Garden & Gun

Beyond the Pie

Sara Bradley knew better than to ask for her mom’s strawberry pie before spring. “It was my favorite, but I had to wait because it be made with fresh strawberries,” says the chef and proprietor of the restaurant Freight House in her hometown, Paducah, Kentucky.fruit is in a barbecue sauce (see recipe). “When we buy strawberries for the restaurant, we’re buying thirty pounds at a time, they’re picked right off the farm, and the ones on the bottom of the bucket are always a little squished,” she says. “So we reserve them for sauce.” In addition to using the tangy sauce to glaze ribs and lacquer chicken, she likes to drizzle it over grilled carrots on a bed of arugula, sprinkled with sliced strawberries. To keep strawberries fresh at home, put off washing until you’re ready to use them, and tuck a folded paper towel into the container they’re stored in. And when selecting them at the u-pick or farmers’ market, grab dark, fragrant berries (they don’t continue ripening once picked, so what you pick is what you get flavor-wise). If you’re unsure, ask if you can have a taste…though it will be hard to stop at one. “It would be impossible to be in a field of fresh strawberries,” Bradley says, “and not enjoy a few straight off the vine.”

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