Cherry Tart Recipe & How To Select The Best Fresh Cherries
Cherry season is fleeting—just a couple of weeks in some locations. It is also frustrating because we’re not having a good cherry season this year. Every cherry we’ve sampled has been bland. They look good but don’t deliver on the palate.
The term “cherry-pick” is a hint. The expression comes from harvesting the fruit: The pickers are instructed to carefully select the ripe fruit only. Unlike other tree fruits, cherries don’t ripen or improve in flavor after they’re picked. Are we getting unripe fruit? Have growing conditions been substandard? Is the fruit mishandled after it’s harvested? We want answers (but more importantly, we want good cherries). > July 16th is National Cherry Day. > Check out all the cherry holidays and more cherry recipes. You can’t bite into a peach to see if it’s sweet enough before you buy it, but you can score a cherry. It’s the only way to make sure you’ll be happy with them. If the flavor doesn’t deliver, it’s not worth the calories if you’re looking to snack on raw fruit. Find another variety. Keep tasting cherries as you come across them, and hope for a successful score. |
[1] Fresh Bing cherries are one of the happy signs of summer (photo © Foods From Spain).
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This is not to say that you can’t use less flavorful cherries to make delicious cherry pies, tarts, jams, sauces, or ice creams. In recipes, added sugar compensates for what’s missing in the fruit. |
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REAL CHERRY PICKING: WHAT TO LOOK FOR
While these tips don’t ensure that the fruit will be sweet, they’re a good start: |
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The most demanding part of the recipe is pitting the cherries. You don’t need a cherry pitter. |