Sometimes around here, I find delight in things that no one
else does. Like the smell of fresh second cut hay stacked in the hay garage. Or the one and only hollyhock that appeared
for the first time in three years after I planted it. Or the red earthworms that are everywhere when
I dig in the garden, thanks to all that good horsey compost. So, this morning, I was filled with joy as I
picked the first wild raspberries of the season from the bush behind the barn.
There is an on-going battle between me and my husband about
ripping out the raspberry bushes. I
admit, they show up everywhere. He hates
them with a passion. We have agreed that I am allowed to have one big patch
next to the driveway and another behind the barn. I secretly know about three
other bushes that I try to hide from him, but they aren’t the robust producers
that the big patches are. While the
fruit of the wild raspberries is not as big as the berries found on domesticated
bushes, it is much more intense in its raspberry goodness. The flavor is so super, hyper raspberry-ish
that I usually eat half of what I pick by the time I get the bowl back to the
kitchen.
And for the next two weeks, I will have raspberry muffins,
raspberry pancakes, raspberries on ice cream, cereal, sprinkled on my
salads. There was only one other person
who loved the raspberries as much as I do – my mom. And I will think of her, remember
how we would argue since she always
tried to pick them before they were ripe enough, and how we would eat all of
what we picked by the time we got the bowl to the kitchen so that we would
laugh and have to turn around and go back out and find some more.
4 comments:
I had to grin over the raging battle with your husband. With us, it's the delicious wild blackberries! I love them, and oh how he hates them. :)
What makes those guys so stubborn? Okay, the bushes are a bit prickly and dare I admit it, invasive - but the fruit is the best!
I love picking fresh wild berries. When I was a kid there were wild blueberry bushes that grew by the railroad tracks and also a hidden cove I found with blackberry bushes. They were prickly getting in and out of them but it was worth it. Enjoy your raspberries!
We have wild blackberries here. You generally do shed some blood harvesting them, but the flavor is far superior to store bought fruit.
Another plus for wild berries - waaay higher in antioxidants. I believe thoughtful pruning can maximize production and tame them a little.
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