
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: For those of you broiling in other parts of the US, you’ll be surprised to hear we’ve been having a cold summer in Maine so far. Yes, there was the infernal heat dome last week, and we’ve managed a few days when the temperatures have gotten into the 80s, but otherwise it’s hardly been the kind of weather that inspires lingering over icy drinks on the deck or patio or grilling for guests.
Which is why I was delighted the other day when it hit the perfect point of heat (i.e. “Yay, it’s summer,” instead of “65 and drizzling” or “Satan’s bowels.”) It finally felt right to have my first Pimms cup of the summer. To me, it’s the quintessential seasonal drink - I mean, the bottle’s not going anywhere, but I don’t touch it between September and May.
There are a lot of foods tied to the calendar and the weather because, well, that’s when they taste best. Strawberries, corn on the cob, home-grown tomatoes. But there are other foods and beverages we could have at any point of the year but… we don’t.
An example for me: the grilled hamburger. I like hamburgers!
I’ll occasionally order one in a restaurant (there are some great
grass-fed-beef places in Portland; hit me up for recommendations if you’re
traveling here.) But the ONLY time I make them at home is between June and
August, outdoors, and it has to be hot enough that I’m a little uncomfortable
standing over the grill (I have the old-fashioned, charcoal briquette
kind.)
Or potato salad. I literally make the exact same potato salad summer and winter, but the former gets a mustard-mayo dressing and hard-boiled eggs and the latter gets a bacon-vinegar dressing and no eggs. Why one and not the other? I don’t know! I could serve the vinaigrette cold and the mayo warm, but after 40 years of making this (and more years eating - these recipes come from my mother) they remain strictly, rigorously separated by the time of year and the temperature outside.
How about you, Reds? What are your “strictly-seasonal-although-they-don’t-have-to-be” drinks and dinners?
HALLIE EPHRON: My favorite seasonal dish is a salad main dish. A corn and basil and Fetah cheese salad. Corn (fresh, boiled and cut off the cob (NOT frozen or canned)) with season’s best cut up tomatoes, a generous handful (or two) of chopped fresh basil, and plenty of crumbled fetah cheese — dressed with a vinaigrette (⅔ olive oil, ⅓ a good balsamic vinegar, S&P).
I confess, messing with the charcoal grill holds no allure for
me these days. Though my favorite summer thing used to be a whole turkey
roasted over coals. You season the bird as if you were roasting it in the oven.
No stuffing. Get a full load of coals hot and push them to the edges so you can
put the turkey on a rack with coals NOT directly under it. Let it roast with
the lid down. Baste occasionally with olive oil or butter.
Takes about what it takes to roast it in the oven (use a meat thermometer to test
for doneness) and it tastes smokey and sensational and can be eaten hot or warm
or cold.
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Oh, tomatoes! I cannot wait, CANNOT WAIT! For the good summer tomatoes. A tomato sandwich with white toast and mayo and arugula and tomatoes and crazy salt and I am transported. So delicious.
I also love sungold tiny tomatoes cut in half with a tiny
slice of mozzarella and topped with fresh pesto.
Or–tomatoes again–capresed with exquisite balsamic drizzle and mozzarella.
Hamburgers cooked outside–yes! We have briquets, too, it is SO much better.
And salmon grilled outside too, with grilled corn.
Now I am absolutely drooling.
And you know–I always forget about watermelon. But it is so yummy!
RHYS BOWEN: Summer to me means the farmers market. All
that local produce, especially ripe peaches, plums, apricots. Oh, and
strawberries. I am not married to a barbecue expert so we only use it if the
kids come over but I do love barbecued chicken and shrimp. But a special treat
is to pack a sandwich and fruit and take my lunch to a local beach.
LUCY BURDETTE: What the others said–fresh corn on the cob from our favorite local farmer (I never buy grocery store corn out of season), fresh tomatoes, and blueberries. Later in the summer, the Connecticut peaches come in and I buy bushels of them. Here’s one more: a root beer float with sweet cream ice cream from Ashley’s. Oh yum, glad the grandkids will be here so I have a good excuse for that!
DEBORAH CROMBIE: This past week we’ve gone from “Oh, yay, I
can grill,” to “Oh my God, somebody shoot me if I have to go back outside and
it’s still ninety degrees at eight o’clock. That said, I will still grill. I
make fabulous burgers with grass fed local beef from our town butcher shop.
They also sell the most scrumptious chewy, dark molasses buns from a local
bakery. Tomatoes, however, in spite of the abundance at the farmer’s
market, have been disappointing.
But peaches and blueberries are in season here and they have been fabulous. The one thing that absolutely says SUMMER, though? Watermelon! I cart a quarter melon home from the market every Saturday!
