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Menu Planning for May 2013

If you’re planning your menu for May, there are a few holidays to consider and many fresh fruits and vegetables Making their entrance for the summer.

Plan for May :
Full Moon on May 25th – called the Flower Moon. May is National BBQ, Egg, Strawberry and Salad Month!!

• May 1st – May Day
• May 5th – Cinco de Mayo
• May 3rd and 4th – 139th Kentucky Derby
• May 12th – Mother’s Day
• May 18th – 20th – National Restaurant
Show
• May 27th – Memorial Day observed

Plan Ahead for June:

Full Moon on June 23rd, called the Strawberry Moon because it indicated when the berries were ready for
harvest (called the Rose Moon in Europe where strawberries were not indigenous).
June is National Dairy Month, Get Outdoors Month and National Fruit and Vegetable Month!

• June 13th – Weed Your Garden Day
• June 14th – Flag Day
• June 16th – Father’s Day
• June 17th – Eat Your Vegetables Day

• June 18th – International Picnic Day
• June 21st – First day of Summer (Solstice
celebrated, the longest day of the year!)

• Mid-month, wild strawberries start becoming available, depending on the heat. Purchase wild strawberries from your local farmer’s market or strawberry stand because they are too delicate to ship – the aroma from frais de bois seems almost manufactured in it’s strength and perfume.
• Crystallized flowers are another plate freshener and they are becoming readily available from wholesale suppliers. Mother’s Day is a great time to decorate with any edible flowers!

Mother’s day is mid-month this year – on Sunday, May 12th. Remember that this is the busiest restaurant day of the year so a full weekend of specials may be advantageous to guarantee a book full of reservations.

May availability becomes a bit more predictable towards the end of the month as the weather mellows and crops take hold of their landscapes. Ramps, fiddleheads and other harbingers of spring fade by mid – May to make room for stonefruit, their decline may be a little later this year – because of the late spring. Apricots and the first of the good Peaches will come in at the end of the month and provide a great treat to herald in June!

Plan on cherries, the first of the domestic stonefruit, to be best between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day (these holidays are a great way to remember the fresh cherry season in California). Other regions may start their cherry harvest a bit later to carry the sugar through the early part of the summer. The early cherries are the Burlatt, followed by the Bings in June, with Brooks in the middle; there are other, lesser known varieties, but these are the predominant types.

Lychee and Mangosteen are two international fruits that become more available in May and they are delicious bursts of tropical flavor. Late citrus should be available through almost the end of June: Meyers lemons, tangelos, kumquats and mandarins. Think of mixing some delicious late harvest citrus with some beautiful spring greens, baby roasted beets and some beautiful candied nuts and pansies.

All the flowering herbs are in full swing from mid-May through June – Sage, thyme and chive blossoms are beautiful additions to salads and tabletops.

Available in May 2013

Remember that the items in BOLD will prove to usually be better values as they are in their peak harvest or storage period.

Apricots – new crop*
Artichokes
Asparagus
Avocados
Baby Artichokes
Baby Carrots w/ Tops
Baby Mixed Root Vegetables
Baby Pineapple
Bananas
Beets
Belgian Endive
Berries – Blackberries
Berries – Blueberries
Berries – Raspberries
Blood Oranges
Broccoli
Broccoli Rabe
Broccolini
Cabbage
Cactus Leaves
Cactus Pear
Cantaloupe
Celery
Celery Root
Chayote Squash
Cherimoya
Cherries*
Citrus – Grapefruit
Citrus – Kumquats
Corn

Cucumbers
Dragon fruit
English Peas
Fava Beans
Feijoa
Fennel
Fiddlehead Fern – eastern
Garlic Scapes
Grapes – Perlette
Green Beans
Greens – all types
Herbs
Honeydew
Horseradish
Kiwano (Horned Melon)
Kiwifruit
Kohl Rabi (Green & Purple)
Lettuce
Lettuce-Baby (all)
Lettuce-Spring Mix
Lychee
Mangoes
Meyer Lemon
Mushrooms – Morels
Napa Cabbage
Nectarines – new crop
Nettle, Stinging
Okra

Onions – Spring Sweet
Onions – Vidalia
Oranges
Papaya
Peaches – new crop
Pears – Packham
Pears – Taylor Gold
Peas
Pepino Melon
Peppers – Bell
Pineapple
Potatoes – Purple
Potatoes – Red
Potatoes – White
Potatoes – Yukon Gold
Radicchio
Radish
Rhubarb
Shallots
Spinach
Spinach – Bloomsdale
Spinach – Baby
Spring Onions
Star Fruit
Strawberries
Tamarillo
Watermelons

Coosemans L.A. Shipping ♦ 2820 E. 44th Street, Vernon, CA 90058 ♦ Tel: 323-588-1127

©2013 Coosemans L.A. Shipping, Inc.

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