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Grapes in the Oasis |
Most of us have been eating them right off the vine - picking a bundle and munching on them between meals. even having them for dessert. They're pretty seedy, but we don't mind - we crunch right through them. Some have even begun drying into raisins! The best are the semi-shriveled half grape, half raisin - they're extra sweet and just the slightest bit chewy.
So, what do we do with all these grapes, you ask? Juice em!
David & Brandon spent half a day harvesting 2 huge coolers worth of grapes to bring up to our friend Jini's house for juicing. She has an apple press, and we heard that works just fine on grapes, too.
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Brandon mid-harvest (I told you they shade well!) |
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One of the 2 coolers filled with grapes for juicing |
We decided to make an evening out of it, as Jini lives in Redwood Valley, a bit north of Ukiah. So Brandon, David, Vaughn, Mimi and I rolled up there, grapes and empty bottles in tow, to make some juice as well as dinner.
David and Mimi led the pressing while B and I manned the kitchen. In 2 hours time, we pumped out approximately 9 gallons of grape juice and 10 pizzas. Now that's teamwork.
The grape juice is so good but it's sooo sweet! We're talking syrup-sweet. I'm sensitive to sugars and after 3 large gulps, I could feel my heart rate amp up. Vaughn had a hefty cupful and started to felt shaky. Talk about a sugar rush. We've found the best way to consume is to cut it with some sparkling water.
So refreshing in the hot summer sun |
What does one do with 9 gallons of grape juice? Make jelly, of course!
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