Wednesday, May 20, 2026

A Merc, by Any Other Name, would still be Redd’s.

After the settling of pioneers in Bluff, in 1880, by 1882 one cabin had been set up as a co-op where goods and supplies were sold to the people in the Fort and/or traded with the Navajo. The pioneers bought Navajo wool, pelts, and blankets which were taken to Durango, Colorado for sale. Returning from Durango, they brought other necessary goods to be sold from the co-op. 

By 1889, the co-op became housed in a brick building and became known as the San Juan Co-Op, being named after the San Juan Mission, not the river.  It was destroyed during a robbery attempt by the Fred Starr gang, and blown up.  Being diligent, the residents rebuilt the store and it is now the Bluff Fort Welcome Center and Museum.

North of White Mesa, Walter C. Lyman founded a small community, in 1905, which was named Grayson, after the maiden name of the wife of Bluff leader, Joseph Lyman.  The renaming of the community occurred in 1914 when a hefty library donation, from wealthy Easterner, Thomas W. Bicknell, was given.  His wife’s maiden name was Blanding, so followed the pattern of the first naming of the area.

Three years prior, the Grayson Co-Op had been established, but it was not until 1918 that it became housed within the ZCMI building.  The ZCMI (Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution) building featured a cast-iron and stamped sheet metal façade; the materials shipped in from Philadelphia.  The main structure was constructed with brick masonry and heavy timber frame, with elements of pine pillars and stamped metal ceilings, and remains a prominent iconic feature along Blanding’s Main Street.

 

 

When the co-op was first established in 1911, Parley Redd was hired as manager, and continued to do so until 1939, when he purchased the business.  Being a hard worker, and having business “smarts”, he was able to buy out other stockholders and changed the co-op to a private business, the Parley Redd Mercantile.  “The store carried clothing, food, shoes and just about everything a pioneer needed right down to baby diapers (cloth of course) and coffin

…ice cut from the ponds in winter and buried it in a big sawdust-filled pit in back of the store to be dug out in the summer and sold. (sounds like Parley took a lesson from Hans Jensen).

…goods were purchased from traveling salesmen called “drummers” and shipped in by horse-drawn wagons.

The Co-op store was a gathering place for many of the town’s people. They would sit around the old stove in the middle of the store and catch up on all the latest gossip and news. Parley was, by nature, a friendly, gregarious individual who loved to play practical jokes on people. They say he rigged an auto coil under the counter and when an old-timer or anyone else sat on the counter Parley would wind up the coil and shock the person perched thereon. His good humor made it work and it curtailed men sitting on his counter.”  (from San Juan Record, July 6, 2011, Parley Redd and his Ruth: A San Juan romance)

 

In 1952, Parley sold the business to his three sons, Vint, Gordon and Kent, but retirement was very short for Parley, as he died, from illness, April 1955.  The mercantile eventually joined forces with the Ace Hardware corporation, and became known as Redd’s Ace Harware; and yes, the Redd’s still own the business to this day.

So, where does food come into all this?  Well, while Parley Redd ran the merc, and the modernization of refrigeration began, he was able to offer more then just cut up blocks of ice, or dried and canned goods.  He installed frozen food lockers that could be rented, and residents were able to come in, store fresh food in the lockers, and pick up their goods whenever needed.

Weekly, Parley would have cattle slaughtered, prepped for sale, and that would be a way for local cooks to have more than pork, mutton/lamb, or wringing the necks of their own chickens.

However, the hardware store doesn’t offer up much in the way of edible goods any longer, unless you count the candy, snacks and soft drinks available near the main checkout counter.  Or, you can always pop into the Subway housed in the same building complex, or walk one street over to Smoke Pizza Company, if you’re hungry after all that hardware shopping.

Now for a recipe that would honor Parley fresh cut beef, but I’m not one for the Dutch oven, over an open fire, way of cooking.  No, low and slow in the crock pot does me just right.

 


Crock Pot Beef Stew

Ingredients:

2 and ½ lbs. sirloin or eye round roast

½ cup flour

4 Tbsp. olive oil, divided in half

6 medium potatoes

1 lb. package baby carrots

1 large onion

1 and ½ cups beef broth

½ tsp. ground black pepper

1 tsp. garlic powder

 

Preparation:

Spray a 6-quart crock pot with nonstick spray.

 

Cut roast into 1-inch-thick slices, the slices into 1-inch-thick strips, the strips into 1-inch cubes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coat the cubes in flour; heat 2 tablespoons oil in large skillet, medium-high heat, add half the cubes and brown on all sides; drain on paper towels. Repeat with second half of cubes; place browned and drained cubes in bottom of crock pot.

 



 

Cut potatoes in half lengthwise, cut into 1-inch strips, the strips into 1-inch cubes. Place into 5- quart pot with the baby carrots, cover with water; parboil for 15 minutes.  While these are parboiling, cut the onion into ¼ inch strips; place over the beef in crock pot.  Drain potatoes and carrots; spread out over the onions.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a medium bowl, mix together beef broth, black pepper and garlic powder; pour over ingredients in crock pot.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Set pot on low; cook for 8-10 hours until meat, potatoes and carrots are fork tender.

Makes 8 servings.

