View Full Version : Where you live/lived: Best natural foods you'll miss
shootingstar
11-21-2009, 09:14 PM
To me, for British Columbia would be:
fresh blackberries-- Agree, it's real predatory weed bush. But the wild berries here are best. Sweeter.
fresh sockeye salmon- Sadly, less each year. No one's clear why there's less salmon. Scientists are puzzling big time over this one. :(
fresh raspberries-- B.C. grows the greatest volume in Canada anyway.
For Ontario, since used to live there for several decades:
maple syrup --ok that could be tied with Quebec. British Columbia doesn't produce maple syrup. (I'm sure Vermont produces great stuff but it probably will be more expensive for us up here.)
For Quebec-- its artisan cheeses.
I haven't quite decided about our cranberries since B.C. is one of the lead Canadian provincial cranberry producers. Cranberries are tart, so hard to judge without eating alot of tart. Not something I normally do.
zoom-zoom
11-22-2009, 06:27 AM
Michigan:
blueberries
cherries
Bells' Brewery (Founders, New Holland, and Old Boys' are all in this neck o' the woods, too) beer...ahhh...
I grew up in WI. I miss lots of things from that state, too:
CHEESE
deep-fried cheddar curds
brats (I can get Johnsonvilles here, but it's not the same)
freshly caught lake whitefish
New Glarus beers
For Thanksgiving we are getting together at my brother's place in IL. We aren't having turkey. Instead we are having steak, lasagne, and New Glarus beer...with plenty of cheese and smoked fish.
ehirsch83
11-22-2009, 06:31 AM
mm SOUTH Florida(yes south is all caps b/c our produce can be very different then central and north).
The first is FRESH OJ(which usually comes from central fl). I can not drink OJ that comes from concentrate or doesn't have pulp. Fresh squeezed OJ and Grapefruit juice are the only thing I can drink.
The others are the abundance of mangoes,bananas, tostanos, plantains, star fruit, and all other tropical fruit that is here.
Besides that though, our produce isn't great- but those few fruits I always miss when I move away.
shootingstar
11-22-2009, 03:13 PM
freshly caught lake whitefish.
I miss that after leaving Ontario.
solobiker
11-22-2009, 03:17 PM
I miss the apples I had in NY. I am from Rochester, NY which is upin NW by the lake. They have some of the best apples arround. The apples I get here in CO are only okay. D
zoom-zoom
11-22-2009, 03:44 PM
I miss that after leaving Ontario.
My maternal grandfather was a commercial fisherman and I grew up in a very Scandinavian community. We ate Lake MI whitefish at least every other week. I know I'm probably full of mercury, but yummmm...
OakLeaf
11-22-2009, 04:01 PM
Whenever I'm in Florida I miss fresh foods of all kinds. It's awful.
"Farmers'" markets might have a few dozen local eggs if you get there as soon as they open, but all the fruits and vegetables come from somewhere else. Produce in the grocery store comes wrapped in three layers of EPS trays and plastic wrap. Organic produce in the natural food store comes from Holland or China or, if you're really lucky, California. Plant City strawberries in season excepted, of course. (Organic strawberries still come from California. :mad: Which strawberries are one of the foods that supposedly have the most toxic pesticide residues on them. :()
It's possible to get local food if you go direct to the farmers, but it's 15-25 miles one way for produce, 40 miles (in a different direction) for meats, and AFAIK (probably because of the water shortage) there is no local dairy.
(PS to Emily - most of the commercial orange groves in central Florida shut down after the big freeze in the '80s, whenever it was. Almost all of it comes from south of Palm Bay, which is south Florida, in my book. :cool:)
Aquila
11-22-2009, 04:40 PM
California: artichokes. artichokes. artichokes. Yum! Also apricots, blackberries...
Wisconsin: cheese curds and really good apples
redrhodie
11-22-2009, 04:48 PM
I love walking in the woods and eating berries off the bushes. I found lots of wild strawberries this year, which I hadn't seen since I was a teenager.
Our local corn is good, and we have great corn meal for bread and Johnnycakes. And, of course, we have abundant seafood. I don't eat much of that, so it wouldn't be as missed by me as the berries.
pfunk12
11-22-2009, 05:53 PM
Cameroon, West Africa (when I was a Peace Corps volunteer) - I miss ALL of the fresh fruits and vegetables. Especially the yummy tropical fruit. You could go to the marketplace every single day for your fresh produce - straight from the farm.
shootingstar
11-22-2009, 07:04 PM
California: artichokes. artichokes. artichokes. Yum!
