Montreal Gazette

Tangy dip brings out the best in fruit

Greek yogurt base even manages to pack a little protein into dessert

- MELISSA D’ARABIAN

Late-summer fruit is perhaps my favourite. Berries are juicy and sweet, in their last flourish before slipping away into elite and expensive status.

Peaches and plums are soft and caramel-like in flavour. Even the humble pebbly-skinned cantaloupe boasts rich orange flesh and syrupy-sweet flavour.

Like most in-season produce, fruit is inexpensiv­e this time of year.

I’ll admit: I almost always overbuy late-summer fruit. Perhaps it’s the threat of my favourites disappeari­ng, or maybe it’s the great prices and vitamin supply.

But now’s the time when I find myself serving fruit plates to my family to finish every meal, and I reach for a basket of berries for snacking. Desserts for summer barbecues almost always star sweet fresh fruit.

The perfect addition to your fruit repertoire is this incredibly easy tangy orange fruit dip. It has only a handful of ingredient­s, so it’s whipped up in seconds, not minutes.

And it’s healthy enough that if you end up eating a whole recipe yourself, you’ll still feel great, and celebrate the big boost of protein you just had. (This might be the voice of experience.)

The base of the dip is low-fat plain Greek yogurt, which gives it tang, and the aforementi­oned protein. Simply stir in a surprise ingredient: orange juice concentrat­e. A little goes a long way, but this sweet gem of an ingredient magically transforms acidic yogurt into a tangy-sweet delight that brings out the best in ripe, almost-oversweet fruit.

Add some finely chopped fresh mint leaves, and you have an unbeatable combinatio­n that will complement your late summer fruit stash.

6

3/4 cup (180 mL) 2 per cent plain Greek yogurt

3 tbsp (45 mL) thawed orange juice concentrat­e

2 tbsp (30 mL) finely chopped fresh mint

3 cups (750 mL) halved strawberri­es, or other or cut fruit

Serves:

Stir the yogurt and orange juice concentrat­e together in a small bowl. Top with the mint.

Serve with fruit for dipping, or spoon on fruit for eating with a spoon.

 ?? MELISSA D’ARABIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
MELISSA D’ARABIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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