JULIA: What are your fave seasonal foods, dear readers? And are there any, like potato salad and Pimms, you ONLY have during the summertime?
Niagara Ontario peaches, local corn on the cob, fresh picked tomatoes frkm my balcony garden.
ReplyDeleteAnd I only drink craft beer, hard cider or a G&T in the summer. I enjoyed the first 2 during this 4-day Montreal getaway.
Blueberries are a favorite as are vegetables from the garden . . . .
ReplyDeleteI had no idea what a Pimm’s even was until I googled it. To me summer beverages are fresh lemonade, Kool Aid, and sun tea. Watermelon, corn on the cob, potato salad, homemade vanilla ice cream or Dairy Queen, popsicles, hot dogs at a ball park and all the Fair foods…corn dogs, mini donuts, cheese curds, funnel cakes, plus anything and everything they put on a stick.
ReplyDeleteTomorrow is Canada Day here. Locally the small museum gets a federal grant to provide free food, which will be, as usual, hot dogs. Barbecued on several dragged in barbecues. The ceremony will run long, the hot dogs will be put on way too early, the flag will finally go up, and finally the lineups will start for the hot dogs. They will be burnt, dry, and in a bun with mustard and ketchup, maybe. They will be the best hotdogs all season, and I don’t know why!
DeleteI will be back in Ottawa for Canada Day. Due to Parliament Hill large scale renos since 2021-2032, the main celebrations have moved from the Hill & nearby Major's Hill Park to Lebreton Flats a few km west (3 LRT stops from Rideau Centre/ByWard Market).
DeleteIn past years, the Govt of Canada provided a free grilled chicken sandwich or veggie burgers to celebrate July 1 & there was a smaller stage with ongoing performances. I usually went since the park is just 2.5 blocks from my apt. Unfortunately, the weather looks baf tomorrow with tstorms until noon & chance of rain the rest of the day. I might just stay home if it's really bad.
Oh and strawberries, tomatoes, rhubarb, cherries, blueberries, raspberries, peaches
ReplyDeleteSummer fruits! Strawberry season is mostly over here, but the price was up to $10.50 a quart, gulp, so I didn't buy many. I might have to start growing them. Blueberries on my bushes are fat and green and forecast a great harvest (I told my son he must bring Ida Rose in a few weeks to pick for herself). Yes, watermelon - I had some yesterday. Then peaches and apricots, which I'm trying to reintroduce to see if I can get over my oral allergy. Otherwise I'll cook them.
ReplyDeleteBut it's the summer veggies that shine - my own sun-warmed tomatoes, from Sun Gold to to Green Cherokee to other heirlooms. My own crisp cukes and lettuce and Asian eggplant and basil and rosemary. Local farm corn (I won't buy it in a store, ever) and zucchini and new potatoes. Summer is my favorite food season.
Hugh grills year round, but summer is for eating on the deck and enjoying a G&T out there, too. I suppose I only make potato salad (mayo version) in the summer, and I certainly only make Greek salad when the Sun Golds and cukes are ripe for the picking.
Another summer-only delight are BLTs (thanks to Karen for the reminder). Hugh has one every single day as soon as sliceable tomatoes are harvestable until the first frost. I hold myself to one a week.
DeleteAlso, I just grabbed a cool half hour to weed, top-dress, and mulch my tomato garden. I feel SO much better about it. If I wait until late, I never do it. And it intruded on my writing time by only ten minutes.
Yikes, that is pricey for local strawberries. I got a 1/2 flat (6 pints) of local Quebec strawberries for $25 CDN/$16 USD from the last produce stall in the ByWard Market in June. Froze half of them for later use in smoothies.
DeleteLemonade. Cherries. Fresh corn on the cob and watermelon.
ReplyDeleteWe need a small second summer fridge, just for Steve's watermelon and corn. He jumps the gun every year, though, and gets subpar stuff that is shipped in, while I prefer to wait for the local fresh stuff. My favorite local farm will soon have corn and I'll get a couple dozen to freeze, too.
ReplyDeleteFresh tomatoes! So many kinds, including two new varieties this year. Indigo Rose from Amsterdam--with unusual dark stems--but growing very slowly. I hope they make it, because they look really interesting, a "black pink" fruit. And a lady in the garden club gave me two "Two-Bite Cherry" tomato plants that are flowering.
Must haves: my Hungarian grandmother's potato salad that has bacon, vinegar AND mayo, fresh nectarines, G&T, iced coffee with vanilla extract, and BLTs, along with corn on the cob. Chard or kale, sauteed with garlic, fresh green beans straight from the garden. Later in the season, eggplant with peppers, onions, tomatoes, garlic and basil, sauteed together. Yum.
We will be in Michigan next month, eating local whitefish, cherries, and pasties!!
