Category Archives: Harry’s Pizzeria

Thank God It’s….LYCHEE Season!!!

photo (47)I don’t remember the first lychee I ever ate. I believe I was much too young, but as far back as I do remember my mom and I were drying and sprouting the pits, trying to grow a lychee tree. They’re not so easy to grow, we learned, so while I’m screaming ‘Thank God it’s lychee season’ from the rooftops, I’m also thanking Genuineland’s lucky stars for one Roland Samimy who keeps us well stocked, and well informed as to how we can expect this lychee season to go.  His report went just like this:

Compared to last year (which was an absolute disaster) this year is much better.  There will certainly be more than enough to meet your needs, however, it is still a less than average crop.  If you recall, we have two varieties (Mauritius and Brewster).  Mauritius fruited, Brewster’s, nada!  So right off the bat it is half a crop.  Same goes for the rest of the growers.  Got to love mother nature.  It is a weather thing.  My best hypothesis is that since the Brewsters lag behind the Mauritius by a few weeks, the Mauritius flowered and got pollinated before getting hit by a cold snap or wind or a combination of both that likley hit the grove when the Brewster flowers were at their most vulnerable.  As such, poof, no Brewster crop.  Plus there is the issue of the bees.  Bee populations are way down.  That is a problem for all agriculture in general not just lychees.  The bummer is that lychees are hard enough to grow as it is without these issues.  So here we are.  Waiting for things to ripen up !!

And ripen, they have! Just two days ago I laid my eyes on the first lychees of the season fresh from the Redlands in the MGFD walk-in, and I swear I squealed like a little girl. I can’t help it. I see a lychee and get that same feeling I did as a kid at Publix with my mom when we first saw lychees on the shelf: 1) That it’s summertime and school’s almost out! And 2) it’s almost my birthday! Then, there’s that juicy pop of breaking the skin and the cool crunch of the milky white fruit, so sweet and fresh, as sweet as the sight of them is to me, I love them that much. And I’m not the only one.

I grapped a couple and shoved them in my pocket for my mom, who I was going to see that evening - a little thank you for the lifelong lychee love.  Those lychees in my pocket brought up all sorts of similar fondness from everyone I passed (who couldn’t help but tell me I had lychees in my pocket). From the bar to the kitchen to the managers upstairs it seems whether you’re a Miami native or a recent transplant, everyone is screaming TGILS!!!! So, here are a few ways these summer treats are popping up on our various menus. Come in and get ‘em while we got ‘em!

photo (48)MGFD:

On the menu: wreck fish ceviche with avocado, citrus, papaya AND lychee and cilantro
From the pastry station: Coconut lychee sorbet
From the bar: Lychee Market Special – Lychee puree, muddled mint, simple syrup, double cross AND a lychee martini

Harry’s Pizzeria is implementing a Lychee Farmer Fizz today to run through the weekend!

And last but not least, Roel has yet to reveal how, but lychees will be finding their way on to the Tasting Menu tonight at The Cypress Room.

None of this is to be missed. TGIF! And TGILS!

Italy to the Third Power: Announcing Harry’s Chef Pop-Up No. 16 with Jeffrey Michaud of Philadelphia’s Osteria on June 18

Jeffrey Michaud

Chef Jeffrey Michaud at Barbuto last October for Lemon NYC in support of Alex’s Lemonade Stand, a charity we love to cook for at events across the country thanks to Jeff and the Vetri Family, as well as generous chef friends like Jonathan Waxman. Click here for Jeff in action, and always with a smile on his face, at past Lemon events.

We are so proud to announce that tickets are live as of this moment here for Osteria Pizzeria on June 18, when Harry’s Pizzeria plays host to yet another James Beard Award-winning chef we love to call our good friend, this time Jeffrey Michaud. Don’t be confused by the name. Osteria is Jeff’s restaurant in Philadelphia where he is partner – with the grand poobah himself Marc Vetri – and for our pizzeria’s next pop-up it will be Italy served up to the third power!  An osteria at a pizzeria, with the bonus of the inspiration Michael brings back from his trip in May to host cooking classes.  Either way, it’s all for our benefit!  We can’t wait to taste how the arrival of summer ingredients inspires this menu.

Peachy Keen in Genuineland: Tracking Our Favorite Stone Fruit in Season

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Florida peach season is in full swing. You might not know this — we sure didn’t until we did a little tooling around on the internet — but peach farming is not entirely new to Florida.  The Lakeland Ledger reported last year that although growing peaches is usually associated with Georgia, Florida farmers claimed about 5,000 planted acres of peach trees in the early 1980s.  After a devastating freeze caused a drastic drop to about 500 acres by the end of that decade, the University of Florida’s Department of Horticultural Sciences in Gainesville began work on several “low chill” varieties that don’t require as many cold days to produce fruit like the Georgia crops do and can survive Florida’s mostly subtropical climate.  In part due to this R&D, as well as Florida citrus growers wanting to spread risk on their land, peach farming started to pick up again about a decade ago according to Mercy Olmstead, an extension specialist for stone fruit production with the University. The article reports that today, there are more than 1,000 planted acres of peach trees, mostly in Central and South-central Florida, compared to 240 acres reported in 2007 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Georgia has about 12,000 acres. More for us, more for you.  Here’s where you can find peaches in our neck of the woods, and the many ways to eat them savory and sweet, although we like plain just the same!

Continue reading