Season: Avocado

What do you do with this gift?

But seasons are, by their nature, cruel. They end.

Cutting into a peak-season avocado is a sensory event. The knife slides through the skin with a clean hiss . You twist the two halves apart to reveal a planet of chartreuse, a gradient of butter-yellow near the pit that deepens to a vibrant, grassy green at the edges. The texture is the thing: not watery, not stringy, but dense —the density of custard, of cold butter left out for an hour. It mashes into a bowl with the obedience of whipped cream. avocado season

It is the silent partner to a fried egg, the cool relief on a taco truck’s spicy al pastor, the reason a simple piece of toast can cost fourteen dollars in Brooklyn. But when it’s truly in season, the avocado asks for nothing more than a spoon and a pinch of salt. Eaten straight from the shell, standing over the kitchen sink, juice running down your wrist—that is the ritual.

You know the season has arrived not by looking at a calendar, but by the feel of the fruit in your palm. What do you do with this gift

The season is short. The toast is waiting.

And no, I’m not talking about the 365-day-a-year, rock-hard, rubbery imposters that haunt grocery stores in February. I am talking about the real thing: the fleeting, generous, green-gold rush when the fruit falls from the tree heavy with its own destiny. Cutting into a peak-season avocado is a sensory event

Because avocado season is not just a harvest. It is a reminder that the best things in life are not on demand. They are not 24/7. They do not come shrink-wrapped in plastic with a sticker promising ripeness. They arrive when the tree decides, when the sun is right, when the soil has rested. They are a window, not a door.