Friday, March 8, 2013

The Chokecherry Saga Continues

Last week, after quite a bit of research on a good, mechanical way to remove the pits from the pulp, skin, and juice of chokecherries, we thawed out a few bags of chokecherries to attempt to make some chokecherry leather, which we've heard is very good and highly nutritious.  I was optimistic as I read that several people simply remove the spring from their Victorio food strainer and it works the chokecherries through just fine.  Well, we don't have a Victorio but I thought maybe it would still work to just remove the spring from our Kitchen Aid Fruit and Vegetable Strainer for my stand mixer.

I put a spoon of chokecherries in the hopper and turned it onto the slowest setting.  It was going okay but didn't even get any of the juice/pulp to drop into the bowl before I started hearing the pits breaking.  Defeated, I turned it off to avoid any permanent damage to my machine and cleaned it all up.

For the next several days, I tried to come up with something else that might work.  I have, through that research, discovered that the plains indians just crushed the pits up and dried it with the leather.  Apparently, the process of drying (cooking, essentially) removes the potential for cyanide to be present, so then the pits are safe to eat.  I still haven't tried this yet as I have another method I'm going to attempt first.

In the process of this research, I found a Crow Indian recipe for chokecherry cake that I decided to try.  It calls for just one cup of crushed, pitted chokecherries.  I decided to do that by hand, which took about an hour.  (Definitely not going to be doing this by hand for all of the gallons upon gallons of chokecherries we have in our freezer!)



Once that was done, it was a quick cake to put together, though I did cook it in a 9 x 13 pan instead of the angel food cake pan it says to use.


I wasn't quite sure how good it would be but I was serving it to some friends of ours anyway!  I worried a little about not having any kind of frosting over top, but what I would have done was a mix of Cool Whip and chokecherry syrup only we didn't have any Cool Whip.  It went over really well, though, and we had only about 1/3 of the cake left at the end of the night!  My husband said I could definitely make it again.  Next time I plan to try it with the frosting.


1 comment:

  1. We used to have lots of choke cherries when we lived in Ontario. I often wanted to do something with them but just never got around to it. They would have made some great organic wine, back when I used to make wine from anything and everything. I quit making it before I discovered the choke cherries. I haven't seen any out here in BC.

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