Showing posts with label The Best of What's Still Around. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Best of What's Still Around. Show all posts

Friday, July 19, 2024

The Best of What's Still Around: Navel Oranges

 


One of my first purchases after moving to California in 1996 was a bag of a dozen navel oranges at the Arcata Farmer's Market. That was accidentally poetic in that when I was very young, that's all I knew about California apart from television: it was where they grew oranges.  It was the 1950s and the few people we knew who made the long fabled voyage to California, invariably returned with oranges.  They were much prized.

But even though most of the orange groves in southern California are long gone (Kim Stanley Robinson played among them as a child, and as a teenager watched them destroyed to make way for more and more suburbia), there are still navel oranges grown there.

Navel oranges are seedless, and the first tree to grow them was apparently a mutation, an accidental hybrid, a sport of nature.  This was in Brazil.  Because they are seedless, new trees come only from cuttings from the old.  So at first all navel orange trees derived from that one tree.  

Disease wiped out the navels of Brazil in the 1930s.  By then fortunately California had its own variety, begun in the 1870s by a recent California settler, a woman who was an abolitionist and a Suffragette.  Nobody was then certain where the navel orange would best grow in America, but when she requested and was sent two cuttings from the Department of Agriculture in Washington (hence they are still called Washington navel oranges), she planted them in her front yard in Riverside.  From those two flourishing trees, the navel orange became a leader in the California citrus industry, which by the 1920 was the second largest income generator in the state, next to oil.  Now every navel orange tree in the world is a descendant of those two trees in Riverside.  One of the two trees survived to this day, an officially designated Historical Landmark.

Though I kept buying those bags at the Farmer's Market once in awhile, I wasn't over my suspicions of oranges.  Most of the oranges back in PA came from Florida, and they were frequently too tart and even sour, and always very acidic.  Enjoying the fruit of the orange after peeling it was hit and miss.  If it's a miss, you're left with a peeled orange nobody wants.

But for at least the past ten years and probably longer, I have gloried in the navel orange.  I bought them at the supermarket--they are typically large (sometimes very large, not much smaller than a grapefruit.)  Their skin is thick but easy to peel--it's not entirely unusual to peel them in one piece.  Inside they are almost invariably sweet, and never acidic. They have a unique texture.  On most days a navel orange and a cup of coffee still are my entire breakfast.

In more recent years they seem to have become more scarse, and available less often during the year.  They are a winter fruit but for years they disappeared only in August for maybe a couple of months.  In recent years they've come and gone, and sometimes they are much smaller.  So when I get the big ones I tend to eat half at a time, and that's good enough.

I don't know how climate distortion is affecting them, though they are said to be hardy, but climate is very quietly affecting the quality, availability and prices of a lot of fruits and vegetables.  The Florida orange crop has been severely depleted.  Though I consider the navel orange to be the closest to perfection, other varieties of oranges have gone through fashionable periods, so some growers are tempted to stop growing the navels.

But this year, after months with fairly small, and thin-skinned varieties, the classic large thick-skinned sweet navel began appearing.  I've had a good supply for several months now, though the last trip to the supermarket suggested that they may be diminishing.   But for as long as they last, I'm going to be grateful that such a wonderful thing is still around. 

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Best of What's Still Around: Message in a Bottle



Sting's songs are, as he says, "muscular."  They can be done in all kinds of ways and still keep their integrity.  He's proven this point with a lot of them, by doing them in different styles and with different instruments and bands behind him. Lately he's taken to singing one of his best and most popular, "Message In A Bottle," originally recorded with The Police in 1979, with just his voice and an acoustic guitar (as at the end of his Ted Talk.)

Probably the first time he did this was as an encore to his first concerts after leaving the Police.  The gestation of the band that recorded his first two solo albums with him is chronicled in one of my favorite movies called Bring On the Night, that builds to their first concert in Paris. I saw it in a shopping mall theater when it came out in 1985 or so, watched it on cable TV, taped it off cable, bought the VHS tape on sale and most recently the DVD.  This version of "Message" --with just his electric guitar--runs with the end credits of the movie, but it's one of my favorites mostly because of the gentle French voices singing along.  The lyrics make it one of the most appropriate songs to sing along to.




From an encore to the song that began the concerts on the 2008 Police reunion tour. Its joyous power with the biggest three-piece band that's ever existed, and the bond with the audience are evident in this contrasting version.  This audience for the concert in Japan is actually a little muted compared to others, but the video is HD--and free.  

Update (sort of): There were actually two stories in the news today about messages in bottles that were found--one 21 years later, another 40 years later.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

The Best of What's Still Around



A third outstanding performance from a Sting birthday concert involves somebody I'd never heard sing before, though I'd certainly heard of her--her public image was, well, public and highly theatrical.  But Lady Gaga can sing--this is a great version of "King of Pain."  The band is really great too.

Monday, April 20, 2015

The Best of What's Still Around



I saw this for the first time in the full concert footage and didn't recognize the performer.  I heard a good voice and especially heard good diction--as great as Sting's lyrics are, he doesn't always sing them clearly, especially with the Police.  So I understood some of these lyrics for the first time.  Turns out of course that it's Robert Downey, Jr, aka Ironman etc.  With Sting (yeah the shaved head looks weird, don't know what that was about) and a great backing band.

I've been aware of this concept of the Bucket List for a few years but didn't have one.  Now I've got one item.  I'm not deluded enough to say "sing with Sting" or in a particular venue.  I'd just like to sing on stage with two or three hot lady backup singers.  Just one night.  I've got sweet backup voices on my one and only record but we did our parts separately (I didn't even meet the sax player whose solos are my favorite moments until years later.)  But I've never had that experience in real time.  I suspect it would be a bit of an out of body experience, but maybe a video of it would allow me to savor.

Monday, April 13, 2015

The Best of What's Still Around



Recently via YouTube, PBS etc. I've been catching up with Sting.  He's a great performer and a very great songwriter.  This is from his 60th birthday concert a few years ago, which featured many guest artists.  The video available on YouTube is a strange amalgamation of professionally shot and pretty bad amateur video from the audience.  But this is one from the professional part at the beginning--it's Rufus Wainwright singing "Wrapped Around Your Finger."  Such a great voice, and his opera interests really show in great intonation and force--it's already my favorite version of this song, including the original Police recording.

For fellow boomers, Rufus Wainwright is the son of songwriter and singer Loudon Wainwright III and singer Kate McGarrigle of the McGarrigle Sisters.   I once was in their apartment in the Village, tagging along with Georgia Christgau and maybe her brother Robert.  I don't remember why we were there, but the apartment was empty (maybe to water the plants?): no Kate (I think she and Loudon were separated at that time) and no infant Rufus.  Just hundreds of motel keys hanging from nails near the ceiling, all around one big room.

This may be the first of a series, inspired by Sting's line: "When the world is running down/ you make the best of what's still around."  Which includes: appreciate, savor, enjoy, celebrate.