On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp What is it about squash, any way? Few vegetables get less respect, except maybe for egg plant. But even that has a sort of gourmet specialty named for it. Eggplant Parmesan. Some veggies are so desirable they get seasonal media cover age, like when the sweet corn is ready, which it is. Not to say the M.M. WEAVER & SON N Groffdale Rd Leola, PA 17540 (717)656-2321 MEYERS IMPLEMENTS, INC. 400 North Antrim Way Greencastle, PA 17225 (717) 597-2176 SCHREFFLER EQUIPMENT Pitman, PA 17964 (717)648-1120 PEOPLE’S SALES MIIICD & SERVICE FOnSSm Oakland Mills, PA 17076 - H (717) 463-2735 DuulifyUj; public adoration for sweet corn isn’t deserved, because it’s an absolutely wonderful food. What could possibly be better than freshly-shucked sweet corn, yanked from the stalk while the water is coming to a boil on the stove, cooked up in a few min utes, then served steaming and sweet, dripping with butter? Or just zapped in the husk for a few LEBANON VALLEY IMPLEMENT CO. 700 E Linden St Richland, PA 17087 (717) 866-7518 LAWN CARE OF PA Martindale, PA (717)445-4541 D.W.OGG EQUIPMENT CO. 5149 Cap Stine Rd. Frederick, MD 21701 (3011473-4250 Westminster, MD (410)848-4585 minutes in a microwave, But how much media interest have you ever seen in squash? Except maybe a blurb in the food section. They’re rarely even mentioned in food store sale ads. Tomatoes fare better, too. (Which are not a veggie, but a fruit.) Though it’s beyond the realm of my imagination, there are actually folks who don’t like tomatoes. Go figure. Seed catalogs devote large sections to the myriad of tomato varieties available, from the itty-bitty, bite-size ones our grandson likes to snitch from the stalk to the giant beefstakes so large they may give you a backache to pick. Well, if you believe catalog hype. Even beans are in vogue. One catalog firm, the Vermont Bean Seed Company, devotes 13 pages to a fascinating array of beans. Many of them are heirloom vari eties, like the Vermont NORTHEAST DIST.& EQUIP. Rt 106 West Clifford, PA 18413 (717) 222-9090 (717) 222-9020 C.J. WONSIDLER 1975 Trumbauersville Rd. Quakertown, PA 18951 (215) 536-1935 FRANK RYMON& SONS, INC. 399 Route 31 South Washington, NJ 07882 (908)689-1464 ECKROTH BROS. FARM EQUIPMENT RD #2, Box 24A New Ringgold, PA 17960 (71/1943-2131 4910 Kemsville Rd. Orefield, PA 18069 (610) 366-2095 307 Edgar Ave Bloomsburg, PA 17815 (717) 784-5217 TEST DRIVE ONE TODAY! MASSEY-RERGUSON Cranberry Bean, the Jacob’s Cattle Bean, and the Black Turtle Soup Bean. One could easily devote an entire garden to beans. Our garden this year sports a ten-foot-long row of pole-type Roma beans, the broad, flat green bean I prefer for its meati ness, yields, and taste. The pole version is a new experiment with this old favorite. While the beans are now just beginning to bear, the long, vining foliage has already yanked its support netting downward and should probably be growing instead on metal hog fence. The once mostly-ignored broccoli has risen to new popu larity in recent years on the veg etable charts. Research findings that the tasty, green flower-stalk and its cruciferous cousins are rich in nutrients with anti-can cerous properties will likely only enhance its desirability. BUt how many people go out of their way for squash? Huh? Squash are the Rodney Dangerfield of the produce patch, often generating jokes, jeers, and groans. Is it because of their unappe tizing name? Maintenance Free Railings For Porches, Decks or Balconies We have the expertise to design & create a system just to fit your need. Any Size, Different Styles vinyl railing systems offer low C ?C£ce ma j n tenance and durability. No Rust • Smooth Surfaces Available in BVHpPi No Paint • Impact Resistant • White 1"™ Ni •No Scraping • Lasting Beauty • Ivory •UV Stabilized • Non Fading Colors • Cray Quality Workmanship 7| 7-354-0524 \ vinyl railing , S2SLSSE*. "•» « liiiil-"- T --"fisi. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 1, 1998-B3 Is it their overeagerness to grow into baseball bats and bowling pins? Squash, as a kid, meant sandwiches of them, sliced and prepared by what has now become a nutritional f-word. Fried. We still enjoy them that way occasionally, but consume far more tender young squash thin ly sliced in circles, with a little sliced onion, slivers of red bell pepper, garlic powder, and Italian seasoning, sauteed together gently until tender in a few tablespoons of mild salsa. Practically no calories. With that in mind, I planted three hills of hybrid yellow crooknecks and green zucchini. Mother Nature threw in her own two hills of yellow squash volun teers, one of gigantic proportions thriving in the compost pile. We are literally being squashed this summer. Maybe squash just need bet ter PR. or their own spin doctor. A four-year-old friend of our has the right idea. Unable to pronounce “zucchini,” he instead calls them “bikinis.” That name change might not get squash any more respect But it would surely generate more interest