So back home, when I mention Valencia, probably the first thing people say to me is, "Oranges!" Yes,
Valencia is the land of oranges ("
naranjas"), and right now (late December through early February) oranges are in season. Which means that I've been enjoying, near daily, the world's most delicious fresh-squeezed orange juice with my breakfast, and we've been eating fresh oranges in a variety of forms for dessert. Thus, I'm using this very iconic Valencian product to inaugurate my series on
"eating in season," a practice that is very Spanish and yet somehow lost to time
and globalization in the United States
but waiting for a good comeback.
It's funny. The idea that oranges are a seasonal fruit, and much less a winter fruit is probably extinct now in the States. If anything, people probably hit the
highly-processed Florida orange juice even heavier in the spring and summer (bikini diet season). And, indeed, as I will explain in a moment, it is because of the Valencian orange that many of you will eat table fruit oranges more in the summer, too. Yet not long ago, or not long ago by historians' standards, as in just over a century ago, an orange in many parts of the U.S. was a special treat associated with the holiday season. In my family, for example, we are very proud of a very old diary we have that was written by my grandfather's grandfather (my great, great, great grandfather? very great, needless to say). He lived a fascinating life, having grown up partly in Japan
where his father went as a missionary just after the country (re)opened to the West in the 1870s. But there is a lovely passage that he wrote as a boy growing up in Indiana, where he mentions his excitement at getting a fresh orange around Christmas time. I believe it was even a common gift or stocking stuffer back in the day. (Imagine! Oranges special enough to be a gift.) I think of it every time the first batch of this season's local oranges appear in supermarkets mid December.
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My Spanish family is so Valencian that we haven't even had to buy oranges yet this season.
These organic oranges were gifted to my father-in-law from a producer, who also got a box from a friend
of his that has a family orchard, plus he got a third box from his employer as a Christmas gift! |
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Spaniards have no doubts about how Valencian oranges are.
This old ad encouraging foreigners to "Eat more Spanish fruits"
features a woman dressed in very Valencian fallera attire. |
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"Fruta, hija del sol, fuente de salud"
[Fruit, daughter of the sun,
source of health] |
So now I'm going to follow that with a big letdown for all you Hispanophile Americans. When you find "Valencian Oranges" in the States, chances are they are _not_ from Spain, much less Valencia. Thus the title "Valencia Oranges," and not "Valencian" for this post. This is because the Valencian oranges you find in your supermarket are named for the
variety of orange and not the location where they were cultivated. Most oranges in the States come from California (though increasingly shifting southward to Mexico), Florida (which specializes more in the thin-skinned juicing oranges), or Brazil. Spanish-grown oranges largely get marketed only within Europe. This Valencian variety, according to my very cursory investigations, was a hybrid first developed in southern California in the late 19th century, and was prized because it ripened off-season, so to speak, which is to say it was ready to be eaten later, in the summer, instead of in the winter and spring. Many a southern California town and region was marked by this discovery, such as
Valencia, California (just outside of Los Angeles) and
"Orange County" (a.k.a.
The O.C.). But don't be too disappointed. This variety of orange probably does have its roots in the Iberian peninsula, since it was found to be very similar to oranges grown in Portugal, and likely originally from the Valencia region. Also, in recent years there are a lot of clemetines ("
clementinas") in the U.S. arriving from Spain (usually around December), which most certainly would be coming from the Valencian region.
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Fruits of Natural Advantage: California and Valencia, which landscape is which?
Traveling through L'Horta de València can feel like traveling through southern California.
(Answer key: California is on the left, Valencia on the right.) |
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California, a land made in Spain's Valencia's image?: This old ad celebrating
the Orange County's pastoral self-fashioning could easily have been Valencia, too. |
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This Valencia ad from the early 20th century illustrated the citrus industry's global ambitions:
"Son deseadas en todo el mundo." (They are desired all over the world.) "Eat more
Spanish fruits." [Even back then you can see the non-native English errors: "fruits" in plural.] |
Okay, so that brief
American history of agriculture detour aside,
Valencia is a _major_ orange obsessed producing region. (Though like California-Mexico, much of the production in Spain is shifting south to Morocco.) The streets are literally paved with
gold orange trees. (
Guiri alert!:
Don't be a guiri and try to pick this fruit. The orange trees that line the streets have decorative oranges, which are nearly inedible.) You can find oranges in the tile art (
azulejos) iconography all throughout the city. And after the silk trade's decline, following its height in the 15th and 16th centuries, the citrus industry was probably one of the major backbone industries of the region that maintained Valencia's importance economically as a port city, especially around the turn of the twentieth century when the marketing of such fresh fruit boomed in the U.S. and Europe (following advances in transportation and preservation, which overcame the perishability challenges of before). And, again, I'm eternally grateful to the
ill-conceived association Americans have between oranges and Valencia, since it provides me a starting point when talking about my
otherwise neglected adopted Spanish city.
