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Rhubarb Strudel

If you don’t live in Vancouver you probably can’t get rhubarb any more. That first stalk that sprouts in the Spring and paves the way for the strawberries and raspberries that you’re probably eating now. The sign of Summer that hasn’t had time to ripen in the sun so it’s so tart you can’t even imagine eating without heaps of sugar?

But us Vancouverites can. Heck, the way this weather is going we’re going to be eating rhubarb in August. 

It’s the coldest June on record here. I can’t keep the windows open in my apartment and I start to shiver without my slippers on. I have yet to go outside without a sweater on this year. 

So I’ve retired to the kitchen, where the oven is nearly always on and that keeps the water in the kettle warm for when I need a cuppa. And I bake. I bake with rhubarb. 

Rhubarb Strudel

Adapted from this recipe

Dough

1 1/3 cups unbleached flour
1/8 teaspoon salt
7 tablespoons water, plus more if needed
2 tablespoons vegetable oil, plus additional for coating the dough
1/2 teaspoon cider vinegar

Filling

5-6 Stalks of Rhubarb, cut into 2 inch pieces.

3 cups of Sugar

1 cup Breadcrumbs

2 tbsp Butter, melted

In the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with a dough hook- or in a regular bowl if you want to knead by hand) mix all the ingredients together and knead until the dough is smooth and elastic. When in doubt keep kneading. You can’t really over knead this dough, 

Wrap with cling film and let it sit for about 30- 60 minutes. 

Preheat your oven to 400F and line a cookie tray with parchment or a silpat. 

Once the dough has rested take a linen dish cloth and sprinkle it with flour. Get some flour on your rolling pin as well. Cut the dough in half, put one half on the cloth and start rolling. You want the dough to be as thin as you can possible get it. It should be see through, if it tears a bit don’t worry.  I didn’t roll my dough out enough so don’t look at mine as an example. It was delicious but it wasn’t quite as light as it should have been. 

Carefully move the dough onto the pan (folding it over your rolling pin helps for this) and in a thin line spread half of the rhubarb, sugar, and breadcrumbs out.

Carefull bring the dough up on 1 side and then roll it gently so that the rhubarb mixture has been wrapped several times with the dough. 

Repeat with the other half of the dough. Brush with the melted butter.

Bake until the rhubarb is cooked, about 45 minutes. 

Let it cook for at least 10 minutes before slicing into it, dust with icing sugar and serve!

June 20, 2012
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About me

I am one of those unbearably lucky people who grew up with great food. My mom is a terrific cook and 9 nights out of 10 we sat down as a family and ate dinner together. She didn't make fussy food, and to this day none of my favourite foods have more than 5 ingredients, but she made good food and she taught me to appreciate it. 

When I was 15 I decided I wanted to cook for a living and when I was 17 I got my first job in a restaurant, I was an apprentice (read: kitchen bitch) and spend the next 7 years in kitchens both in savoury and sweet. But mostly sweet because people tend to be nicer in pastry kitchens. 

I started this blog in the beginning of 2011, partly because so many friends were always asking me for recipes, but mostly because I love the stories behind food. I love the connection of a recipe to where it came from, the thought process behind it, the memories that make their way to the table with the meal. That's also where the name comes from, it's my middle name but it's also my Nona's name. She was an incredible Italian cook. She taught bread making classes at a local school and made the best canned peaches I have ever known. I was named after her, and I named this site after her as well, because this isn't just about what you eat but the traditions and memories that come with every bite. 

This passion for where food comes from isn't just about the memories, it's also about where it's grown, and who grew it. It's about making sure that food that nourishes us isn't at the cost of the people who work in the fields or the environment. Because of this the vast majority of the recipes you see here will be full of things that grow here too. And in British Columbia that means berries in the Summer, apples in the Fall,  and an alarming amount of potatoes in the Winter. I feel a lot better about dinner time when I know where my food comes from. 

I hope you like what you see and read here, and if you have any questions about anything you can contact me at claire@liviasweets.com

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