The Apples Overwhelming my Eyes

Wendy is on her way to Louisville…loaded with goodness, of both books and apples

I’m part of a gleaning society. We move food that would otherwise rot in the field, getting it into people’s kitchens. We prioritize food banks and cafes that serve suspended meals or otherwise have token systems for those who can’t pay with money.

A week ago, the coordinator for the gleaners let us know they had apples. Great, everybody loves apples, right? Our coordinator and her husband picked them up.

Six half-ton boxes of apples. Three went straight to some food banks and suspended cafes. The call went out for community members to come get some fruit.

I took ten grocery bags of apples, with the intent of giving as many as possible away, and then canning up a bag or two for gifting. I run the buy nothing list in my county. The list proved disinterested, so I made sure to have some in my car when attending civic meetings. 12 dozen apple gifts later, people were starting to edge away from me at these events. “Don’t go near her, she’s handing out apples. Don’t leave your car unlocked. Apples are the new zucchini.”

And of course the apples landed in a busy week. We’re working on a federal grant – well we would be if our federal identity page for our non-profit worked properly. Six hours passed with help desks and support services, coring apples while on hold or waiting for instruction on what grew to be a more complex problem by the hour. There was something very meta about mashing apples when hearing there was nothing we could do but wipe our profile and start over.

Anger has to go someplace. Mine gave the 21 bottles of cider a nice spicy flavor.

200 cidered apples and one new federal identity page later, I checked the fridge. Apples in the meat drawer. Apples in the cheese drawer. Apples in the veggie drawer. Apples in the butter panel, in the egg holder, stuck behind the coil leading to the freezer. APPLES EVERYWHERE!

I made apple butter. I made apple pumpkin butter, thereby eliminating the problem of what to do with the pumpkin going over on my porch. (Our chickens are mutants. They won’t eat pumpkin.)

150 apples to go. In desperation, I googled “unusual apple recipes for canning.” Then I reset my filter to adult controls and googled it again.

Steamed apple bread pudding (yes you can can bread; you just have to know what you’re doing). Apple salsa. Spiced apple rings. Apple slaw. Each took fewer apples than one might have hoped. There were still a few dozen apples in my refrigerator as I packed a bag to be one of the authors featured at the Louisville Book Festival Nov. 11.

I put the bags in my car; the other authors will love me, I’m sure.

The Monday Book – A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

Guest review by Janelle Bailey, avid reader and always learning; sometimes substitute teaching, sometimes grandbabysitting, sometimes selling books

A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

I saw this one in the new books section of a bookstore earlier this year and added it to my TBR stack right away, having previously enjoyed Joanna Cannon’s Three Things About Elsie and immediately after that purchasing her The Trouble With Goats and Sheep, which I have not yet read. I was not expecting a murder-mystery.

While murder-mysteries are rarely my go-to genre, I do love all books British in setting, so thoroughly enjoyed that aspect of this book. If you have any fondness for that lovely English life, you will, I think, enjoy it for that even if you’re not typically a murder-mystery fan. And if you are a lover of murder-mysteries and haven’t yet read A Tidy Ending, simply head toward it next!

Main character Linda is someone I easily appreciated from the start. I suspect you may also find her to be someone likable, as she is simply always doing and being her best, despite others–even her own mum, at times–making things more challenging for her than they are supporting or encouraging her. Linda, like many of us, possibly, is simply working toward and always doing her best. She struggles, though, to fit in socially, not having a lot of good, true friends. Both at home and at work–she works at a local charity shop, long as a volunteer but now being paid a bit–Linda aims to make a good life and keep a tidy home for her husband and herself.

And there is much tidying to do, as her husband, Terry, is not so spiffy. Actually, he is rather careless and carefree–pretty “care-free” and reckless–in so many ways. And, to boot, there seems to be a serial killer on the loose and possibly right in their local neighborhood or estate. Neighbor Malcolm is on constant watch and uniting the neighborhood, keeping open clear lines of communication as well as making recommendations for safe behavior, all somewhat Neighborhood Watch-like.

Hopefully I have not spoiled a single thing so that you, too, will completely enjoy engaging in A Tidy Life yourself. I sure did. Soon, then, too, I must also read: The Trouble With Sheeps and Goats.

Come back next Monday for another book review!