NFriday wrote:Hi- I suspect that most of the large scale Georgia peach growers have trickle irrigation in their fields, so that should not be much of a problem.
Trevor wrote:So for our Saturday, July 9, 2011 visit we will now be parking at the Dairy Queen at 4611 Old Grand Ave (just off Hwy 131) from 1:30 to 3:00 pm.
Trevor
Tree-Ripe Citrus Co.
dudefella wrote:Trevor wrote:So for our Saturday, July 9, 2011 visit we will now be parking at the Dairy Queen at 4611 Old Grand Ave (just off Hwy 131) from 1:30 to 3:00 pm.
Trevor
Tree-Ripe Citrus Co.
i do believe this isn't quite off 131... closer to milwaukee/rt 21 and oplaine rd.
Trevor wrote:However, while large peaches look appealing, they aren't that great for canning as a really large peach will often not fit through the mouth of the glass jar, so our canning customers generally like those 2-1/2" peaches.
Trevor
Tree-Ripe Citrus Co.
http://www.tree-ripe.com
Cathy2 wrote:
And those canner types prefer cling free, where the stone easily seperates from the fruit.
Regards,
Trevor wrote:@stevez. they are a bit smaller because of the hot & dry weather down there early on, but that resulted in a peach with a higher sugar content, making them especially sweet this season. But in the last week or so, the sizes have been getting larger and we're seeing many more 2-3/4" peaches and larger and less 2-1/2" peaches. However, while large peaches look appealing, they aren't that great for canning as a really large peach will often not fit through the mouth of the glass jar, so our canning customers generally like those 2-1/2" peaches.
Trevor
Tree-Ripe Citrus Co.
http://www.tree-ripe.com
Vital Information wrote:I have no doubt that Georgia produces plenty of good peaches, and I bet some of the peaches from this truck taste pretty good. Still, I cannot imagine why someone would want to eat a peach trucked in from Georgia, especially when it is mostly a hassle to get to these peaches, when so many great peaches are just a market away.
I had my first Michigan peach today, a white, early peach from Walt Skibbe. It took a napkin under chin to prevent total shirt ruin from all the juices. Granted, these white peaches won't have quite the sun-kissed flavor of the soon to arrive Red Havens, but it had that succor that can only come from optimum tree harvest. I believe when you are paying for a market peach, and granted you are paying, a lot of what you pay is from the skill these farmers have in knowing when to take the fruit off the branch.
Walt Skibbe himself is at the Oak Park Farmer's Market, but his peaches can be found at other markets including South Bend and Deerfield. You may find you don't need to schlep for a good peach.
stevez wrote:Vital Information wrote:I have no doubt that Georgia produces plenty of good peaches, and I bet some of the peaches from this truck taste pretty good. Still, I cannot imagine why someone would want to eat a peach trucked in from Georgia, especially when it is mostly a hassle to get to these peaches, when so many great peaches are just a market away.
I had my first Michigan peach today, a white, early peach from Walt Skibbe. It took a napkin under chin to prevent total shirt ruin from all the juices. Granted, these white peaches won't have quite the sun-kissed flavor of the soon to arrive Red Havens, but it had that succor that can only come from optimum tree harvest. I believe when you are paying for a market peach, and granted you are paying, a lot of what you pay is from the skill these farmers have in knowing when to take the fruit off the branch.
Walt Skibbe himself is at the Oak Park Farmer's Market, but his peaches can be found at other markets including South Bend and Deerfield. You may find you don't need to schlep for a good peach.
Rob,
Please post when you start to see Red Havens. I'd like to do the comparison between Michigan and Georgia peaches again to see if my opinion might have changed.
Vital Information wrote:In case you need my prompting, the markets now has Red Havens, and if you don't like those, the local nectarines I've tried so far this year are even better than the peaches.
The GP wrote:Steve-
Thanks for resurrecting this. Since Michigan peaches will be scarce, I will try to seek out this peach truck. Can't do it this weekend unfortunately.
Chicago Hokie wrote:How long have (will) these peaches been (be) sitting on the truck?