LESSON 5: Fruit crisps easy as pie
March 5, 2009 by Sharon Thompson
Start with trusted apple for flavor and aroma
The cooking skills required for making apple crisp are minimal. If you know how to slice an apple, measure flour, brown sugar and oats, you can make a delicious dessert.
While a fruit crisp is an easy dessert to make, the aroma of fresh baked fruit and cinnamon will wow everyone who comes into your kitchen.
Simply place fruit in a baking pan and cover it with a streusel-type topping. The hardest part is preparing the fruit.
You can use apples, pears, stone fruits, tart cherries, berries or a combination, and even if you don’t have fresh fruit, you can use canned or frozen.
An apple crisp is a good choice for the novice cook. Apples are available all year, although they’re usually better and cheaper in the fall. When baking and making pies, choose a firm apple. According to the Washington Apple Commission, you can always increase the sweetness or acidity of the product by adding sugar or a few drops of lemon juice to the recipe.
The best apple crisp is made with a blend of sweet and tart apples such as Golden Delicious, Braeburn and Jonagold (sweet); and Granny Smith, Empire and Cortland (tart).
Other ingredients are brown sugar, flour, oats, cinnamon and butter. You can jazz it up with nuts if you like.
Here are some cooking tips for these ingredients.
Brown sugar
Brown sugar, whether light or dark, is simply white sugar with molasses added. Dark brown sugar has more molasses and thus a stronger flavor than light brown. If brown sugar is exposed to air, moisture in the molasses can evaporate, causing the brown sugar to dry out. To revive hard brown sugar, spread it on a pie plate (or square of aluminum foil) and place in a 250-degree oven for 3 to 7 minutes, checking often. Cool the softened sugar before using.
If you don’t have dark brown sugar, add 2 tablespoons molasses to 1 cup granulated sugar and pulse three or four times in a food processor; to approximate light brown sugar, add 1 tablespoon molasses to 1 cup granulated sugar, and pulse.
Pouring brown sugar out of its narrow box into a measuring cup can be a messy chore. Transfer the brown sugar to a large, heavy-duty zip-top bag, which allows the sugar to remain moist during storage. Also, a measuring cup fits inside the bag easily and can be filled by pressing the sugar into it through the plastic.
Flour
If you are going to have only one flour in the house, Cook’s Illustrated recommends King Arthur unbleached all-purpose flour or Pillsbury unbleached enriched all-purpose flour.
Oats
At the supermarket you’ll find a variety of oats: instant, quick, rolled (old-fashioned), steel-cut and oat groats. Choose steel-cut oats because they make the best oatmeal.
Butter
For a crisp topping, most recipes call for softened or chilled butter, depending on the method you use for cutting the butter into the flour mixture. The easiest way to soften butter is to put sticks on the countertop and forget about them for an hour or two. But most of us don’t want to wait. Microwaving it is the next option, but that can be tricky.
Here’s a foolproof method: Place a stick of butter on a small microwave-safe plate. Place the plate in the microwave and heat for 1 minute at 10 percent power. Press on the butter with your finger to see whether it is sufficiently softened; if not, heat for an additional 40 seconds at 10 percent power.
Cinnamon
A dash of cinnamon is not only pleasing to our senses, it also has one of the highest anti-oxidant levels of any spice. You’ll find as many anti- oxidants in 1 teaspoon of cinnamon as a full cup of pomegranate juice or 1/2 cup of blueberries, according to McCormick Spices. Nutmeg and mace also can be used.





This sounds wonderful! I haven’t made a crisp for a long time, and usually when I do, I have to use rhubarb because I have so much in my yard, and I freeze it all the time!
Another thing to use to soften the hard brown sugar is a Brown Sugar Saver terra cotta disk. They keep the brown sugar soft for nearly 3 months, and then can just be re-used. We live in a dry climate, so it doesn’t take long for the brown sugar to become hard as a rock, even in a sealed container!
Cindy H
Hard Brown Sugar?