I would never have bought a peach tree called Pixzee. Call me a snob, but newfangled plant names give me the shudders. I would only buy the lovely old-fashioned nana peach trees. But when I handed over my planting budget to Kaye at Grow from Here, I knew there would be some surprises, and I was braced for them. Now I have the cutest little Pixzee peach in the front border, and I can actually pluck sweet juicy peaches off it and eat them as I walk up the path to the house. That is exactly what I dreamed about when I told Kaye I wanted an orchard out front. Never mind about the terrain.
It's quite vertical out there, but it's loaded with all sorts of good things for your nibbling pleasure. But back to Pixzee.
This is the first blossom, way back in early September.
It soon became clear this one was a real show off. Look at that show biz tutu.
In October, we were blessed with heaps of peachlings. So many, in fact, that we had to pull a load of them off. There is no way a knee-high peach tree can support 50+ peaches. I read it's better to cull a few and give the rest a chance to mature.
Eighteen survived, and we've picked and eaten nine of them. There are a few little worm holes, but no major damage. I don't mind sharing with a few bugs.
I really wanted to make a dessert with this haul, and not fruit salad, so I made an experimental tart, involving a butter puff pastry casing, a filling of mascarpone mixed with a tiny bit of sugar, the merest dusting cinnamon and cardamom powder, and a few drops of orange blossom water. I've been on a Middle Eastern cooking bender recently, so that's what inspired the filling. Raw fruit cut up and arranged meticulously (not) on top. Baked at 200 for about half an hour.
I know, it looks like a quiche from the '80s. What to do?
But it really was the most delicate, delicious slip of a tart. Absolutely, totally Pixzee.
Love reading about this peachy Journey! I might've been wary of a Pixzee too, but Kaye knows her stuff. That tart sounds just wonderful - definitely worth saving the tree in the hailstorm!
ReplyDeleteNow I want to know what's going to happen with those enormous figs!
Oops... I forgot to mention that Pixzee's fruit are pixie size. The figs are just normal size -- they ended up in the tart too, as they weren't quite perfectly ripe enough to eat raw. I haven't quite got the fig-picking timing right yet. There's about 10 minutes between when they are truly ripe, and when the birds descend, so I've been a bit hasty to get them off the tree.
DeleteHow fantastic - I am now officially in love with pixzee and want one for myself. Next year!
ReplyDeletePeaches in Wellington - now I'm jealous!! Your garden must be completely amazing. Our greatest fruit effort to date is one lonely 2.5cm feijoa that the children were determined to eat with teeny tiny mustard spoons!! And figs - aaaah - now I'm really jealous.
ReplyDelete