Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

Garden Update

15 July 2009

Dug up the bed that had daffodils in it now that their foliage has died down. Got most of the weeds out and dug in 5 gallons of leaf compost.

Collected all the daffodil bulbs in a bucket and put them in the basement, will get them planted this Fall somewhere outside the vegetable garden. I don’t like mixing annuals and perennials.

Plan to plant more kale, maybe more chard and carrots. We have about 60 days left before frost.

After I had cut some puslane for my dinner and was washing it, I noticed a bunch of tiny black specks in the wash water and in the salad spinner. I thought, “oh jeez, what is this, some new tiny mite eating my garden?” But it turned out to be purslane seeds! I find that a very happy thought for some reason — it means I’ll have purslane next year!

Was thinking about buying or renting a rototiller as I was digging. I’m trying to do everything as fossil-fuel-free as possible, but it sure would save time and do a better job if I had one of those. So even if I’m planning on eventually gardening without any fossil fuel inputs, if with a roto-tiller I’m able to improve my soil more than I could without it, couldn’t I make a case for using one now?

Also thinking about where to put some hazelnut bushes. A local source of protein would be good.

First Tomato

13 July 2009

First tomato from the garden today. I split it with the boys. Small but good flavor.

Harvested and used in salad yet more purslane and kale today. I made a big salad, put on some Italian dressing, then put a big hamburger with a slice of cheddar on top. Divine! We’ll definitely be planting more kale.

Tomorrow I want to have some collards and swiss chard cooked. And probably purslane too.

I ask myself, what if our garden was all we had? And I’m apalled by the thought. We’re miles and miles from any kind of self-sufficiency. Could we even come anywhere near on our little bit of land? It hardly seems possible.

First Potatoes

27 June 2009

The boys and I dug the first potatoes today, some of the red ones. Most were about egg-size or a little bigger. I boiled them and we ate them with butter and a little salt. Yum! We also pulled a couple of onions to have with the potatoes, but there wasn’t much there yet.

M and I have been eating a lot of really good salads lately. I’ve been collecting a combination of greens: purslane, amaranth thinnings, kale, collards, even a little lettuce. The purslane is really what makes the salads so good. It’s crunchy without being tough, and very mild flavored. We have the onions in a raised bed, and that happens to be where a lot of purslane self-seeded, so I let it grow. Being a weed, it grew very vigorously, which is fine since it’s my favorite vegetable from the garden so far this year.

The last week has been really hot, and the tomatoes, corn, and peppers are loving it. I got a little carried away with the fish emulsion on the tomatoes, and they have a lot of huge, green leaves. I think the tomatoes will come, but probably would have come sooner without quite so much fertilizer.

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Dandelion Greens

2 May 2009

Picked some dandelions from the back yard today. It’s a gorgeous, sunny, breezy day, and it was nice laying out in the lawn picking them. And now that I think of it, that’s the first harvest of the season!

One of the good things I remember from my childhood was visiting my grand-aunt and uncle’s farm out in Lebanon, Connecticut. My aunt was a fantastic cook, and we had some memorable meals there. She was a big fan of dandelion greens, probably because they didn’t cost anything as much as for any other reason (frugality being a virtue she valued above most others, like many from her generation). She would often serve them as one of the vegetables with a meat such as spare ribs, and even though they were quite bitter, since she harvested them all summer, they somehow went with the meat really well.

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Anyway, I washed all the ones I harvested this morning, then had some of them as a salad with my second breakfast (along with 4 of C’s eggs, scrambled) and put the rest in the refrigerator to cook for dinner tonight. They have a very mild flavor, with just a hint of bitterness.

CR’s chickens are getting more and more of their food from pasture this time of year. With those eggs and the greens picked less than 30 minutes before they wound up in my stomach, that should be about the healthiest meal ever.

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I cooked some dandelion greens for dinner, just boiled them for a very few minutes with some butter. They were okay, but the bitterness seemed more pronounced.

I bought a copy of Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants by Bradford Angier yesterday at Borders. I’ve wanted a wild edibles book for a while, and this looks like a good one. It’s certainly fun to browse, and I strongly prefer illustrations over photographs.

And speaking of shopping, I tried to browse the sale DVDs at Borders yesterday, and I could barely do it. I’m so used to shopping online that trying to look through stacks and stacks of physical items was immensely annoying. To find the book I wanted, I immediately asked for assistance instead of spending 15 minutes looking as I would have 5 years ago.

Last of the Butternut

4 April 2009

Sounds like a movie title, eh? “The thrilling tale of how 4 tenacious butternut squash, against all odds, survived for 6 months in a cold, dark basement.”

Brought the last 4 little butternuts up from the basement today and put them in the oven. They were wrinkled and had some bad spots, but definitely lots of good squash left in them. It still amazes me that we harvested those over 6 months ago and we’re still cooking and eating them.

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The other thing you may notice is that some of those butternut from last summer had an uncharacteristic shape, with a very long, slender neck. I’m guessing that they’re some kind of hybrid volunteer from the year before. They don’t have as much flesh as a more typical butternut, but they taste just as good.