With large irregular leaves and hefty stalks, rhubarb looks
like so many leafy vegetables that grow in your garden. An obscure New York
court decision in 1947 counted it as a fruit for the mere purpose of regulations
and duties. Whether this decision
was reached at the behest of some large rhubarb importer who wanted his duties
reduced or the judge fondly remembering his grandmother's recipe for rhubarb
pie, rhubarb remains the harbinger of spring.
It is one of the first plants that are ready to eat in April
and May. Richard Pie, Chef and Food Stylist, decided to
pick rhubarb to illustrate another chapter in my series of photographs
entitled “The Bounty of Oregon”.
We've enjoyed the amazing agricultural production of Oregon. Beautiful stalks of rhubarb along
with Richards' grandmother's recipe for
rhubarb jam made for such a wonderful composition that for the first time in this series there are both raw and prepared in the same
photograph.
The crew here at Polara can attest to the fact that jam
tasted as good as it looks.


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