Willies Crisp Recipe
Yield: 9 ServingsRecipe by luhu.jp
Ingredients:
1 cup: Flour,
1 cup: Sugar,
1 tsp: Baking powder,
1/2 tsp: Salt,
1: Egg, beaten
5: To 6 cups peeled, seeded, sliced fruit, or stemmed berries
1/2: To 3/4 cup sugar,
2 tbsp: Flour,
1/4 lbs: Butter, melted
Directions:
I love cobblers, crisps, etc., but never make them. This one may
change my mind. What can you say about a recipe that starts like
this?
"...When I called her, she read me the recipe from a small black cook
that contains, she says, the recipes that have no peer, the benchmark
recipes. Willies Crisp is part of this collection, and although I
have no idea who Willie is, I do know that his is the only crisp Ive
ever had that was crisp. It is perfect on top of fruit or berries."
Preheat the oven to 375F. Have ready an 8 x 8-inch baking dish (no
need to butter it). Put 1 cup flour, 1 cup sugar, the baking powder
and salt in a large mixing bowl. Stir to mix well. Make a well in the
center of the dry ingredients and add the beaten egg. (Dont add the
egg now unless you are going to bake this right away. The sugar will
begin to melt, and the mixture wont crumble and spread properly.)
Stir mixture with a fork. It should be crumbly; if it seems too dry,
add a little more egg. Put the fruit or berries into another mixing
bowl. Stir together the 2 tablespoons flour and sugar to taste. Add
to the fruit and toss lightly to coat. Spoon fruit into the baking
dish and spread evenly. Sprinkle the crisp mixture evenly over the
top. Drizzle the melted butter evenly over the crisp mixture. Bake
for about 40 minutes, or until the topping is golden. Serve warm with
whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.
Serves 9.
PER SERVING: 325 calories, 3 g protein, 56 g carbohydrate, 11 g fat
(7 g saturated), 51 mg cholesterol, 250 mg sodium, 2 g fiber.
Marion Cunningham, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/15/92.
Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; November 1 1992.
Source from luhu.jp
change my mind. What can you say about a recipe that starts like
this?
"...When I called her, she read me the recipe from a small black cook
that contains, she says, the recipes that have no peer, the benchmark
recipes. Willies Crisp is part of this collection, and although I
have no idea who Willie is, I do know that his is the only crisp Ive
ever had that was crisp. It is perfect on top of fruit or berries."
Preheat the oven to 375F. Have ready an 8 x 8-inch baking dish (no
need to butter it). Put 1 cup flour, 1 cup sugar, the baking powder
and salt in a large mixing bowl. Stir to mix well. Make a well in the
center of the dry ingredients and add the beaten egg. (Dont add the
egg now unless you are going to bake this right away. The sugar will
begin to melt, and the mixture wont crumble and spread properly.)
Stir mixture with a fork. It should be crumbly; if it seems too dry,
add a little more egg. Put the fruit or berries into another mixing
bowl. Stir together the 2 tablespoons flour and sugar to taste. Add
to the fruit and toss lightly to coat. Spoon fruit into the baking
dish and spread evenly. Sprinkle the crisp mixture evenly over the
top. Drizzle the melted butter evenly over the crisp mixture. Bake
for about 40 minutes, or until the topping is golden. Serve warm with
whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.
Serves 9.
PER SERVING: 325 calories, 3 g protein, 56 g carbohydrate, 11 g fat
(7 g saturated), 51 mg cholesterol, 250 mg sodium, 2 g fiber.
Marion Cunningham, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/15/92.
Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; November 1 1992.
Source from luhu.jp