maybe I can find a website aimed at slow six year olds who don’t yet know which two weeks are strawberry season, and whether sour cherry season comes before or after black cherry season.
If you tell us where you are, one of us will almost certainly track this down. Most of us like researching things, and this sounds like a fun challenge.
freezers are indeed useful. someday, i shall have one.
You should do the actual math to see how much you will (or won’t) save by having a freezer—it might pay for itself quicker than you think.
You don’t have to get a full-sized refrigerator/freezer unit. I’ve seen small freezers here for less than $100 that would handle one person’s food pretty well, and you might be able to get one for less than half that, secondhand. (Does Craigslist have listings in your area? How about freecycle?)
although it doesn’t list strawberries. for july, it says: sweet cherries, gooseberries, black currant, watermelon, sour cherry, peach, currant, apricot, plum. the ones that are in the middle of their season will be cheapest. the ones just starting or just ending will be expensive. so my bet is that sour cherry is cheapest.
for vegetables: zucchini (meh), kohlrabi, lentils, sunflowers, capsicum (bell pepper), tomato, pattypan squash, pumpkin, green peas, and horseradish.
If I can figure out what’s wrong with the fridge (and whether it has an easy solution), I could make cherry soup http://www.chew.hu/meggyleves.html (recipe in English)
i dont know if they have vanila sugar where you are, but it’s equivalent to a tsp or tbsp (but definitely not a cup) of a vanilla i think. you could just keep adding small amounts of it until it tastes good. :)
on the veggies list, the only things on that list that i’ve cooked with before and would know how to make something edible are: lentils, tomato and capsicum (Both of whom are just starting their season and arent at their cheapest yet)
but there may be other fruits and vegetables not on this list.
There’s a divergence between American English and British English here; in BrE “capsicum” can mean a bell pepper, but in AmE it only means a chilli pepper. (In neither does “capsicum” mean the substance that gives the hot peppers their hotness; that’s called capsaicin, capsicin, or capsicine.)
Hungary (southern plains, specifically, but it’s a small enough country that it doesn’t matter. My city is the one that gets an average of 2000 of sunlight a year, the highest in the country.). I noticed a while ago when strawberry prices stopped going down and started going up that strawberry season must be ending, but I didn’t attach a date to this noticing in my mind, so when next year rolls around, I still won’t know. (Though I remember they never went below 665 HUF/kg (about $3. I would’ve bought if they went down to 565. This information may or may not be useful next year due to inflation)
Just checked Freecycle. There are three in the country, but none in this city. Deliapro (southern classified ads) has people selling stuff used. currently, someone’s selling a gigantic one (230 litres) for about $75, someone else says they’re selling various kitchen appliances for $40 and up. i dont want a large one. I wouldnt have space for it anyway. But I could fit a 30-60L one somewhere. I live in a 1.5 room apartment, and the kitchen is tiny, but there is a space in the pantry where I could fit a small freezer.
The fridge I have is a bar fridge. There is a freezer compartment, but the door broke, so I fixed it with duct tape (which means I can’t open it). Before the door broke, it would fill with snow on a weekly basis and was tiny anyway (it would fit one frozen pizza.) so I gave up on it and just use the fridge.
If you tell us where you are, one of us will almost certainly track this down. Most of us like researching things, and this sounds like a fun challenge.
You should do the actual math to see how much you will (or won’t) save by having a freezer—it might pay for itself quicker than you think.
You don’t have to get a full-sized refrigerator/freezer unit. I’ve seen small freezers here for less than $100 that would handle one person’s food pretty well, and you might be able to get one for less than half that, secondhand. (Does Craigslist have listings in your area? How about freecycle?)
Anyway, a quick googling of “mikor érik” (when is ripe) got me to this page: http://www.hazipatika.com/topics/zoldseg_gyumolcs/seasonality (warning, not in english)
although it doesn’t list strawberries. for july, it says: sweet cherries, gooseberries, black currant, watermelon, sour cherry, peach, currant, apricot, plum. the ones that are in the middle of their season will be cheapest. the ones just starting or just ending will be expensive. so my bet is that sour cherry is cheapest.
for vegetables: zucchini (meh), kohlrabi, lentils, sunflowers, capsicum (bell pepper), tomato, pattypan squash, pumpkin, green peas, and horseradish.
If I can figure out what’s wrong with the fridge (and whether it has an easy solution), I could make cherry soup http://www.chew.hu/meggyleves.html (recipe in English)
i dont know if they have vanila sugar where you are, but it’s equivalent to a tsp or tbsp (but definitely not a cup) of a vanilla i think. you could just keep adding small amounts of it until it tastes good. :)
on the veggies list, the only things on that list that i’ve cooked with before and would know how to make something edible are: lentils, tomato and capsicum (Both of whom are just starting their season and arent at their cheapest yet)
but there may be other fruits and vegetables not on this list.
In English, capsicum is what makes hot peppers hot. The large peppers that aren’t hot are called peppers, sweet peppers or bell peppers.
There’s a divergence between American English and British English here; in BrE “capsicum” can mean a bell pepper, but in AmE it only means a chilli pepper. (In neither does “capsicum” mean the substance that gives the hot peppers their hotness; that’s called capsaicin, capsicin, or capsicine.)
Capsaicin is the chemical that makes peppers hot; capsicum is a genus.
Hungary (southern plains, specifically, but it’s a small enough country that it doesn’t matter. My city is the one that gets an average of 2000 of sunlight a year, the highest in the country.). I noticed a while ago when strawberry prices stopped going down and started going up that strawberry season must be ending, but I didn’t attach a date to this noticing in my mind, so when next year rolls around, I still won’t know. (Though I remember they never went below 665 HUF/kg (about $3. I would’ve bought if they went down to 565. This information may or may not be useful next year due to inflation)
Just checked Freecycle. There are three in the country, but none in this city. Deliapro (southern classified ads) has people selling stuff used. currently, someone’s selling a gigantic one (230 litres) for about $75, someone else says they’re selling various kitchen appliances for $40 and up. i dont want a large one. I wouldnt have space for it anyway. But I could fit a 30-60L one somewhere. I live in a 1.5 room apartment, and the kitchen is tiny, but there is a space in the pantry where I could fit a small freezer.
The fridge I have is a bar fridge. There is a freezer compartment, but the door broke, so I fixed it with duct tape (which means I can’t open it). Before the door broke, it would fill with snow on a weekly basis and was tiny anyway (it would fit one frozen pizza.) so I gave up on it and just use the fridge.