Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, July 17, 2019, Page A6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A6
COMMUNITY
Wallowa County Chieftain
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Local foods, local recipes, local folks
Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian
Becky Conant purchases Hermiston watermelons at the
Bellinger Farms shop on Highway 395 in Hermiston.
Conant is bringing the watermelons to a family reunion in
Florence as a remembrance of growing up in Hermiston.
First Hermiston
watermelons ready
By JADE MCDOWELL
East Oregonian
HERMISTON
—
Hermiston’s most famous
crop is shaping up nicely
this year.
Bellinger Farms started
selling their fi rst batch of
watermelons this week and
Jack Bellinger said he was
pleased with the sugar con-
tent and weight.
“All indications sug-
gest that it’s going to be a
good year, quality-wise,”
he said.
He said he was sur-
prised with how much the
early melons weighed this
year, making him cau-
tiously optimistic about the
season.
Heavy snow in Febru-
ary had put the crop behind
schedule, Bellinger said,
and he had expected to see
a gap between when his
early fi elds and late fi elds
were ready. Instead, ideal
weather in June helped
speed things up and will
help keep watermelons
rolling into the store.
“I would have guessed
we wouldn’t start until July
15 or so,” he said.
Watermelons
are
already available for pur-
chase, however, and Bell-
inger said their operation
would start shipping them
outside of Hermiston on
Friday.
Walchli Farms water-
melons are not quite ready
yet, but Patrick Walchli
said they are looking good
and will be here “shortly.”
The large family-owned
farm sells its melons out
of a warehouse on Loop
Road.
“Right now they’re not
ripe, but I expect to have
good quality from what
we’ve seen,” he said.
He said in Eastern Ore-
gon you never know what
you’re going to get, weath-
er-wise, during a growing
season.
Editor’s Note: This is
the fi rst of what will be a
monthly column devoted to
local foods, local recipes
and the local people who
make good food happen.
This column is shep-
herded by Lynne Curry and
the Wallowa Slow Foods
organization. We hope you
enjoy it!
Janie Tippett’s
Strawberry Cream Pie
Makes 6 to 8 servings
A beautiful, delicious
pie. This recipe is best when
you use your own home-
grown strawberries or those
purchased from someone
locally.
— Janie Tippett
Ingredients:
½ cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon cornstarch
¼ cup water
1 cup fresh strawberries,
mashed, or unsweetened
frozen strawberries
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 packages (8 ounces
each)
cream
cheese,
softened
1 cup confectioner’s
sugar
1 cup whipping cream
1 fully baked nine-inch
pie shell
2 cups fresh whole
strawberries
Blend together the sugar,
cornstarch and water in a
saucepan and stir in mashed
strawberries. Bring to a boil
over medium heat, then
cook, stirring, until thick-
ened, about 2 minutes.
Remove from the heat, stir
in lemon juice and cool to
room temperature.
Beat the cream cheese
and confectioner’s sugar in
a bowl until smooth. Whip
T HE B OOKLOFT
Ellen Morris Bishop
Janie Tippett’s Strawberry Pie requires no baking--except for the crust. Fresh local strawberriess
are the best, of course.
the cream until it holds
peaks. Fold in the
whipped cream. Spoon
the cream mixture
into the pastry shell
and arrange the whole
Wallowa Slow Foods
strawberries over it.
Spread the cooked
strawberry
mixture
over them, and refrigerate ones I made my jam from
until set, about 3 hours.
I got those from Cove.
Talking pie with Janie They’re so sweet.
Tippett:
I do my own creative
How long have you been stuff and use nectarines and
making this pie recipe?
strawberries. You can do
Oh my gosh. Probably for it with peaches. It’s really
20 years. I do a lot of exper- good with wild blackberries
imenting. This one seemed also. Of course, my all-time
to click, so I keep mak- favorite is the huckleberry
ing this one. I usually just cream pie. You just make it
use my homegrown straw- the same way. Oh my gosh,
berries. That’s the secret! I is it good!
don’t have any homegrown
Is
it
for
special
strawberries right now. The occasions?
THE COUNTY
COOKERY
AND
Skylight Gallery
Finding books is our specialty
541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com
Church
Directory
Church of Christ
Grace Lutheran
Church
502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa
541-398-2509
409 West Main -Enterprise
SUNDAY WORSHIP at 9am
Worship at 11 a.m.
Mid-week
Bible Study 7 p.m.
