Eat This Now—Tuesday 01/26/10

Jan 25
2010

Best if Used By 02/01/10

Eat This Now for Tuesday January 26, 2010 features: Fuji Apples, Organic Navel Oranges, Grapefruit, Cauliflower, and Fingerling Potatoes.

1. Fuji Apples

Are you a fan of the Fuji? – nicely crisp, so very sweet.  Fuji’s are the No.1 apple variety in Japan and China.  Here in the States, Fuji’s have skyrocketed in popularity over past two decades into the Top 4.  In Natural Food Stores and Coops, Fuji and Gala are neck and neck for the top apple spot with flavor-savvy organic produce shoppers.  The Organic Fuji’s I ate this week where outstanding!  If you’ve never tasted a Fuji Apple for yourself, now is a great time.  Buy. Eat. Enjoy.

Fuji Apples

Fuji Apples are about as sweet tasting an apple as you will find, just dripping with sugary flavor.  The flesh is crisp with a fine texture.  The skin is green with a red to dark red blush that covers some to almost all of the apple, depending on growing conditions.  The fruit tends to grow in a round shape and the trees produce very large apples.  Fuji’s are a fantastic snacking apple and ideal for salads, but they’re also good for cooking and baking because they keep their shape well and require less added sugar.

Organic and Conventional Fuji Apples are mostly coming from the Yakima Valley of Washington State right now, with some additional conventional supplies from New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan.  Fuji’s store well so they are known as a “Winter” variety even though the fruit comes off the trees in October.  Demand is so strong on Fuji Apples this season, especially for Organic Fuji’s, that growers began raising the prices at wholesale a couple weeks ago to slow movement down to make sure they don’t run out before new crop fruit is available from Chile and New Zealand later in spring.  In spite of the case cost increases you will still find many stores promoting Fuji’s.

rule

2.  Organic Navel Oranges

Prices are lower than last month on Organic Navel Oranges from California and quality has been great from most growers.  In fact, I sampled some from a load that arrived this week and they were, hands down, The Best Navels I’ve eaten this year!  So juicy, outrageously sweet – wow!  Buy some fresh looking Organic California Navel Oranges that feel heavy.  My hope for you is that they’ll be awesome as the ones I ate.

Organic Navel Oranges

rule

3.  Grapefruit

February is National Grapefruit Month, so here’s a head-start.

ConventionalFlorida had the freeze, but there will still be plenty of decent Grapefruit.  Pink and Red flesh varieties are good, Star and Dark Red varieties are really good.  White Flesh Grapefruit are also available, if you want to mix it up.  The best tasting Grapefruit this season, in my opinion, has been the Rio Star variety from Texas – deep red, loaded with juice and very sweet.

Grapefruit

Organics: Rio Red and other Organic Pink/Red varieties are nice, but higher price out of California and Arizona.  Florida Organic Pink and Red Grapefruit are in very low supply and hard to come by, but Florida Organic White Grapefruit (if you can find them) are quite impressive.

rule

4.  Cauliflower

Reasonable pricing, good quality, a seasonal cooking ingredient – Conventional and Organic Cauliflower grown in CA and AZ have all of the makings of a good buy right now.  Enjoy steamed as a side, pureed into a curry soup or chop raw for snacking and dipping.

Cauliflower

Like Cauliflower, but want some more flare on you plate?  Keep an eye out for Romanesco, a green colored cousin to Cauliflower shaped with dramatic spiked cones.  Romanesco has full Cauliflower flavor with hints of broccoli.  Try it steamed and serve with a little browned butter – oh yea!

rule

5.  Fingerling Potatoes

Small, heritage (think heirloom) potatoes that are shaped like stubby little fingers are called “Fingerling Potatoes.”  Chock full of buttery, nutty potato flavor, Fingerling’s are typically roasted, fried or boiled and served whole or halved with the thin skin on.  Top varieties, which often are packaged together as a medley, include: French Fingerling, Russian Banana, Purple Peruvian, Ruby Crescent and Austrian Crescent.  Buttercream and Klamath Pearl are delicious varieties that are very small yet more round in shape than long.  Organic and Conventional Fingerling Potatoes are available right now from CA, CO, ID and OR.  Pick some up this week and turn Wednesday night supper into a restaurant-style meal.

