Apple butter

Apple butter doesn’t get any fresher than when you make it the way we do, right here on our place using our own apples. Stop by the farmstand and take home some of our fresh apple butter today.

Wagon rides

 September 18 

Looking for something to do with the kids with school closed Wednesday? Stop in at Wickham’s for some apple picking. Wagon rides are included.

Barn

The view inside the barn. In former years, we hoisted hay from a trailer by means of a hook through the window shown, and then along a trolley system that can still be seen under the ridge, at the top of the ceiling.

Honeycrisp apples

We have a limited supply of Honeycrisp apples for sale this month at the farmstand. Try eating one of our Honeycrisp apples raw, and experience the way your mouth fills with juice once you bite into it.

Poached pears

An elegant dessert of pears poached in a mixture of spices and port wine, fromwww.mygourmetconnection.com :

6 medium-size pears
3 1/2 cups port wine
1 cup water
1 1/4 cups sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
3 tablespoons lemon juice
6 large strips lemon zest
1 cinnamon stick
6 whole cloves

1. Place the port, water, sugar, vanilla, lemon juice, lemon peel, cinnamon stick and cloves in a deep saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat.

2. Meanwhile, peel the pears, leaving the stems on. Using a melon baller or small spoon, carefully hollow out the core and seeds through the bottom. Cut a thin slice from the bottom of each pear so that they’ll stand upright for serving.

3. Place the pears in the pan and lower the heat to medium so that the liquid simmers gently. Cook, turning gently and basting every 3 minutes for even flavor and color, until the pears are tender when pierced with a thin knife, 12 to 18 minutes. Be careful not to overcook. Remove from the heat and allow them to cool for 10 minutes in the liquid.

4. Transfer the pears to a platter and continue cooking the poaching liquid until it reduces to the consistency of maple syrup. To serve, make a small pool of syrup on each serving plate, set a pear on top and drizzle with a bit of extra syrup.

traditional apple varieties

At Wickham’s Fruit Farm we continue our decades-old tradition of growing tried-and-true traditional apple varieties like Cortland, which was developed about 120 years ago in Geneva, New York, and named after the county upstate. Cortland has deep crimson skin coloration and very white flesh.