When a neighbor hands you overflowing bags of garden vegetables, they’re really sharing the wild success of plants that took off faster than they could eat. Zucchini, cucumbers, tomatoes, and peppers often arrive in piles, while figs, plums, or apricots show up in frantic bursts when every fruit on the tree ripens at once. A bundle of mint, basil, or cilantro may be more than one kitchen can handle, and unfamiliar greens or roots might be treasured ingredients from a culture you don’t yet know.
You don’t need complicated recipes to honor what you’ve been given. Wash and eat it raw if it’s tender. Toss chunks with oil and salt, then roast until caramelized. Sauté slices with garlic, onions, or spices and serve over rice or pasta. Stir leftovers into soups, stews, or salads, or pickle and freeze them, turning one neighbor’s surplus into weeks of quiet abundance.