Fingerling Potatoes

rule

Do you have a recipe for any of ingredients that you’d like to share or a comment about what you’ve read here?  Email us or post a comment at www.producegeek.com.  Thank you for reading.

Forward this to a friend if you think they’ll like it – Here’s to fresh produce!

The Produce Geek,
Jonathan K. Steffy

Eat This Now—Tuesday 12/22/09

Dec 22
2009

Best if Used By 12/28/09

Eat This Now for Tuesday December 22, 2009 features: Gold Pineapples, Sweet Potatoes, Asparagus, Pacific Rose Apples, and Organic Navel Oranges.

1. Gold Pineapples

Super sweet, super special.  What better way to celebrate the holidays than with the symbol of welcome – fresh Gold Pineapples!  Fresh Pineapples can be cored into rings to dress up your holiday ham.  You can carve them up and serve them on toothpicks as an appetizer.  Add them to a fresh fruit salad.  You can bring one to a gathering as a host gift.  Cube them for a delicious snack for friends and family that “graze” in your kitchen.  Or just enjoy one by yourself – mmm!

Gold Pineapples

Sometimes supplies get tight around Christmas, but this year fresh inventories from Central America are bountiful.  Stores are promoting super-sweet variety Gold Pineapples at great prices this week.  Organic Super Sweet Pineapples are in good supply and high quality right now too!  Organic “Pines” tend to have a greener skin and whiter flesh, but the sugar content of the flesh is outstanding!

Here are a few notes on choosing your Gold Pineapple. No waiting is necessary, Gold Pineapples are expertly harvested as ripe and do not really ripen after harvest. Sure, the color on the shell may darken or become less green, but the fruit is just getting older and less fresh. Cut it shortly after buying. Don’t let it sit on your counter forever hoping it turns yellow, it could end up black, brown and overripe, yuck! At the store, green versus gold shell color does not always indicate ripeness or sugar content, so pick one that is fresh looking, is firm and has a healthy crown. Pineapples are tropical fruit, store at room temperature, then refrigerate only after cutting.  An easy way to cut your Gold Pineapple is to slice the crown off about 1/2″ from the top and also cut the bottom 1/2″ off. Next, slice it quarters or eighths vertically. Cut off the woody core, then trim off the shell. Chop the spears into bite-sized chunks.

rule

2. Sweet Potatoes

Awesome anytime in the fall and winter, Sweet Potatoes are extra special around the holidays.  Common orange-fleshed Yams, which are actually a type of Sweet Potato, should find their way into your shopping cart (fresh, no cans here) and onto your Christmas table this week.  Kiln-dried (to help them last longer) Sweet Potatoes from the fall crop are shipping from NC, LA, MS and CA.  The best reason to buy this week is because they are likely on sale at your store -stock up!  Organic Jewel and Garnet Yams from California are particularly nice right now too.

Sweet Potatoes

Check out www.ncsweetpotatoes.com or www.sweetpotato.org for great recipe ideas.

rule

3. Asparagus

Need a great vegetable for the holiday dinner?  Fresh Asparagus has been nice out of Peru, buy some!  Look for advertised specials on Green and White Asparagus this week.  White Asparagus must be peeled before steaming, but is awesome served with butter.  Captain Obvious says, “Avoid Asparagus that has a bad odor or slime on the tips.”  Fresh Asparagus will be crisp, have tight tips and no aroma.

Asparagus

rule

4. Pacific Rose Apples

Still in search of the perfect apple – one with crunchy texture AND really sweet taste?  Or do you just want to mix it up a little bit to take a break from the ol’ standbys?  With delicate rosy pink to to red skin, Pacific Rose Apples pack a crispy crunch inside.  Not only is their texture good, Pacific Rose Apples are extremely sweet.

