Vegetable List For 2014

Every year when winter arrives I like to sit down and look at garden catalogs and start planning for what I will grow in the coming garden year. I also like to look at the records and notes for the past year to see how things did. I posted my Stars of the Garden in 2013 recap a couple of weeks ago which covers the 2013 garden. And I finished my seed inventory late last year, and that helps me know what seed I have leftover. With all those tasks done, I am now ready to come up with a list of what I plan to grow in 2014.

seeds2014

I am trying hard to simplify and grow fewer varieties these days. But I also love to experiment and try new things, so my growing list is always pretty long. My wife and I try and grow as many of our vegetables and fruits as we can, so gardening is more than just a hobby for us.

Tomatoes are always a major crop for us to grow. There are probably several thousand different varieties of tomatoes out there, so there’s no way anyone can really try more than a small percentage of the total available. But many of my favorite varieties today are ones I had never grown ten years ago, so it does pay to branch out and experiment. I’m only planning to try two new varieties this year: Nova and Green Tiger. Both of these small-fruited tomatoes came from Johnny’s Selected Seeds. Nova is an orange grape tomato, while Green Tiger is a green-when-ripe cherry type. We use a lot of the smaller tomatoes for drying and roasting, as well as for eating fresh. Juliet, Black Cherry and Sungold are three of my favorite small fruited types.

cluster of 12 Juliet tomatoes (2012 photo)

cluster of 12 Juliet tomatoes (2012 photo)

I am currently quite fascinated with growing winter squashes. I recently started reading The Compleat Squash by Amy Goldman, which is certainly helping to feed my new obsession! This year I want to try several new (to me) varieties, including Black Futsu, Seminole, Marina di Chioggia, Triamble, and Honeyboat Delicata. I also want to grow two Thai squashes from Baker Creek called Rai Kaw Tok and Kang Kob, which are both C. moschata types. Another one I plan to grow is the short-vined Kakai, which is grown for its completely hull-less seeds.

compleatsquash

I’m going to try an old heirloom summer squash I’ve grown in the past called White Scallop (aka Early White Bush Scallop). Food historian William Woys Weaver says this one dates back to pre-Columbian times, and was grown by Native Americans in the eastern U.S. Our friend Ruth gave us some of these squashes last year, and one taste of this delicious squash convinced me I need to grow it again. I also have seeds for a similar white scalloped squash with green markings called Patisson Panache Vert et Blanc. I’m looking forward to trying the hybrid zucchini Romanesco too. Old standbys like Gentry, Enterprise and Striata d’Italia will also be back for 2014.

Good Mother Stallard beans

Good Mother Stallard beans

Dry shell beans made a good showing in 2013. This year I plan on growing the bush beans Jacob’s Cattle and Hutterite Soup Bean. Pole shell beans include Cherokee Trail of Tears, Good Mother Stallard and the dual purpose Rattlesnake. Other snap beans for 2014 include Fortex, Musica, Gold Marie, Derby and Rocdor. Last year was a great year for beans here, and I can only hope that 2014 repeats that success.

dried Jacob

dried Jacob’s Cattle beans

I’m also having a lot of fun experimenting with peppers and making hot sauces, paprika and chile powder. I want to try the Italian heirlooom Topepo Rosso and the Hungarian Paprika peppers this year. I also want to grow the Numex Suave Red and Orange, which are two mild C. chinense peppers. I love these mild-mannered chinense peppers which have the flavor of Habeneros but very little heat. Aji Angelo is a C. bacchatum pepper that I look forward to growing again. I have one plant of it growing in a container under lights, and it is still ripening peppers here in January. I am hoping to give this plant a little pruning and then set it out in the garden next spring.

Aji Angelo pepper in January

Aji Angelo pepper in January

I’m sure there will be a few later changes to my list, but this is pretty close to what I plan on growing this year. I’ve already ordered a few seeds, and now I can work on getting the rest.

