Short Order - Broward




Add to Technorati Favorites

Blogroll

WTF Is It?!? Round 4

Fri Jul 25, 2008 at 09:05:26 AM

Rarest of the Rare

Every year around this time, I get an email from a friend obsessed with a fruit that, until recently, I'd never seen or tasted. He claims that the halcyon summers of his youth were saturated with the sugary tartness of this sublime edible. Since my friend doesn't seem to understand that there are literally hundreds of fruits and vegetables no longer available to the average consumer, thanks to corporate agribusiness, which breeds produce for characteristics that have nothing whatever to do with flavor (ie shelf-life, ease of transport, and resistance to pests), he continues to yearn for what he can't have... what he has irretrievably lost...

a foodstuff that, unless slow/local foodists have their way, will probably become extinct soon enough, along with the 97 PERCENT OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES THAT HAVE GONE EXTINCT SINCE 1900. And then even Manhattanites haunting the greenmarkets of Union Square will remember these little darlings with nostalgia.

For now, though, anybody who visits New York City between, say, late July and early September can find them -- They're not exactly abundant, but they're here.

Anybody want to tell me WTF they are?
As usual, the winner wins the certain knowledge that he or she is smarter than at least 97 percent of all extinct vegetables.

Here ya go:

early%20santa%20rosas.jpg

Here's how they look after a couple of days ripening in a bowl at home:

plums%20day%203.jpg

Category: WTF is it?!?

3 Comments:

Eric says:

Those look like Missouri Jonathan apples. They're about the size of a plum and are softer and sweeter than most apples. They also make damn fine cider.

NY NiteRiter says:

Hmmm...They could be Newtown apples....Maybe?....

gail shepherd says:

Thanks folks, these were smart guesses, and this was a tough one. These are actually a type of Japanese plum called the Santa Rosa, usually grown in California and Arizona, but apparently some orchards produce them even up in New York (unfortunately Florida is too hot for them). They're not entirely impossible to get, and they're in season now. You can order them here: http://www.diamondorganics.com/prod_detail_list/18
-- and I'll testify that they're delicious, and gorgeous to look at. I'm bringing a bag home with me from NYC today.

Post a comment

Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.



Broward Palm Beach Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff