If you prefer your fruit cold or canned, I can’t help you, and there’s nothing for you to see here, so click or scroll away to something more satisfying. But before you go, in the name of the goddess Pomona and all that is botanically holy, take those bananas out of the refrigerator—and the tomatoes, for crying out loud, if you’ve stashed them there. No tomatoes in the fridge. Ever.
Where
was I?
Peaches.
I have a peach tree. I didn’t plant it. It was here when I moved in. How lucky
am I? And I dare say, on far more than one occasion, I have been blessed to
find the perfect peach.
When
I’m picking, I search only for ripeness. If the fruit, ever so gently impressed
by my thumb, gives way, the globe is plucked.
A
sharp knife will glide through such a peach, the two halves falling away from
each other as if relieved at their release. A slight tug, and the skin, thin as
a gossamer veil, will lift away, leaving the pale flesh exposed and inviting.