Thursday, June 17, 2010

eating locally
















Tomatoes: This is the first year I've actually gotten tomatoes from plants planted in my yard. (I have two Romas, one grape, one patio, and one beefsteak). There are few things more satisfying than picking a sun-warmed tomato from the backyard and eating it (drizzled with olive oil and sprinkled with kosher salt, cracked pepper, and torn basil) within minutes. Ben has declared that he likes tomatoes from our garden. I just have to convince him that all tomatoes come from some garden, some where.
Blackberries: Truthfully, I didn't even like blackberries that much. Until. This year the kids and I picked blackberries from a "farm" a stone's throw from our neighborhood. Baked into a cobbler the next day and topped with Brenham's own Blue Bell Homemade Vanilla--I'm a believer. WOW!

Blueberries: The kids enthusiasm quickly wilted in the morning sun (it was only 80 at 9:00!); we managed to pick a paltry pound of blueberries before William's cries for a nap sent us home. They did perk up for blueberry pancakes for lunch!

Cookies: Okay, no local ingredients but aren't they adorable! I baked them for William's birthday this past weekend along with a Texas sheet cake for the adults.

Not-so-local: As I write this, I'm sucking the last dregs of my Cheerwine float, made with the last can of imported North Carolina soda. If I could just get that on home delivery and a Publix on the corner....

4 comments:

Goes On Runs said...

have missed you.... love those tomatoes. won't have any "true seasonal" ones until august.

Nana said...

Love the blueberry face on W. Hope you have some blackberries left for your dad this weekend. Enjoy Father's Day with your dad. What a rare treat for him!

Guidedogpup said...

The 'not so local' sounds likes a BIG hint to me. My folks 'bootlegged' it from NC to FL, maybe yours can sneak some on their next trip down. Or the next...

U said...

Yeah, I'd do anything for Cheerwine. Well... almost.
When I lived in Philly we would cross the bridge over to NJ just to buy those huge, ripe beefsteak tomatoes. Yum indeed.