Afew years ago, I decided to spend a summer focused on preserving fruit butters instead of my beloved jams.
I went the butter route because I realized that while I loved the act of making jam, I needed my canning habit to involve less sugar and have smaller yields.
Fruit butters are made from whole pureed fruit that is cooked down slowly over low heat, until the water is dissolved and the natural sugars are concentrated and delicious. You end up with a fairly small amount of spreadable, flavorful product that needs very little in the way of additional sugar.
Since pledging to make more fruit butters, I’ve developed a personal calendar of favorite butters.
In late June, I make apricot butter. During blueberry season, I cook down pounds of berries into a low sugar spread. And in late summer, when the freestone peaches arrive, I oven-roast them until thick and sweet.
However, the true start to my butter season comes in mid-May, with the tandem arrival of strawberries and rhubarb. An established duo for pie, these two ingredients make a divine butter.
It’s good for spreading on toast, for dolloping into bowls of oatmeal, or as a fruit-on-the-bottom in a cup of plain yogurt.
I like to make it in fairly small batches to keep it manageable and affordable (if you don’t have a patch in your backyard, rhubarb can get spendy). I also have a little trick to share that makes quick work of the strawberries and ensures that you don’t have to dirty your blender more than once.
I start the prep for this butter by cleaning and hulling the strawberries. As I work, I drop the whole berries into the blender container. Once they’re all in there, I puree them until smooth.
Then I pour the berry pulp into a saucepan or Dutch oven, add the chopped rhubarb and 1 cup of sugar and bring it to a simmer.
It will look ridiculous at first, with the chunks of rhubarb bobbing in the strawberry puree. However, the heat and the act of stirring will result in the rhubarb melting into the berries. The finished product will benefit texturally because the fibers in the rhubarb will still be intact.
The end result is a thicker, more spreadable butter in less cooking time (and with no noticeably fibrous rhubarb).
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