Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

Reading the topic about soft-shell crabs got me thinking about "The Endless Summer." Two surfers globetrot trying to avoid winter and see the best possible waves the world has to offer.

Sooooo.... how about a checklist for the discerning globetrotter. (If this takes off, I reserve the movie rights :-)

Late August, Hatch NM for the chilis

September, the Chesapeake Bay for the crabs

What would you add -- winter truffle harvest? Le beaujolais nouveau est arrivé! Oktoberfest? Napa cab release? Thanksgiving in Plymouth, England?

Could be a fun topic...

Edited by ScoopKW (log)

Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe

Posted

I live in Arizona, and I miss fresh apples, unwaxed ones, right off the tree -you can pick a region, there are too many to choose from. And so many kinds... Winesaps were always my favorites. Then there's always cider and cider jelly. Most of the places that made these things when I was a teenager in PA are gone, so I don't know what to say about a location. My HS brought into the cafeteria full sized barrels of cider in the fall, yes, huge real barrels, and sometimes it would be a bit hard....everyone was a bit happier that time of year....

I also miss really ripe peaches. My parents, when we moved to Maryland, used to buy overripe peaches for $1/bushel at an orchard and have us immediately freeze them in simple syrup. We had a taste of late summer all winter that way. Once again, I don't have an exact spot, but, a peach orchard someplace where they raise them the old-fashioned way and let them get really ripe on the tree.

I'd visit Santa Fe for apricots. People grow them in their yards and it's the only place I have ever been where they didn't have to be peeled to make pie. I know that other places have apricots, but, some of the older trees in Santa Fe were better than anything I have ever tasted.

I'd love to pull a vidalia out of the ground and eat it immediately, in the proper terrior.

I could do a whole world-wide tour of fresh local honeys, they are so individual!

Posted

OK, so add a vidalia festival in Macon, GA -- and may as well throw in the Gilroy, CA garlic festival.

But I think the "Endless Food Summer" should basically include venues where it is generally agreed that one finds the absolute best of the best -- Hatch chilis, Alba truffles, Key West pink shrimp, Champagne, etc. And it doesn't have to be the most expensive best of the best. I'm down for a Cornwall pastie festival, if one exists.

Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe

Posted

As a Jersey Girl, I'd be remiss in not nominating July in NJ for outstanding tomatoes...

"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast" - Oscar Wilde

Posted

OK, so add a vidalia festival in Macon, GA -- and may as well throw in the Gilroy, CA garlic festival.

But I think the "Endless Food Summer" should basically include venues where it is generally agreed that one finds the absolute best of the best -- Hatch chilis, Alba truffles, Key West pink shrimp, Champagne, etc. And it doesn't have to be the most expensive best of the best. I'm down for a Cornwall pastie festival, if one exists.

I expect you would find one or two folks down this way who would happily argue that a vidalia onion is indeed the best of the best! Macon would get you close but you would have to slide another 100 miles or so down the road to Vidalia, GA to go to the Vidalia Onion Festival each spring.

I believe one day I would like to have my own little festival in Spain featuring the very best and freshest jamón I can find to include at least a little bit of Jamón Iberico de Bellota before I die.

If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man. ~Mark Twain

Some people are like a Slinky. They are not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs...

~tanstaafl2

Posted (edited)

OK, here's what we have so far

early-March, Fort Myers Beach Shrimp Festival, Fort Myers, FL

late-April, Vidalia Onion festival, Vidalia, GA

late-April, Port Royal Soft Shell Crab Festival, Port Royal, SC

early-May, Salón del Jamón Ibérico, Jerez de los Caballeros, Spain

late-June/early July, Aÿ Champagne Festival, Aÿ (near Reims), France (biannual event, even years)

late-July, Gilroy Garlic festival, Gilroy, CA

late-August, Tomatina, Valencia, Spain

early-September, Hatch Valley Chile Festival, Hatch NM

mid-September, Festival del Prosciutto di Parma, Langhirano, Italy

mid-to-late September, Oktoberfest, Munich, Germany

November, Alba International White Truffle Festival, Alba, Italy

Keep 'em coming, even if they overlap. Someone might be allergic to shellfish, after all.

EDIT -- added the Salón del Jamón Ibérico de Jerez de los Caballeros for tanstaafl2

Edited by ScoopKW (log)

Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe

Posted

June 24 (St John's Day) in Italy, to make nocino.

Gravenstein apple festival in Sonoma County, California, around mid-August. The best of the heirloom apples, IMO.

Day of the Dead in Oaxaca, Mexico, late Oct-early Nov. Feast foods at the markets, housewives lined up at mills to grind their special blends of mole. Go there for some great mole.

Dungeness crab season opens in San Francisco, sometime in November. Get the local crabs while you can, it's a short season.

Posted

As a Jersey Girl, I'd be remiss in not nominating July in NJ for outstanding tomatoes...

and corn. another native Jersey girl here, but as a long-time Rhode-Islander, stiff competition for both in RI.

Have to add: maple syrup in New England (VT, probably) in March, sugaring season, with doughnuts and pickles.