Yes, BLTs!
DeleteWith a bumper crop from my balcony, I have already eaten sauteed rainbow chard & kale salad. And now that I can eat nightshade veggues, ratatouille is again on my meal rotation.
DeleteAt Home Depot this spring, they sold a ratatouille pak - 2 tomato, 2 peppers and 2 eggplant transplants. No names on varieties, but I thought it was a unique marketing ploy. Will see how it does, as eggplant usually does not do well, especially in a cool summer like this one so far.
DeleteRatatouille! Thanks for the name. I was sleep-deprived when I wrote this. I add mushrooms, sometimes, and other stuff from the garden, so it's not technically ratatouille. I call it Olio, instead, which means a hodgepodge of ingredients.
DeleteThe other thing I started making in summer a couple years ago was Salade Nicoise, with fresh green beans and tomatoes, and hard-boiled eggs along with the tuna. A nice hearty, protein-rich cold supper.
DeleteMARGO: I share your frustration in growing eggplant, which I love eating. I only got enough to eat twice in the past 4 years due to cool weather & it is SATAN's favourite veggie to steal/nibble & discard from my balcony garden.
DeleteIt was not Satan in our case but tomato hornworms and potato bugs - strip it in a night!
DeleteSummer food for me is tomatoes from the garden (but not for weeks yet up here in Manitoba) and a meal of fresh-picked basil for homemade pesto on capellini. YUM. We had our first feed of that last week. So good and definitely summer only. Later in August I'll look for Ontario peaches.
ReplyDeleteI am glad you can get ON peaches. They are the best!
DeleteI like Ontario peaches too but I prefer nectarines
DeleteI have nothing very original to add. Corn on the cob. Peaches and nectarines. And pasta salad! I don't know why, but I never make pasta salad in the winter.
ReplyDeleteSame on the pasta salad!
DeleteOr orzo salad, and it is delicious. Too bad no one else likes it but me.
DeleteMargo, call me! I'll come help you eat it. I LOVE orzo salad!
DeleteWe made it to the green market ( NY for farmer's market) on Saturday we came home with delicious corn,(first of the summer), and peaches. Ditto. Made a peach crisp,and one stall had rhubarb, so a rhubarb coffee cake. Ah, summer.
ReplyDeleteI make chicken salad only in the summer, along with Greek feta salad and basil-tomato-mozzarella salads, all for dinner. We aren't getting local peaches yet, still the tail end of an excellent cherry season, plus wonderful strawberries and all kinds of melons. We also occasionally serve rosé wine when we have company for dinner, which we never offer between September and May. Can't explain that--it's just the way it is. Food habits are funny things.
ReplyDeleteRaspberries! Yum. I will have them for a few more weeks--loads of berries this year. I also look forward to the Maryhill peaches and melons, but that's a bit later in the summer.
ReplyDeleteMy main reason to love summer is to be able to finally eat all those things I love and that are produced locally : asparagus, strawberries, raspberries, blueberries and corn on the cob.
ReplyDeleteI love potato salad with egg and mayo and usually crave it in summer.
Hallie – you reminded me of the accompaniment that I made to go with a fresh crab dinner. (I prefer lobster, but that would be another topic.) I find crab is so much work (we have giant snow crabs and only eat the leg part), and I usually leave the table hungry. I thought I would make ‘thai rice’ but could find no recipe so cooked some parboil and jasmine rice partially in water and then finished in coconut milk. Then added and cooked green pepper, red pepper, jalapeno, onion, garlic, tomato bits, corn off the cob (it was fresh) green beans in bits and a bit of cheese and cream to finish it. It was delicious – everybody loved it – and I can never reproduce it again, no matter how I have tried.
ReplyDeleteNow as for the Pims. My uncle’s wife (long story, but she was always just Lucy and not any other word – 2nd wife). Anyway, she had a cousin with a girl’s name (Bev) who lived most times in London. He came to visit and asked if we had ever had Pim’s and of course we had not, and since my father and uncle were wannabe snobs, we had to have it. He sent the ingredient list, which we hastened to provide. It took them all day to blend, slice, muddle and let the concoction stew to perfection. Perfection it was! There was just something about the way the cucumber blended with the citrus and the fresh mint! Sooooo good and so refreshing!
Odd bits - Summer time thing that I never use – crock pot. Never even think about it and don’t know why. It rained last night – 1.7mm or 0.06 inches. The top of the soil looks damp. Still sharing the cold temps with Julia. Hope that Kayti is staying hydrated if she is still in London.
Chicken salad, tuna salad, egg salad, and pasta salad made with fresh tortellini, cherry tomatoes, and kalamata olives. Fresh fruit instead of the endless cycle of apples and bananas. Cherries!
