Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   The Villages, Florida, Non Villages Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-non-villages-discussion-93/)
-   -   Attention, Watermelon Lovers! (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-non-villages-discussion-93/attention-watermelon-lovers-351378/)

JerryLBell 07-12-2024 09:15 PM

Attention, Watermelon Lovers!
 
I have absolutely LOVED watermelons for nearly 70 years now. I thought they were great in my home state of Michigan, but I was wrong. I moved to North Carolina for 20 years before retiring here and found out that I had never actually tasted a great watermelon until then. I figured it was a combination of soil, rain and sunshine. Then I moved to Florida with great hope and sadly found out that the watermelons here aren't even as good as those in Michigan. Or so I thought!

Two weeks ago I just happened to stop at a pull-off on Micro Racetrack Road where an older fellow in a pickup had some watermelons that looked pretty good, even though he said they were grown in northern Florida. Despite way too many negative experiences in the past, I took a chance and bought one. Once I got it home and chilled, I sliced into it. The rind started cracking in front of the knife cut, showing that this was a ripe one. The end piece rolled off and it was nicely deep red. I spooned a chunk out of the heart and...

THIS MELON WAS FREAKING GREAT!

I gorged on watermelon for two weeks and loved every bite. I pressed my luck and stopped back today and he was still there, still selling good-looking watermelons. I got it home, chilled it and had some this evening and...

THIS MELON WAS EVEN BETTER!!

It was deeper red, even sweeter, even crispier and even better! I am seriously starting to doubt my allegience to North Carolina watermelons.

Now, full disclosure. These are SEEDED watermelons. The long, big ones. These are NOT those solid-dark-green-on-the-outside, pink-on-the-inside, bowling ball-sized watermelons that Publix, Winn Dixie, WalMart, Sam's and everyone else sells. But then, when they bred watermelons to have tiny little immature seeds (there's no such thing as a truly seedless watermelon), they bred out the flavor. Just like they bred the flavor out of apples when they bred them to be prettier and last longer in storage. I bloody HATE seedless watermelons; they just have no d*mned flavor!

If you LOVE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy. If you simply LIKE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy to truly experience what a great watermelon can taste like. If you only ever buy "seedless" watermelons because they "taste just as good", you've been fooling yourself and you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy and remind yourself how truly great seeded watermelons can be.

You may be thinking, "I can't fit a big melon in my little Villages fridge!" Buy one anyway and give half to a neighbor that you especially like. They will love you for it. You will love you for it. Or throw half of it out (what a waste!) and savor the half you kept.

I don't normally endorse folks selling stuff off the side of the road, but I am doing this for the absolutely selfish reason that I want to encourange this guy to continue to get these melons and have them for me to buy and relish. I also want to encourage the farmer(s) who grew these bad boys. Support small business! Especially when what they are selling are so reasonably priced and SO MUCH BETTER than the big businesses!

By the way, watermelons are a GREAT food for you! I guote healthline.com who says, "With a bright red flesh and little seeds embedded throughout, watermelon is packed with a plethora of nutrients and antioxidants that include vitamins A and C." (Emphasis mine)

I'm not sure what this guys hours or days are, but seek him out and get yourself one ASAP. I'm sure you've done something good at some point recently and you need to reward yourself!

Shipping up to Boston 07-12-2024 09:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JerryLBell (Post 2349599)
I have absolutely LOVED watermelons for nearly 70 years now. I thought they were great in my home state of Michigan, but I was wrong. I moved to North Carolina for 20 years before retiring here and found out that I had never actually tasted a great watermelon until then. I figured it was a combination of soil, rain and sunshine. Then I moved to Florida with great hope and sadly found out that the watermelons here aren't even as good as those in Michigan. Or so I thought!

Two weeks ago I just happened to stop at a pull-off on Micro Racetrack Road where an older fellow in a pickup had some watermelons that looked pretty good, even though he said they were grown in northern Florida. Despite way too many negative experiences in the past, I took a chance and bought one. Once I got it home and chilled, I sliced into it. The rind started cracking in front of the knife cut, showing that this was a ripe one. The end piece rolled off and it was nicely deep red. I spooned a chunk out of the heart and...

THIS MELON WAS FREAKING GREAT!

I gorged on watermelon for two weeks and loved every bite. I pressed my luck and stopped back today and he was still there, still selling good-looking watermelons. I got it home, chilled it and had some this evening and...

THIS MELON WAS EVEN BETTER!!

It was deeper red, even sweeter, even crispier and even better! I am seriously starting to doubt my allegience to North Carolina watermelons.

