Thursday, November 5, 2009

growing, growing, cinderella's coach







How many pounds?

candy roaster squash (pumpkin) for Thanksgiving pie


Here's our baby candy roaster on its umbilical cord.

grandfather would say "that's enough for me, what are you going to eat?"


MMMMMMMMMMMMM, good!

garden stew - really!


pearl onions, three color pole beans, yukon gold potatos, garlic clove, sweet banana pepper, yellow cherry tomatos, heirloom tomatos

stew ingredients


red onions, carrots, three color pole beans, yukon gold potatos, heirloom tomatos, yellow cherry tomatos

collecting stew ingredients


carrots on the stone, yukon gold potatos in the basket

tender and tasty baby carrot for the stew


Should have planted rows and rows of these. These were our first time attempts to grow carrots and being reasonably successful, we'll put in lots more next year.

yukon gold potato crop


One four by eight foot bed with yukon gold potatos for fall stews.

Making beef stew! First dig the potatos.


Just a few of the yukon gold potato crop that we grew.

A "cheesey" pumpkin


Use your favorite cheese ball recipe, mix in a blender, form into a ball and chill. Remove from refrigerator and roll in shredded cheddar cheese. Garnish with celery stalk stem and greens.

Fall mesclun mix on Vera Bradley plate!

From Wikipedia:
Mesclun (pronunciation: MESS-klunn) is a salad mix of assorted small, young salad leaves which originated in Provence France. The traditional mix includes chervil, arugula, leafy lettuces and endive in equal proportions, but in modern iterations may include an undetermined mix of fresh and available lettuces, spinach, arugula (rocket), Swiss chard (God's Breath), mustard greens (Dijon's Child), endive, dandelion, frisée, mizuna, oak leaf, mâche, radicchio (Italian Spinach), sorrel, and/or other leafy vegetables. Mesclun is good up to 5 days in a plastic bag. Wash and blot dry just before using. The name comes from Provençal (Southern France)—mescla, "to mix"—and literally means "mixture".

broccoli for Thanksgiving?


Broccoli that the green worms have been gracious enough to leave for us! We hope some broccoli heads form before they eat all the leaves. It is growing beautifully though even with temperatures in the 30's in our two layers of plastic, greenhouse. It is November 5th and counting - 21 days until Thanksgiving. We'll be thankful if we can serve it with the turkey.

Christmas cactus at Halloween?


Wait, wait, Christmas cactus!
It's only Halloween!
Is this a trick? by such a beautiful treat!

fall blueberry bush colors


Rabbiteye blueberry bush turned brilliant colors in October! It loves its place next to the warm brick at the side of the house with an east facing sun supply.
Thank you beautiful bush, we have your blueberry babies in our freezer just on the other side of the wall!

salad tonight


Temperature was 31 last night (Nov. 4) and here's our "greens" bed in our new "poor man's greenhouse. Tiny red Swiss chard on the near right, a mezclun mix behind the pole, radishes in the middle. Oldest plantings on the right, newest ones are timed two weeks apart, proceed from middle to the left. We pick from right to left. Then replant at the right. Hope it lasts all winter!

Saffron crocus in our yard


Saffron crocus grow and bloom in the fall of the year. Plant in August and harvest in October. The three red stamens seen here below the yellow syles, are the saffron spice. I picked mine with tweezers, dried them on a paper towel and stored in a tight lidded jar or zip lock bag. Each stamen is a "strand" of saffron as called for in recipes that use saffron such as saffron rice and paella, a Spanish dish with chicken, seafood and rice. Saffron costs between 500$ and 5000$ a pound and requires 70,000 plants to make a pound of saffron. Grown commercially in Southeastern Spain. !Vamonos! (Let's go!)
Count on eating something with saffron next time you stop by!

You croakin' to me?


This is one of our big pond frogs getting up the courage to flirt with the pretty ceramic beauty who just keeps ignoring him.