Harvest Monday May 9, 2016

Welcome to Harvest Monday, where we celebrate all things harvest related. My harvests are certainly pretty repetitive these days, but I’m not complaining. It’s my wife’s turn to cook, and I always give her a list of what’s ready in the garden. “It’s salad season” I told her, with lots of lettuce to be cut and more sizing up in the garden. The lettuce in the below photo is from the salad boxes in the greenhouse, and I think they wound up in chalupas.

mixed lettuce from greenhouse

mixed lettuce from greenhouse

I cut the last head of the Winter Marvel butterhead lettuce for a main course salad we had yesterday. Some of the leaves near the ground were deteriorating, and I wanted to save the head before I lost it all. The lettuce I planted last month is about ready to start cutting, and spring rains have it growing quickly.

Winter Marvel lettuce

Winter Marvel lettuce

I also harvested some of the White Russian kale I have growing in one of the cold frame beds. This kale has proven to be one of the best tasting kale varieties I have grown, and it is a prolific grower as well. These plants are just beginning to flower, and I cut a few of the rapini as well as the leaves.

White Russian kale

White Russian kale

The kale joined up with our 2015 sweet potatoes to make Kale and Sweet Potato Hash. This is without a doubt our ‘new favorite thing’ and I could eat it practically every day. I don’t want to get burned out on it though, so we limit it to perhaps once every couple of weeks. We made this using some of our 2015 orange, white and purple sweet potatoes from storage.

Kale and Sweet Potato Hash

Kale and Sweet Potato Hash

I pulled the last of the overwintered spinach from the cold frame beds. This one is Viroflay, the last to bolt of the o/p types I usually grow. There was almost two pounds of it, and I blanched and froze it for later use.

harvest of Viroflay spinach

harvest of Viroflay spinach

My wife usually harvests the asparagus but she ‘let’ me cut it on Saturday. It turned out to be a bumper harvest, as I found over a pound of it ready. Saturday was a warm day, and the heat really seems to make it pop up, and it grows inches a day. We’ve harvested over 19 pounds of it so far in 2016. We’ve been enjoying it all the usual ways, including stir-fried and grilled.

asparagus harvest

asparagus harvest

She grilled some to go with Reuben sandwiches we had for lunch yesterday. Hers was meatless, while I added some Prosciutto di Parma on mine. Both were made with a mix of our kohlrabi and cabbage kraut, along with homemade rye bread and Swiss cheese.

Reuben sandwich with grilled asparagus

Reuben sandwich with grilled asparagus

The largest harvest of the week turned out to be inedible, or at least not edible to me. Plenty of the soil micro-organisms are at work eating it up though. I started digging the first finished compost out of the compost bins I built last year. I’ve been spreading it on the beds as I prep them for planting, and last week I dug six bushels of it out to put on the garden. As you can see in the below photo, there’s still a lot in there.

finished compost in the composter

finished compost in the composter

The right bin is full to the brim with organic material. I need to finished digging the finished compost out of the left bin so I can turn the other one over into it. There’s always lots of organic material this time of year as we do spring cleanup work (aka weed pulling). I’m guessing there’s more finished compost on the bottom of that side. That’s a good thing, since I use a lot of compost this time of year.

compost bin full of organic material

compost bin full of organic material

Harvest Monday is a day to show off your harvests, how you are saving your harvest, or how you are using your harvest. If you have a harvest you want to share, add your name and blog link to Mr Linky below. And be sure and check out what everyone is harvesting!


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Photo Friday: May Flowers

It’s been a while since I shared photos of things other than edibles, so I thought I would show a bit of what’s blooming around here in early May. I’ll start out by the front of the house, where the Encore azaleas have been putting on a show for about a week now. I believe this is their third season blooming, and they are covered with blooms.

