My neighbor handed me a full bag of fresh vegetables from the garden, and I honestly had no idea what I was looking at. They looked familiar in some ways, but not familiar enough for me to know how to cook them. I stood there turning them over in my hands, wondering if they were meant to be eaten raw, roasted, boiled, or added to some kind of soup.
That is the funny thing about garden produce. When plants grow well, they sometimes grow faster than people can eat them. Neighbors may suddenly show up with bags of zucchini, cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes, herbs, fruits, or greens they do not want to waste. What looks confusing at first may simply be someone’s extra harvest.
The safest place to start is simple. Wash everything well, then ask the person who gave it to you what it is and how they usually prepare it. Many vegetables can be sliced and sautéed with garlic, onions, salt, and a little oil. Others can be roasted, added to soups, mixed into salads, pickled, or frozen for later.
Sometimes the best part of receiving food from a neighbor is not just the food itself. It is the story behind it. A mystery vegetable can turn into a new recipe, a new flavor, or even a small connection with someone who wanted to share what they grew. What began as confusion can easily become a simple and meaningful kitchen discovery.