Now, full disclosure. These are SEEDED watermelons. The long, big ones. These are NOT those solid-dark-green-on-the-outside, pink-on-the-inside, bowling ball-sized watermelons that Publix, Winn Dixie, WalMart, Sam's and everyone else sells. But then, when they bred watermelons to have tiny little immature seeds (there's no such thing as a truly seedless watermelon), they bred out the flavor. Just like they bred the flavor out of apples when they bred them to be prettier and last longer in storage. I bloody HATE seedless watermelons; they just have no d*mned flavor!

If you LOVE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy. If you simply LIKE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy to truly experience what a great watermelon can taste like. If you only ever buy "seedless" watermelons because they "taste just as good", you've been fooling yourself and you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy and remind yourself how truly great seeded watermelons can be.

You may be thinking, "I can't fit a big melon in my little Villages fridge!" Buy one anyway and give half to a neighbor that you especially like. They will love you for it. You will love you for it. Or throw half of it out (what a waste!) and savor the half you kept.

I don't normally endorse folks selling stuff off the side of the road, but I am doing this for the absolutely selfish reason that I want to encourange this guy to continue to get these melons and have them for me to buy and relish. I also want to encourage the farmer(s) who grew these bad boys. Support small business! Especially when what they are selling are so reasonably priced and SO MUCH BETTER than the big businesses!

By the way, watermelons are a GREAT food for you! I guote healthline.com who says, "With a bright red flesh and little seeds embedded throughout, watermelon is packed with a plethora of nutrients and antioxidants that include vitamins A and C." (Emphasis mine)

I'm not sure what this guys hours or days are, but seek him out and get yourself one ASAP. I'm sure you've done something good at some point recently and you need to reward yourself!

The Watermelon Growers Association owes you a dividend check! Nice post!

LeRoySmith 07-13-2024 04:11 AM

Wow Jerry, I thought I loved melons but I think you've got me beat. I'll stop and buy one.

thelegges 07-13-2024 07:11 AM

We bought 3, and freeze chunks and juice for drinks. We can eat 1/2 a day, they never last. Bet our garbage guys don’t love us but we do use a box to put out the rind.

ElDiabloJoe 07-13-2024 09:32 AM

Sandia!!!! I used to enjoy it best when a small quarter sized hole was bored out of it and a bottle of stoly turned upside down into it to get soaked.

The problem I'm starting to think about is all the huge agri-businesses are shallowing up the produce gene pool by using only those few GMO (genetically modified organism) Monsanto seeds. Instead of 50 varieties of corn, we get 6. This guy's watermelon may be an endangered species, so enjoy now and keep an eye on the future. As we lose variety in our produce we lose the diversity of nutrients and we risk losing everything in a blight. Between them both, Dupont and Monsanto provide 50% of the seeds used in large scale agri-business. Not terribly hard for an adverse government (rhymes with China) to create their own targeted diseases to wipeout our food supply.

Here's the wikipedia link to Monsanto: Monsanto - Wikipedia

Topspinmo 07-13-2024 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JerryLBell (Post 2349599)
I have absolutely LOVED watermelons for nearly 70 years now. I thought they were great in my home state of Michigan, but I was wrong. I moved to North Carolina for 20 years before retiring here and found out that I had never actually tasted a great watermelon until then. I figured it was a combination of soil, rain and sunshine. Then I moved to Florida with great hope and sadly found out that the watermelons here aren't even as good as those in Michigan. Or so I thought!

Two weeks ago I just happened to stop at a pull-off on Micro Racetrack Road where an older fellow in a pickup had some watermelons that looked pretty good, even though he said they were grown in northern Florida. Despite way too many negative experiences in the past, I took a chance and bought one. Once I got it home and chilled, I sliced into it. The rind started cracking in front of the knife cut, showing that this was a ripe one. The end piece rolled off and it was nicely deep red. I spooned a chunk out of the heart and...

THIS MELON WAS FREAKING GREAT!

I gorged on watermelon for two weeks and loved every bite. I pressed my luck and stopped back today and he was still there, still selling good-looking watermelons. I got it home, chilled it and had some this evening and...

THIS MELON WAS EVEN BETTER!!

It was deeper red, even sweeter, even crispier and even better! I am seriously starting to doubt my allegience to North Carolina watermelons.

Now, full disclosure. These are SEEDED watermelons. The long, big ones. These are NOT those solid-dark-green-on-the-outside, pink-on-the-inside, bowling ball-sized watermelons that Publix, Winn Dixie, WalMart, Sam's and everyone else sells. But then, when they bred watermelons to have tiny little immature seeds (there's no such thing as a truly seedless watermelon), they bred out the flavor. Just like they bred the flavor out of apples when they bred them to be prettier and last longer in storage. I bloody HATE seedless watermelons; they just have no d*mned flavor!

