
A piece of rhubarb buckle
At the farmer’s market I bought a few pounds of rhubarb. Normally, I would make a crisp, but since I had so much rhubarb, I thought I’d try something else first. Enter the buckle.
A buckle is a dessert from the colonial times. It is related to the crisps, cobblers, and brown bettys. A cake-like batter is made with fresh fruit folded into it, and then a lovely crumble topping it added to the top of the batter just before baking. It is essentially the marriage of a cake and a crisp.
The buckle turned out very well: a delicious large crumbed cake filled with bits of tart rhubarb and topped with a buttery crumble. For my recipe I used sucanat for the crumble topping and as half of the sugar in the cake. Sucanat retains more of the nutrition found in sugar cane, so it isn’t all empty calories like refined white sugar. It also has a richer flavor, similar to molasses. It works really well for this type of recipe. Don’t be fooled though, sugar is still sugar and this is just a treat!
Here is my recipe, inspired by The Washington Post.







