Bonne Automne
Posted on October 16, 2009We just got back from a trip to Southwest France to visit Jacky, my wife's ailing 82-year-old grand cousin. She's a very sweet lady who slaps your face when she is happy with you, lives in the tiny village of Buziet in an 1840s farmhouse built by her great-grandfather, and speaks only French at a rate of about 200 kilometers per hour. The kids loved the fall farm rituals: the green pastures and stone walls, the roosters crowing in the morning, the contented clucking of hens pecking the grass, the bereted Bearn shepherds with their flocks of dusty sheep rolling down from the Pyrenees mountains like giant balls of frayed yarn heading for safer winter pasture, the bats darting out of the dusty, bow-timbered grange, and the clang-clong sound of hollow brass cow bells bumping through the narrow village streets announcing the evening bovine beauty pageant.
Inspired by the bucolic surroundings, the kindness of the people, and the antioxidant-rich liquefied red-grape drink that the French seem to enjoy with every meal except breakfast, I started speaking French-never even took a lesson. One evening as Jacky pushed away from the table I wanted to tell her good night. I cleared my throat to get the French pronunciation right and proceeded to wish her a happy new year. She paused, turned and smiled quizzically. For the rest of the trip she (and my wife's entire extended French family) was culturally sensitive to my traditions as they too wished each other and me good night (bonne nuit) with a smile, a kiss, and a wish for a Happy New Year (bonne annee). Who says the French don't have a sense of humor.
Fall in the Northern Hemisphere is changing the warm and bright summer light into a cooler dusky-ember orange. For those in the fruit world these next few weeks feel a bit like no-mans-land between summer and fall. We'll continue to offer kiwi-berries and passion fruit and pomegranates whenever they are available. Generally however the transition from summer fruit with its abundance of peaches, nectarines, and the like is a tough seasonal reality check. There are still some late-season pluots and grapes but you will start seeing more pears and apples varieties as they come to harvest. Look forward to specialty citrus in November. We make a great effort to post up all of the fruit varieties we have for you on the website so that you can identify what you are eating. Please visit our In the Mix pages at www.fruitguys.com -- just click on your region. Enjoy and be fruitful! (And bonne annee!) chris@fruitguys.com
Recent News