Hartford Courant

Clafoutis: Stylish French comfort food

- By Arthi Subramania­m

Clafoutis has a luscious yet homey French pedigree.

Pronounced kla-FOO-tee, it requires little muss or fuss to be instantly satisfying. A slightly sweet egg-flour-milk batter is poured over tiny cherries, baked and finished with a dusting of powdered sugar.

It is often likened to other egg batter-based foods. But please don’t call it a pancake because it is not flipped and cooked on both sides.

Neither is it a quiche (which has a crust), a flan (which has more flour, making it thicker) or a far Breton (a custardy cake from Brittany that has a smooth flanlike texture and is dense). When made with pears, peaches or apples instead of cherries, purists say it is not a clafoutis but a flaugnarde.

Clafoutis is derived from the word clafir, which means to fill. Typically, small black cherries are laid out on a buttered baking dish, which is then filled with a batter made with eggs, flour, milk and sugar.

Christiane Larhantec, who lives north of Paris in Coye la Foret, believes a real clafoutis is made with unpitted tart cherries. Part of the pleasure of eating one is enjoying the fruit with pits intact, she says.

Also if the pits are removed, she says, the cherries will let out more juice, making the custard thinner. But she offers this warning: “You need to pay attention and not bite into the pit.” It might crack your tooth.

Didier Berlioz, an assistant professor at the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York, says small, unpitted black cherries are ideal. Pits add a complement­ary flavor to the clafoutis, he says, but the bigger the pit the more tannin it will add to the dish.

“That’s why small pits are so much more desirable,” the Nice native says.

A perfect clafoutis is delicate, with a crisp edge and top and a creamy interior. The batter should not be overmixed, Berlioz says. Otherwise it will have a soufflelik­e feel and end up as almost two layers.

It’s important to match the texture of the batter to the filling. If the filling is made with ingredient­s that tend to release a lot of moisture, add a sufficient amount of flour so that it can absorb the excess liquid. He prefers using a light pastry flour when compared with heavy ones like bread flour.

After mixing, the batter needs to rest for about 20 minutes so that the flour can absorb the liquid. Finally, bake at 350 degrees for around 40 minutes.

Clafoutis can have a savory side, too, and there is no limit to the type of filling. It will work just like in a quiche, Berlioz says, and it is mainly about controllin­g moisture content. He suggests cutting savory versions into little squares and eating them with a toothpick as a snack.

Recently, I came across clafoutis recipes in two cookbooks that featured vegetables and cheese and sounded delicious.

The clafoutis is simply French comfort food with a lot of style.

 ?? STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ??
STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE

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