It is rare to see fresh artichokes in our stores. Haven't yet hauled a fresh one home to prepare. It's all been brined in advance, what I've had here. (and delicious).
What does freshly cooked artichoke taste like?
Oak: Didn't know about the lack of fresh certain produce (other than citrus or some tropical). Guess strawberries can't grow in Florida?.
OakLeaf
11-22-2009, 07:27 PM
Guess strawberries can't grow in Florida?.
Plant City, near Tampa, is famous for strawberries. But organic produce of any kind is sort of antithetical to the way Florida envisions itself. (On a related note, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio - among other northern states - all have more photovoltaic installations than Florida. :mad:)
It surprised me to learn that Flagler County grows a lot of potatoes - I wouldn't have thought they could tolerate the climate.
I miss the Quebec cheeses. Badly. They are available here but only some of them, and are more expensive and hard to find.
My mom replenishes my stock of maple syrup regularly so I don't have to buy the over-priced, multi-year-old syrup they sell in B.C. ;)
I miss fresh asparagus. (As in: cut less than 12 hours before it is eaten.) There doesn't seem to be a producer around Vancouver.
I love walking in the woods and eating berries off the bushes.
Same here! Where did you find wild strawberries? I have never run across those but have found blueberries, raspberries and blackberries along some of the trails.
crazycanuck
11-22-2009, 10:11 PM
I think i'd miss the fresh Barramundi..mmmmmm...
Oh, if I moved somewhere where there were no wild strawberries I'd definitely miss them. They are the best berry in the world!
redrhodie
11-23-2009, 04:59 AM
Same here! Where did you find wild strawberries? I have never run across those but have found blueberries, raspberries and blackberries along some of the trails.
Right along the road in Kingston, RI. They're so tiny, they're easy to miss, but they really pack a punch of flavor!
bmccasland
11-23-2009, 05:42 AM
Creole Tomatoes - fresh tomatoes grown in Mississippi delta dirt, Farmer's Market or some local grocers
Satsumas - a type of tangerine - currently in season. Easy to peal, very few seeds, yummy.
Shrimp - packed on ice at the grocery store, not frozen. Wild caught from the Gulf of Mexico. It is most definitely politically incorrect to eat imported shrimp. And there is a taste difference between fresh and frozen. I like mine sauteed in butter/olive oil with garlic and a bit of cayenne pepper.
Crawfish (crawdads, mudbugs) - Louisiana born and bred - not imported. If it has to cross an ocean to get here, it isn't worth eating.
and finally, Smith's Dairy milk - I buy direct from the dairyman Mr. Smith at farmer's market - their milk is pasteurized but not homogenized (you have to shake the carton). They make a wonderful chocolate milk that is the perfect after ride pick-me-up. :) and he passes out shots of it at market. :D
Crankin
11-23-2009, 06:11 AM
Blueberries! We once found an abandoned blueberry farm in some conservation land in S. Yarmouth on the Cape. It was at the end of a cul de sac where we had rented a cottage. We brought bowls and bowls into the woods, to take home and freeze. Now, I get them from local farms.
I miss the Hass avocados we used to pick right off of the trees in our yard in Miami, when I was a teenager. I also miss a lot of the Mexican type food we had in AZ, but not sure if the ingredients are necessarily native. As the years have gone on, I have found a few authentic places here to get Mexican food, but they are all a drive. What I really miss is having the parents of my students make me tamales, enchiladas, etc. for gifts.
katluvr
11-23-2009, 06:21 AM
Oak,
Actually (although not organic) in the right place in Florida you can get fresh produce. Not in my coastal area, but near Ocala where my folks live...lots of sold on the side of the road produce. I think it is the left over or surplus from large commercial lots.
Melons...cateloupe and watermelon, when in season can be bought off the back of the truck in these more rural areas.
I do agree that in the more urban and coast (congested) areas, fresh produces is hard to find. Even the "saturday am market" in teh "city" the procudes does nto look all that fresh and they really don't advertise/say where it is comes from. It really looks like surplus and "fallen off the back of the truck".