Pacific Rose Apples

This relatively new variety is a cross between Gala and Splendor apples.  The new crop of Organic and Conventional Pacific Rose Apples from Washington is available at some premium retailers and commands a premium price.  Find some and snack away!

rule

5. Organic Navel Oranges

Seedless, sweet, flavorful AND grown without pesticides or synthetic compounds!  Prices are dropping as volume is increasing on Organic Navel Oranges from California.  Quality from most growers has been solid, so it is a great time to try some.

Organic Navel Oranges

rule

Forward this to a friend if you think they’ll like it – Here’s to fresh produce!

The Produce Geek,
Jonathan K. Steffy

UPDATES on all of your Holiday Favorites

Dec 22
2009

Curious about the fresh ingredients that are on your holiday shopping list?  Based on what I’m hearing from growers and retailers, and seeing on the dock, this is what you can expect at the supermarket Christmas week:

  • Clementines: Take advantage of great pricing with ad features on 5lb Gift Boxes of seedless, easy-peeling Clementines from Spain and Morocco.  Yummm!  In January ads on Clementines will not be as hot and quality will start to wane just a bit.  Satsuma Mandarins from California are an outstanding Made in the USA alternative (even sweeter than Clementines, based on what I’ve tasted the past month).
  • California Navel Oranges: Great quality, pricing and availability on all sizes!  Buy some, enjoy them, give some away for other to enjoy.  Juicy, sweet and healthy!
  • Sweet Potatoes (Yams): See this week’s Eat This Now.
  • Lettuces: Lettuces remain expensive.  Supplies and quality on Iceberg, Romaine, Romaine Hearts, Red Leaf and Green Leaf have improved slightly versus last month.
  • Bagged Salads: Quality has improved with the input product for Bagged Salads so most will hold up well to their expiration date.  But the major snow storm that rocked the East Coast and beyond this past weekend has caused significant disruptions to the supply chain.  Some parts of the country, especially the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic may experience some out-of-stocks on their favorite salads due to trucks with lettuce raw product not making it to the processing facilities in time which has a ripple effect on produce warehouses and the supermarkets they supply.
  • Cranberries: Caution.  All Fresh Cranberries are now actually storage Cranberries from earlier in the fall.  Quality is suspect.  Inspect your bags for soft and decayed berries.  Firm berries are perfectly fine.  It is a store’s goal to be out of Cranberries immediately after Christmas.  Freeze your Cranberries if you want to extend your enjoyment.
  • Green Beans: Quality from Florida has been good on Green Beans, but cold weather has put the brakes on supply this week.
  • Celery: Weather has caused a serious shortage on celery right now and prices have shot through roof!  What’s put on the shelf is good, but this is just not very much celery ready to be harvested in the fields.  Many supermarkets planned their ads weeks in advance and put celery at a discount, so go ahead and take advantage if you can.  If not on ad, celery and celery hearts are almost double the average price.
  • Broccoli and Broccoli Crowns: Quality is just OK.  The crown size has been a bit small and pricing firm, but if they look good – buy.
  • Cauliflower: OK quality, pricing will be higher than usual.
  • Romanesco: This specialty vegetable looks like a Christmas tree green cauliflower.  If you find it – buy it.  Steam and serve with butter.
  • Brussels Sprouts: Delicious flavor, solid quality.  Try some holiday – roasted or blanched then sauteed!
  • Asparagus: See this week’s Eat This Now.
  • Red, Gold, Idaho, White Potatoes: Quality and appearance on Red and Gold Potatoes is awesome!  For best affordability, choose Idaho Russets (best for mashing) and White Potatoes.
  • Spanish Yellow Onions: Great quality. Great pricing.  Get cookin’!
  • Carrots/Baby Carrots: Baby Peeled and Bagged Carrots have decent quality with affordable pricing.  Bunched Carrots with tops are good too.
  • Broccoli Rabe: Nice choice this week for a bold side dish, though pricing is strong.
  • Anise (Fennel): Major shortage due to cool weather.  Product will be expensive and small.
  • Artichokes: Pricing is very high because of lack of availability due to cold weather which causes discoloration artichoke.  This discoloration is referred to as “Frost Kissed” and is said to actually improve the flavor.
  • Baking Apples: All of your favorites are good to go:  McIntosh, Empire, Cortland, Red Rome, Granny Smith and Braeburn.
  • Dessert Pears: Storage Bartletts are winding down, in fact Organic Bartletts are done for the season.  Juicy Green and Red Anjous, Crunchy Bosc and Sweet Comice (The Christmas Pear) are fantastic options.
  • Fresh Herbs: Buys some.  Fresh Herbs like bay leaves, parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme make the difference for holiday recipes.
  • Italian Chestnuts: Go ahead, try out an old-fashioned recipe because quality is great.  But this is you last chance to enjoy fresh Chestnuts.  After Christmas, most stores hope to be sold out for the seasons.
  • White Mushrooms: Look for aggressive holiday promotions, especially on jumbo-sized stuffing mushrooms.
  • Baking Nuts (Pecans, Walnuts, Almonds): 2009′s crop is available in-shell.  2008′s crop shelled and ready for use.  Go nuts – bake away!
  • Cooking Greens: Conventional Collards and Kale were steady on the East Coast until this past weekend.  Prices may jump up a bit.  Organic Collards, Kale and Lacinato are expensive and tighter in supply.
  • Tomatoes: Florida round Tomatoes are still high in price but showing signs of dropping in price and improving in quality.  Grape Tomato quality is great and flavor is good.  Look for in-store specials on Grape Tomatoes.
  • Grapes: Expensive, expensive, expensive.  New crop Seedless Grapes from Chile will be coming in January.
  • Persimmons: Some growers are still promoting deals from a heavy crop, but this season is winding down.  Fuyu variety you can eat right away, but Hachiya need to be soft-ripe.
  • Pomegranates: Supplies of fresh Pomegranates are just about sold out for the season.  Quality is so-so.  Don’t worry, the juice is available bottled all year.
  • Gold Pineapple: See this week’s Eat This Now
  • Medjool Dates: Awesome flavor, sweetness and quality from California.  So delicious they deserve to be on the cookie plate.
  • Dried Figs: Black Mission and Calmyrnia varieties available dried.

