Well, spring has finally really come to the Stockholm region.
Yesterday, in a fit of compost grooming, I found myself busily digging/mixing/churning around an old group of rhubarb that was the orignial resident of the area we've now designated as our compost heap. Initially concerned with smothering the poor things, I've seen that they seem to be the real winners of the redesignation of their plot - all of the nutrients suddenly available to their roots has made for some happy, lush plants.
However, on this particular spring afternoon, one lucky turn of the pitchfork revealed these:
Nearly a pound of sunlight-starved, chlorophyll-free rhubarb that had busily been burrowing it's way through the compost in search of May's sunshine. I felt a little like a half-lost spelunker stumbling on some undiscovered breed of eyeless newt when I lifted the cover from these freakish shoots.
I ran in to the kitchen with my find, rinsed it off and immediately whipped together an egg-heavy marsipan sponge cake, sliced the rhubarb (it needed no peeling whatsoever) and plunged it into the batter. I topped with a heavy handful of "pearl sugar" and a few tablespoons of thinly sliced butter. After about an hour at 350 degrees and I had:
The watery rhubarb kept the cake a little gooey in the center yet I was having a hard time complaining about that. The interplay of the pooled butter on the surface of the baking cake, the pearl sugar and the marsipan in the batter created an incredible, crunchy yet chewy surface.
A little lemon zest or even some crushed cardamon in the batter would be welcome additions later in the year when the rhubarb gets a little harsher. However, I'm pretty glad I took the light-handed approach with this spring's most tender bunch of rhubarb.
Last edited by
Bridgestone on April 30th, 2008, 2:16 am, edited 1 time in total.