something i wrote on blueberries. summary by ChatGPT 3.5 and Google Gemini afterwards.
This is a little story or blog posting on blueberries. We get. these blueberries from our Farmboy in Peterborough, which is not the same farmboy as London or Cambridge or Trotter area has. I believe I have a posting on that. I can wait to hear. It’s a two kilogram box. I get it. Jones is getting for like 10 bucks. That’s he seems crazy. So as I’m discussing this, we’re showing my mother asking for a. blueberry jam recipe that we can use for these two kilograms of blueberries. I said these are farms, so if they’re not as good as hand picked natural or wild as she and Larry and we used to with kids. But
But if you go to their website. http://foresthillswildblueberries.com/ They would suggest what their materials suggest. They’re kind of the. feel growing the pictures are all very much not a farm like setting. But then they obviously have the account some sort of mechanical collectors and separators and stuff. So I’m kind of curious as where does one dot line first off in the technical definition of farm grown versus wild cone? Is this straddling the line between the two of course? And then in the other draft, more meaningful process, at least to me, for meaningful metric, is what is the M product like? It would be very understanding compare these blueberries made into blueberry jam or other blueberry intensive things and compare them to what my mother, Larry would do. either directly or from memory, because I don’t sure that she has any left at home. I know I’ve gotten here, so it was really interesting, especially in a blind taste test of identical rescue using different sorts of blueberries. And are these good ones? And if they are five bucks a kilogram, that’s ridiculously inexpensive compared to sign of a road, a side of the highway, 400 Etcetera. Where do you see? I’m sure a court has got to be fifty bucks now. I don’t know. A pint is 12 to 20 bucks It’s 25 bucks last time. I saw them. That’s going to be at least 10 years ago. I’m sure I’m worried every other idea. Anyhow, of course, those are wild. Pick that day or pick it in the last little while. He’s from this moving producer, Forest Hills. Well, move varying. They’re going to be frozen. They can be a year old. like a box. II have here is. something in 2023. So I’ll check the later to see. So I’ll put it in the end. The result is. But what is the end result? Alton Delta. If you combined it in 30 kilograms. I think it’s 30 kilogram or 30 pounds. Whatever pops is around with just two kilogram boxes. for big time. So be even interesting to love. by them. Father Moat put it in pint containers and see if you can sell them at side of the road. Has final blueberries At what point do you say what point is it thrott to say you know bless them somebody asks where these are frozen Were they wild? Yes. Did you pick them yourself? No, but we have a crew that does it. OK. Where did you break them? I’ll work from Nova Scotia You know, are we exactly defraud? Is that fraud or not? So the exact sizes three pound blocks or 4.4 pound box.
- The author purchases two kilograms of blueberries from Farmboy in Peterborough for $10, finding the price surprisingly cheap.
- The author asks their mother for a blueberry jam recipe to utilize the purchased blueberries.
- Questions arise regarding the distinction between farm-grown and wild blueberries, particularly in taste and harvesting methods.
- The author considers conducting blind taste tests to compare the quality of blueberries from different sources.
- They ponder the ethical implications of potentially mislabeling frozen blueberries harvested by a crew as “wild,” considering the consequences of misleading customers.
tried Google Gemini for the same summary task:
Absolutely! Here’s a condensed summary with a maximum of 5 points:
- Blueberry Source and Quality: You’re curious about the quality of blueberries purchased from a local store compared to hand-picked, wild blueberries.
- Price Comparison: You question the price difference between your purchased blueberries and the higher-priced wild ones sold roadside.
- Farm vs. Wild Debate: You ponder the true definition of “farm-grown” vs. “wild” blueberries, especially those from larger operations like Forest Hills Wild Blueberries.
- Best Quality Metric: You suggest using the end product (like jam) as the best way to compare the quality of different blueberry sources.
- Transparency and Labeling: You raise questions about ethics and transparency in labeling blueberries, especially when it comes to disclosing details about their origin and harvesting process.


