As a child, my father, brothers and I would spend summer Saturday afternoons in my grandparents' backyard. Like most nonni, their yard wasn't conducive to child's play; instead it was dedicated to growing vegetables (tomatoes, zucchini, and verdura of all kinds) and fruit, most notably their two monstrous cherry trees.
So instead of playing, my brothers and I were free to climb the trees. It was good fun for us kiddies, but for the adults it was a way to collect the cherries easily and quickly. We were always given pails to collect our fruit, so we could enjoy them like "civilized people" at the table. But I never descended with much to share.
There were two reasons for this. First, I only wanted to fill my pail with the reddest, juiciest, sweetest cherries I could find. The problem, however, was that when I found them I had to give them a try to see if their taste matched the promise made by their beautiful appearance. I did this time and time again.
When I tired of eating cherries, or more likely, my belly ached with over-consumption, I'd begin searching for the nastiest, worm-infested cherries I could find. Why? Well, I wouldn't want to waste a good cherry when pelleting my brothers on the other branches, of course!
The cherry trees don't blossom as they once did. It seems that once their main caregiver passed on, so too did many of their buds.
Although my market-bought cherries don't match the taste of my nonno's home-grown cherries, they do bring forth sweet memories of childhood.
1 comment:
Some people just eat to live (my wife) and then there are the rest of us!
What gets me is the Marie and Nicole watch every bimbo they give a TV show...For me there is only one:
Lidia B...save up to go to her place on the East side: Felidia...
Just got back from a vacation in Charleston: Shrimp amd Crab over Grits (southern polenta)every night! And Fried Green Tomatoes!
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