
Pie cherries fresh picked in old Davidson. (David Boraks/DavidsonNews.net)
By SHELLEY RIGGER
DavidsonNews.net
One of my fondest childhood memories is from summer 1979, when the 17-year locusts made their appearance in northern Maryland. The locusts (technically cicadas) were such easy pickings that for one glorious season, the big songbirds – cowbirds, catbirds, robins and mockingbirds – left our pie cherry tree alone, and I was able to harvest bucket after bucket of heavy crimson fruit.
Not that you’d want to eat pie cherries right off the tree. The pie cherry is very tart – sour, really. It’s beautiful to look at – bright red skin, golden flesh – and has a distinctive flavor, nothing like the “eating cherries” with their purple-black skin and burgundy pulp. But in a pie, flavored with plenty of sugar and a few drops of almond extract, tart cherries are sublime. Continue Reading