Daily Dish

The inside scoop on food in Los Angeles

Category: Fruit

What's hitting its peak in July? Santa Rosa Plums

Santa_rosa_plums 
Introduced in 1906, the Santa Rosa is still the gold standard for farmers market plum flavor, though it has fallen out of favor commercially. Click here to find out how to choose, store and prepare these ruby delights. And take a spin through one of our most popular photo galleries: Market Fresh: Cooking through the seasons. It's your guide to feasting on fruits and vegetables when they're at their height of freshness. We have recipes, too, from the L.A. Times Test Kitchen.

--Rene Lynch
Twitter / renelynch

Photo credit: David Karp / For The Times

Anarchy in the fruit world!

Fruit600
It used to be that a peach was a peach and a plum was a plum, and that was it. Now, however, breeders are coming up with complex hybrids between species, such as fruits that are a combination of peaches, apricots and plums, and cherries or nectarines and plums.

And what the heck are you supposed to call them? Read on as our farmers market expert, David Karp, picks through it all and explains why you should care:

Photo: What kind of fruit is that? A blend of plum, cherry, apricot and peach. Credit: David Karp / For The Times

What's fresh at the farmers market? Early figs

Earlyfigs
Early figs hit their peak in July. Connoisseurs debate whether these figs are sweeter than fruit from the main harvest. The rest of us? We're just happy to have them available. Click here for details on how to choose, store and prepare early figs.

PLUS:

Photos: Your guide to the seasons' freshest produce

Market Watch: David Karp's weekly report on what's fresh at the farmers market

Interactive map: Find your local farmers market

Photo: David Karp / For The Times

Video: Strawberry dumplings


 


Now that Market Watch columnist David Karp has schooled you in the finer points of strawberries, what are you going to do with them? Watch this video of TImes Test Kitchen manager Noelle Carter making strawberry dumplings. That's right, strawberry dumplings: Click here for the recipe. They were a huge hit in the test kitchen, meaning there were many people who just conveniently, coincidentally, happened to drop by for a visit each time Noelle tested a new batch as she worked to perfect her recipe for publication.

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A world of extraordinary flavors in specialty and exotic strawberries

You think you know everything about buying strawberries? Read this

--Rene Lynch
On Twitter @renelynch

It's a wild, wild strawberry

Wild
Strawberry school is back in session. Our Market Watch columnist David Karp returns with Part Two of his berry primer.

And this time, it's just wild.

Last week, Karp gave us a buying guide to farmers market strawberries, focusing on standard varieties. Let us now consider specialty and exotic strawberry varieties, both from farmers markets and further afield. And click here to check out his photo gallery of some of the most unusual strawberries you'll ever see.

PLUS: Cooking through the seasons -- your guide to choosing, storing and preparing the season's freshest produce.

--Rene Lynch
On Twitter @renelynch

Photo credit: Wild strawberries grown by Pudwill Berry Farms in Nipomo at the Santa Monica farmers market.

Fennel showing up at farmers markets

Fennel

Fennel, the most fragrant of vegetables, is now at its peak of abundance and quality. Of the half a dozen stands at the Hollywood farmers market that sell it, Finley Organic Farms, which grows the Zefa Fino variety in Santa Ynez, has the sweetest and most tender and aromatic bulbs, ideal for eating raw in salads. Finley also sells at the Culver City, Beverly Hills and Saturday Santa Monica markets. But it's hard to go wrong: The Xiong farm of Clovis has pristine specimens, and Underwood Family Farms of Somis has large, plump bulbs.

Read more in David Karp's weekly Market Watch report, bringing you the latest farmers market news and the inside track on the season's freshest produce. 

Photo credit: David Karp / For The Times

What's hitting its peak now? Jerusalem artichokes

Jerusalem
They look more like raw ginger than anything else. Whatever you call them, Jerusalem artichokes have a crisp texture and a mildly sweet flavor (a better alternative name is "earth apple"). Click here for details, recipes and your guide to cooking through the seasons.
 
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Photo credit: Wally Skalij, Los Angeles Times

Why we love L.A.: fresh strawberries in December

Strawberries
Elsewhere in the country, it's frosty and freezing. After all, it's December.

But in L.A.? We're still reaching for our sunscreen and enjoying freshly grown Gaviota strawberries, above, courtesy of Harry's Berries in Oxnard.

Admittedly, strawberries are unusual this time of year. Just chalk it up to one more reason we put up with the traffic to live here. Check out this photo gallery of the luscious fruits and vegetables on sale recently at the Hollywood farmer's market.

If you're lucky, you can also find them at your local market.

If you live in L.A., that is.

--Rene Lynch

On Twitter @renelynch

RECENT & RELATED

Market Watch: David Karp's weekly report on the farmers markets

MAP: Explore your local farmers market

Seasonal Cooking: We show you what to buy now -- and how to cook it. Recipes included

At the Santa Monica Pico farmers market: Kiwis, dates, Fuyu persimmons and more

Fuyus
The Santa Monica Pico farmers market on Saturdays has a lower profile than the big Wednesday venue on Arizona, but it's an excellent market in its own right. It's in an attractive location, the recently renovated Virginia Park, and it's substantial in size, with 35 produce vendors and seven prepared food stalls. Most important, Ted Galvan, who has managed the market since its establishment in 1992, vets the farmers to make sure they actually grow what they sell. Many managers don't bother or don't have the time to conduct farm inspections, but Galvan -- whose family used to own a local chain of Mexican restaurants named Hacienda Galvan -- has visited virtually all of his growers.

Eighty-seven-year-old Harry Nicholas, resplendent in a purple fedora with a faux leopard band, has started to bring Hayward kiwifruit, the standard green-fleshed variety, from his 5-acre planting in Orange Cove, which he picked two weeks ago. He placed the fruits in storage, then briefly treated them with ethylene gas and left them in a warm room for a day to ripen, he said, so they're ready to eat straight out of the tray. Kiwis store well and Nicholas will have them into April, but they're at their sprightliest right now. Nicholas, who also sells at the Santa Monica Wednesday and Beverly Hills markets, displays regular oval-shaped fruits, while some other vendors are selling misshapen packinghouse culls, which don't taste any different, but are not supposed to be sold under state farmers market regulations. Read more here:

-- David Karp

Photo credit: David Karp / For The Times

Market Watch: Mexican limes, Arkansas Black apples and Autumn Lady peaches

Guavasstrawberry 

Just-picked peaches in November?

It seems preposterous, but Tenerelli Farms of Littlerock just started selling their Autumn Ladys, making them probably the latest peaches in the Northern Hemisphere. Surprisingly, it's a good peach, not mealy like many late varieties. Read more about peaches, strawberry guavas (above), limes and more at David Karp's weekly Market Watch column:

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Photo caption: Strawberry guavas. Photo credit: David Karp / For the Times

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