Mary Cokenour 

 

 

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Chokecherrying the Berries Blue.

“White and yellow, kill a fellow.

Purple and blue, good for you.

Red… could be good, could be dead.”

Survival expert, Mykel Hawke, mnemonic for remembering which berries are safe to eat in the wild.

Now when it comes to berries in the wild, I am one to admit that I am clueless as to the species, and safety, of varieties found in Utah.  Except juniper berries which I have often seen while adventuring to explore ruin sites; and have used juniper ash when baking indigenous based recipes.

 


Here is a list of berries native to Utah:

Serviceberry (Amelanchier): Aka Saskatoon or Juneberry, these sweet, dark blue berries are common in high mountain valleys and ripen in mid-summer.

Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana): Aka Bitter Cherry is very popular for preserves and jellies

Elderberry (Sambucus cerulea): Large shrubs producing clusters of blue berries, often used for jams.

Golden Currant (Ribes aureum): A very hardy native bush that produces yellow-to-black berries.

Oregon Grape (Mahonia repens): A low-growing, groundcover shrub with tart blue berries, often found in mountain areas.

Thimbleberry (Rubus parviflorus): Similar to a raspberry, but flatter and softer.

Buffaloberry (Shepherdia argentea): Often found along rivers, producing bright red or yellow berries.

Bearberry/Kinnikinnick (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi): A trailing, low-growing woody plant with red berries.

Truth be told, the only berries I have seen, for sale, were chokecherry in a jam form, and elderberry, in capsule or gummy form.  If there is a place, within San Juan County, where the berries can be purchased, in whole form, or any other way, I’d really love to know.  In local markets, the typical berries, known to the majority of Americans, are: strawberry, raspberry, blackberry and blueberry.  Oh, I just heard someone ask, “What about cherries, since chokecherry is listed as a berry?”

Cherries have pits in the middle that cannot be eaten, so classified as stone fruits. Berries have seeds in the middle, or coating the outside, and the whole fruit can be eaten, seeds and all.  Chokecherries grow on a shrub, and indigenous peoples used the dried berries in pemmican; a mixture of dried meat, fruit, and fat. The berries were also cooked to create juice and pastes, which were used to help with respiratory and digestive issues.

All the berries we find in stores must be grown, and shipped into, Utah from other states as they are not drought resistant.  So, fresh or frozen, we make due with what we can purchase.

However, and I mentioned this in my mushroom article from November 8, 2023, it would be wonderful if there were classes, and actual outings into our wonderous outdoors, on foraging wild edibles.  I am not the only person saying we need more outdoor activities besides hiking, camping, ATVing, etc., so outdoor experts, what say you about starting food foraging classes?

Ah, so the recipe I will be sharing will contain a very popular berry indeed, the blueberry. They are little bombs loaded with antioxidants that explode within the body to help reduce the risk of: cancer, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease.  They have an anti-inflammatory property to reduce joint pain, act as prebiotics to reduce gastrointestinal issues, and strengthen blood vessels in the back of the eyes that helps to improve vision.  These little blue-purplish beauties pack one heck of a healthful punch.  By the way, out in the wild, the berry most similar to blueberries is the serviceberry.  Growing on native shrubs, they are sweet, purple-black, round berries that taste like a mix of blueberry and apple, with a hint of almond. They are drought-tolerant, common in canyons, and make excellent jams, jellies, and pies.

 

With extra blueberries, made two rustic pies of apples and blueberries.

The recipe for Lemon Blueberry Loaf is simple, can be made into muffins as well, and delicious with or without the glaze.  The sweetness of the berries and the tartness of the lemons balance out to give the taste buds a zesty treat.

 


Lemon Blueberry Loaf

Ingredients:

2/3 cup (12 Tbsp.) melted butter

2 cups sugar (or equal non-calorie sweetener; I use Splenda baking blend)

6 Tbsp. lemon juice

4 large eggs

3 cups all-purpose flour (+1/4 cup for high altitude)

2 tsp. baking powder

2 tsp. salt

1 cup milk (I use 2%)

4 Tbsp. of grated lemon peel (fresh, or reconstituted dry)

2 cups of fresh or frozen blueberries

Glaze

3 Tbsp. lemon juice

2 Tbsp. melted butter

2 cups confectioners’ sugar

Preparation:

Preheat oven to 350F; spray, with baking spray, three 8-inch loaf pans, or line muffin tins with paper liners (16-18 standard size, 12 large size).

 

 

 

 

In a medium bowl, blend the butter with the sugar, lemon juice and eggs until smooth. 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a large bowl, sift together flour, baking powder and salt. 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Add egg mixture and milk to dry ingredients; stir until well combined.

Fold in lemon peel and blueberries. 

 

 

 

 

Spoon mixture into loaf pans, 3/4s full; or same for muffin liners.  

Bake 55-60 minutes for loaves, 15 to 18 minutes for muffins; or until golden brown and toothpick in center comes out clean.

 

Move loaves and/or muffins to baking rack to fully cool before spooning glaze over tops.


Makes 3 loaves, or 12 or 16-18 muffins, depending on muffin tin size.

So folks, remember to chew your berries well, as you don’t want to be choking on them.

Mary Cokenour