B Tuesday, June 1, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald BETWEEN THE ROWS WENDY SCHMIDT Wendy Schmidt/Contributed Photo Aphids have infested the author’s rose bush. Aphids invade my rose bush: now what? Hillary Levin/St. Louis Post-Dispatch-TNS Warm strawberries with baked meringues and vanilla ice cream, made with fresh strawberries. Holy cow! There’s a crop of aphids on my favorite rose bush. Now comes the decision dilemma. Soapy water? A hard spray of water from the hose? Harvest them and hope there’s enough for a meal (everything goes with rice)? Certainly no poison will be used in this yard. Yikes! If nothing is done, the aphids will feed on the rose and make more aphids! This year the plans are to dry most of the rose blossoms. Will the sticky aphid residue mess up those plans? (It may make them sweeter?) It looks like the persimmon tree has tiny blossoms. Perhaps that means fruit this year for the fi rst time. The quince and the peach are both forming fruit. The grapes are ready to bloom. All these joyous happenings fi ll me with anticipation and a fi dgety feeling. Spring fever has taken over. Disney defi ned it as being “Twitter-pated.” We all know what that feeling of anxiety and butterfl ies is like. Garden Chores • Begin “hardening off” peppers to prepare for transplant outdoors. • Continue to plant seeds of bush, lima and pole beans. • Also plant seeds of cucumber and okra. • Make the last sowings of leaf let- tuce and radish. • Pinch back mums to promote bushy growth. • Take houseplants outdoors when night temperatures will remain above 50 degrees. If you have garden comments or questions, please write: greengar- dencolumn@yahoo.com Thanks for reading! T HE S WEETEST OF THE S EASONS ■ Fresh strawberries make everything better — especially desserts By Daniel Neman St. Louis Post-Dispatch It’s impossible to be sad when strawber- ries are in season. Everything looks better when there can be fresh strawberries in your future. The air smells sweeter. Dogs are friendlier. The sounds of traffi c are more melodious. Strawberries make a bad day better and a good day great. Strawberry season happens to be raging at the moment, and I am in bliss. The stores are full of them, the pick-your-own places are going gangbusters and if you are lucky enough to have your own strawberry patch, then you know that paradise is the taste of a sun-warmed strawberry right off the vine. I don’t have my own strawberry patch, so I backed a box truck up to my neighborhood grocery store and fi lled it completely with strawberries. Or so it seemed. Strawberries have their savory uses, but let’s face it, desserts are better. I had a lot, so I used mine to make fi ve desserts. The easiest was Strawberries Dusted with Cardamom Sugar, which is only a little more complicated than the name suggests. But the complication makes a wonderfully subtle difference. Before the strawber- ries are rolled in a mixture of sugar and cardamom, they are fi rst splashed with an orange liqueur, such as Grand Marnier or Cointreau. You don’t quite taste it, but your taste buds know it’s there. The cardamom is also somewhat under- stated. Cardamom is just about the only spice that is equally at home in savory dishes as it is in sweet. When used to fl avor strawberries, it presents an alluring, perfumed earthiness that brings the high- fl ying strawberries and sugar back down to earth. The most diffi cult strawberry dessert I made, in contrast, was a stunningly superb strawberry tart. This is the kind of dish you could easily see at a bakery. A good bakery. It would be easier if you just used a premade tart crust, but where is the fun in that, or the fl avor? I used a leftover pie crust dough that I had frozen, and it was just as fl aky and delicious as it was when I fi rst made it. Inside the crust goes a crème pâtissière, also known as pastry cream, which is just a vanilla custard that has been thickened with cornstarch. It is the classic fi lling for an éclair and is frequently used in tarts such as this because it is such a rich and creamy foil for the fruit. Whole strawberries fi ll the tart, and they are then coated with a lightly thinned marmalade glaze. Then all that is left is a sprinkling of toasted almond slices. It is a lot of work, but most of the steps can be made in advance, except maybe the easy glazing of the strawberries. And the result is fairly stupendous. Almost as impressive is my next des- sert, a frozen strawberry souffl é. It’s like a more sophisticated version of strawberry ice cream, as elegant a repast as you would want to serve. See Sweet/Page 2B Getting to the rub: making the most of grilling season JeanMarie Brownson The Daily Meal True confession: I grill outside all year long. Memorial Day weekend just made it offi cial! This year, I won’t stand for any- thing bland to come off my grill — and, if I can help it, yours. An herby marinade sparked with a little crushed red pepper can add fl avor to lean meats and vegetables. A dry seasoning blend that combines smoke, spice and garlic will feature in nearly all my steak and rib grill sessions. And after grilling, I propose the liberal use of rich, slightly sweet, bronzed butter to add a chef’s touch of fl avor and luxury. Let’s talk about marinades. I recommend using acidic, deeply-sea- soned wet marinades to infuse fl avor into simple poultry pieces, lean pork and bland vegetables such as zuc- chini and eggplant. Marinades high in acid will do a bit of tenderizing, in advance of grilling for the biggest impact. A simple blend that contains smoked paprika helps underscore the smoke of a charcoal grill and proves a great boon when cooking on gas grills. It might not be a well-kept secret, but steakhouse chefs almost always boost fl avor with butter. I propose you follow suit with a highly- seasoned butter full of caramelized onions, fresh garlic, spices and a splash of sweet-tart pomegranate molasses. You can keep small par- cels of the butter in the freezer for easy retrieval on grilling day. To take advantage of these fl avor- Eberly Film Labs/The Daily Meal-TNS boosting creations, I’ll be grilling Turkey and Vegetable Kebabs and Smoky Beef and Mushroom kebabs for our small Memorial Day Kebabs. Styled by Shannon Kinsella. gathering. Kebabs please everyone. We can make meatless kebabs, lean too, although most don’t penetrate — and sometimes sugar — to the turkey kebabs and, for a treat, beef more than ¼-inch into the foods. surface of tender meats, such as beef sirloin kebabs. Scale the recipes up Dry marinades, like grill season- steaks, chicken breasts and fi sh fi l- or down based on the number of ing rubs, add fl avor as well as salt lets. Dry rubs should be applied well people to serve. For easiest grilling, use metal skewers that are fl at so the meat doesn’t move when you turn it on the grill. Another option is a two-pronged skewer which holds everything in place. Wooden skewers work too; just pick out a length that fi ts on the grill and soak the skew- ers in cool water before adding the ingredients to them. Using a second wooden skewer will help secure the food. Serve the kebabs over a bed of greens, which will get the fl avor from the juices dripping off the hot kebabs. Steamed, small new pota- toes sprinkled with the season’s fi rst chives and tender dill fronds make a perfect side — ditto for grilled or steamed asparagus. Gather around the grill with cold rose wine or a variety of non-alcohol- ic beers and enjoy! See Grilling/Page 3B