· By Angela Seto
Did you know that limes are yellow?
A beautiful spread for holiday entertaining featuring our Spicy Honey!
Thank you to everyone who placed an order during this year's Black Friday sale. I hope you enjoyed some great deals. It means so much to us to have your support this holiday season!
What's new on the farm:
Recently, I learned that ripe limes are yellow.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that. I'm shocked by that fact.
I used to think that when the limes turned yellow in my fridge, they were goners.
It turns out that growers pick limes when they are extremely underripe. They are still green at that stage.
But why? Well, I don't have a lime tree in my backyard here in Canada. Limes travel long distances from other countries. They need to last long enough to make it all the way to your fridge.
When limes are underripe, they are green, tart, and even a bit bitter, as you might already know.
But when they become ripe, the sugars develop and they turn juicier, sweeter, and richer in flavor.
I'm finding that the more I learn about the conventional food system, the more conflicted I am about it. We definitely get exposed to a wide variety of food, but a lot of it isn't high quality food.
Are there any other foods you know of that are completely different outside of the grocery store?
Greek Christmas Honey Cookies (Melomakarona)
This is a traditional Christmas cookie that combines a cookie dough containing warm spices like nutmeg and cinnamon, that is soaked in a delicious honey syrup.
It's a fun project to take on if you love baking, as they are more involved than your typical scoop and bake cookies.
They keep well too — you can make them now and they will last all the way until the holidays (if they're not eaten up by then!)
I recommend you visit the original site for the recipe as it gives lots of tips and instructions on how to make them successfully!
Melomakarona recipe from My Greek Dish