I think it's time to share one of my little pet-peeves. I keep seeing recipes in books and magazines using the phrase 'Whole Wheat' in the title. I get excited and start reading, only to find the recipe also calls for white flour. It seems to me, if a recipe says 'Whole Wheat' in the title, it should't use any refined flour. It's confusing enough trying to decipher what food labels mean ("All-Natural, Lower-Calorie, Zero Trans-Fats Chemically Enhanced"). Inaccurate recipe titles make matters even more complicated. I don't think bakers deliberately try to deceive readers. Maybe they just want credit for including the stuff. Here's a simple plea to the world of food writers and recipe publishers: "Please, keep 'Whole Wheat' whole!" Is that too much to ask?
It might be.
The season's first strawberries have arrived at the markets and I decided it was about time to create a whole wheat strawberry shortcake recipe. Not too dense, not too sweet, buttery, flaky, light, with honey-sweetened strawberries and whipped cream. I hope you'll enjoy them, even without the magic words in the title.
Strawberry Shortcake
Adapted from Cooks Illustrated
Serves 6
2 pints strawberries, sliced
2 tablespoons honey
1 ¾ cups whole wheat pastry flour
¾ cup whole wheat flour
2 teaspoons baking powder¾ teaspoon sea salt
2/3 cup cold buttermilk
8 tablespoons butter, melted and cooled
1 egg
3 tablespoons honey
3/4 cup whipping cream
2 tablespoons honey
Preheat oven to 475°F and adjust rack to middle position. Toss together strawberries and honey in a small bowl. Set aside. Whisk whole wheat pastry flour, whole wheat flour, baking powder, and salt in large bowl. In a medium bowl whisk together buttermilk, cooled butter, egg and honey. Pour buttermilk mixture into dry ingredients and stir until incorporated. Spoon 1/3 cup scoops of dough onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Bake for 15 minutes until tops are golden brown. Cool for 20 minutes.
Whip cream and honey together until soft peaks form. To serve: Cut each shortcake in half, spoon several tablespoons of whipped cream on the bottom-inside layer of the shortcake. Spoon strawberries over cream and top with other half of shortcake. Serve immediately.
This is my favorite dessert - thank you!!!
ReplyDeleteI tried to make whole wheat strawberry shortcake last year and the biscuits were like rocks! I bet yours are delightful.
ReplyDeleteThe "mislabeling" of ingredients makes me nuts! I don't understand that either. When it says whole wheat, that is what I use. I am so happy to know that we are on the same page with that! Great shortcake :) xo
ReplyDeleteThis looks AMAZING! I wish our New York "kitchen" was bigger.
ReplyDeleteMaking strawberry shortcake is on my list of "fun things to do"...and I totally want to try your recipe! Thank you! Also, I can totally relate to your pet-peeve. I hate it when they say "all natural" when in reality, there are very few all-natural ingredients. Bugs me.
ReplyDelete-Gail
I agree 100%! Baked goods are either whole wheat, or they are not. If any part is white flour, the word "whole" does not apply. We need to start a movement, a political party (The Brown Party), or at least a petition! :)
ReplyDeleteAgreed! I have been thinking about figuring out a whole wheat shortcake recipe so thank you for saving me the trouble. =)
ReplyDeleteI am in love with your website, Carrie! Your recipes look pretty much AMAZING!!! I can't wait to try some of them. :)
ReplyDeleteGoing through the "whole wheat shortcake" search results I was having the same problem - most of them had barely any whole wheat flour. So bravo.
ReplyDeleteNo whole wheat pastry flour? The batch I'm eating now is 1 1/2c regular whole wheat flour and 1 cup oat flour. (Oat flour = oatmeal + electric spinny blade appliance of choice, if you don't keep around prebought stuff.) I figure since oatmeal has no gluten at all, you have to use more of the wheat flour to compensate. I don't have a regular batch to compare to but I'm quite happy with these.