Encore azaleas

Encore azaleas

Also out front we have lots of irises blooming. My wife showcased quite a few of them on her blog with her Sunday Stroll, but she left out one of my favorites. We have an unnamed yellow one that I brought from my old place. Though we don’t know its name, it has certainly traveled because I originally got it from my neighbor Eva, who had brought it to Kentucky from her old place in Alabama! When Eva moved back to Alabama, I dug up a few of her lovely ‘old fashioned’ irises, and then moved them to Happy Acres.

unnamed yellow iris

unnamed yellow iris

In the shade garden, we have Brunnera macrophylla  ‘Jack Frost’ blooming. While the leaves of the Brunnera are usually the main attraction, the flowers are also lovely in spring.

Brunnera

Brunnera

Close by the Bleeding Heart is almost done blooming. We have a red one and a white one, and I don’t know those cultivars.

Bleeding Heart

Bleeding Heart

Also in the shade garden, the Lamium is blooming. I believe this one is Lamium maculatum ‘Beacon Silver’, but I wouldn’t bet the farm on it! It’s a much showier relative of the dead nettle we have growing and blooming everywhere.

Lamium blooming

Lamium blooming

In the greenhouse, the Wave petunias have started blooming. It is definitely time to get them planted outside in containers, which is where we usually grow them.

Tidal Wave Hot Pink petunias

Tidal Wave Hot Pink petunias

We do have edibles blooming too. Monday I shared a photo of the blackberries blooming. The blueberries have also been blooming for some time now, and berries are setting on even as the later flowers are still opening.

blueberries blooming

blueberries blooming

In the main garden, some of the overwintered kale plants are flowering. I plan to leave them for pollinators until I need the space for something else.

kale plant blooming

kale plant blooming

And my final photo is very exciting to me. It’s a blossom on the Sugar Ann snap peas. It’s been a while since I grew peas here, and I am looking forward to getting a taste of these soon. The snow peas should also be blooming any day now.

Sugar Ann snap pea blossom

Sugar Ann snap pea blossom

I hope you have enjoyed this photo tour of Happy Acres in bloom!

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Harvest Monday May 2, 2016

Welcome to Harvest Monday, where we celebrate all things harvest related. The kale in the greenhouse is flowering but I’m still getting nice harvests from it. I cut all the rapini I could find, plus small leaves from both varieties I have growing in there (Western Front and True Siberian). I sauteed these briefly along with some mushrooms for a side dish.

kale and rapini

kale and rapini

The salad boxes are still growing strong as well. I have started cutting whole plants instead of plucking individual leaves, since I have lots of lettuce growing in the cold frames that should be ready for harvest soon. I plant a mix of things in the boxes, without labeling them, but I can tell it’s mostly Radichetta in the below photo. That lettuce was destined for some tepary bean tostadas I fixed for lunch one day.

harvest of lettuce from salad box

harvest of lettuce from salad box

I also cut a butterhead lettuce called Winter Marvel last week. This one was overwintered in one of the cold frame beds. It’s a hardy variety for sure, and it made a big head with buttery smooth leaves that gave us a jump on the spring planted lettuce. This one wound up starring in a taco salad my wife made yesterday.

Winter Marvel lettuce

Winter Marvel lettuce

Asparagus continues to be the star of our spring harvests. I used some of it raw in a black lentil salad. The salad had a few of our dried tomatoes in it too (rehydrated), along with some of the lacto-fermented giardiniera I made a couple of weeks ago. I added some avocado at the last and served it up on leaves of Simpson Elite lettuce, along with fresh baked cracked wheat rolls. I didn’t take any photos of the asparagus harvests, since they all tend to look about the same! We did cut right at 5 pounds of it last week, bringing the yearly total to 16 pounds.

black lentil salad with fresh asparagus

black lentil salad with fresh asparagus

I harvested a nice bit of arugula from one of the salad boxes in the greenhouse. It’s mostly Speedy with a little Apollo thrown in. It’s bolting already and the aphids seem to like eating it almost as much as I do!

arugula

arugula

It all went on a pizza I made last week. The pizza also featured our dried tomatoes, plus some of the C. baccatum peppers I pickled last fall (Malawi Piccante and Kaleidoscope). I spread some thick, homemade tomato sauce on the whole wheat crust before adding the other ingredients. It is so nice to have a well stocked freezer and pantry with lots of goodies from past harvests.

