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    Back to Good Food

    Good Food

    Market Report

    Laura Avery and David Karp David Karp is a pomologist with UC Riverside.  He also writes for The Los Angeles Times.  Boysenberries are a raspberry / blackberry hybrid with a short season (only late May and June).  It's related to the Loganberry, the Marionberry, and dewberries.  Read David's article in the LA Times . Choose…

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    By Evan Kleiman • May 12, 2014 • 1 min read

    Laura Avery and David Karp

    David Karp is a pomologist with UC Riverside. He also writes for TheLos Angeles Times. Boysenberries are a raspberry / blackberry hybrid with a short season (only late May and June). It's related to the Loganberry, the Marionberry, and dewberries. Read David's article in the LA Times. Choose boysenberries that are dark in color. Find them in Mexico, Southern California and Oregon.

    Daniel Mattern is the chef at Ammo Cafe in Hollywood. They are doing Sunday prix fixe dinners with a them. This Sunday, they're doing an Ode to Cherries. Their main course is roasted cherries with pork.

    Ammo’s Balsamic Roasted Cherries

    Serves 6

    One of our favorite things to do with them is roast them in the wood-burning oven until they burst out of their skin and release their juices. Cooked this way the cherries make a terrific accompaniment for pork or duck, but they can also be served on their own as an appetizer with a nice spoonful of mascarpone.

    For this dish, we prefer the juicy varieties such as Burlatt or Bing. Although a firmer cherry, such as the Brooks variety, holds up in the oven very nicely.

    1 lb of cherries, intact (don’t pit or remove stems)

    2 Tablespoons olive oil

    1/4 cup good quality balsamic vinegar

    Kosher salt and ground black pepper to taste

    1. Place one of the oven racks in the upper section of the oven and preheat to 400°F.

    2. Rinse the cherries with cold water and pad them dry gently with a kitchen towel.

    3. Place cherries in a bowl and toss them with olive oil and balsamic vinegar, and season generously with salt and pepper.

    4. Transfer cherries to a non-reactive baking dish (glass or porcelain are ideal) with the stem standing up. Preferably, the cherries will fit really close to one another. Cover the baking dish with aluminum foil.

    5. Roast the cherries in the oven for 20 minutes or until they start to release their juices. Remove the foil, and place the baking dish back in the oven for another 5 minutes to allow the juices caramelize a bit.

    6. Remove from the oven and let them sit for 5 minutes. Serve cherries as desired spooning on top a little bit of the juice.

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      Evan Kleiman

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