The strawberries started showing up, and soon they were everywhere. I guess it is April. Where I lived for decades we were lucky if local strawberries came available while it was still May, but here? And Spain? And Italy, where Spring has been dancing around since February? These strawberries are ripening everywhere around here.
But let me just say first: Strawberries are the most disappointing fruit in the world. They so rarely seem to live up to their promise that I have more or less stopped believing in them. Is this from modern cultivation styles? Is this just the nature of strawberries? Do I have unrealistic expectations?
Once, many years ago in the Spring in Rome we found a cafe or bakery that had a tart made with fragolini, wee adorable tiny wild strawberries. These were a revelation! These tasted like I always thought strawberries should taste, soft and firm, juicy, sweet and tart and full of strawberry flavor.
Is this so hard for a strawberry?
But that was 15 or 20 years ago. Do you know how many strawberries have broken my heart since then?
So when I started seeing the strawberries show up at every market and every vendor stall around this Belle Epoque city, I said to myself "I'm not falling for that again."
And I didn't, for awhile. But here's the thing:
A lot of the fruits and vegetables have a kind of variation here, sometimes inscrutable, sometimes wild and dramatic. For instance one might see pale red tomatoes on the vine for something like a dollar a pound. They might even ripen into something good... eventually. Or one might see a string of deep red small tomatoes perfectly arrayed on their flower branch, laid out like some kind of exquisite jewelry and selling for something like 14 dollars a pound. Are those ones amazing? I don't know. That seems like a mad amount of money. But it seems like they must be brilliant, there just isn't any knowing here. After all, I will see expensive tomatoes here now seething with mold too, and cheap ones looking unusually nice.
But the variety sort of sucks one in.
And so it was with the strawberries. There are different colors and locations to these strawberries. There are molding boxes and pristine ones. Their prices, colors, shapes, and conditions are all over the place. And that's just it: With so many, something, some version of all these strawberries must be amazing!
So after a week or two I broke down. I bought a nearly perfect looking ruby red small box for seven or eight euros.
But to be safe I went to my local fromagerie and bought whipped cream.
I brought them home.
I tasted one.
I sprayed whipped cream all over them. And I ate all the strawberries, but honestly I think the whipped cream would have been better without them.
Ah well. I guess that's done for the year.
Unless some tiny little ones show up here from Italy.
