homemade pizza

homemade pizza

I’ll close with something from the future harvest department. The thornless blackberries are starting to bloom. The one in the below photo is Natchez, and you can see a small blackberry forming by my finger. Go blackberries! There are blueberries, currants and gooseberries setting on as well, plus cherries in the orchard area. Now if we can just keep the critters away from them, which sometimes feels like a full-time job!

blooms on Natchez blackberries

blooms on Natchez blackberries

Harvest Monday is a day to show off your harvests, how you are saving your harvest, or how you are using your harvest. If you have a harvest you want to share, add your name and blog link to Mr Linky below. And be sure and check out what everyone is harvesting!


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Greenhouse Tour in Late April

As we near the end of April I thought I would grab the camera and capture a few images of what’s going on in the greenhouse. It’s a time of transition there, as much of the space is put to use growing flats of seedlings for planting out later on. I have shelves installed around three sides of the greenhouse, and this time of year they are always full of flats. All of the tomatoes and peppers are now potted up in 3.5 inch pots, so they do take up quite a bit of space.

flats on greenhouse shelf

flats on greenhouse shelf

I’ve been battling an outbreak of aphids in the greenhouse since early March. They were on the greens growing in the beds and salad boxes, as well as on many of the early seedlings like the brassicas and lettuce. With cilantro, parsley and spinach bolting it was time to clean up the beds and put everything on the compost pile – aphids and all. Now I have flats of plants sitting on the ground in the bare spots. Soon they will start spending some time outdoors during the day so they can begin the hardening off process before they are planted. And I will plant cucumbers in the larger of the two beds, the one in the below photo.

flats on the ground of the greenhouse bed

flats on the ground of the greenhouse bed

I started petunia seeds for several different varieties of Wave petunias back in March. I got great germination on the purple and pink color, but the red and blue did not do well at all. I wound up with only two of the Wave Blue and none of the red ones. I’ve heard of other gardeners having problems with certain colors, but I’ve not really had problems until this year. I got my seed from Parks, and I plan on switching to another supplier next year. At least the ones I have growing are sizing up and some are even showing flower buds. I will have plenty of petunias, but I will have to buy a few red ones which I plant for the hummingbirds.

flat of Wave petunia seedlings

flat of Wave petunia seedlings

I had much better luck with pepper and tomato seed germination. I have a nice supply of plants for those, though some of the peppers are having issues with the aphids. I’m getting the aphids under control, spraying with insecticidal soap, but it takes a while to get them all. The bigger pepper plants are doing well, but some of the smaller ones seem to be more affected by the aphid damage, or by the soap spray itself. It’s always something, it seems, and this year for me it is aphids! I rarely have issues with them once plants are in the garden, but in the greenhouse and indoors they are almost a perennial problem for me.

tomato seedlings

tomato seedlings

Some of the flats on the ground in the greenhouse were quickly hit by sowbugs. They seem to be fond of the basil, though not so much the tomatoes or peppers. The one in the below photo is, ironically, Sacred Basil. There’s nothing sacred about it to the sowbugs! I got the basil plants up off the ground and spread some Sluggo Plus on the beds to see if I can get them under control.

Sacred Basil plant with sowbug damage

Sacred Basil plant with sowbug damage

The salad boxes are continuing to give us a small but steady supply of salad greens. There’s a few aphids on the lettuce leaves, but nothing that can’t be remedied with a good rinsing off once they are harvested.

salad box with lettuce planted

salad box with lettuce planted

The overwintered kale plants are flowering.  We’re eating the leaves and the rapini, and those plants don’t seen to have many aphids on them. Go figure! I am thankful for that for sure, though it’s possible the aphids will migrate to the kale since I pulled the other plants from the beds.

overwintered kale in greenhouse bed

overwintered kale in greenhouse bed

The first kale to flower was the lone plant of one called Western Front. I harvested all the leaves and rapini, and left the plant to produce more leaves and shoots. The other plants are all True Siberian, and they are starting to flower too. Both varieties did well in the winter greenhouse and I will grow them again.

rapini on Western Front kale

rapini on Western Front kale

Also blooming are the early tomato plants I am growing in containers. I have one plant each of Spike and Maglia Rosa. Spike was the first to bloom, and is now the first tomato to set fruit. I am hoping to get some small fruited tomatoes planted behind the greenhouse soon, once the soil warms up a bit more. The bed is on the south side of the greenhouse, and the microclimate there lets me plant things a bit sooner than in the main garden.

