I must have been a farmer in a previous life. For as long as I can remember I've been fascinated by growing things that can be eaten. I can't fully explain the magic of that for a city kid, but to actually see the stuff that comes out of the cans or the freezer case actually hanging from plants or pushing up out of the ground used to blow my mind.
I grew up in the city of San Francisco, The Sunset District in the last remaining area of native urban sand dunes in the city. My street consisted of the characteristic San Francisco row houses and then.....The Sahara. For a kid it was endless fun but I was more interested in the three scrawny fruit trees we had in our back yard. Apple, cherry and Bosc pear.
I was the only one who seemed to be interested in them and I picked and cooked anything I could get off of them. In foggy San Francisco it wasn't much.
When I moved to Santa Monica I had a strawberry guava tree, neighbors would give me their loquats for chutney and there was also a gigantic Meyer lemon tree that kept the neighborhood supplied, until we discovered it was so gigantic because it was drinking directly out of the bottom of the swimming pool.
Here in Sonoma, many things grow wild. There are olives and cactus pears, pomegranates and figs and lemons, and loquats and blackberries, and grapes and plum trees.
Our place is covered in blackberry vines and every summer I battle the deer for dibs. Until a few months ago I thought that was all we had. Then we cleared brush as part of Sonomas' fire safe program and what did we find underneath it all? Two plum trees, a Santa Rosa plum and a Cherry Plum. I was over the moon.
I couldn't wait to pick the fruit and do something with it. Chutney? Jam? What to make? The Cherry Plums weren't ripe yet, and weren't enough plums on the Santa Rosa tree to make any chutneys or jams, so I settled on a crostata. I decided to bake one for our local gathering at Tuesdays' Sonoma Farmers' Market.
I'd picked about 2 pounds of small plums off my tree, just the exact amount I figured I'd need. In fact, just the exact amount that I could get off the tree.
I love making crostata because they always look so homey and rustic, and they always take a great picture.
Making the crostata is a two step process. The crust can be made a day ahead and kept in the fridge overnight, as long as it's taken out about 30 minutes before it's rolled out. If you make the crust the same day you're baking, just make sure it chills for at least an hour. Here's what to do