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Lampeira Preta -2016

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  • lampo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fighugger
Hi Francisco, thanks for the clarification, -15C, that means the freezer will kill the bugs if any are present. If I just store the figs the Whole time in the freezer, I can also prevent mold. I guess now i have to clean out my clay oven and make pizza again, so we can have roasted dried figs for dessert ! Looking forward to tasting those dried figs of Yours with the famous crunchy seeds that only are present in the "real" lands of smyrna figs.

My oven is not an original portugese clay oven either, but a home made dry-stacked construction of fire-bricks, but It will have to do.

More semi off topic : Can you belive it Francisco, this summer here in Scandinavia, was so warm, long and sunny, that figs are still ripening at the end of September (Main crop starting now), and the Atlantic sardines and the Tunas that follow them, decided to swim all the way up here. One Norwegian fisherman caught 190 tunas in one go, and anglers are reporting tunas and sardines all over the place,  right now in Danish Waters for the first time in my 50-years lifetime. Umm the smell of Sardinhas asados, just like when you walk the sidestreets of any town in Algarve on a summer night  !  Now I am only waiting for the fig wasp  to arrive and work its magic ! (ok, thats very unlikely, I know, but I keep dreaming...).

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Hi Michael
Correct! The freezing portion of the process is effectively to kill any eventual bug
Your oven is great! and looks immaculate..and ideal to bake bread ,pizzas, and roast figs
I share your news and views on climate change particularly the unusual ripening of your figs and the hopes for the introduction of new varieties demanding additional heat to ripen.
on the OT side...

Being a Nature and Sea/sail  lover I have been following with much interest the appearance on our shores of several  species typical of the Southern seas as well as the continual presence of other, which in the not so distant past, were migrating during specific seasons of the year and now keep showing all year round..

One of these is a 'tuna like' predator <sarda-sarda>, BTW an excellent fish also referred as white meat tuna
The other, the heavy weight meager, <Argyrosomus Regius> for centuries showing up in April/May, entering our rivers to spawn on the sandy shallows.. now is seen all year round.

Another popular migrator this time a bird, the white stork, no longer returns to their winter grounds deep in Africa.. and remain here being a permanent resident.
Big changes!
Francisco




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Nice oven Fighugger, those pizza's are nice.

Francisco, yes, I enjoy the summer, the new fishlife, and the maturing figs, but I also have a worry, as to what is going on, that the climate is changing that much and soo fast !  But lets not get into that, lets just enjoy the figs !

Elin, thanks for the comment on my oven. I actually just stacked it dry without mortar as a test. It Works fine ! The big goal is to build a bigger, domed one - with dining area under a shady fig tree ! Elin, I see you are from Israel. I have a new plant of the breba-variety Nazareth (St Pedro type)  from Israel. Do you know anything about this variety and its breba-crop ? I can't find any information about it, except the Israeli marketing stuff for the figs.   (If you have some varietal-info, maybe we should move it to another thread)

Michael Hi,

Its the main Breba crop fig in Israel and according to a study it is a synonim to "white bosnian" which is otosalso a "san pedro".

The taste is very good and refreshing- fig are big almost 100gr each.

I belive Francisco Lampeira taste even better and hope you get to grow it too.

Eli

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Yes, thats true, Francisco. Its just that all of your fig photos look so wonderful I feel like buying a clay oven. And what a treat it is to have your fresh bread and figs baked in a baker's clay oven? when I was growing up we did go for fresh bread and fresh milk daily. No figs unfortunately. What you post always brings up such warm feelings of "home."

Quote:
Originally Posted by lampo



Meg
I do not think you should incur on any additional expense to buy a new clay oven.
you may do it with your std electrical   or gas oven.
As I buy my bread on a nearby village,  the owner does me the favor of roasting my figs on her clay oven.

Francisco

Hi Elin, Thanks for the Photos and info on Nazareth brebas. White Bosnian ? -ohh those fig names ! Hopefully I will get a chance to compare Nazareth and Lampeira in a year or two, since I am growing both. I try to make a Collection of all the good breba-croppers, but sorting out the aliases seems to be a big part of the job ! If you can find the time, then please make a series of Photos of fruit, leaves and tree, of Nazareth Next breba season and post them in it's own thread ! I think that woulld be appreciated by many breba growers.

Michael hi, I found some old pics of the Nazrati tree.

the leafs have finger like appearance. the tree is somehow not full o brebas probably because the land is not irrigated at all during the summer and in that location mainly it "chooses" to develop the main crop.

Also in an article there are many subvarieties of the nazrati but the one in the pics is the most vigorous one.



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  • elin
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on the other hand check this variety called Dil Naor which i belive is the same as Dauphine, the ophoto is taken 4 days after that with the Nazrati.
Notice the very short internodal spaces between the brebas indicating the land is not irrigated and tree growth is restricted.
The owner o the orchard tells me he almost never prunes his trees cause the growth is minimal due to the non-irrigated nature.

I believe growing on non irrigated land is an art by itself and it involves alot of geological data- I think that the trees are in a mountanious land the mountain conserves the water during winter for later summer use (acts as a wick).

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Wonderful.
So excited

Very promising

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Lampeira.

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