We’ve all been through it. Lugging home a huge, heavy watermelon from the store or farmers market, as perfect-looking as you could find. Schlepping it up the stairs and making room for it in the refrigerator. Waiting for the opportune time to crack it open — a picnic maybe, or just a hot summer day. Something, anything, to bring a little joy to the perpetual Groundhog Day we’ve all been living since mid-March.
And then, upon slicing it open, you see your deepest fears have been realized: It’s a bad melon.
Nothing can top the heartbreak of discovering your carefully selected watermelon is terrible. It’s mealy or flavorless; or worse, it has the integrity of rotted wood or has huge patches of white that make it resemble more cucumber than melon (the two are in the same Cucurbitaceae family).
When perusing fruits and vegetables at the market, with a few exceptions, it’s pretty easy to tell what you’re going to get. Lettuces, carrots, apples, berries — you judge primarily on appearance. If you get a flavorless strawberry or an insipid tangelo, you can toss it with relatively little harm done.