It’s April, and I sneeze at least five times every morning, right when I wake up. Pollen’s in the air. We’ve cracked out the light jackets. Summer is coming for us.
Summer is the time for falling in love: with cities, with food, with freezing cold showers. It’s suncream, hot tarmac, and that unmistakable smell of strawberries, an aroma that hit me unexpectedly a few weekends ago, giving just a hint of things to come, before the UK was once again blanketed in grey.
London has never been my home – I never yearned for the big city like other teenagers did, and for too long after I moved here I lived in a bubble, terrified that I just couldn’t do it and yet too stubborn to give in. At no point has it been love. London and I are like the married couple that stays together for the sake of the kids.
People still say, Ooh, London eh? Good place to live while you’re young. You must have so much fun. And every time, I smile and nod and think, Well, sort of. The economy is harsh, meeting people is difficult and honestly I would rather cook for my friends and pack them off, giggly and stumbling, with a fist full of cookies, than hit the nightlife.
But just when I think it’s too much – the isolation, and the cost – something good happens. A gaggle of strangers offers to help a women with a buggy, or a museum visit turns out to be particularly good. In this case, it was a trip to a local grocery stall – the one that’s not part of a market, and where you get called “babe” as standard – that saw me laden with almost more fruit and vegetables than I could carry.
I’m still not in love, but it helps. It’s more bearable when you can go home and say, Okay, so a pint might bankrupt me but damn it, I can buy 750g of strawberries for a quid and I dare you to beat that. These are small pleasures, and it’s almost worth it. Summer is a little slice of sunshine breaking up the unrelenting grey, and I suppose this posh jam tart is my sunshine.
This galette – a lazy person’s tart – was something I fell for unexpectedly, like all the best romances. I ate the first slice and messaged friends, It’s alright. It’s like a jam tart, only it took a while. But then I went back for another slice, and the next day I thought about it till I got home. It crept up on me.
As the strawberries cook they release a sweet syrup that gives the galette its jamminess, but without any of the weird stickiness you might get with a regular jam tart, while macerating them in balsamic gives it a little savoury kick at the end. You could serve it with mascarpone instead of ricotta, if that’s more your thing.
Balsamic strawberry galette with ricotta
Serves 6
You should eat this within a day. It’s easily done.
Ingredients
Balsamic vinegar, about 3 tbsp |
Method
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Your pictures are gorgeous! I love the recipe, so interesting to find balsamic vinegar in a dessert…
Some foods (red cabbage for me), cities (Frankfurt) or even people make it hard for you to fall in love with them, but when you do it’s just great! And as you said, something always comes along! Keep your head up and when spring is finally here, everything will be a little brighter and warmer. 🙂
Thank you so much! Balsamic and strawberries go together so well, they’re one of my favourite things about summer. I’m sure everything will work out eventually, and if not, well, it’s a learning curve 🙂
I read your comment on Shutterbean’s latest snack post and came scurrying over to visit because this sounds incredible!! You have a lovely blog and photos. 🙂
Oh thank you! Strawberries are *always* a winner.