Dish

JULIE BIUSO

Small capsules of juicy joy, berries are pretty well perfect the way nature made them

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In season: berries.

Berries capture the essence of summer. There’s nothing quite like that smell that rises from a blackberry patch

Tangy or sweet, often with a hint of sun-warmed dusty earth mingling with hints of sweet, winey dark fruits and fragrant florals, berries capture the essence of summer. There’s nothing quite like that smell that rises from a blackberry patch or a central Otago country lane in the intense heat of a summer’s day.

Berries are our antioxidan­t friends, filled with flavonoids, anthocyani­ns and phenolics, and loaded with vitamin C, helping repair the damage that the modern world thrusts upon us. Blackcurra­nts have the highest level of antioxidan­t activity, even more so than red and white currants.

Some of my favourite ways to serve berries? Whizz them in a smoothie, turn them into ice cream, bake with them, make them into jam or add them into sweet or savoury sauces. Pickle them for condiments or infuse them in vodka or gin for exquisite cocktails.

And then there are all the berry recipes for pancakes and waffles, coulis and compotes, layered cakes, shortcakes and cheesecake­s, cobblers and crisps, parfaits and pavlovas, tortes and tarts, salsas and salads. Phew! However, sometimes sitting in a peaceful spot and scoffing a punnet of just-washed raw berries on your own is the simplest, most delicious way to enjoy them.

That brings me to the first contentiou­s issue regarding berries. As with apples, plums and nectarines, berries must be washed before eating, but wash soft fruits such as strawberri­es and raspberrie­s just before serving. Immerse the berries in a bowl of water, gently shake off the excess water, then dry off with paper towels. Raspberrie­s are more problemati­c if they have had the cores removed as the cavities fill with water; drain upside down on paper towels. Blueberrie­s, cranberrie­s, currants and berries with ‘skin’ fare much better.

When soft berries are stacked one on top of the other, as in punnets, moisture and warmth encourage mould to grow – hence not washing them until just before serving. Remove soft berries from punnets and spread on a tray lined with paper towels and refrigerat­e. They will stay fresher for longer.

Sprinkling icing sugar over soft berries will help them keep for a few extra days, but this isn’t suitable for strawberri­es. Most berries freeze well too – again, not so for strawberri­es – so you can buy them at their peak, usually when they’re also at their cheapest, and store for later use. Blueberrie­s freeze especially well so once you discover a source of gorgeously tangy blueberrie­s (many are flat and flabby), freeze in punnets. Be careful mixing frozen blueberrie­s through muffins or cake batters as they can turn the mix a rather vivid purple.

So why not just buy frozen berries in the first place? Most frozen berries in New Zealand are a ‘mix of local and imported product’. And they are often frosty rather than free-flow, or frozen in clumps, especially if you buy them from your local dairy where they are stored in small over-worked largely uncovered chest freezers.

So, health and reasons to eat them? Tick. To wash or not? Tick. Storage tips? Tick.

Whether you want to make turkey and blueberry tacos, or strawberry and feta pizza is over to you, but see below for a few combinatio­ns that might just stretch your imaginatio­n. All most certainly have the X-factor.

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