Asian Greens: Komatsuna Summerfest, Mizuna Kyoto, Pak Choi Fun Jen, Pak Choi Mei Qing, Yukina Savoy

Beans (bush): Derby, Hutterite Soup Bean, Jacob’s Cattle, Rocdor

Beans (pole): Cherokee Trail of Tears, Fortex, Gold Marie, Good Mother Stallard, Musica, Rattlesnake

Beets: Golden, Red Ace, Touchstone Gold

Broccoli: Apollo, Arcadia, Green Magic, Imperial

Cabbage: Farao, KY Cross, Parel

Carrots: Cordoba, Hercules, Nelson, Yaya

Chard: Lucullus, Verde Da Taglio

Cucumber: Dasher II, Green Fingers, Manny’s, Summer Dance, Summer Top, Tasty Green, Tasty Jade

Eggplant: Dancer, Fairy Tale, Galine, Hansel, Millionaire, Nadia

Greens: Arugula, Golden Corn Salad, Mache Large Dutch, Purslane Golden

Kale: Beedy’s Camden, Lacinato, Red Ursa, Wild Garden Mix, Winterbor

Kohlrabi: Kolibri, Kossak, Winner

Lettuce: Anuenue, Bibb, Black Seeded Simpson, Brown Goldring, Lingua di Canarino, Loma, New Red Fire, Oak Leaf, Radichetta, Red Sails,  Sierra, Simpson Elite, Spotted Trout(aka Forellenschluss), Tropicana, Winter Density

Melons: Brilliant Canary, Burpee’s Ambrosia, Diplomat Galia, Hollar’s Sensation, Sugar Baby Watermelon

Onion: Candy, Guardsman, Red of Tropea, Sierra Blanca

Pepper(hot): Aji Angelo, Aji Dulce, Anaheim, Ancho 211, Biggie Chili, Cayenneta, El Jefe Jalapeno, Golden Greek, Hot Happy Yummy, Holy Mole, Joe’s Long Cayenne, Numex Suave, Serrano Del Sol, Thai Bird, Trinidad Perfume

Pepper (sweet): Big Bertha, Dulce Rojo, Early Sunsation, Flavorburst, Goliath Goldrush, Gourmet, Hungarian Paprika, Sweet Happy Yummy, Jimmy Nardello’s, Orange Blaze, Topepo Rosso, Yummy

Potato: French Red Fingerling, Red Norland, Russian Banana, Yukon Gold

Radish: China Rose, Green Meat, Minowase Summer Cross, Red Meat, Shinden Risoh, Shunkyo

Spinach: Amsterdam Prickly Seeded, Gigante Inverno (Giant Winter), Viroflay

Squash(summer): Enterprise, Gentry, Partenon, Patisson Panache Vert et Blanc, Spineless Beauty, Raven, Romanesco, Striato d’Italia, Surething, Tondo Nizza, White Scallop,

Squash(winter): Black Futsu, Cornell’s Bush Delicata, Early Butternut, Gold Nugget, Kakai, Kumi Kumi, Marina di Chioggia, Pennsylvania Dutch Crookneck, Seminole, Thai Kang Kob, Thai Rai Kaw Tok, Triamble, Waltham Butternut

Sweet Potatoes: Beauregard, Carla’s Purple

Tomatoes: Amish Paste, Better Boy, Big Mama, Black Cherry, Celebrity, Champion II, Cherokee Purple, Early Girl, Eva Purple Ball, Golden Rave, Golden Sweet, Health Kick, Italian Heirloom, Jetsetter, Juliet, Ludmilla’s Red Plum, Mountain Magic, Rio Grande, Sun Gold, Super Marzano, Super Sweet 100, Ten Fingers of Naples, Vinson Watts, Viva Italia

Turnips: Hakurei, Oasis, Purple Top White Globe, Tokyo Cross, Tsugaru Scarlet

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Photo Friday: 2013 Cutting Room Floor

I was going back through my image folders recently and saw a lot of shots that, for whatever reason, never made it to the blog. So, here are a few of them for your viewing.

We started off 2013 with a trip to Australia. I posted a few of the photos, but never got around to the rest of them. One of the highlights of the trip was our visit to Uluru. We did a lot of hiking during our brief stay, and the scenery was amazing.

