Distant Field Burning |
Apples
Walking into Walmart a few days ago, I immediately saw a display table filled with beautiful green Granny Smith apples in white sacks. “98 centsper pound” read the sign. I’d been thinking about apple pie and the price seemed good, so I gave in to temptation and dropped one of those apple-filled white sacks into my cart.
Walking into Walmart a few days ago, I immediately saw a display table filled with beautiful green Granny Smith apples in white sacks. “98 centsper pound” read the sign. I’d been thinking about apple pie and the price seemed good, so I gave in to temptation and dropped one of those apple-filled white sacks into my cart.
Mike enjoys late summer sun |
Fast
forward a couple of hours and I arrived home with my purchases. In preparing my
receipts for the financial manager, the cost of the apples caught my eye --
over $8.00, or $1.77 per pound. That difference of 79 cents per pound was
noticeable, and beyond that, it was the principle of the thing.
So
– it was back to Walmart, carrying the sack of apples and my receipt to
customer service. I was in luck – no line of testy customers ahead of me. “I was
charged $1.77 per pound for this sack of apples,” I said, “and I could have
sworn the sign said 98 cents per pound.”
The path home over June's field |
“Hey, I’m
doing all of us a favor,” I should have said. “I’m not letting the store get away
with over-charging us.”
Soon
enough the issue was resolved and I walked out of Walmart with the apples and
$3.57 in my pocket.
Pears
In
late summer I traditionally dry a box of pears, so on this same shopping day, I
stopped at a local produce mart. $16.99 read the sign on the box of beautiful
pears, but nearby I spied a box of less lovely pears (culls, I call them) marked
at $6.99. This fruit was ripe and ready to use which was important due to time
constraints. And it worked out perfectly. I spent Wednesday afternoon preparing
the pears for the drier, and by Thursdays afternoon they were done and ready
for packaging.
Peaches
Friends
gave us two buckets of peaches from their tree today. I could see they were
short of buckets and still had peaches to pick, so right away I transferred the
fruit to a box and returned the buckets. Wouldn’t I take more peaches, they
asked. So, I said I would and there went my sewing time for today, which was
probably already gone anyway.
That’s
the trouble with fruits and vegetables in season. Processing must be given
priority in our schedules, and while there’s a certain comfort in preparing the
bounty of the season for later use, I know we wouldn’t starve if we didn’t have
it. It just isn’t for me as it was for the farm wives of yesteryear who
depended on the fruit of the land to feed their families. Still, my sense of
economy dictates that I should do what I can to preserve this bounty – wisdom,
economy, etc.
At
home in the kitchen, I examined each and every peach, dividing out those that
needed to be used immediately and setting aside a full box that need a little
time to ripen. With the ripest, I made a large peach pie. Mike tells me that
peach pie is one of his very favorites. If I ever knew that, I’d forgotten it. Well,
he’s going to be in “peach pie heaven” for at least the next three days.
And
now, what shall I do with the rest of them? KW
4 comments:
That camera is really something! VERY sharp photos. Are you happy with it?
Oh yes . . . I just have to learn to use it appropriately. As we have discussed, though, "auto mode" is great -- at least for daytime shots. I just need to take time to experiment with it.
I also don't like to carry it around unprotected, so I'll probably decide where I want to take pictures and then carry it there in the case. I'm sure it wouldn't bother Bess and Nellie to do it that way.
If you are interested in trying something that might be a bit different, try a 2 to 1 mixture of peaches and blueberries in a pie or cobbler. The flavors actually go quite well together.
Good idea, Richard! And also raspberries.
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