Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7437
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
Having enough huckleberries for a pie is a massive treat. In past years with both kids and wifer Lucille, on a good year, we could pick 3 gallons of huckleberries. Mostly we made jam and syrup, but would make one pie. You can mix huckleberries with any other fruit, and the huckleberries will take over the flavor. That's a good thing because they make huckleberries last longer.
Pap
Edited by pappy19 (08/28/1912:02 AM)
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Mike Allen RKCC-CM-086 True West Magazine Maniac Randall Collector Behring Made Collector Ruana Collector Glock Fan NRA- Life Member since 1975 mikenlu99@aol.com
Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
About 5 years ago we had a good crop of wild Black Cap Raspberries along our property line. We got a quart or so every day for a few weeks. They would start red and ripen to black. Never made a pie but we did the jam thing. Stuff around them is so overgrown they're choked out.
Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1872
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
Those berries look really good!
That picture stirs up memories!
We don’t have that particular variety here, but we have some that look pretty close.
When my Grandmother was alive, she would make a huge berry cobbler in a porcelain dishpan to take to the Family Reunions.
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"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.
Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
Borderline silly. Can't pick em fast enough. Already given a ton away. The yellow and San Marzano's are awesome. Got plenty of basil to go along for the ride.
Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1872
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
GOOD STUFF!!!
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"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.