
No, not the three sisters planted by the Native Americans (corn, beans, squash). I didn’t think I had enough room for corn in my victory garden, and I wasn’t too fussed, really, because corn makes up about 70% of our diet here in North America, cleverly disguised under names like xanthan gum, modified starch, cyclodextrin, lactic acid, and MSG — not to mention the ubiquitous high fructose corn syrup. (Did you know they’re putting HFCS in bread crumbs now?)
Just a clever name for these three lovely pickling cucumbers seen clustered together in a charming configuration on the vine. We’ve got lots of clusters all of a sudden; I’m supposing it’s the effect of all that rain. Sumter, by far the most prolific, has been spurred to heights of productivity that are awe-inspiring.
I know I should be daydreaming of making homemade lacto-fermented pickles. But I cannot get my fill of these tiny, tender, delicious cukes sliced into spears and dipped in homemade buttermilk dressing. I’ve been making the Homesick Texan’s version lately, and it’s fantastic. I just happen to have a few of the fresh ingredients ready and waiting in my garden.
I realize I’m actually salivating as I write this post. I’ve always liked cucumbers. But the victory garden has made me a confirmed lover of the kind of cucumber you cannot get at a grocery store, or even possibly the farmer’s market. Next year, F. and I have already decided, we’re devoting more land to cucumber cultivation. Can you ever have enough of these crisp little, thin-skinned delicacies? Maybe that’s a rhetorical question.
And here’s another rhetorical question: Isn’t that misty blue twilight made for dreams? It should be called “fairy light.” I kept expecting fairies to materialize, shimmering, and the cucumber blossoms to turn out to be their flirty, twirly, lemon-yellow skirts in disguise.
Namasté, y’all.





Oops, I thought it was about Chekhov’s play… http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Sisters_%28play%29
(a guy from North Georgia once told me that there’s only one side of culture that’s really developed in the US: the agriculture)
I don’t mind if it’s yummy (boo for HFCS!). How about me bringing the play on DVD and watching it while munching those sisters above?
Well, I’d probably agree as pertains to North Georgia. Not sure if I want to include the rest of the u.s., tho.
But I’ll take you up on that. Let’s make a date to watch the play and munch sometime soon
Honey, just read the plot, and I have two things to say.
Numero uno: miserable and depressing does not equal culture, even if it is Chekhov.
Numero dos: are you sure this play isn’t going to give us heartburn?
No worries, I have the ranitidine handy!