Strawberry Lemonade Popsicles

I may owe some licensing fees to Mattel for these...

So apparently in food blog land it's popsicle week, which I didn't know was coming but the timing is fantastic, since I whipped these guys up last weekend. I'll just put these right here as my bandit contribution. It's the pinkest rebellion in the history of everything.

A few weeks ago a friend "forced" several meyer lemons on me from the crap ton that grow on her tree. Suddenly offered a mountain of lemons I had no idea what to do with, I panicked and politely only took four. Luckily, my stupidity still left me with exactly the right amount of lemon juice to mix with some leftover strawberry syrup I had lying around*, and once I topped it off with soda water, I had the most electric pink, refreshing, tart strawberry lemonade ever. It was crazy good, and I immediately wanted to replicate it. 

*Apparently I have become this person. I'm rolling my eyes too.

But then, as so often happens, my brain kept running, right past "make more lemonade" to "make more lemonade but as popsicles".  So I blended up some strawberries with lemon juice and condensed milk and created the prettiest and pinkest strawberry lemonade popsicles the exact color of the battery-powered Barbie convertible I drove when I was four. 

Can a popsicle violate a color trademark? Lawyer friends please let me know.

It may be barely hot outside here in SF and I don't have that sweet ride anymore, but I'm going to go find a sunny spot to stand in and eat one of these, then close my eyes and pretend the wind whipping through my hair is from the breeze as I cruise down the driveway at a reckless 5 mph. 

Zoom Zoom.


Strawberry Lemonade Popsicles

Makes 10 popsicles in a standard mold.

3 cups strawberries, hulled and quartered
2 Tbs sugar
juice of 4 lemons, regular or meyer or a mix
1 can sweetened condensed milk

  1. In a large mixing bowl, sprinkle the sugar over the strawberries and let sit until strawberries have begun to release their juices. 
  2. Using a blender or food processor, puree the strawberries until completely liquefied. Strain the puree to remove seeds, if desired.  You should have roughly about 1 3/4 cup of puree.
  3. Pour the strawberry puree back into your mixing bowl, add lemon juice and stir to combine. Add condensed milk and whisk into the puree until the mixture is completely smooth and combined.
  4. Pour the mixture into popsicle molds and freeze until hard. 

Burrata Toast with Stonefruit, Arugula, and Pancetta

Oh burrata, how I love thee.

That beautiful pouch of mozzarella encasing a treasure of cream and curds. I mean, what could be better?

It was really only a matter of time until I brought my burrata obsession home with me. It has taken over basically every menu in this city, and yet, that apparently was not enough to satisfy me.

I brought it into my home.  

I may never be the same.

I really shouldn't get too deep into my feelings about this dish because it might get weird but I will say that I ate this for four days straight and I did not get sick of it.  The creamy burrata pairs so well with this season's bounty of stone fruit.  I threw in some peppery arugula and salty pancetta, and piled the whole mess on top of a piece of sourdough toasted in the pancetta grease.  I cackled with glee that I had created something so wonderful, then I threw moderation to the wind and devoured the whole thing.

Look at that. I just don't have words.


Burrata Toast with Stonefruit, Arugula, and Pancetta

Serves 2 (or 4 if you can restrain yourself)

1 pouch of burrata, room temperature
2 thick slices sour dough bread
1/4 cup diced pancetta
1 peach, plum, or nectarine or any combo you wish
1 handfull cherries, pitted (I used a mix of red and rainer cherries)
1 couple handfulls of arugula
flaky sea salt
fresh ground black pepper
olive oil

  1. In a skillet, cook the pancetta until crispy. Transfer to paper towels to drain. Pour out most of the rendered grease but leave a little in the bottom of the pan. In the skillet, toast the sliced bread in the pancetta fat for a few minutes on each side, until golden.
  2. To assemble: pile arugula on top of the hot toast so it can start to wilt a little bit. Top with 1/2 of the burrata. Sprinkle with sea salt and black pepper, then top with half the fruit and half the pancetta. Drizzle a little olive oil over the top, if desired. Repeat with the second piece of toast and remaining ingredients.