Sunday, February 13, 2022

Watermelon Radishes


The weather was bright and blue and crisp yesterday, so Olga and I took an afternoon walk to the cemetery. Yes, I am still technically in Covid isolation, but since I'm pretty much over it and I was outdoors and away from people the whole time, I didn't see how a walk could hurt. I desperately needed a change of scenery and I think Olga did too!

Along the way I found this stamp lying on the sidewalk. It's an old French stamp, somewhat battered and torn. Who knows how it wound up lying on a London street. It makes me suspect someone's stamp collection got discarded and this one blew out of the trash can. But who knows.

Olga wasn't super-energetic, and in fact she turned for home after we'd made one loop around the rear part of the cemetery, rather than also doing a loop around the front too -- our usual path.

I finished Sean Wilsey's "Oh the Glory of It All," which I liked even though it ran long in a few places, particularly toward the end. For example, I could have done without the road trip to Marin County, complete with thumbnail-sized photos from a disposable camera, to find the exact spot where the author's father had died peacefully a few weeks before in a passenger seat while en route from Napa to San Francisco. But Wilsey's descriptions of interactions with his truly evil stepmother -- a cliché, but this woman was capital E-V-I-L -- and his entertaining accounts of his troubled teen years and education at various expensive and exotic reform schools made up for the occasionally excessive detail. Like I said, it was thumbs-up overall.


Here's something I've never seen before. It's called a "watermelon radish," and Dave bought a package of three at the grocery store as an experiment. His verdict?

"They taste like nothing," he said. "It’s the 'Seinfeld' of radishes."

(In case your '90s cultural references are rusty, "Seinfeld" was often described as "a show about nothing.")

Indeed, they are pretty and they're pleasantly crisp, and as you can see they're quite a bit larger than a traditional radish, but they don't have much of a taste. I think they're more about texture and appearance than anything else.

We also tried another new product, courtesy of my monthly (now quarterly; I reduced the frequency) box from the Craft Gin Club. It's called "Crodino," and it's a non-alcoholic Italian aperitif. It's very bitter and neither Dave nor I cared for it. He likened it to concentrated orange rind, and I think that's pretty accurate. But some people love it (at least according to the Amazon reviews) so maybe it's just not our thing.

53 comments:

  1. I thought of you today and your Newbery Award project -- I follow a guy on Instagram who's from Florida and who is currently reading and writing a newsletter about ALL the books that were longlisted for the National Book Award beginning in the 1950s when it started. His name is Hunter McLendon of ShelfbyShelf. I think you might like following him. It's always so good to see and hear about Olga -- and I'm glad that you're getting out and about, recovering from the plague.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow! That sounds like a much bigger task than reading all the Newbery winners. Did he say how many books that would be? More power to him!

      Delete
  2. The watermelon radish is a beauty. I love Dave’s description.

    As for Crodino: It tastes best very cold (a glassful of ice) with soda water. That’s not to say you’ll like it. That’s just to say it tastes best that way.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. OK, good to know about Crodino! We didn't mix it -- just poured it over ice. (That's how the Craft Gin people suggested serving it.)

      Delete
    2. And, if you feel like cooking, an orange slice is a nice touch (with a squeeze).

      Delete
  3. Leaving the house while still in COVID quarantine would be fine if you were ringing a handbell and warning others, "Unclean! Unclean!" Funny that you had nice weather yesterday when 170 miles north it was wet, grey and miserable.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well I crossed the street whenever anyone came toward me so that's the equivalent of ringing the "unclean" bell, I think!

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. That tree always makes interesting shadows. I've shot them before.

      Delete
  5. I’ve had watermelon radishes a number of times but they are normally quick pickled and used as an edible garnish. I guess the pickling process was for flavor.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can see how they'd pickle well because they're so crisp.

      Delete
  6. Great stamp to find on the ground. I sometimes wonder if lost and abandoned things try to find YOU.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think there's just a lot of stuff lying around out there -- though I don't remember finding this much when I lived in NYC. Maybe I wasn't looking as closely.

      Delete
  7. Interesting foray into food and drink today. Both new to me. I also wondered if the Crodino works as an addition to a sparkling water.

    Olga was probably happy for her walk,too. Even dogs like a change of scenery.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can see how sparkling water might dilute the bitterness a bit, which might make it more palatable.

      Delete
  8. You had me at the "Seinfeld of radishes"! An apt description of what looks like it might be delicious but isn't.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought that was a pretty apt description too!