Posted

OK, here's what we have so far

early-March, Fort Myers Beach Shrimp Festival, Fort Myers, FL

late-April, Vidalia Onion festival, Vidalia, GA

late-April, Port Royal Soft Shell Crab Festival, Port Royal, SC

early-May, Salón del Jamón Ibérico, Jerez de los Caballeros, Spain

late-June/early July, Aÿ Champagne Festival, Aÿ (near Reims), France (biannual event, even years)

late-July, Gilroy Garlic festival, Gilroy, CA

late-August, Tomatina, Valencia, Spain

early-September, Hatch Valley Chile Festival, Hatch NM

mid-September, Festival del Prosciutto di Parma, Langhirano, Italy

mid-to-late September, Oktoberfest, Munich, Germany

November, Alba International White Truffle Festival, Alba, Italy

Keep 'em coming, even if they overlap. Someone might be allergic to shellfish, after all.

EDIT -- added the Salón del Jamón Ibérico de Jerez de los Caballeros for tanstaafl2

Cool list. It looks like there's some space there though to squeeze in

mid-August, Great Taste of the Midwest, Madison WI

It's a beer festival that's really one of a kind.

nunc est bibendum...

Posted

I'll re-edit the list shortly (off to work a double shift, ugh). I'm getting too old for doubles.

Some of the ideas, I'm a little unsure of including. I can't add every state fair and food festival on Earth. So I want to stick with things that have broad, international appeal. (Oktoberfest) Or at least very strong regional appeal. (Hatch Chile Fest)

Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe

Posted (edited)

I live 20 miles from teh self-proclaimed Huckleberry Capital of the World: Jay, OK. See you the first week of July for the county fair and huckleberry festival.

Edited by annabelle (log)
Posted

The local specialty that I dream about is spiny lobster. The commercial season opens October 5th this year (my birthday!!) and end mid March.

Posted

I'll re-edit the list shortly (off to work a double shift, ugh). I'm getting too old for doubles.

Some of the ideas, I'm a little unsure of including. I can't add every state fair and food festival on Earth. So I want to stick with things that have broad, international appeal. (Oktoberfest) Or at least very strong regional appeal. (Hatch Chile Fest)

Well it is your list so do what you want but it seems to me that you mmay have a hard time judging what has strong regional appeal outside of your jurisdiction. Maybe you should spell out some more specific groundrules.

Cheers,

Anne

Posted

I'll re-edit the list shortly (off to work a double shift, ugh). I'm getting too old for doubles.

Some of the ideas, I'm a little unsure of including. I can't add every state fair and food festival on Earth. So I want to stick with things that have broad, international appeal. (Oktoberfest) Or at least very strong regional appeal. (Hatch Chile Fest)

Well it is your list so do what you want but it seems to me that you mmay have a hard time judging what has strong regional appeal outside of your jurisdiction. Maybe you should spell out some more specific groundrules.

Hm, I thought this was (essentially) just for fun?

Also, are there no special annual culinary events in Asia, Africa, Australia or New Zealand..? Someone must have something to recommend!

Michaela, aka "Mjx"
Manager, eG Forums
mscioscia@egstaff.org

Posted (edited)

There's not a festival any more, to my knowledge (there was when I was in high school, a century or so ago), but you must add mid-October to early November, depending on the year and the weather, for "new sorghum" in the Tennessee River Valley of Western Tennessee and Kentucky. You can get "local" sorghum year-round, but "new" sorghum, with crackling cornbread, for the first two-three weeks after it's cut, cooked and canned, is just a spectacular taste that has no equal.

I might add that, to be enjoyed correctly, it must be accompanied by slab bacon and home-canned tomatos. Heaven!

Edited by kayb (log)

Don't ask. Eat it.

www.kayatthekeyboard.wordpress.com

Posted

And I entirely forgot the largest food event in my city! (insert forehead slap here).

Late January right up to the day of Lent - Festival of Fruit and Flowers, Ambato, Ecuador.

Specific days within this festival celebrate the harvest of the best of the black Claudias, Duraznos, Guaytambos, Naranjillas, Ambato Red Pears, Tisaleo Gold Apples. Near the middle is the Festival of Bread, celebrating the best in the traditional Ambato breads (we're known for having the best bread in the country), the Chocolate Festival, and sometimes (alternate years) the Cuy Festival. There are also typically about 5 times the number of street food vendors during this two month festival period.

Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.

My eG Food Blog (2011)My eG Foodblog (2012)

Posted

I'll re-edit the list shortly (off to work a double shift, ugh). I'm getting too old for doubles.

Some of the ideas, I'm a little unsure of including. I can't add every state fair and food festival on Earth. So I want to stick with things that have broad, international appeal. (Oktoberfest) Or at least very strong regional appeal. (Hatch Chile Fest)

Well it is your list so do what you want but it seems to me that you mmay have a hard time judging what has strong regional appeal outside of your jurisdiction. Maybe you should spell out some more specific groundrules.

Hm, I thought this was (essentially) just for fun?

Also, are there no special annual culinary events in Asia, Africa, Australia or New Zealand..? Someone must have something to recommend!

Of course this is just for fun -- but I've also already been to roughly one third of the events on the "official" list. As for ground rules, it's kind of like art. I can't define it, but I know it when I see it.

Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today. -- Edgar Allan Poe

×
×
  • Create New...