We are right smack dab in the middle of the best strawberry harvest we've ever had. Very early in the year I planted some bare root strawberries - a ten foot row of them in the very back of the garden by the sugar cane. They have thrived! In past years, we struggled because the slugs and snails would eat them before we could harvest them. A nice lady from our church gave me a plastic shopping bag full of crushed up egg shells to sprinkle around the base of the plant (see below). She told me that the sharp eggshells cut the slugs undersides when they slide to eat strawberries and die. I did what she told me, and it appears to work!
She then told me if the eggshells don't work, that there is another remedy for slugs. Beer! She told me to put plastic lids filled with beer around the strawberry plants. The slimy critters are attracted to the scent, climb in and drown. I have not tried this eradication option yet. The last thing I need is a bunch of partying, drunken slugs and snails loitering in the garden. That doesn't sound safe.
I'm going to share a new recipe we tried today that's a keeper: Honey-Lime Macerated Strawberries (a recipe from The School of Traditional Skills.) Check 'em out!
So macerated was a new vocabulary word for me. It means softened while sitting in a liquid. The acidity of the lime in this recipe pulls out the juice from the strawberries. Here's what you need:Wash up the berries that just came out of the garden and pick the mint leaves and wash.
Cut up the strawberries in a glass bowl. Drizzle the honey, lime juice and lime zest over the berries and stir to coat.
Here's where our new vocabulary word goes to work. If you let the bowl of berries sit for 15-20 minutes at room temperature the berries soften and a bright red syrup will collect at the bottom of the bowl. You might call it a maceration sensation.
When it's about time to serve, chiffonade your fresh mint leaves over the top and stir in.
After church we ate a nice meal and put coffee on. We each fixed a little bowl with this easy spring dessert to go along with our coffee.
What a treat it was! All the ingredients (except the limes, doggonit) were harvested right off of our land. That makes it special - almost as special as the taste! We'll keep this recipe and make more of this before the strawberry harvest ends.