Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Perennials

Today we received an order of perennials from One Green World. They kindly added a note to the invoice that these plants would offset about 153 pounds of carbon dioxide per year after they are full grown.

Of course, I love edibles. The order included flowing plants such as akebia and Maypop passion flower, both of which produce gorgeous flowers but also produce fruit. Akebia requires two varieties, so we're adding a pretty white variety to our rosy one. There are several huckleberries, a Korean bush cherry, and lingonberry. I also have five saffron crocus bulbs, and I'm hoping to offset saffron expenses.

I'm planning to put the saffron bulbs into a low, wide blue pot I bought at Pemberton Farms yesterday. I also found some pots that biodegrade after a couple seasons. They seem very sturdy now and are made of bamboo, but in two years, you just pop them into the ground as they start to disintegrate. I'm hoping to create an herb garden out of these. I've bought some herb plants and have several seeds for others.

I discovered that my herbs create the best vegetarian lasagna, and can't wait for this season's. This weekend I made a meat and bitter melon lasagna, which was great, but still not up to par with rosemary, thyme, and fennel.

I also picked up a bunch of gorgeous looking succulents for another piece of the garden. I tried it out last year, but they didn't set too well, so this time they'll be in the ground sooner.

Right now the perennial plot looks like a barren wasteland, but in about a month it'll start looking trim and inhabited. Or so says my ambition.

Patriot's Day

Yesterday I went to my garden to plant lettuce and other greens. One gardener remarked, "Oh, so you're one of those people who might think it'll actually cool off." It was 88 out when I left the garden, hardly lettuce weather. And I'm sitting here before 7am the next day, worried that my afternoon-watered lettuce is going to wilt away to nothing before I can next water it. I thought about driving the 45-minute round trip to splash some water on, but decided that maybe this evening would be a better bet.

I read The $64 Tomato a couple weeks ago. It's about the slow dive into insanity as you try to perfect your garden. Battles against bugs, groundhogs, sod, weather. At the end he realizes he is no longer a gardener, but a farmer. And I can see my path clearly ahead of me too.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Sunnyside up

My new go-to ingredient for breakfast is corn tortillas. I really have to learn to make my own, but for now we get packs at the store. 

A couple of recent breakfasts:
Two corn tortillas. Cook on one side, then flip and add a spoonful of refried beans, some avocado, and cheese. After cheese starts to melt, plate and add greens. Fast, delicious, satisfying.

This morning's was more involved. We had extra bok choy, which I panfried with just salt and pepper. Then I cooked two tortillas. I cooked up breakfast sausage from Chestnut Farms. I made a salsa out of tomatoes, jarred jalapeƱos, scallions, garlic, and some cumin and chili powder. And then two sunnyside-up eggs. Place tortillas, then eggs, then salsa. Add the greens and sausage on the side.

Growing up, after my mom found out about salmonella, we stopped doing things like licking the bowl or cooking sunnyside-up eggs. Since most of my eggs no longer come from factory farms, I take the risk these days and cook sunnyside-up. Such a pleasure.

Garden time

This year, I found an interesting deal online for 100 packets of seeds for $$59 at GetSeeds. Given that theses seeds are organic heirloom, that's a fantastic deal. My packets arrived in a nice big bag. Here's the bag, not that they attached some buttercup seeds to the outside:


And here's the seeds:

It was a lovely variety, great for a large plot. There were tons of herbs, as well as a nice mix of peppers, tomatoes, squash, beans, corn, and so on. There were no instructions, but since they put the variety on each packet, it's easy enough to look up.

I started a large tray of peppers and tomatoes this year. Oddly, the peppers are doing better than the tomatoes. Usually it's the other way around. Generally I like peppers better, so I suppose it's a good thing, but I can't seem to figure out why the tomatoes aren't doing well.

The annual garden plots at Codman Community Farm are opening up today. Apparently they had a record number of new gardeners applying for plots. It's great that everyone is so interested in gardening. Looking forward to the new season.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Happy Spring

Spring came early this year. I've done some work in the gardens already, planting snap peas and cutting back an akebia vine that was getting invasive. Still a long way to go there.

Akebia is a beautiful flowering vine, but if planted with another variety, it produces fruit too. Max and I are dying to try out this fruit, so we picked a white variety to go with our rosy-colored flowers. It might not work this year, since the flowers are budding so early and the white hasn't been shipped to us yet, but we'll give it a go. It's a good excuse to tame it and try to make the tangle into something productive.

We went a little overboard this year picking out plants. I've pinned a bunch on Pinterest on my Edible Perennials board. I found out that companies may not send ribes, such as gooseberry plants, to Massachusetts. I checked the trusty Wikipedia article on ribes, and it is because it causes White Pine Blister Rust. I hadn't heard of this, but I don't argue too much with stopping non-native disease. No currants or gooseberries in my garden.

I picked up my ever-reliable meat share this week from Chestnut Farms. Kim was dealing out "extras", including beef bones, pork bones, and leaf lard. I made a pork bone soup by boiling the bones for a couple hours the first day (we ate the broth straight), then removed the bones and added sliced baby bella mushrooms, sweet peppers, scallions, and some bok choy. Pretty good! The beef bones are great just roasted for the marrow or in a soup. I like making sweet potato soup with that broth. And the leaf lard is supposed to be amazing for pie crust. I'm looking to make a gluten-free, egg-free, dairy-free crust, so maybe leaf lard is the answer. It's a tough search on Google, and I'm not sure it's been done before.

Max cooked up four steaks in our share for a family visit. For his birthday I ordered miso from the South River Miso Co. They make several non-soy misos, anywhere from rice to barley to dandelion leek. We marinated the steaks with miso and a few other ingredients, which is always a nice treat. (My recipe is usually miso, sake, mirin, and sugar, sometimes with soy sauce and scallions.)

Happy Easter to everyone, and hope you got to enjoy some local food.