I went to Green City Market Wednesday with a touch of melancholy-- signs of fall in the air, time to gather the last of some in-season things for freezing, especially since I'm now making ice cream and sorbet as well as pie.
I bought a basket of peaches for half price-- peeling and slicing them hard, I now have two bags of slightly sugared peach slices freezing.
I bought more blueberries, two blueberry pies will hold us over until spring.
I bought a thicket of basil, wilted and not all that pretty, but aromatic; chopped in the Cuisinart with a little olive oil, then laid flat in plastic bags, they'll be my "pesto starter" in winter. (Better-
looking basil from the next stand and very good tomatoes made an excellent caprese the same night. Go long in tomatoes right now, they're finally first-class.)
And... I saw Orianna of Orianna's Oriental Orchard.
* * *
Orianna is a small but sturdy Asian woman with a farm in Winslow, east of Galena, who only comes to Green City in the fall and winter. She's appeared here before, even by (slightly misspelled first) name: she's the
black walnut lady. But that name hardly does justice to the deeply interesting and unusual variety of things she brings to market, born of her own curiosity and interest in obscure, once-popular, uncommercial fruits grown in Illinois, as well as Asian fruits it's possible to grow here.
Busy as they often are, it's possible to talk to many of the farmers at Green City, at least on a pretty practical basis about their produce, and I've done so enough that Seedlings, for instance, recognizes me as someone who comes poking around for the more unusual things
(gooseberries, butterscotch melons). But talking with Orianna is different-- the selling of the fruit seems incidental to the talk.
Indeed, she's surely the only person bringing fruit to Green City she doesn't plan to sell. The first thing I noticed on her table was a small basket of paw paws and persimmons. What are paw paws? I'm frankly not sure. The one she had looked sort of like an eggplant-colored avocado, although as she quickly explained, "You have to get them and eat them when they're green. This is only good for seed."
So no paw paw today. And no persimmon then, as she said they weren't soft enough to eat yet. I asked if there was a time when they would be in high season and there would be lots of them-- no, she said, you just have to catch them as they fall. Well, it's easy to see why the persimmon is not available by the crate at Jewel, then; they may have sustained native Americans, but today only someone willing to pick four or five of them off the ground and then drive a couple of hundred miles to show them off without selling them is likely to have them. In other words, apart from Orianna, you have about as much chance of seeing them in a commercial setting as you do of seeing a passenger pigeon or a Great Auk.
One of her delights that we'd bought last year at the winter market was dried Asian pears, and in fresh pears at last I found a crop that was actually for sale. She had largely sold out of the bags of pears she came with, but three Asian pears for sampling still sat under glass. I had bought a fancy Asian pear at H-Mart and decided that it was the kind of fruit that gets grown for perfect roundness and blemish-free skin, not for flavor, so I wasn't necessarily expecting much from the fresh fruit. But she handed me most of a small round brown pear called a Nijiseiki, and I bit into it.
"This is the best pear I've had in twenty years," I said when my eyes rolled back down into place and the colors around me returned to their normal saturation. Here was the same watermelon-like, wet-styrofoam texture of the gift pear I'd bought, but the flavor was complex, spicy and and as richly fruity as a good peach.
She handed me another, called Korean Giant. I bit into it-- here was something more like the styrofoam pear I'd bought. I must have shown my disappointment by comparison with the wonder she'd given me first, because she quickly explained, "These are still a little early. Two weeks, these will be better."
We talked for a moment about the market and selling what she has. Just before me a woman had been complaining, or perhaps reporting as if it were a homeland security breach in need of immediate action, that one of the pears she'd bought the previous Saturday had turned out to have an insect in it. "What do people think? It's organic,
everything wants to eat it. They want to buy organic but they don't think about what that means. This year, it's rainy, so many bugs, I lose half. If there's a spot, cut around it!"
One last pear-- this one was called Chojuro, "They say it has butterscotch flavor, I don't know." There's a lot of that going around Green City, I thought to myself. The butterscotch was even more elusive than with my butterscotch melons, but what surprised me was a note that tasted like alcohol-- sharp and astringent, this pear tasted like it had already been turned into Poire William. Pears, not one of the world's most interesting fruits to my mind, had revealed sides I'd never suspected today.
It was close to the market's closing time and so Orianna began packing things up. As she did she gave me two of the persimmons and told me to wait until they were soft to eat them, which by today, they were.
Another reason why persimmons won't be today's Fresh Values special at Jewel-- they have to look like they're rotting before they're ready to eat. I cut around the stone, then peeled off the wrinkly skin to reveal a small amount of fruit with the texture and translucency of a slightly mushy plum. The flavor was also a bit like a plum, but with a note which was oatmeal-like, or even wallpaper-paste-like, yet not unpleasant. A few moments later, however, the tannins in the fruit attacked my mouth, I was like a cartoon character who's been handed "Alum" instead of sugar, the inside of my mouth felt instantly dry and sandpapery. The feeling soon washed away but it was a most odd and unpleasant sensation.
I know persimmons are still used for pudding, there's even a
Persimmon Festival in Mitchell, Indiana, so I'm curious now about how you actually capture their elusive flavor while minimizing their defensive tannin shield. But I think when I go back to see Orianna, it will be for pears first, and whatever other curious things turn up on her table of strange, and possibly even purchasable, delights.