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Robert Barnum, the owner of Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery, was testing and fine-tuning his recipes for weeks before The End of Summer Brunch. He’s a self-taught chef who has developed a long list of interesting dishes with unique tastes and texture combinations, using tropical fruits that grow in his nursery. He’s also created The Possum Experience, which includes dinner and tour of the grove. The Brunch was similar to the Experience, in case you were wondering.

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert was up at 3:30 in the morning the day of the brunch, making last minute preparations along with his assistants. Farmer Margie and her crew came over at 7:30 to help. The oven in the main kitchen gave out, so roasting mixed root vegetables was moved to the wood burning oven and smoker outside. It was puffing merrily when I arrived at 9:30. Cheesemaker Hani Khouri also came by, and that was his goat cheese and labneh that you ate. A long table with chairs was placed under the trees, set with centerpieces of basil, carambola and red ginger aka shampoo ginger. Nearby was the tent with beverages — a blend of cas, passion and carambola juices, lemongrass tea, a pitcher of honey-water to sweeten the tea, and water for the timid.

On the porch, a buffet was set up with all the dishes, and guests lined up to be served. The menu has been blogged elsewhere. The guests enjoyed themselves, and the scene under the trees looked like something from a French film. My favorite dishes were the broiled avocado with scrambled eggs, allspice muffins with honeyed labneh, and the fruit salad. That salad had a happy jumble of ingredients — carambola, longan, banana, red grapefruit, mango and jakfruit. (Have been getting the smoked eggs all summer, and they are great for egg salad with celery and sweet onion.) For nibbles, there were boiled jakfruit seeds that tasted like chestnut. Robert simmered them four times at 45 minutes each time, which made them quite edible, the result of another happy accident in the kitchen.

Halfway through the meal, Robert realized he needed to set out his homemade wine. He dusted off several jugs of bignay (or antidesma) fruit wine he made himself. It tasted like a fruity merlot, and later I combined it with cass juice for and incredible taste of deep sweet and bright tart. The bignay tree is native to Africa (according to Robert) and grows well here. The wine was made from its berries, which grow in clusters and is one of the few fruits that starts green, turns white, then bright red to purple-black as they ripen.

Tour of Possum Trot

Tour of Possum Trot

After the meal came the tour of Possum Trot. Most of the guests took a lap around the 40 acre property with Robert pointing out various kinds of trees growing there, and other interesting things. (I couldn’t help but notice that he was walking around in bare feet!) He has several macadamia nut trees (a favorite of squirrels), carambola, canistel, mango, avocado, citrus (now dying from greening disease) and plenty others. When I walk through his grove I think this is what the Garden of Eden might have been like… maybe. A tropical vine has infested a section of the grove and covered trees. Robert sure could use volunteers to pull the vines out. If you want to come and help — and most likely get fed a fabulous lunch– let him know!

So I waddled home with a full belly and a sack full of basil recycled from the centerpieces. There was plenty left, and I’m surprised that people didn’t ask to take it with them. Whipped up a big batch of pesto, and it’s going on the smoked eggs and other things I’m eating this week.

Reservations for The Possum Experience:

Robert Barnum
The Cantankerous Chef
Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery
14955 S.W. 214 St.
Miami FL 33187-4602
305-235-1768

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Lychee freezer jam

The first batch of lychee freezer jam

The first batch of lychee freezer jam

Do you remember June, when lychees were bursting everywhere? The summer fruit sale offered pesticide-free lychees from Possum Trot Nursery and I loaded up.

My friend Kattia, who grew up in Homestead and now lives in Sanford with her husband and son, was craving lychees since June, when I told her about the crazy season we had. Wasn’t able to drive up then with fresh lychees, so I filled my freezer. (Yes, you can freeze lychees, then peel and eat like mini popsicles. Kids love ’em.) With the start of the CSA season almost around the corner, it was time to unload my freezer and make a run north.

Kattia loves to make jam. She had made me delicious mango jam a few summers ago. But what to do with thawed lychees?

Came across a simple recipe for lychee freezer jam on the Lycheeyum blog. It was our starting point. But 1 1/2 cups of sugar sounded like way too much. This was the first time either one of us had heard of freezer jam. It’s a no-cook process that doesn’t require heating the fruit, or working with hot jars and boiling water. There’s a video on the Ball canning site that shows how to make freezer jam using their freezer pectin. We tweaked and combined both recipes. Here’s our version:

4 cups lychees (fresh or frozen) and their juice, peeled, seeded, chopped
1 cup sugar (or to taste)
1 packet freezer pectin

1. Combine lychees, juice, and sugar in a large bowl.
2. Add freezer pectin, and stir for 3 minutes.
3. Fill plastic freezer jars. Allow mixture to sit for 30 minutes. It’s ready to use!
4. Keep jam in refrigerator for 3 weeks, or store in freezer for up to 1 year.

Got the freezer pectin and freezer jars at the Sanford Wal-Mart. (That’s where I stumbled across the Redland Best avo’s a few aisles over.) The recipe was very easy. You could even make this with your kids. A grownup would have to pit the fruit, as a sharp knife is required. The chunks of lychee were a bit big in this batch. Next time I’d run the fruit through a food processor to make the pieces smaller and more spreadable. Thawed lychee doesn’t mash very easily. Don’t know enough about canning to suggest an alternate to sugar. Wonder if agave would work as well.

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Redland Best avocados

Redland Best Florida avocado

Redland Best Florida LoCal avocado

So I found myself in the Sanford Wal-Mart this afternoon browsing through produce when I discovered a taste of home looking back at me. Avocados! They look like Donnies, but not as big as Farmer Margie grows them, and they’re selling under the Redland Best label. I whipped out my old Razr cell phone and took a couple snaps (apologies for the poor quality, but that’s what I had with me at the time). Googled for Redland Best but I haven’t been able to find anything about them. Does anybody know who they are? And what’s a “lo cal avocado” anyway??

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If you bought smoked eggs or fruit this summer, the jakfruit, starfruit and passion fruit (among others) came from Possum Trot Nursery. Later this month owner Robert Barnum will host a brunch outdoors on his property. You’ll get a tour, then eat a sumptuous meal — The Possum Trot Experience — prepared by Robert himself. He calls himself The Cantankerous Chef and invents all kinds of tasty dishes that use his fruits. This month’s brunch should be an easy challenge for Robert — use only local ingredients except for salt, pepper, sugar and the like.

Possum Trot is completely unlike any plant nursery you have ever seen before. It’s a cross between a grove and a primeval jungle, 40 acres of Old Florida wildness that makes Fairchild Tropical Gardens look like a manicured rosebush. Robert has collected all kinds of trees that have useful purposes, whether it be fruits, herbs or wood for smoking food. The property also has a sinkhole — or is it a spring? — and a bomb shelter right in the ground.

Here are pictures of my first visit to the nursery in September 2007.

Entering Possum Trot Nursery

Entering Possum Trot Nursery

Ye olde swimming hole

Ye olde swimming hole

Strolling through 40 acres of tropical trees

Strolling through 40 acres of tropical trees

Star fruit hang like golden lanterns

Star fruit hang like golden lanterns

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JUMBO avocados!

A JUMBO 4 lb avocado!

A JUMBO 4 lb avocado!

Today we were picking avocados for the Saturday summer orders, and we came back with several well over 3 pounds. This one weighed in at a whopping 4.06 pounds! Oooh, mama!!

A 4-pound avocado!

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