OK now this has got to stop.
I survey the groceries and realize there is simply too much food in the refrigerator. There are tons of fruits and vegetables. It’s crazy.
After the game Sunday afternoon, I went to the Berkeley Bowl, where I got raspberries, blackberries and blueberries on the cheap. I don’t want to keep them too long, though, so I make a crisp.
I got a bag of eggplants for 99 cents and think of a tomato-less pasta sauce with a recipe I saw on Salon. Or perhaps I should roast them for baba ghanoush.
I got six ears of shucked yellow corn for 99 cents. I got a bag of squash - zucchini and two varieties whose names I do not know - for 99 cents. I have not figured out entirely what to do with them but have a couple of days still, I think.
I got rhubarb, which I happened to see and, of course, could not resist. I love it and will need to cook that down for schloop (a word I just made up). I can have it with vanilla yogurt and granola for breakfast.
I got kale just because. In hindsight, perhaps I should have put back the kale. I still have carrots, onions and lettuce leaves, too. I even wound up freezing a mess of sliced red bell peppers the other week because I could not use those immediately.
It is ridiculous, right? You’d think I was cooking and shopping to feed a football team. And this is all after the flat of strawberries the other weekend from the farmers’ market.
Oh, and shoot, running errands in Chinatown this morning, I got pluots, too. I know. But they are in season, and I saw them.
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1. by TRISTA on Jul 14, 2010 at 3:11 PM PDT
I totally relate to this! I biked home with a backpack full of stuff last weekend. When I open the fridge door it’s like a jungle reaching out at me.
I didn’t know you could freeze bell peppers. Do they stay crispy when they thaw, or do they get mushy? Do you have to do anything but wash and chop them to freeze?
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