Our Tweets of the Week Nov 23 – Nov 28, 2009

Nov 28
2009

Every week we tweet a lot of interesting stuff highlighting great Fruit and Vegetable content that we come across during our daily activities at work. We share these tid bits of knowledge with those of you interested on Twitter.

The best way to keep track of our tweets is simply to follow us on Twitter, however, in case you missed some here’s a quick and useful compilation of the tweets that we sent out this past week.

To keep up to date with all the cool links, simply follow us @TheProduceGeek

  • Eat This Now: Jazz Apples, Bananas, Sunburst Tangerines, Idaho Potatoes, Organic Hass Avocados. read more… http://bit.ly/8zg4Uj
  • Curious about which favorite Thanksgiving #freshproduce items are good this week? read more… http://bit.ly/70FSJL
  • RT @JAZZAPPLES_NZ: Want to know where to get a taste of JAZZ Apples in North America, follow the Crunch Tour @jazzapple
  • Jazz Music, Jazz Festivals, Jazz Bands – Jazz Apples? http://bit.ly/8tz9s1
  • Spitting seeds can be fun! Just ask baseball players or fans of Sunburst Tangerines. http://bit.ly/5jpiow
  • Curious about which favorite Thanksgiving #freshproduce items are good this week? read more… http://bit.ly/59jNJ2
  • Sunburst Tangerines are NOT just like Clementines, but still worth a try. http://bit.ly/5jpiow
  • INSIDER ALERT: New arrivals of Florida Sunburst Tangerines look outstanding, eat good too.
  • Hate mushy apples? Tired of the same old varieties? Try Jazz Apples. http://bit.ly/5q7sul
  • Delicious! RT @favoriteproduce: Satsuma Mandarins is like peeling open candy. One segment at a time: http://bit.ly/7RPHrV
  • #iamthankfulfor FRESH produce! eat more of it, you’ll be glad you did
  • Learn more about the health benefits of Jazz Appleshttp://bit.ly/5Kz6Xg
  • #goodfood is FRESH! Wondering what fresh produce is BEST each week? checkout www.producegeek.com