Delicious Living

Strawberry Shortcake


This healthy strawberry shortcake recipe uses fiber-rich whole-wheat flour and more antioxidant-packed reaspberries

 

This healthier version of an old-fashioned favorite increases the ratio of berries to shortcake and adds whole-wheat flour for fiber and nutrients. Thick Greek yogurt makes a wonderful, healthy stand-in for whipped cream. If your berries aren’t perfectly juicy and ripe, toss chopped berries in a little sugar or agave and macerate for 15 minutes before serving. For best flavor, offer this the traditional Southern way: warm from the oven, with cold berries on top.

1 cup all-purpose flour

1/4 cup whole-wheat pastry flour

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon sea salt

2 tablespoons natural cane sugar

3 tablespoons very cold unsalted butter

1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons low-fat buttermilk

2 pounds fresh strawberries, hulled and chopped

1 cup vanilla Greek yogurt

Whole fresh strawberries, for garnish

1. Preheat oven to 425˚. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

2. Combine flours, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar in a large mixing bowl. Add butter about a teaspoon at a time, using fingers to rub into the flour, until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add buttermilk and stir until ingredients are just blended. Dough should be very moist.

3. Transfer dough to a generously floured work surface, sprinkle with flour, and knead 8–9 times to make dough smooth and pliable. Pull off eight egg-sized pieces; pat and shape into flat rounds. Place on prepared sheet and bake until golden, 10–12 minutes.

4. While shortcakes bake, coarsely chop berries and let stand in a bowl (toss with a little sweetener if desired).

5. Remove biscuits from oven and let cool for 1 minute. Transfer to serving plates. Spoon strawberries over each warm biscuit and top with a dollop of yogurt; or split biscuits crosswise, arrange on plates partly overlapping, and sandwich with berries and yogurt. Serve immediately.

PER SERVING: 183 cal, 5g fat (1g mono, 0g poly, 3g sat), 14mg chol, 6g protein, 29g carb, 3g fiber, 212mg sodium

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In marketing natural products in the food service industry, we have gone out of our way to define natural as we all did years ago in the natural products industry. No artificial flavors, colors, minimally processed, no preservatives and now, non-GMO.  I vote to maintain natural as a certification that our industry supports and defines.

on Apr. 25, 2012