ReplyDeleteSo hungry! Thanks, Reds! :-) Mediterranean pasta salad with loads of fresh veggies, ditto chicken stirfry with fresh veggies from the farmer's market around the corner. Black raspberries over vanilla or chocolate ice cream or baked into a cobbler. Some of those I'll freeze to enjoy in the winter in an apple-berry crisp. Local melons, peaches, blueberries from our bush and my friend's. BLT's, of course!
ReplyDeleteFlora, Anon again
DeleteYep, I only make potato salad in the summer although I am on the lookout for a good hot potato salad. Also, I only want tomatoes and cucumbers from the garden, never from the grocery store. Last year my cucumber did nothing - maybe helped by chipmunks - so I am very hungry for one now, almost to the point I might actually try one from the store. Another thing I look forward to every summer is a BLT sandwich, again with garden tomatoes.
ReplyDeleteI uusally get some nice peaches and make a great peach cobbler; it is so much easier than pie. I've been thinking if I can get some really tasty juicy peaches we will make some peach ice cream, the kind that starts with a cooked custard mixture. My blueberries are almost ripe so if I can keep the birds away from them there will be sour cream-blueberry muffins. Or just blueberries on my shredded wheat. A handful or so of blueberries tossed into the peach cobbler is very good too.
My raspberry bushes just do not thrive which makes me very sad, but I have found a farm where I can buy them, as well as blueberries, if the birds end up with all of mine.
Summer always brings back memories of backyard family barbecues when my father grilled the best steaks and burgers on an outdoor brick fireplace he constructed with my Uncle Otto. Mom's delicious oil and vinegar garden salads and the best homemade potato salad in the world. :-) But the most vivid memory I recall as a young girl were Saturday summer evenings when Dad would make delicious Banana Splits, ice cream sodas and "Black Cows" for the entire family. (He learned all the "recipes" as a high school teenager when he worked part-time as a soda jerk at a local pharmacy.) My favorite was always a "Black Cow" so my summers are not complete until I have my first "Black Cow" of the season. Sixty-five plus years later and I still only partake of "Black Cows" during the summer months.
ReplyDeleteBlack cows! Yes! Coke and vanilla ice cream, right? Wow, is that still a thing?
DeleteIsn't that just a Coke float, Hank?
DeleteHank ~ Dad's "Black Cows" were always root beer and vanilla ice cream but I'm dating myself here. He would have been a soda jerk in the late 1930's when the "Black Cows" were probably based on the original 1890's recipe. (What we would call a root beer float.) But I've also read that the Black Cows recipe varied depending on which part of the country it was made. So eventually Coca-Cola and vanilla ice cream also became a popular combination. Remember when we still had pharmacies with a soda fountain section? I remember going to one named Liggett's and ordering cherry or vanilla cokes as a teen-ager. Or a refreshing Raspberry Lime Ricky... Another great summer memory!
DeleteIt was all I could do not to buy corn yesterday… But it’s too soon too soon! I cannot wait! All of your ideas are so delicious sounding!
ReplyDeleteHank ~ I "sweeten" early season ears of corn by adding a stick of butter to the boiling water, pop the ears in, wait for the water to come to a boil again, cover the pot and shut off the gas burner. Wait 20 minutes and then serve. The butter, of course, melts but makes the water a buttery texture and flavor. I don't know why but it seems to sweeten up the ears of corn and they are quite tasty.
Deletewe wait the entire summer for the beef steak homegrown tomatoes that our friend Sara from Gallo restaurant grows. She lets us know when they are coming and we go down there and choose from all sorts of recipes that include her tomatoes. They are fabulous. Other summer recipes include anything on the grill, especially if made by our son Tyson, who loves to cook.
ReplyDeleteFor me, I think watermelon is the ultimate summer food. I see it year-round in the stores, but who eats watermelon in December? Not this girl.
ReplyDeleteI accidentally bought two watermelon plants this year (they were in with the peas). I planted them, so we'll see what happens. The last time I tried watermelons it was a total fail. But my cukes and green bean plants are going wild! I am going to have to retry my sunflowers. Either they drowned or the bunnies at the shoots.
I want Jenn’s cobbler recipe! I grew up with a fabulous peach cobbler that I’ve never been able to duplicate
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love Sugar Kiss melons! They are like candy to me, and they only show up in the summer. Also, fresh corn on the cob. Pure bliss! -- VIctoria
ReplyDeleteStrawberries always seemed to come into season at the end of June around here, when I was growing up. So for my my birthday, which was just a few days ago, I always had angel food cake with macerated strawberries and whipped cream. Now that we can get strawberries pretty much year round though they're not nearly as good, so I don't go for the angel of food cake so much. Cherries seem to be still seasonal and I look forward to my one and only purchase of them soon.
ReplyDelete