Posts Tagged “Costa Rica”
Buying two of my favorite fruits with any good taste has been a real challenge this year — until this week.
Finally had some cantaloupe from Costa Rica that was out of sight! I know when my cantaloupe is tasting as it should when I don’t have to sprinkle salt on it.
My next pleasant surprise came with California strawberries. I had began to think I’d just grown tired of eating strawberries, until this week. What finally hit me was I’d just grown weary of fruit lacking in taste. You’d cut one open and it there was more white color than red. This quart of clamshell strawberries also wasn’t detriorating. Lately it seemed I have to eat the whole quart at once because the next day, the fruit was be going to “crap.” I’ve had these strawberries at the house three days and they remain firm, tasty, with a beautiful red color — and no decay.
Maybe, they finally realized they should have been shipping it protected by Tectrol, which slows the aging process.
Another one of my favorites are watermelons. I often find it difficult to buy great tasting melons until around the 4th of July. You get all the early season stuff out of the way, and warmer, more consistent weather helps produce better watermelons.
Expect watermelon retail prices to be pretty stiff, especially in the eastern half of the USA. For various reasons, melon crops have been hit pretty hard and supplies will be much tighter than normal. Out West, supplies are much better and you may not face as much stick shock.
Thirty years ago you could only get certain produce items at particular times of the year. This has gradually changed over time as countries around the world have started growing fruits and vegetables, improving varieties, increasing volumes and exporting to countries such as the United States.
In 2011 the leading suppliers of veggies to America were Mexico, which accounted for 58 percent of imports, Canada 27 percent and Peru three percent. The top countries providing us with fruit was Mexico 34 percent, Chile 20 percent and Costa Rica 11 percent.
In most cases if these countries were not providing us these perishables, these items would not be available at all, or least in much less limited supplies, which would greatly increase the costs we pay for them. Their growing seasons differ from ours.
There are some exceptions, with perhaps the most drastic being the tomatoes available to us from Florida in the winter, which compete against tomatoes coming out of Mexico. Over the years the Florida tomato industry has complained out Mexico undercutting them on price and flooding the market with excess supplies.
There is some truth in these claims. At the same time, you’ll find Florida providing your supermarket with mature green tomatoes, while the Mexicans are supplying us with vine ripe grown tomatoes and in more recent years have greatly increased their greenhouse grown tomato supplies.
Outside of the folks who grow mature green tomatoes in Florida, I find it difficult to find people who like the taste of these tomatoes, especially when compared to vine ripe and greenhouse grown products.