carbonel: (flower cat)
[personal profile] carbonel
Tomorrow, I'm having some friends over for cards and a light collation. Here is the current planned menu, which is also serving as a reminder for me not to forget any of these.

Savories
Quesadillas
Cucumber sandwiches
Radish sandwiches (I may only make one of these two)
Potato chips
Onion dip
Terra chips
(I also bought a packet of Bugles totally on impulse, but I think three chiplike items is one too many. Possibly two too many, actually.)

Sweets
Brownies (already made; need to be defrosted)
Palmiers
Watermelon
Eton mess

It's that last one that led to my fruitless (as it were) quest. An Eton mess is a classic British summertime dessert consisting of slightly sweetened whipped cream mixed with macerated strawberries and broken bits of meringue shells, topped with more strawberry. Variations can include many different fruits, of course. But all of the recipes I looked at online called for commercial meringue shells to be broken up.

The Target grocery (my usual one) doesn't carry meringue shells -- no surprise there. Cub (big box grocery chain) also doesn't carry meringue shells, or even meringue cookies, though it does carry meringue powder. Since that was around $6, and I already had eggs and sugar, I didn't choose that route. The one that really surprised me is that Kowalski's also doesn't carry meringue shells. I didn't try Trader Joe's because that was too far away to drive to for just one item. Luckily, the recipe from the Telegraph also included an added recipe for making your own meringue -- though I've been making chocolate chip meringue cookies for years, and would have coped just fine on my own.

I wonder if meringue shells are a standard item in British grocery stores. They certainly aren't in my local options for groceries, though I know I've seen them from time to time.

As long as I'm musing about things culinary, I have a question about strawberries. Does anyone else cut out the white core bit from their strawberries when they're cleaning them? My mother never did; she just slice off the tops. But I don't like the texture, so after I slice off the tops, I cut it out as part of the cleaning process. Am I the weird one, or is she? (I can't attribute it to laziness on my mother's part; for years, she cut off the little thorny spikes on asparagus, until we persuaded her that once you cook them, they pretty much disappear. Strawberry cores are much easier to deal with.)

Date: 2019-06-08 08:41 pm (UTC)
minnehaha: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minnehaha
My strawberry strategy is to remove the leaf-like tops and the core with a small knife. The "4 for a dollar" knives at the Dollar Store are quite perfect for this. I rinse first, not after.

[personal profile] graydon does or doesn't know that "actual strawberries" are scarcer than meringue shells in America.

K.

Date: 2019-06-08 08:56 pm (UTC)
sraun: portrait (Default)
From: [personal profile] sraun
I'm with Minnehaha K on this.

Date: 2019-06-08 09:10 pm (UTC)
graydon: (Default)
From: [personal profile] graydon
Graydon is entirely aware but suffers from specificity. (And has picked enough of the actual strawberries to make strawberry-rhubarb pie before now, so did not wish to imagine it impossible that carbonel had done the same.)

Date: 2019-06-10 03:36 pm (UTC)
minnehaha: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minnehaha
It is impossible to imagine cooking real strawberries. That implies such an overwhelming number of them that one can pause in the eating of them fresh, that one might have a *glut*. The "frais du bois" in France is not available in my experience of North America. Nor anything like. And I have grown my own in trying for them.

K. [has rhubarb in the garden, and the usual unimpressive strawbs at the store; could pie be far off?]

Date: 2019-06-10 05:25 pm (UTC)
graydon: (Default)
From: [personal profile] graydon
We had in some years enough to make jam.

Took the right weather and good luck with timing and it was a lot of squat-foraging picking, but there could be a lot of them.

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