      Delete
  9. Hmmm...
    The watermelon radishes might be good in a salad where their texture can be appreciated.
    I wonder if you could use the crodino (which I've never heard of) in baking. Orange and chocolate together are a nice combination.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think salad would be good for the radishes, or pickling, as some suggested. The Crodino tastes more like orange rind than orange.

      Delete
  10. Okay. I am far more interested in that knife. My son took me to a hibachi restaurant when I was last there, and on the way home, he said that he would love to have one of their knives. I've been looking at them as a possible gift idea. (I Christmas shop all year around.) So tell me about that particular knife. I've been researching.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The knife is labeled "masanobu seki - Japan" and below that, "by MCUSTA VG-10"

      Hope that helps! Dave bought it when he went to culinary school. He loves it.

      Delete
  11. That is a great photo of the tree shadow. And two things I will never try...watermelon radishes and crodino.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, you might like the radishes, but the Crodino I'm betting not.

      Delete
  12. I love that shadow photo. It's so beautiful.
    That stamp is such an interesting find. And that watermelon radish doesn't look like anything I would want to try.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. See, I think it LOOKS appealing. But it looks better than it tastes!

      Delete
  13. Great shadow shot on the first photo. Keep on walkin'

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Now that I can walk to work again I'll be walking more!

      Delete
  14. I've never seen watermelon radishes either but they are lovely. Probably better for presentation than dining! (Or did Dave lose his taste with Covid?) I like "The Seinfeld of Radishes!"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, I think they're mostly for appearance and texture.

      Delete
  15. Watermelon radishes show up quite often here. They get added to salads to ad a bit of color but I agree, they don't have much taste.
    Love the shadow in the top photo.

    ReplyDelete
  16. That's a beautiful radish but I would be disappointed to as I prefer my radishes with a bit of bite. I'm often puzzled by what is the latest and "greatest" in foods, drinks, books, films, etc.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sometimes it's just a matter of being "new," not necessarily good!

      Delete
  17. I would probably like the watermelon radish since I don't care for radish taste and I love crunch! I bet it would be good in Thai green papaya salad. How long a walk is the full cemetery loop?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's not too long. I've never measured it out, honestly! Let me get back to you!

      Delete
  18. You sound like you will be happy to go back to work! Glad you are feeling better.

    ReplyDelete
  19. I've seen watermelon radishes on TV cooking shows where they always seem to pickle them. They must need that flavoring to be any good!

    Concentrated orange rind doesn't sound very good. Why on earth was your gin club sending you something non-alcoholic??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can see how pickling would work well. The Gin Club sends a variety of little treats and mixers in each box. It's usually a bunch of weird stuff that I would never buy otherwise! LOL

      Delete
  20. Yay for a walk! You've been cooped up for a long time. The radish looks interesting, too bad they don't taste like anything.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They have a pleasant crunch -- that's the best I can say.

      Delete
  21. HAHA what Mr. Pudding said! "unclean Unclean", ding ding ding. Hilarious! Olga is doing great for a gal her age- I am not as spry as she! The radishes look amazing - the crunch must be like water chestnuts.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She still gets around pretty well, all things considered!

      Delete
  22. It's really interesting about the Watermelon Radishes. I was telling my son Jon that we should give them a try, but after I read your description about them, he said "Ummm No" lol. He is not much for change lol.

    I love the stamp and you could be correct. Then again perhaps a tourist was planning to use it to mail a post card home and it fell out of their pocketbook/wallet. I always try to think of real life, scenarios or things that have happened to me.

    Have a great last day of your sentence and a return back to a normal routine. xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But the stamp has already been used! And besides it wouldn't work for postage here in the UK.

      Delete
  23. That description of Crodino reminds me of the time Mike & stayed at a Shaker village & ate at their restaurant that served "authentic" Shaker food. I got lemon meringue pie for dessert & it was SO BITTER. They used LOTS of lemon zest and practically no sugar. No thank you!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yikes! Well, the Shakers strike me as people not likely to be very indulgent with sugar. :)

      Delete
  24. Well, the radish is very pretty, if not tasty. Concentrated orange rind does sound very bitter. We use something called bitrix when having our fit testing for N95 masks, the most bitter, nasty smelling and tasting stuff every. If the N95 mask fits properly, you shouldn't be able to smell or taste the bitrix.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, interesting. I've never heard of having a mask fitted that way!

      Delete
  25. That's a vicious looking knife. I want one!

    ReplyDelete
  26. The radish does LOOK interesting and without much bite, might be suited to kids who haven't tried radishes yet.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's true! Kids might go for it, particularly with a touch of salt or something to give it a bit more flavor.

      Delete