I’ll say it. I hate cooked strawberries, and I refuse to make a dessert that involves them. First, the texture of a cooked strawberry repulses me. Second, they don’t taste as good as fresh ones. That’s a fact.
You know you have ideal, perfectly ripe strawberries when you can smell them. Walking through the farmers’ market or grocery store, you suddenly get a whiff of their hauntingly bright, pineapple-like aroma.
The complex flavor and aroma of strawberries come from various volatile compounds, which are what you smell and thereby taste. When you bite into a fresh strawberry, you release those compounds, which travel up to your nose, adding to the flavor experience.
Some of the compounds that contribute to strawberry aroma are heat-sensitive. Cooking strawberries can destroy them, muting the flavor and making your strawberry dessert less, well, strawberry-y.
Without these aroma compounds, strawberries taste rather bland. Some of the compounds are also heat-sensitive — cooking strawberries can destroy them, muting the flavor and making your strawberry dessert less, well, strawberry-y.
Unlike, say, apples, strawberries contain very little pectin and a lot of water, so when you cook them, they turn into a snotty, watery mush. Pies and tarts with cooked strawberries require a lot of thickener, diluting the flavor of the finished dish. Or you get puddles of soggy cake batter around each little bit of sad-cooked strawberry. For me, the texture of strawberries is the least appealing of any cooked fruit.
But don’t just take it from me: Many traditional strawberry desserts don’t call for cooking them at all, highlighting the majestic fruit in its fresh glory. Think of the sugar-macerated strawberries that top a shortcake, a show-stopping Fraisier Cake, an elegant strawberry tart, an Eton Mess, a classic fresh strawberry pie, or even simple strawberries and cream.
There are exceptions…
If you really adore strawberries and want to incorporate them into your baking, use jam or freeze-dried strawberries. Why is jam okay when cooked strawberries are not? Strawberry jam gets boiled long enough to drive off most of the water and concentrate the flavors, providing a burst of rich strawberry flavor.
Replace fresh strawberries with a swirl or dollop of strawberry jam in a snacking cake; use jam to fill a layer cake, hand pie, or thumbprint cookies; or spread it onto the bottom layer of a tart before topping it with pastry cream and fresh strawberries.
Enlist freeze-dried strawberries to add concentrated strawberry flavor without any moisture. Chop some up, then add to cookies, muffins, and more. A dusting of freeze-dried strawberry powder on top of a cake gives you a pop of pink and a pow of flavor.
However you choose to add strawberries to desserts, I just request that you don’t cook them. Embrace the fresh fruit in all of its glorious complexity.
Still not convinced? Using fresh strawberries is far easier.
+ There are no comments
Add yours