Spike tomatoes setting on

Spike tomatoes setting on

I hope you have enjoyed this tour of the greenhouse here in April. I’ll be back soon with more happenings from Happy Acres!

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Harvest Monday April 25, 2016

Welcome to Harvest Monday, where we celebrate all things harvest related. The asparagus is coming on strong now that the weather has settled and is seasonably warm. We hauled in 16 ounces one day last week, which was our biggest daily harvest. A few days later we got 21 ounces to add to the totals. We’ve gotten 11 pounds of it so far this year. It is a highlight of seasonal eating for us here, and even though the calendar year starts in January the harvest season starts with the first asparagus.

homegrown asparagus

homegrown asparagus

Much of that in the above photo wound up on the grill. I love it prepared that way, but I have to say I like it most every which way, including raw. Asparagus is a prebiotic food when raw, but I like it mostly just because it tastes good! The grilled asparagus wound up in a meal I’ll talk about later.

grilled asparagus

grilled asparagus

I also steamed a big bunch of it for a lunch of Asparagus Mimosa. I like to use the bamboo steamer for that, as it can hold more asparagus than our stainless steel steamer.

steamed asparagus

steamed asparagus

Other than asparagus, I made a cutting from a couple of Wild Garden Kale Mix plants that survived the winter unprotected. One had fairly flat leaves while the other one was more frilly like a Red Russian. Both were tender and sweet tasting.

Wild Garden Mix Kale

Wild Garden Mix Kale

Some of the kale wound up in a hash I made with purple fleshed Purple sweet potatoes and the white fleshed Bonita. I think the combo made for a visually appealing dish that was tasty and nutritious as well. Add beans or eggs and you’d have a main dish meal. I used it as a side dish for some fish.

Kale and Sweet Potato Hash

Kale and Sweet Potato Hash

The salad boxes in the greenhouse continue to give us a steady supply of lettuce leaves for salads. It’s been so nice to have while I wait for the plants in the cold frame beds to size up.

mixed lettuce harvest

mixed lettuce harvest

I used some of my recently prepared Chipotle Peppers in Adobo Sauce to make a batch of bean enchiladas. I made the filling from Black Tepary beans. I have some of these beans I plan on growing this year, and I have to say they seem to be pretty versatile in the kitchen. They hold their shape well for salads or soups, but they also work well when mashed up for refried beans. I made the enchilada sauce from some of our homemade unseasoned tomato sauce and some of my homegrown chile powder.

Black Tepary bean enchiladas

Black Tepary bean enchiladas

I made a batch of Michelle’s Green Quinoa Pilaf last week. I used green garlic and parsley instead of the scallions and cilantro she used, since that was what I had. I used the overwintered flat-leaf Splendid parsley I have growing in the greenhouse, which is only now starting to bolt but still loaded with lots of leaves.

green garlic with Splendid parsley

green garlic with Splendid parsley

After baking I topped the dish with a mix of grated Parmigiano-Reggiano and Asiago cheeses and put it back in the oven for a minute to melt the cheese. My wife and I both really enjoyed the dish. Lynda even called it “comfort food like macaroni and cheese.” I totally agree, and I can see making this dish again for sure. Since our season for fresh spinach is fairly short here, I may try making it with kale. I will definitely use scallions too when I have them, which should be fairly soon. The pictures don’t really do it justice. I’m always looking for new ways to use quinoa, and thanks to Michelle I have another one!

Green Quinoa Pilaf

Green Quinoa Pilaf

Harvest Monday is a day to show off your harvests, how you are saving your harvest, or how you are using your harvest. If you have a harvest you want to share, add your name and blog link to Mr Linky below. And be sure and check out what everyone is harvesting!


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