Today, we are making muffins out of iffy fruit!
| Raspberry Puffs 1 tsp salt 2 cups flour 2 tsp baking powder ¼ cup shortening or butter 1 egg ½ cup sugar ¾ cup milk 1½ cups raspberries, fresh or frozen* Heat oven to 375°. Grease a 12-cup muffin pan, or line it with paper cups. (These fall out of the pan pretty easily without the paper liners, so you don't need to go out and buy them if you don't have any.) Sift together the salt, flour, and baking powder. Or combine them in a small bowl and stir with a whisk or a fork to fluff them up and break up any flour lumps. Cream together the sugar and shortening. Beat in the egg. Add milk alternately with the dry ingredients. You want to try to keep the batter at more or less the same consistency the whole time. Fold in the berries. If using frozen raspberries, try to mix them in quickly-- before they have a chance to thaw and break apart. Fill the muffin cups about half to two-thirds full. Bake until the tops are slightly golden, about 15 minutes. These are good served warm with butter, or with the following sauce: Raspberry Sauce 1½ cups raspberry juice† ½ cup water ½ cup sugar 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 tablespoon butter Thoroughly mix the cornstarch and sugar in a saucepan, eliminating all lumps. Add juice and water. Cook over medium heat (or high heat if you're really careful to scrape the bottom of the pot) until it boils and thickens. Remove from heat and add butter, stirring until melted. Serve hot on the Raspberry Puffs. *The original recipe uses canned whole raspberries. You might find them at a farmer's market (or if you do your own canning and made a batch). †If you use the above-mentioned preserved raspberries, you can use the juice you drained off for the sauce. Or you might buy raspberry syrup (like the flavored syrups they have in coffee shops). If you buy raspberry syrup, mix it with the water in the recipe and then thoroughly dissolve the cornstarch before turning on the heat. Taste the sauce before adding any additional sugar.
A Book of Selected Recipes: The Ashland Times-Gazette Cookbook, Mrs. George O. Thurn, 1934
|
I've been dog-sitting for my parents these past few days, and found a small tub of raspberries starting to expire in the fridge. (I think we all know that raspberries last about thirty seconds before growing fur.) I didn't know what to do with a nearly-full box of raspberries, but our old friend Mrs. George Thurn did!
![]() |
| A Book of Selected Recipes: the Ashland Times-Gazette Cookbook, Mrs. George O. Thurn, 1934 |
Even though I wouldn't eat raw berries if I had to pick off the fuzzy bits first, I figured that any latent spores would get baked away. But before we get to wholesome fruit, the recipe starts with a quarter cup of shortening. It always feels weird to open a completely new can of scientifically white fat and gaze upon it as it waits to transform ordinary cooking into an unnatural act.
As often happens with scientifically modern recipes, our mixing bowl started with a complete absence of color.
Every time I come back here and do a bit of cooking, I am surprised my mom's mixer hasn't finished falling apart. The motor came half-unmoored inside the housing who-knows-how-many years ago, and now the whole thing shakes and rattles your hand. But apparently this mixer is like my first car: no matter how much it falls apart, it simply won't give up. (The car was deemed unfit for public roads by the end of its time, but damnit it drove itself onto the reaper truck.)
Moving down the recipe, we are supposed to sift our flour with a few other ingredients. Instead, I put them in the really big measuring cup and whisked them until all the lumps in the flour had loosened up. I'll have to keep an eye out for a quart-sized measuring cup. (That's one liter-ish for our metric friends.) It makes an unexpectedly convenient mixing bowl for small batches.
Our puff batter turned out a lot thicker than I thought it would. As a recipe note, there was no dairy milk in the house-- only powdered or almond. I went with the latter because I figured it would be like adding lots of almond extract. You couldn't taste any difference, but it would have been nice.
And now, we finally arrived at the fruit! Mrs. Thurn calls for canned raspberries, which I have never seen. Did factories used to can raspberries the same way they do peaches? Or did Mrs. Thurn think we either canned our own fruit or got some from a neighbor or at a farmer's market? Regardless of how your fruit arrives, this recipe uses a decent-sized cereal bowl of it. I added a handful of blueberries because we didn't quite have enough raspberries for the recipe. No one likes fruit parsimony.
![]() |
| They only look this good because I picked off a lot of fuzzy bits. |
The raspberries broke apart into lots of little pieces as I stirred them in, regardless of how gentle I was. At first I was disappointed, but then I realized this means there will be lots of berry thoughout each muffin. If you want your raspberries to stay intact, you might buy them frozen and mix them in very fast before they have a chance to thaw.
I baked these for fifteen minutes as directed. They sprang back when gently pressed, but looked pale. I thought that perhaps this recipe just doesn't brown very much. Some things stay pale no matter how long you bake them-- like Mrs. Wilson's one-egg cake or the pepperless pepper cake.
When I took one out of the pan, it was cooked but still felt very doughy. You'll know what I mean if you've ever eaten brown-and-serve rolls without browning them. So, I put the muffins back in the oven until they got a little golden on top. I thought this might harden and dry them out, but they were still wonderfully soft.
Without the attached sauce recipe (which I didn't make because I don't have any raspberry juice), these are right in the middle ground between savory and sweet. They're not quite a dessert (or at least, not by American standards), but they're also not something you'd serve next to a pot roast. The muffin batter was itself mildly flavorless, which would have been a problem in other recipes but today meant that it really let the raspberries' flavor pop.
Actually, given how these are fully baked before getting nice and browned, these might make good brown-and-serve breakfast muffins. You could bake them when you have the time and then pop them in the freezer (or just leave them out if you'll be serving them the next day). Then you would only need to stagger into the kitchen and put them in the oven before you start the tea.










%20-%20Copy.jpg)






















