My Nana's Blueberry Buckle
We all have recipes that remind us of childhood. This one reminds me of both childhood and summer. Weeks spent at my grandparents' house in Connecticut, playing in the pool, cuddling the dog, chasing the cousins around the yard. Actually, in my case, I remember a fair amount of corralling the cousins, all of them younger than I. Two weeks of having five little siblings to boss around.
And my Nana had blueberry bushes growing out by the pool. We used to pick them for her, and only the promise of cakes like this one could get us to actually bring any of them inside before eating them all ourselves. Back in Colorado we'd read Blueberries for Sal, about a little girl's blueberry-picking adventures in Maine, and remember the satisfaction of eating fruit plucked straight off the bush.
Nana often had a sheet of blueberry buckle waiting for us by the time we rolled out of bed and made it out onto the covered porch for breakfast. The recipe comes from a small spiral-bound cookbook, shaped like a basket of strawberries. Just the kind of down-home collection such a recipe should be from. As far as old-fashioned American desserts, the buckle is pretty straight forward. It's just a single layer of cake with fruit, usually blueberries, tossed over it and topped with crumbs of butter, flour and sugar. And it makes for wonderful childhood memories.
Nana's Blueberry Buckle
Adapted from A Very Berry Cookbook by Judith Bosley
Adapted from A Very Berry Cookbook by Judith Bosley
2 cups flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg
1/2 cup milk
Topping:
2 cups fresh blueberries
1/2 cup flour
1/4 cup butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Comments
nice blog to read! great post.....
One of the prettiest buckles I have seen! thanks for sharing this beautiful recipe.
John Williams
Zubaida Tariq
Love the blog, really personal and inspiring :-)
R.x
ruairilikes.blogspot.com
jessyburke88@gmail.com
I would love to try this myself for a family picnic in a few weeks.
The recipe didn't give weight measurements, and it's really not at all a finicky recipe. Wiki says that 120 grams of white flour should be about 1 cup, and I think you'll be fine with that since it really is forgiving.