Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Fruit of the Week: Golden Raspberries


Name: Organic Golden Raspberries

Brand: Driscoll's 

Place of Purchase: Wheatsfield Organic Co-op in Ames, Iowa

Country/Region of Origin: California
Price in Iowa: $2.39 for 6 ounces of fruit

Description: Pretty, yellow aggregate fruit

Flavor: Tart, not too sweet, strong berry flavor

Aroma: Not very fragrant

Texture/Mouth-feel: Organic fruits ripen quicker for some reason, so these berries were rather squishy.

Notes:These golden raspberries were tasty.  They weren't that sweet and has a stronger "raspberry" flavor.  Their true allure is their golden color, which makes them a nice contrast when mixed with red and black raspberries.  However, their stronger flavor and reduced sweetness actually makes them attractive for jam-making.


Too bad they're so darned pricey.  The cultivar that produces the golden berries is owned by a single company, so they are only grown in the US and only available seasonally.  Which isn't a bad thing, but limits the availability of these tart jewels.  Which is another factor that lends to preserving this fruit.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Libation of the week: Trumpetflower Nectar

Name: Trumpetflower Nectar
 
Brand: God made this

Place of Purchase: Free in Ames, Iowa
Full-screen
Country/Region of Origin:Ames, Iowa, USA

Tasting Conditions: Chilled

Price in Iowa: $0.00

Description: a clear, light liquor

Flavors: Sweet, with floral and astringent notes

Mouth-feel: Very light, for sugar water

Aroma: Clean, slightly floral

Notes: At the end of June/beginning of July, the trumpetflowers bloom and fill with sugary nectar.  If you can beat the bugs, you can suck the nectar from the bottom of the bloom.  I didn't want to hurt too many of the plants, so I poured the nectar from the flowers.  It took about 20 flowers to gather half-an-ounce, which I took home and chilled.  There wasn't much of an aroma, and the sucrose overpowered much of the complexity of the nectar.  I did detect some floral notes and a strange astringency, probably fruit acids acting as an anti-fungal.


I just felt like trying something different.  If you have some trumpetflowers in your yard, give them a try.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Cheese of the week: Taleggio


Name: Taleggio

Brand: none listed

Place of Purchase: Wheatsfield Organic Co-op in Ames, Iowa

Country/Region of Origin: Italy

Price in Iowa: $12.17/lb.

Milk
: cow's milk

Processing
: cheese molded into squares, and is then washed in a special brine

Texture
: soft

Color
: straw-colored to orange around rind

Rind
: washed

Aroma
: WOW.  Powerful.  It isn't unpleasant, but strong dairy and wine, with some moldy/woody undertones.

Taste
: Nutty, woody, tart wine flavors that grow stronger as you eat more.  There are some other flavors underneath all of that that I don't fully recognize (something like wood, cherry, and vanilla, but faint)

Mouth feel
: Buttery but unyielding paste.
 
Notes: Everytime I hear about some magically amazing cheese, I'm skeptical.  I search for it and buy it, but I'm skeptical.



Tallegio is such a cheese.  This Northern Italian secret is supposedly the first of the soft cheeses and is so protected that it's hard to get here in the States.  Typically, they have to fly it in special.  Don't ask me how the organic co-op got it, but they did.  So I did.  And boo-yah, this is a good cheese.  Buttery, soft, spreadable paste.  Extremely rich and complex flavor.  I need to keep eating it to discover everything.  Delicious.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Fruit of the Week: Mangosteen


Name: Mangosteen (canned in syrup)

Brand: Lamthong

Place of Purchase: Double Dragon Market in Des Moines, Iowa

Country/Region of Origin: Thailand
Price in Iowa: $1.89 for 8.1 ounces of fruit

Description: Beige, sectional, meaty orbs

Flavor: Tart citrus, peaches, sweet flowery notes 

Aroma: Flowery, with a blunt spicy scent

Texture/Mouth-feel: Sectional, like an orange, but with a single large seed in each section.

Notes: My wife, who has had the fresh fruit, tells me that the canned fruit are unripe.  Which makes sense because the ripe fruits must be eaten right away.  They can not be transported.  So, if I want "the Queen of Fruits" I will either have to go to Southeast Asia or find some unripe fruits and wait wait wait.  The canned ones weren't bad.  I liked them.

Again, I have to apologize about my sideways image.  I rotate it in Photoshop, but the rotation doesn't stick.