Kennyz wrote:On a related note, I have found this spring that fresh, local strawberries work amazingly well in place of the tomatoes in a caprese. Thinly sliced strawberries, fresh mozzeralla, julienned strips of basil, and a drop of aged balsamic. Perfection, really.
Real strawberries (unlike Driscoll and other supermarket brands) have very high acidity, which is what makes this work.
fleurdesel wrote:Personally, I'm really intrigued by the mozzarella-making kit sold here:
http://www.leeners.com/cheese.html
If you try it, please let us know.
jygach wrote:Kennyz wrote:On a related note, I have found this spring that fresh, local strawberries work amazingly well in place of the tomatoes in a caprese. Thinly sliced strawberries, fresh mozzeralla, julienned strips of basil, and a drop of aged balsamic. Perfection, really.
Real strawberries (unlike Driscoll and other supermarket brands) have very high acidity, which is what makes this work.
That sounds like a delicious combination of ingredients - look forward to trying this soon.
Jyoti

Kennyz wrote:Once you get hooked on local strawberries, you just can't eat any other kind.
Matt wrote:Is there something wrong with those strawberries in Kenny's photos? Aren't the insides supposed to be white?
nr706 wrote:Matt wrote:Is there something wrong with those strawberries in Kenny's photos? Aren't the insides supposed to be white?
My experience is white interiors = relatively tasteless; red interiors = good strawberry flavor.
Darren72 wrote:Whole Foods is a sure bet. The Lincoln Park and Peterson stores have especially good cheese selections.
Pastoral may also have it. You'd have to double check their hours (and of course whether they have it). Trader Joe's usually has a fairly cheap version.