I can't even say we have fresh seafood here!
Oh, corn is another thing...early corn (spring) is usually local and fresh.
Although not organic!
K
Atlas
11-23-2009, 10:45 AM
Sweet Corn: This is Iowa, the land of corn. Peaches 'n Cream or Honey 'n Pearls are my favorite kinds.
There are a lot of other great things, we have fantastic farmer's markets, but the corn is the thing I would miss most if I left.
New Mexico - Hatch green chiles, freshly roasted...man I miss that smell and being able to smother almost any food in those bad boys. YUM! http://i209.photobucket.com/albums/bb217/Deepliquid/Smilies/clap.gif
Reesha
11-23-2009, 11:30 AM
Oooo awesome thread idea, ShootingStar
New Hampshire:
Being able to go just off trail on local hikes and fill tupperware container after tupperware container with wild blueberries.
Belgium:
Fresh milk and yogurt from the Ijshoeve just outside Brugge
Soft-ripened cheeses from France and Belgium
Local sausages were always phenomenal
Lake Placid, NY:
Ha, well I lived and worked on an organic farm there so... all of it? The zucchini was always incredible as well as their beets. I loved the pork and lamb we raised as well as the continuous stream of fresh eggs. Tomatoes and basil!
GLC1968
11-23-2009, 02:08 PM
Wow, this should take me down memory lane...
Minnesota: too young to remember any foods
Massachusetts/Maine: steamers, lobster, fried clams, apples and pears off our own trees, oh and those sausage/onion/pepper sandwiches sold late night off carts around downtown Boston...we had a love/hate relationship with those!
Michigan: apple picking, maple-sugar candy, cider mill donuts, raspberries growing wild in our backyard
Wisconsin: Kringle, brats, frozen custard and cheese
Poconos: nothing worth remembering! :p
Florida: strawberries from Plant City and fresh sqeezed OJ from the orchard farms place across the street from us... Oh, and Greek salads with potato salad on them from Tarpon Springs (totally a Tarpon Greek tradition). And from the other coast - we knew an amazing fisherman who would fish in the am to stock his tiny dive restaurant in the PM with the most amazing fish. YUM!
North Carolina: we were fans of a Virginia winery and my husband loved the sweet tea and the BBQ (not my favorites)
Oregon: too many things to list! Blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, hazelnuts, walnuts, salmon, apples, pears, grapes, blueberries, wine, beer, etc.
shootingstar
11-26-2009, 01:32 PM
[COLOR="red"]Crawfish (crawdads, mudbugs) - Louisiana born and bred - not imported. If it has to cross an ocean to get here, it isn't worth eating.
Am not certain if I've had crawfish yet. Sounds like a type of big shrimp.
Just reading this whole thread, makes me want to memorize certain special regional foods to try if I ever get to visit certain areas.
Someone here mentioned hazelnuts. We do have a local poducer here that does sell great stuff. The Northwest coast is also known for its diversity of mushrooms. Some mushroom types are only found in our region. Must be the moist rainforests that make happy growing areas.
Admittedly the high price tag for certain mushrooms, so far is abit of a barrier for us to try cooking freshly picked stuff.
OakLeaf
11-26-2009, 05:36 PM
I'd be surprised if you don't have crawfish in BC - they live in most of north America. We had them in North Dakota.
They're more like little lobsters than big shrimp I guess. Pick up a river rock and you've got a pretty good chance of seeing some underneath. ;)
Bike Chick
11-26-2009, 06:43 PM
For Thanksgiving we are getting together at my brother's place in IL. We aren't having turkey. Instead we are having steak, lasagne, and New Glarus beer...with plenty of cheese and smoked fish.
Spotted Cow is the best!
shootingstar
11-27-2009, 08:04 AM
I'd be surprised if you don't have crawfish in BC - they live in most of north America. We had them in North Dakota.
They're more like little lobsters than big shrimp I guess. Pick up a river rock and you've got a pretty good chance of seeing some underneath. ;)
Most definitely crawfish does not sound familiar to me at all. For certain, we never had them in Ontario in our lakes nor rivers for eating or have never heard of them in that area. But I'm an urbanite.
As for here, next time I would have to scout out our fish mongers' stalls more closely. The edible spotted shrimp, for instance is indigenous to our area.
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