozen peaches that have been thawed first
  • 1 2/3 cups sugar
  • 2/3 cup canola oil
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 4 large eggs
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice (or your favorite baking spice)
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 cup chopped nuts

Topping:

  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 tablespoon softened butter

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour baking pans of your choice. In large bowl, mix rhubarb, peaches, sugar, oil, vanilla and eggs. Sift dry ingredients and stir into mixture in bowl. Transfer batter to baking pans. Mix Topping ingredients and sprinkle over the batter. I baked the cake for about 40 minutes, the large muffins took about 30 minutes. If you use two 9- x 5- x 3-inch loaf pans, baking time will be 50 to 60 minutes. Makes 2 loaves.

Rhubarb Bread Created by an Artist

While many of you have been enjoying fresh rhubarb from your garden for weeks, here in northern Minnesota the rhubarb is finally ready to harvest.

Although I have a few favorite rhubarb recipes that I prepare each year at this time, I’m always on the lookout for new ways to enjoy the early-summer stalks of tartness.

A week ago I was spending time with friends in the Park Rapids area. We visited the studio of artist, Bickey Bender. In a cozy loft above a large garage, it’s a space that allows her imagination to take over as she creates with watercolor and paper art.

From her studio, she invited us into her home where she had a snack of rhubarb bread and fresh fruit waiting for us. The Rhubarb Nut Bread she had made for us was so moist and delicious. Bickey told me it is always the first rhubarb recipe she makes in the spring. She was willing to share the recipe.

I just had to share the photos I took of the fresh fruit. Look at the way she cut the watermelon. They looked like little pine trees. The little trunks on each wedge of watermelon made a perfect handle to easily pick the watermelon up with and eat it just like a popsicle. I thought it was great fun eating it that way. Wouldn’t children just love it? Leave it to the creative spirit of an artist to come up such a cute idea. And it really did make the fruit platters look like a work of art.

Great treats from Bicky, the baker and the artist.

 

RHUBARB NUT BREAD

Bickey Bender 2009
Temperature: 325 degrees

Time: 40-45 minutes

2 loaf pans

  • 1 1/2 cups brown sugar, packed
  • 2/3 cup liquid shortening
  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup sour milk
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon soda
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 1/2 cups flour
  • 1 1/2 cups diced, fresh rhubarb
  • 1/2 cup nuts, chopped (optional)

Stir together in order given. Put into 2 greased loaf pans.

Sprinkle the following Topping over the loaves:

  • 1/2 cup white sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon butter

Bake in 325-degree preheated oven for 40 to 45 minutes.