Tutti frutti clafouti

Is there a difference between the food boys and girls are drawn to?

(Perhaps we can leave an interrogation about the perils of essentialising gender identities to the end.)

It’s a notion that gets bandied around this house quite a bit.

“That’s girl food” is the retort that comes from The Hungry One.  It’s usually accompanied by a mildly dismissive sniff. It’s usually when I’m spruiking the merits of tart berries, stone fruit, yogurt or beetroot.  And it’s not because of their pinkish hues.

I think it’s something to do with their cheerful tang. It’s the same sort of freshness you get from a good gossip with a friend. Light, but with some tart barbs for entertainment value. 

Turns out The Hungry One’s theory isn’t far off.  In 2007 a US survey by the Foodborne Disease Active Surveillance Network included some investigation on gendered eating habits. Five per cent more women than men will regularly turn to things like red berries and nuts. Women were also more likely to eat eggs and yogurt. (Shiferaw B, Verrill L, Booth H, Zansky SM, Norton DM, Crim S, Henao OL. Are there gender differences in food consumption? [Abstract]. In: Programs and Abstracts of the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases, Atlanta, GA, March 2008)

Those results may help explain why I made this clafouti twice in two days.

A clafouti’s genus lies somewhere between a pancake and a puffed fruit pudding. It’s a French dessert that’s  classically made with cherries, still carrying their pits. The pits then gift an almond twinge to the batter.

Prizing my dental work, and knowing I had flaked almonds in the cupboard I substituted plums, leaving their frayed stones in a neat pile to one side.

The plum clafouti found a happy audience in me and a bride to be.  I’d love to break gender stereotypes and say we drank beer and cheered at a rugby match, but instead we sipped pink wine and watched Tamara Drewe

We ate the clafouti with vanilla ice cream that puddled and pooled in its airy crevices. The next morning I offered the leftovers to The Hungry One for breakfast. He declined. His loss was my gain.  Even cold, with a pile of berries and a slush of yogurt, it was perfect.

Suffice to say, I’ve fallen for this pudding, and hard.

The night before we decided the only thing that could be improved was the name. The potential rhyming novelty of a ‘Tutti fruitti clafouti’ was too good to pass up.

So the second time I made it I reached for a wider bounty. Soon  nectarines and cherries, peaches and plums  all cuddling together, dotted with butter and dusted with sugar.

It was just as good, if not better. No matter how you feel about fruit-based desserts, a puffed pudding straight from the oven is hard to walk away from. The Hungry One ate half of it before inquiring what it was. 

When I told him its name, he raised an eyebrow and sniffed.

“You’d have to be pretty confident in your manhood to order that” he said.

Luckily he is. Which helps explains why we now make it about once a week.

Tutti Frutti Clafouti 

Adapted from Stevie Parle’s Cherry Clafoutis in the lovely ‘My Kitchen, Real Food from Near and Far

This is an easy dessert to pull together for a small group. It would also be lovely as part of a brunch . It’s best hot, but there’s no reason at all why you can’t eat the leftovers cold, with plenty of yogurt.

Equipment
One  20 cm non stick fry pan, that can go in the oven. 1 mixing bowl. 1 whisk.

Shopping/foraging
80 grams/ 2 1/4 ounces of wholemeal plain flour (you can use normal, but I prefer the nutty flavour of wholemeal)
200 ml of milk
2 beaten large eggs
4 tbsp caster sugar
1 tbsp unsalted butter
500 grams/ 1.1 pounds  of a mixture of stone fruit- plums, peaches, nectarines apricots, cherries
1 handful of flaked almonds

Here’s how we roll

1) Preheat oven to 200 C/ 400 F.

2) Whisk the flour and sugar into the milk and beaten eggs until you have a smooth batter.

3) Slice the fruit into half moons or chunks if they’re large peaches or nectarines. Place in the non stick fry pan and dot with butter and scatter half the sugar over the top. Bake for 10 minutes.

4) Pour the batter over the top of the fruit. Scatter almonds over the top. Bake for 20 minutes.

5) Eat warm, with ice cream. Or cold, for breakfast, with yogurt.

{ 14 Comments }
  1. Love the name (can't beat a bit of rhyming!)and it looks gorgeous. As for gender-based food preferences, I'm not sure. I think it's a myth men don't have a sweet-tooth (have you seen how fast some grown-men will demolish a bag of Haribo) but I'd say after years of cultural conditioning, women do prefer chocolate. And a lot of it comes from external factors – i.e. men will more likely choose the foods they really want to eat and women are more likely to opt for something of a compromise – e.g. something delicious but healthy such as yoghurt and berries.

  2. You've tackled clafouti! I haven't done that one yet. It looks lovely! 🙂

  3. Who knew that there was a gender bias with food!?

    I love the tartness of plums in desserts so that one would be right up my alley.

  4. I would gladly eat this again any day of the week. The deliciousness speaks for itself but I actually think *I* could attempt this and not ruin it completely you've made it so eloquently simple. Love.

  5. Haha I love the idea of food gender bias…there's definitely one in our household, usually divided between those who can eat a whole pack of eggs plus meat from various animals in one day (poss. my boyfriend) and those who could eat a whole cake in one sitting (ok, that would be me). However I managed to get my boyfriend eating some seriously girly looking macarons the other day, and looks like you've won round the hungry one with this gorgeous clafoutis, so there's hope for us all 🙂

  6. Best post title ever. (Oh and it looks damn tasty). That is all.

  7. The only difference I've ever noticed between the food that boys and girls eat is that boys eat a lot more unhealthy food 😀 haha…Though now that I think about it, I don't know many guys who like eating yoghurt!
    This sounds delicious, especially with all those different fruits in them!

  8. I love the look of that dessert. I've never made a clafouti (can barely even pronounce it) but will give it a try.

  9. I've been wanting to make clafouti but haven't tried it out yet. The idea of fluffy pancake meets pudding sounds delicious. Thanks!

  10. I love the nam too! It is funny!
    Your clafoutis looks so appetizing & apart too!

    MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM,…!!! 🙂

  11. Looks fabulous, must try it soon!

  12. Beautiful clafouti! Haha and I laughed about the boy and girl thing–I love your writing!. It's the same with me and my boyfriend. Except for him, if it sounds remotely healthy, he won't touch it on principle!

  13. Yum, looks so delicious!!! I love clafouti, my favourite is a pear version. 😀

  14. oh yum this looks delicious!

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