Fresh Berries 
Sunday, June 24, 2012 at 11:24PM
Keith

Types of summer fresh berries 

 

 

My Fav Fruit


If someone was to ask me what my favorite fruit was, I would have to generalize a bit and say, berries. I grew up picking berries whether from farms or the wild.

My mom would transform the into jam that served as a summer reminder on my January toast. As a boy, I didn't mind picking noticeable strawberries or conveniently placed blueberries, but black raspberries foraged from the forest behind our house was a different story. The hordes of mosquitoes were vampires who guarded these dark jewels. And if you doused yourself with enough repellent, you still had to escape the scratching wrath of the thorns that punctuated the curved berry branches.

I decided one year to go on blackberry-picking-strike. My mother said I couldn't get any blackberries for that whole year, and I agreed with the deal. That year I rose to the challenge and, I had frozen and jammed strawberries, blueberries, and blackberries. It didn't bother me a bit to not have those black raspberries. Nowadays, the black raspberries and I have made reparations!

Benefits of Berries - perfect for the person cooking for one

A reason why I like berries so much is that they are perfect for the person cooking for one.

How to buy 

How to store

How to freeze  

Learn how to freeze fresh berries to savor them later. 

Berry Ideas

 

Did you know . . . ?

What makes a berry a berry?

Not all fruits that we consider "berries" at the produce stand are actually berries, botanically speaking. To understand this, one needs to observe the fruit in its previous form - a flower.

True berries are fruits that result from one ripened plant ovary. Yes, the purpose of flowers is for sexual reproduction, and the plant wraps its seeds around a tasty fruit to entice animals to spread the seeds. The seeds (baby plants) from the single ovary are clustered toward the center of the fleshy fruit which is covered by a very, fine outer skin (exocarp). Slice open a "berry", and peer inside to discover intricate little structures whose ultimate purpose is the plant's reproduction.

Blueberries, cranberries, gooseberries, currants and yes, even grapes and tomatoes are true berries. Blackberries, raspberries, and strawberries are actually different forms of aggregate fruits. Aggregate fruits are formed from clusters of ovaries that mege to form a single fruit. Notice when you bite into these fruits the seeds are not all clustered together. Some consider the strawberry an accessory fruit (variation from an aggregate) because the luscious red portion we eat is not entirely generated from the ovary. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Article originally appeared on Cooking for One Person (http://www.cooking-for-one-person.com/).
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