Mmmm. Extra strawberries. Yes, these are cultivated. |
Ooga is an expert jam-maker and cans gallons of fruits each year. It's a thing of beauty to see our pantry full of brightly colored mason jars in the winter. But I (Thag) have searched for a more primitive way of keeping our fruits--something that our wild ancestors would have done. So this time, after all of the jars of strawberries were put up. I decided to take the rest of our strawberry bounty and dry it in the sun.
Spreading the strawberry puree. |
It didn't exactly work that way. The strawberries dried almost completely through by the time I went to flip them, and they stuck like a layer of strawberry glue to the wax paper. I eventually wrested them free with a metal spatuala, a knife, and sheer force of will.
And . . . mmm . . . they taste great. Not too sweet. It's going to be hard to save them for winter, but that's OK. I've got a whole bunch of strawberry jam to eat in the meantime.
Here's what we did.
And . . . mmm . . . they taste great. Not too sweet. It's going to be hard to save them for winter, but that's OK. I've got a whole bunch of strawberry jam to eat in the meantime.
Here's what we did.
Drying on the roof--a short-lived experiment. |
Peeling the leather off the wax paper--more arduous that it should have been. Next time I think I'll grease the paper. |
- Pick--We had about (gee, I don't know) three quarts of berries.
- Blend--Next we put them through our food processor--um, our stone age food processor. What came out was a chunk strawberry puree.
- Spread--We poured the puree onto two big baking sheets and spread it around until it was uniform thickness about 3/16" thick.
- Dry--Then we put the sheets in the sun. I started by putting the sheets on our roof, that didn't work. The pitch of the roof was too steep, and the puree began to flow downhill. So then I re-spread them and laid them on the roof of our car instead. It was a hot day and they dried within six hours.
- Flip--Most leathers need to be flipped to dry on both sides. As listed above, that's not what happened here. One leather got a drying on the other side after some meticulous removal from the waxed paper. The other was dried completely before it came off.
- Store--Wrapped the leathers between some fresh sheets of wax paper. (Don't worry. They won't stick this time. We've tried this before.) Put them on the shelf next to Ooga's jam.