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Don't Let Summer End Without Making Strawberry Shortcake

These shortcake biscuits are easy to make and a million times better than store-bought.

 

Being raised in New England with its four distinct seasons, summer foods and dishes meant many things to me - but one always stood out - Strawberry Shortcake.  It just doesn't seem like summer without it.

My mother made the best Strawberry Shortcake (it was my grandfather's favorite) and she of course made her own biscuits.

They are not too hard to make and are so much better than store-bought. Try this recipe. You can't mess up these biscuits as there is no rolling, cutting or shaping.

Strawberry Shortcake

Serves 6

Biscuits:

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 T baking powder

4 T sugar

½ tsp. salt

4 T unsalted butter, cut into cubes

¾ cup light cream

1 egg, slightly beaten

1 tsp. vanilla

In the bowl of a food processor fitted with the steel blade, combine the flour, baking powder, sugar and salt.  Add the butter and pulse/process until the butter is completely incorporated into the flour mixture. (If you don't have a food processor, put all the ingredients into a large bowl and use a pastry knife or pastry blender to incorporate the butter into the flour mixture.) 

Transfer the flour mixture from the food processor to a mixing bowl.  Stir in the cream, egg and vanilla.  Mix with a rubber spatula or wooden spoon until combined, but don’t over mix.

Don’t worry – the biscuit dough will be very, very sticky.

As best as you can (wet hands), divide the dough into 6 portions and plop them on a cookie sheet fitted with a piece of parchment paper.  They will look like 6 freeform, but rounded mounds.

Bake in a preheated 375 degree oven for 16 minutes.  Transfer immediately to a wire rack.

Filling:

About 4 cups sliced fresh strawberries mixed with 3-4 T sugar – let sit in the refrigerator for a few hours to become juicy.

Real whipped cream:

1 pint whipping cream

1 T sugar

½ tsp. real vanilla extract

With electric beaters, beat the cream, sugar and vanilla until medium peaks form. 

To assemble:

For each serving, take one biscuit and cut in half.  Some of my relatives like to lightly spread the biscuit with softened butter. On top of one half with the cut side facing up, smother with about ½ cup of strawberries and juice. Add the other half of the biscuit as the top and add a few more strawberries.  Top with a big dollop of whipped cream.

For smaller-sized desserts, serve half of the biscuit with strawberries and whipped cream on top. This version makes 12 portions. 

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Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 07:06 pm
Politicians are not CEOs. Elected officials are not CEOs. The comparison is not appropriate, butRead More it does fit with Mr. Morici's misplaced CEO worship. The criticisms may be valid, but they must be examined as political or legal criticisms. The government as a business comparison only increases the power of the corporate state. I also note that Mr. Morici's credo which he attributes to President Obama, "We’ll do as we please, stop us if you can" is a very accurate portrayal of predatory capitalism.
MAC May 24, 2013 at 01:23 pm
Maria, your dismissive and divisive 'analysis' ignores the fact that POTUS is anRead More "executive" position, also "Commander-in-Chief" of the military! O had exactly ZERO "executive" experience, which--along with his anti-business and anti-America views--explains his failures. Mr. Morici's assessment of O's job performance is perfectly pragmatic and relevant, while your doting worship of the "Agitator-in-Chief" is rather pathetic, as well as being irrelevant.
Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 12:40 pm
The author of the article quoted endlessly above is Peter Morici, a Professor of InternationalRead More Business at the University of Maryland. I suppose he is to be forgiven if he sees everything through a business lens, after all it has given him a very comfortable livelihood for decades. But it is still a faulty lens on this topic and he should know better.