Lots of Sourness

 

I guess because I enjoy sour cherries so much, I have kept track of my harvest progress since I planted my first tree 25 years ago. I planted it in our back yard which had too much shade but was the only place on my quarter acre that it could go. It grew slowly and produced a handful of cherries for a couple years and then we sold that house and moved. I still wonder if that sour cherry tree is there, a lot taller and producing buckets of sour cherries for the current occupants.

The place we moved to has 3 acres and so I wasted no time in planting another sour cherry tree. I'm not sure if it is the location or something else, but it was and still is extremely slow growing. In fact, its slowness towards life frustrated me that I eventually bought and planted a second sour cherry tree and then a third. The conditions for the second sour cherry tree evidently were the best for it has grown at a tremendous pace and is already 4 times the size of the first one.

Nearly every year the harvest sizes slowly got bigger though were interrupted a few years by late frosts that killed all the blossoms so there were no cherries. Last year, our best year ever at that point, we finally crossed the first hurdle and harvested enough for an entire sour cherry pie. I was a very happy man. My wife had made a few sour cherry tartes over the year but having enough for a pie, traditionally made for me on Father's Day, was something I looked forward too. I finally could see a future with more than one sour cherry pie a year in it.

This year, we had a beautiful spring and no late frosts to kill the fruit crop. The first and third cherry trees had several handfuls of cherries each on them but the second one was absolutely loaded. In an attempt to keep ahead of the birds, who love sour cherries too, I have picked it twice. The first time I picked enough for a pie. The second picking you can see in the picture above and produced several gallons that will probably make another four or five pies in the future. There are still a lot of cherries left and I hope to pick them after finishing up this post and perhaps secure another pie or two for this upcoming year. I may end up with so many sour cherries that I'll make a pie to give to someone else, something that has been unthinkable in my life for the last 25 years!

My Father's Day Sour Cherry Pie

If you think I'm a bit crazy for my love of sour cherries, I came by it naturally. We always had sour cherry trees on the old farm and my grandfather's farm where we would move to after he died. We would pick cherries by the 2-1/2 gallon ice cream bucket full and turn them into many pies, jellies and juices for the upcoming year. 

One other note, my wife doesn't like sour desserts like the above pictured pie. So I only have to fight my two girls, who both think it is the best thing ever, for a slice or two. 

Comments

  1. Lovely family history; beautiful pie! Linda in Kansas

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  2. Ed, sour cherry anything is not something I have every had. We had cherries seasonally growing up, but in New Home 2.0 they were very much a luxury priced item. Fortunately, our relocation has put us much closer to cherry raising parts; I am reliably informed sour cherries are a thing here.

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    1. We did find some when we were there a couple years back but most were sweet cherries. We ate a lot of sweet cherries as snacks while we were traveling.

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  3. To my knowledge, I've never eaten a sour cherry, but I love cherries and I love tart/sour things, so I'd love to try a piece of that pie!! We have some pears on our trees this year and I'm hoping to end up with enough to make at least one pear pie. I'm waiting for them to get bigger and start to ripen, but it doesn't appear the critters are waiting.

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    1. I always describe them as a similar experience to a rhubarb pie. For the longest time, they were hard to find but they seem to be making a comeback. Just the other day, I saw two or three posts on FB Marketplace from people selling them by the pound. I have never seen that before.

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  4. It has been a very very long time since I last had cherry pie, and I don’t recall it being sour. I think I liked it well enough but not as much as blueberry or apple. But do enjoy yours.

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    1. In my experience, most cherry pies are made from sweet cherries. They are good too but I prefer the tartness for some reason. I don't get to eat blueberry pies very often here. There are not a lot of blueberries around. But apple pies are ubiquitous when in season.

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  5. I'm not a cherry fan and am not sure what a sour cherry is. We do have what we call pie cherries? My daughters' favorite eating cherries are Rainiers.

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    1. We sometimes call them pie cherries though I'm not sure that accounts for regional differences in terminology. They are very tart, like rhubarb. When we make a pie with them, we add a dose of sugar to them to help remove some of the tartness but quite a bit remains like a lemon meringue or rhubarb pie. I really enjoy the flavor profile when eaten cold or warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

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  6. I am sour excited you get to have all the sour cherries you wish to have! Enjoy.

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    1. Well, perhaps not all the I WISH to have but certainly enough that I will have a few pies to eat until I hopefully pick more next year.

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  7. Mother in law had a sour cherry tree with same problem as yours. Not many cherries each year. She called and tree had produced a bumper crop and asked if I would like to pick the tree. Couldn't get there fast enough. She had lots of ladders and was able to, in a day, pick the entire tree. Damaged a nerve in thumb while using a cherry pitter for hours. But the cupboards overflowed with with canned cherries. The next year same tree barely produce enough to make a tart. I also love rhubarb and just finished freezing 2 pies for the winter. Just looked on line and my pitter is considered an antique and worth from $9 to 40. Probably paid dollar of less in the late "60's.

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    1. I finally found a pitter just like the antique one we used 40+ years ago that probably belonged to my grandmother. It is a single spring loaded plunger that rests on top of a mason jar and is secured with a canning band. It keeps the mess down to a minimum and can be operated with a slap of your palm versus pinching between two fingers like my other two pitters required.

      Unfortunately, my rhubarb is not thriving. I replanted half of it this year and it never really grew and is now dead with the heat. Next spring, I'm going to replant in a different location and see if I can get different results.

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  8. What a wonderful wife and a great pie maker! You are a very blessed man. Congrats on your harvests!

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    1. Although it was for father's day, I'm the pie crust maker in-chief in this household so I still made the crust. But adding the filling and baking were tasks that my wife did and did beautifully!

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  9. Wonderful post, and the cherry 🍒 pie 🥧 looks delicious.

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