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Oranges adorn Valencia's main train station, Estación del Norte, which is a must-visit for tourists. |
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The train station recently added this beautiful tile room, which displays
pastoral imagery typical of the Valencia region including orange groves. |
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There are also oranges all over the walls of Valencia's Mercat Central,
another modern-style building whose fruit stands will most certainly carry oranges |
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There are orange trees ("naranjos", with an "o" for the tree, as opposed to ending in an "a" for the fruit),
all over the city, and especially along the avenues. Lovely, except in February when there are
also mushed oranges all over the ground. |
Orange,
how do I love thee? Let me count the ways. If you ever try a fresh Valencia orange in season here, you'll understand the local pride, and how it is that oranges and orange juice find their way into the many novel local dishes and drinks here. First, I'm going to let you all in on a big local secret:
agua de Valencia.
Remember when I wrote that Valencians regularly say that the water in Valencia isn't good for anything except making paella? Well maybe that's why "
agua de Valencia" here isn't water. It's a local cocktail which loosely resembles a
mimosa, made of orange juice,
cava, and a couple of liquors. (This cocktail is probably the exception to the rule that there are very, very few local cocktails in Spain. Very, very few. Spain, in general, does not have a cocktail culture.) It was invented
in the late 1950s by Constante Gil at the Bar Café Madrid, what was in its day a lively and culturally important hub in the old center of Valencia. These days, you are more likely to see people here who are out for a drink sharing a pitcher ("
jarra") of
agua de Valencia than of
sangría, and I highly recommend you order some when you visit.
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The most common thing is to order a "jarra" of agua de Valencia with a group of friends. |
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The Plaza de Negrito, shown here in El Carmen of Valencia,
is my favorite place to sit out and drink agua de Valencia with friends. |
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When they daylight hours get short, there's
nothing like the taste of fresh-squeezed OJ |
Valencians, however, are more likely to be enjoying the season of fresh oranges in more mundane ways. My wife and I got the world's best house-warming gift from her parents when we moved into our current place:
an electric juicer. I think it's a must-have kitchen utility here in Valencia in the winter, facilitating that
daily orange juice with breakfast. But you can also have oranges for dessert. My mother-in-law cuts up oranges and serves them with honey on top (and sometimes pollen sprinkled over it), which makes for a delicious, simple and healthy dessert. Or you can cover it with melted chocolate,
like in this fancier and mouth-watering dessert shown below, and whose recipe you can find here?
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Sliced fresh orange with honey on top and pollen sprinkled over it. |
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And anything, but especially fresh Valencia oranges,
tastes better with melted chocolate over it. |
So there you have it. Oranges. One more reason why life in Valencia is sweet!
My fiance's family participates in the very Spanish tradition of gifting what you have and then later receiving the bounty of your friends/neighbors. So, having relatives or friends (I forget) in Valencia, means some really good oranges at times. They're the best ones I've ever had, too.
ReplyDeleteI used to sick and tired of my (English) Grandparents telling me ad nauseum how 'All I used to get for Christmas was an apple and an Orange' and so too great delight this year in getting up early on Christmas day to pick my Daughter's Christmas present. The irony was completely wasted on her.
ReplyDelete[Bursting with Valencian pride...] Kaley [Y Mucho Más], thanks for your supportive comment! What can I say, they're the best oranges I've ever had, too.
ReplyDeleteThough I suspect that there was a time, back in the day in the U.S. when people could got some pretty good Florida oranges. John McPhee wrote a lovely book about the history of Oranges, where he talks about the wonderful oranges in Florida of his youth, or some such. (Think pre-1950s industrialization and juice transformation.) He also argues that oranges were introduced into Valencia (and Andalucía) by the Moors (brought from the Orient, probably China). (Did the Moors bring Spain all the good stuff?) And it sounds like Portugese traders later brought new varieties to the Peninsula from the East (this time India), those varieties more like what we eat today.
Sorry for the history lesson detour (professional weakness), but I think citrus history is actually kind of interesting. Citrus certainly defines part of Valencia the way it once defined California.
One of the pleasures of the palate I love about living in Spain is that you can buy fresh orange juice just about anywhere.
ReplyDeleteMr. Grumpy, I'm starting to suspect that you use these blog posts to let loose your inner Grump, but that in real life you're actually some surprisingly super sentimental, maybe even sappy dad. Am I right or am I right?
ReplyDeleteNancy, much agreed! In Spain (and Europe) there's really a mentality that, if we grow it, we should enjoy it. It reminds me of a Blue Bell ice cream commercial tagline: "We eat all we can and sell all the rest." If a food is "Made in Spain," you can generally count on finding it at quality yet for low prices in your local supermarket. Delicious!
You have me confused with somebody else, I'm afraid. Although I am am a Dad (very soon to be 2x over .. which reminds me... can you tel me where the Avenida 9 Octobre is in Valencia ? - Got an Ecografico next week)
ReplyDeleteGood factors are touching here. Anyway, keep your writing.
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