RE: [gardeners] Re: Sunday in the garden [sic]

Seyfried,Alice (gardeners@globalgarden.com)
Mon, 25 Jun 2001 23:11:56 -0400

Oooo, I have that book! I'll look it up. Thanks a heap Terry!  Your previous
post about your new garden along your driveway sounds wonderful and lush!
Please do take some pictures and let us all know where you've posted them.

-Alice

-----Original Message-----
From: Terry King [mailto:taeking@endlesshealth.com]
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 7:22 PM
To: gardeners@globalgarden.com
Subject: RE: [gardeners] Re: Sunday in the garden [sic]


Alice,
Pears also make wonderful chutney.  If I remember correctly the Ball Blue
Book has a very good recipe.

Terry
E. WA.

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-gardeners@globalgarden.com
[mailto:owner-gardeners@globalgarden.com]On Behalf Of Margaret
Lauterbach
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 10:35 AM
To: gardeners@globalgarden.com
Subject: RE: [gardeners] Re: Sunday in the garden [sic]


Alice, if you do turn out to have a big crop of good pears, another
preservation technique is to dry them.  Pears are easy to dry. You don't
have to skin them, and I just use a Vegomatic to slice them, core and all.
Once they're dehydrated, you can pick out seeds as you eat them.  Margaret L

At 09:39 AM 6/25/01 -0400, you wrote:
>Oh, now that's interesting. I had no idea there was any such-type of pear.
>The fruits themselves have the shape and color of a "regular" bartlett (?)
>that you buy in the grocery store, so I just assumed that's what it was. I
>will talk with our extension office. I can't believe I may have just been
>wasting all those pears for all these years!  Would I go about making pear
>butter the same way I do apple butter? Different spices? We put up many
>pints of apple butter every year. Pear would make an interesting change for
>those Christmas baskets. And pear honey?  That's peaked my interest.