Almond trees blooming

April 9th, 2008

Last February I took some pictures of the almond trees blooming in the way work. I didn’t have time to edit and post them until now. But now the post coincides with Sakura blooming in Japan :D, so I don’t regret very much not having posted these pictures before. Enjoy!

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This is my favourite picture

Oranges and Mandarins

December 4th, 2007

It’s already the orange and mandarin season. Some time ago, I went to the orchards to visit the fruits when they are still unripe. I took some pictures:

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Mandarin orchard


Unripe mandarins (clementines)

Spain is, by far, the first producer in the world of citrus fruits destined to the fresh market. It’s followed by the United States.

In Spain, citrus fruits are produced mainly at the South of Tarragona, Valencia, Castellón, Murcia and Sevilla regions.

Pumpkins

October 14th, 2007

Halloween (31st of October) is approaching, but in Spain we didn’t use to celebrate it. In Spain is more traditional to celebrate the 1st of November, called “All Saints Day”. This day, people visit graveyards to offer flowers and clean the graves of their relatives. In Catalonia we also have a tradition of preparing roast chestnuts and sweet potatoes that we eat with “panellets“, a kind of little marzipan cakes with different shapes depending on the main ingredient. I hope I cant talk more about “panellets” in another post because I like them very much and I’d like to add pictures and recipes, and I should prepare them first, of course.

Returning back to the pumpkins and Halloween…It’s said that All Saints Day is the catholic version of the “Samhain“, the pagan celebration that Celtics had for the last day of the year. They believed that day the spirits of the dead could take over the bodies of the living and resurrect. To prevent this, they started decorating their houses with unpleasant objects as skulls, bones and other sinister looking things, so that the dead would get scared and avoid the houses. So, although this celebration has become popular through American culture, has in fact an European origin.

Some years ago, many Spanish people started celebrating Halloween too, so they now celebrate two holidays: Halloween and the All Saints Day. But officially only the 1st of November is a holiday in Spain.

A pumpkin field in Spain:

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I’d like to finish talking about what we do with pumpkins when it isn’t Halloween. In Valencia they prepare “buñuelos de calabaza“, a round wheat flour and pumpkin dough fried in oil, when it’s Fallas time.

In Spain is widely used (all the year) in pastries, cakes, etc… a kind of pumpkin jam known as “cabello de ángel” (”angel’s hair” because it looks like golden filaments) and which is really sweet and sticky. We also prepare pudding, creams and soups and it’s very tasty. I’ve seen it even as a pasta filling…but this is an Italian recipe.

Apart from cuisine, during years pumpkins had been used in other ways. People used to dry them and use as a float when plastic floats didn’t exist. They gathered some and tied them around their waist. The type of pumpkin used for floats is not the same of the picture. It’s a much smaller type. Dried pumpkins of this smaller type were used as containers too, making a hole at the stalk and placing a cork. A different type of pumpkin with a long stalk was used to make a funnel cutting the top of the stalk and the bottom.

Also, when saying you “bring pumpkins” (“traer calabazas”), people will understand you failed an exam. Nowadays is a little old fashioned expression.

Little harbour

October 11th, 2007

These are some pictures taken in the harbour of l’Ampolla, a little village by the Mediterranean Sea and near Delta de l’Ebre (Ebro Delta, more info). Delta de l’Ebre is famous for its rice fields and the National Park, extraordinarily rich in flora and fauna (specially migratory birds). It’s one of the most important wetlands in Europe.

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Fishing boats


Moorings


A duck in the sea! it was in the harbour, near fishing nets

As l’Ampolla has a big fishing tradition, fish and seafood dishes are really good. For example dishes of oysters, rice&seafood paella, black rice, eel, many fish types…can be eaten here.

Here I leave a pair of videos of Delta de l’Ebre:

A little video of the landscape in l’Encanyissada wetlands.

A video showing the rice fields and the rice harvesting.

Credits:
Pictures: Blackrice
Videos: Their respective owners at Youtube

Olives

October 11th, 2007

Have you ever heard of olive oil (aceite de oliva, in Spanish)? It’s the healthiest vegetable oil, but it isn’t the topic of this post. We’ll talk about it soon.

This is the fruit where it comes from. It’s called “olive” (oliva, aceituna). The one in the picture is ready to be collected. The largest producers in the world are Spain and Italy, olives are a Mediterranean product after all.

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Olives can’t be eaten right after being collected. They enter a process to eliminate its bitter taste and soften them, and it’s also needed for preservation. There are many methods of curing/pìckling olives but, at home, I’ve always seen the brine-curing method only. My grandfather knows well the process. Maybe I can give further information in future posts.

Watch the traditional way of collecting olives in Spain:

Peasants hit olive tree’s branches with sticks (traditional way) or also with vibrating rakes, pneumatic shakers, etc… Olives fall on the ground, over a big mesh they have previously placed there, around the tree. There are also special tractors (harvesters) that circle the tree, shake the branches and olives go directly inside the vehicle. To use these tractors trees must be planted in broad rows.

Credits:
Pictures: Blackrice
Videos: Their respective owners at Youtube