If you LOVE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy. If you simply LIKE watermelons, you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy to truly experience what a great watermelon can taste like. If you only ever buy "seedless" watermelons because they "taste just as good", you've been fooling yourself and you need to stop and get one of these bad boys from this guy and remind yourself how truly great seeded watermelons can be.

You may be thinking, "I can't fit a big melon in my little Villages fridge!" Buy one anyway and give half to a neighbor that you especially like. They will love you for it. You will love you for it. Or throw half of it out (what a waste!) and savor the half you kept.

I don't normally endorse folks selling stuff off the side of the road, but I am doing this for the absolutely selfish reason that I want to encourange this guy to continue to get these melons and have them for me to buy and relish. I also want to encourage the farmer(s) who grew these bad boys. Support small business! Especially when what they are selling are so reasonably priced and SO MUCH BETTER than the big businesses!

By the way, watermelons are a GREAT food for you! I guote healthline.com who says, "With a bright red flesh and little seeds embedded throughout, watermelon is packed with a plethora of nutrients and antioxidants that include vitamins A and C." (Emphasis mine)

I'm not sure what this guys hours or days are, but seek him out and get yourself one ASAP. I'm sure you've done something good at some point recently and you need to reward yourself!

For my tastes hard to beat Midwest River bottom grown Black Diamond watermelon chilled in ice water. I have yet in last 40 years experience a good watermelon. Some are just editable. And others go into trash.

Topspinmo 07-13-2024 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 2349711)
For my tastes hard to beat Midwest River bottom grown Black Diamond watermelon chilled in ice water. I have yet in last 40 years experience a good watermelon. Some are just editable. And others go into trash.

. Maybe if I get off my lazy duff give his try?

Dusty_Star 07-13-2024 10:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 2349711)
For my tastes hard to beat Midwest River bottom grown Black Diamond watermelon chilled in ice water. I have yet in last 40 years experience a good watermelon. Some are just editable. And others go into trash.

Are you going to give Jerry's recommendation a try?

Topspinmo 07-13-2024 11:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dusty_Star (Post 2349717)
Are you going to give Jerry's recommendation a try?

I rarely get down to micro racetrack road. But if I do and watermelon man still there ? YES! Yes! yes..

Arlington2 07-13-2024 12:01 PM

I have passed by him many times, but never stopped. I will definitely stop next time I see him. Thanks for the tip.

OrangeBlossomBaby 07-13-2024 04:14 PM

What's the guy's price for one of these melons? Did he mention which days he's usually at the spot? We're not "big" watermelon eaters, so we'd probably give most of it to neighbors. If the price is right I'll take a drive down Monday and see if the guy's there.

JerryLBell 07-13-2024 09:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Topspinmo (Post 2349711)
For my tastes hard to beat Midwest River bottom grown Black Diamond watermelon chilled in ice water. I have yet in last 40 years experience a good watermelon. Some are just editable. And others go into trash.

You have me intrigued! Where must I go to find such a treat?

JerryLBell 07-13-2024 09:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OrangeBlossomBaby (Post 2349805)
What's the guy's price for one of these melons? Did he mention which days he's usually at the spot? We're not "big" watermelon eaters, so we'd probably give most of it to neighbors. If the price is right I'll take a drive down Monday and see if the guy's there.

I don't know the guys hours or days. I've got the last melon on Friday and the previous one on either a Wednesday or a Thursday.

He charges ten bucks for one of these. That's more than a sale-priced "seedless" watermelon but is more than twice as much to eat and about a bazillion times better.

Previously, I have bought seeded watermelons at a couple of places around here. There's a fruit stand on 27 just short of where you get on the southbound Florida Turnpike and they charge $20 and aren't remotely as good as this. The fruit & veggie guy at the Brownwood farmer's market on Saturdays in front of Scooples has started bring in a couple of seeded watermelons each week. He was charging eight bucks if I recall and they weren't bad, but not as good as the Micro Racetrack guy (I will have to ask for his name next time I get a melon as it's kind of disrespectful to keep referring to him as "that guy").

kaydee 07-13-2024 10:12 PM

If this is the same man who use to be on 441 towards Fruitland Park, his name is Mr Webster

Topspinmo 07-14-2024 06:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JerryLBell (Post 2349846)
You have me intrigued! Where must I go to find such a treat?

Where they sell black diamonds. Usually north of florida line. The are deep green large full of seeds with yellowish bottom.

Black Diamond Watermelon - Facts.net


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:52 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.