St. Katherine’s
Catholic Church
Fr. Thomas Puduppulliparamban
301 E. Garfield Enterprise
Mass Schedule
Sundays:
St. Pius X, Wallowa - 8:00 am
St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 10:30am
Saturdays:
St Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 5:30am
Weekday:
St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise – 8:00am
(Monday – Thursday and First Friday)
Mission Project:
“Bag It for School”
School clothes for Foster Children
phone (message): 541-426-4633
web: gracelutheranenterprise.com
St. Patrick’s
Episcopal Church
100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise
NE 3rd & Main St
541-426-3439
Worship Service
Sunday 9:30am
All are welcome
CLUES ACROSS
1. Fashionable
5. Largest amount
9. Moisture on the lawn
12. Former Milan money
13. Wheels
14. Division of history
15. Biblical ships
16. Courage
17. Mew
18. Pattern
20. Sincere
22. “____ You Tonight”
24. MacDonald had one
27. Accompanied
31. Musical combo
32. Exclamation of contempt
33. Distance runner
35. Pipe joint
36. Beak
38. Petted
40. Kill, as a dragon
41. Tug
42. Not messy
45. Of slanting type
49. Increase
51. Double
53. Crisp, filled tortilla
54. Bring action against
55. ____ in a lifetime
56. At all times
57. “I Was Made to Love ____”
58. Rose starter
59. Isolated
CLUES DOWN
1. Garbed
2. Give a job to
3. Annoys
4. Gambling house
5. Attractive
6. Belonging to us
7. Recipe direction
8. Lug
9. Announces
10. Take a wrong turn
11. Path
19. Wheat ____
21. Toward the back, matey
23. Impede
25. Agitate
26. Form
27. Declines
28. Ground
29. Strainer
30. Went off the tracks
34. Sublet
37. Oven-cleaner chemical
39. Hockey player
43. Turmoils
44. Harmony
46. Volcano flow
47. Froster
48. Center
49. Volcanic dust
50. Payable
52. Tennis point
Joseph United
Methodist Church
Summit Church
3rd & Lake St. • Joseph
Pastor Cherie Dearth
Phone: 541-432-3102
Sunday Worship Service
10:00 am
Gospel Centered Community
Service time: 10:30 am
Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise
541-426-2150
Interim Pastor: Rich Hagenbaugh
The reason I make
it is because if I get the
fresh fruit in season and
there happens to be an
occasion, that’s when I
do it. (By the way, fro-
zen blueberries work
great in this pie.) I gen-
erally serve it when
I’m having more of a lighter
meal, I serve a pie. But not
always. I have big eaters in
my family.
Do you miss writing
Janie’s Journal for Agri-
Times Northwest?
I still belong to two writ-
ing groups. I do an essay a
week. I have to write and
I have to take pictures.
After 31 years, you gotta
do it. Like this morning, I
just went over to the gar-
den and weeded and came
home with a handful of
Swiss chard. I have my own
chickens, so I just scram-
bled up these eggs and put
the fresh Swiss chard in and
had to take pictures. So, it’s
on Facebook.
That’s what people liked
in my column, too. I love to
take pictures of food. It has
to be fresh. It’s the freshness
of the ingredients that makes
the food good. And the sim-
pler you can make it…I
could put all kinds of spices
in my Swiss chard, but you
can’t beat pullet eggs. And
the pullets are eating alfalfa,
so their yolks are yellow.
Just freshly ground pepper
and salt, Swiss chard and
eggs. You can’t go wrong.
What’s your life look
like these days?
I’m going to be 86 in
September. So, I just pretty
much do what I want to
do. I have the place on the
creek and go down there a
lot and write and entertain.
Always got family. I live
between two sons and this
whole herd of great grand-
children. I haven’t slowed
down a whole lot. I’m pretty
laid back.
JosephUMC.org
www.summitchurchoregon.org
Enterprise
Christian Church
Christ Covenant
Church
85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449
Pastor Terry Tollefson
Church Office: 541-263-0505
Worship at 9 a.m.
Sunday School at 10:30 a.m.
Evening Worship at 6 p.m.
(nursery at A.M. services)
Family Prayer: 9:30 am
Worship Service: 10:00 am
“Loving God & One Another”
David Bruce, Sr. - Minister
723 College Street
Lostine
Lostine
Presbyterian Church
Enterprise Community
Congregational Church
Discussion Group 9:30 AM
Worship Service 11:00 AM
The Big Brown Church
Childrens program during service
Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com
541.398.0597
Hwy 82, Lostine
Stephen Kliewer, Minister
Wallowa
Assembly
of God
702 West Hwy 82
Wallowa, Oregon
541-886-8445
Sunday School • 9:am
Worship Service • 10:am
Pastor Tim Barton
Visit Us on
with an open door
Pastor Archie Hook
Sunday Worship 11am
Bible Study 9:30am
Ark Angels Children’s Program
Ages 4-6th grade, 11am
Nursery for children 3 & under
301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR
Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044
Seventh-Day Adventist
Church & School
305 Wagner (near the Cemetery)
P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828
541-426-3751 Church
541-426-8339 School
Worship Services
Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m.
Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon
Pastor Jonathan DeWeber
Closed Monday & Tuesday
TRY OUR GLUTEN FREE CRUST!
THE TROLLEY
A unique experience in travel
& taste. Cheese topped by
asparagus spears, artichoke
hearts and spinach.
THE BEACH
The taste of a BBQ on the
beach (sand not included)
with onions, green peppers &
marinated BBQ chicken with
our special sauce.
THE RIO GRANDE
The taste of the southwest
featuring whole green chilies
and spicy chicken in a chili
verde sauce topped with
Open
Memorial
fresh
tomatoes
& served w/a
Day
to
Day
side of Labor
sour cream.
7 Days A Week