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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984

    Local fruit & food bill

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    All this gorgeous local fruit at good prices has ramped up our food bill this summer.

    But we are happily gorging on local blueberries, raspberries, cherries, peaches, apricots. Not to mention also lichee fruit from other parts of the world.

    And as usual, we miss all this bounty by Christmas.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    Quote Originally Posted by shootingstar View Post
    All this gorgeous local fruit at good prices has ramped up our food bill this summer.

    But we are happily gorging on local blueberries, raspberries, cherries, peaches, apricots. Not to mention also lichee fruit from other parts of the world.

    And as usual, we miss all this bounty by Christmas.
    I LOVE berries, to an excessive point. It does drive up the food bill.

    Perhaps we could ride to Richmond next weekend and pick up blueberries and do some freezin' or even spreads or something?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Delaware
    Posts
    528
    The local Riverfront fruit market has exquisite cantaloupes. I'm convinced that add an addictive drug to it since I crave it every time I pass by on the bike.

  4. #4
    Jolt is offline Dodging the potholes...
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    1,668
    Quote Originally Posted by Grog View Post
    I LOVE berries, to an excessive point. It does drive up the food bill.

    Perhaps we could ride to Richmond next weekend and pick up blueberries and do some freezin' or even spreads or something?
    Sometimes if you go to a pick-your-own place the prices are pretty good and you can pick a lot, freeze some and make jam etc. with some. Or there's always finding a patch of wild berries like I did yesterday while out for a trail run...came home with a pint of blackberries and there are lots more on the bushes that have yet to ripen. That made for an extra-good run!
    2011 Surly LHT
    1995 Trek 830

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    We picked two 6-qt pails of blueberries a couple of weeks ago at a pick-your-own place. They still cost an obscene amount (but they were totally worth it)! One's in the freezer, the other one's in our bellies

    Black raspberries, on the other hand, grow wild all along our lane. We've got a 6-qt pail of them plus another quart container in the freezer. Yummy!

    At the farmer's market we're getting peaches and plums, and early apples. Our own apples are a late variety and they're really best after a frost, anyhow. But we'll have a big crop (after losing last year's entire crop to the late spring freeze).

    And the vegies are all coming out of the garden now, except for onions and garlic.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    Black raspberries, on the other hand, grow wild all along our lane. We've got a 6-qt pail of them plus another quart container in the freezer. Yummy!

    At the farmer's market we're getting peaches and plums, and early apples. Our own apples are a late variety and they're really best after a frost, anyhow. But we'll have a big crop (after losing last year's entire crop to the late spring freeze).
    And the vegies are all coming out of the garden now, except for onions and garlic.
    Sounds similar to blackberries? I never did quite figure out the difference amongst mulberries, blackberries...and now black raspberries. My partner makes a wonderful blueberry salad dressing...it has abit of yogurt in it. He sometimes varies it with cranberries.


    Hey, yea Grog people tell me there are some secret blueberry bushes somewhere out in the lowlands there.. We're starting to freeze some 'cause certain the prices won't stay that low. But I haven't picked wild blueberries yet..

    In the women's cycling group that I belonged to ages ago, we organized some rides, where 1 of the rides was 60 kms. that included a strawberry picking farm outside of Toronto.

    I know, I know this sounds so unlike what bike roadies would do.
    Who cares...gain strength from hauling a couple lbs./kgs. of fresh strawberries homeward. Which is what my partner and I did do for 2 early summers ..along with picking fresh snowpeas.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Hillsboro, OR
    Posts
    5,023
    I'm out picking blackberries daily on our property. I've already canned some jam (that I tried tonight and it's amazing!!) and H made cobbler. I've just saved a recipe for blackberry crisp, so we'll be making that this weekend. I also have berries on my cereal every day!

    Blackberries, loganberries and marionberries are all similar types of berries in that when you pick them, the core comes off with them. Raspberries and black raspberries come off leaving the core on the plant (so the berry looks like a little cup). That's the easiest way to tell them apart besides buying them already labeled.

    We also have fresh plums ripe on our trees too...so I've been able to avoid the temptation at the grocery store for most fruit knowing that if we don't consume ours, it'll go to waste. We will be checking out the farmers market this weekend though - and I predict that I'll fall for local peaches/nectarines and melons, despite our laden trees!
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    269

    Addicted to picking berries

    Be careful- once you start it's hard to stop. I've been going to pick your owns, woods out back, friend's blackberry patch all summer and now have about 40 quarts of strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries in the freezer. BF thinks I'm crazy (but I'm going to have high quality local berries on my cereal all year long).

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
    Posts
    359
    Ironically my food bill has gone down because I pedal around to the farm stands and only get certain necessary things at the store. By the time I get to the grocery store, which is at the end of the ride, I have no room for anything non essential! I have to agree though, peaches at 4 bucks a little box is pricey but sooooooooooooooooooooooo gooddddd!!!!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    I grew up in Richmond and often worked picking berries all summer when I was a kid - strawberries, raspberries, blueberries. I always ate more than I brought in tho...

    And the blackberries? I can't bring myself to pay for them. They were weeds that grew freely in the lower mainland - I gorged myself on them every August. Sigh....
    It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot


    My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast

 

 

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