Lynda in front of Uluru

Lynda in front of Uluru

From the above photo, it’s hard to appreciate the size of Uluru. This monolithic rock formation rises up in the middle of a flat, not-quite-desert area, and can be seen for miles. Up close, you can really appreciate the size and the surface features. Despite the high temperatures, we enjoyed hiking around the base. I estimated we covered almost 15K one day.

closer view of Uluru

closer view of Uluru

We also visited nearby Kata Tjuta. It was so hot that day that some of the trails were closed. According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the high that day was 44.1°C/111°F – and that was in the shade! I probably don’t want to know how hot it was in the sun.

me at Kata Tjuta

me at Kata Tjuta

After leaving the Red Centre of Australia we went to tropical Queensland. The rainforest at Daintree was hot, humid and lush. We have a tradition of taking photos of the two of us by sitting the camera on the best available surface and using the timer. It’s our version of a ‘selfie’.

Lynda and I at Daintree

Lynda and I at Daintree

We boarded the cats while we were gone on that trip. They must have missed each other, because they were inseparable when we all got back home. This image was shot the same day as the one we used for our holiday cards.

Ace and Puddin

Ace and Puddin

We have several kinds of hawks that regularly visit us at HA. Often times I hear them before I see them soaring overhead.  I got a blurry image of one that landed on one of the corner posts of the fenced vegetable garden. I believe this one is a Red-Shouldered Hawk. I quickly grabbed a telephoto lens for this one, but I wish I had brought the tripod along to steady the camera. The hawk was gone in a couple of minutes.

Red Shouldered Hawk on garden fence

Red Shouldered Hawk on garden fence

Not long after the hawk visit I got this shot of our resident male bluebird on top of the nest box. This was back in late April, but I saw a pair again just a few weeks ago. Bluebirds don’t really migrate in winter, but do move around to find food. It is always nice to see a bluebird in the neighborhood!

male bluebird on nest bo

male bluebird on nest box

In autumn of 2012 I misplaced my trusty Wilcox trowel while working down at the Impact Community Garden. I figured it had gotten buried in the mulch, and would turn up eventually. It just happened to be my oldest one of my collection of trowels, so I was very happy when I found it while tilling there the next spring. It’s the top one in the below photo, reunited with its cousin trowel. Gotta love a trowel that survives being buried all winter, then meeting up with a killer tiller!

Wilcox trowels

Wilcox trowels

I experimented a lot last year with using cardboard for mulch. Below you can see it used beside a row of potatoes. It’s certainly an easy, inexpensive and organic way to help control garden weeds. I’ll be doing more of it in 2014. It was a good year for potatoes, and we are still enjoying them even though some have started sprouting.

using cardboard for mulch

using cardboard for mulch

Our figs have not died back to the ground the last few winters, so I have had to do some major pruning in spring. I cut them back severely in mid May. As you can see in the below photo, I did not take the time to do much weeding though! By summer, the figs had grown to the top of the garage roof, which you can see in this photo I did post. I am sure they will die back this year after our bitter cold winter temps.

fig plants after pruning

fig plants after pruning

I shared a photo of some Minestra Maritata (aka Italian Wedding Soup) I made last week. Here’s a photo of some I made in November. I still haven’t written up the recipe, but this one from Eating Well is a good starting point.

Minestra Maritata soup

Minestra Maritata soup

I’ll close with one more cat photo. Like most cats, Puddin loves to snooze in the sunshine. She follows it around the house during the day, staying in one spot then moving as the sun moves. Here she is in one of the cat cubes, basking in the sun.

Puddin in cat cube

Puddin in cat cube

I hope you have enjoyed this look at the some of the 2013 photos that didn’t make it on the blog until 2014. I’ll be back soon with more adventures – probably more current ones!

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First 2014 Harvests

I started off 2014 here by harvesting a few greens from the greenhouse and cold frames. I found enough spinach leaves in the cold frame to enjoy some of them in a salad, along with some lettuce and arugula from the greenhouse.

spinach for salad

spinach for salad

The greenhouse lettuce has stayed nice and clean so far, with no insect issues. Sometimes aphids are a problem in the winter, but I think it has gotten cold enough in there at night to keep them from taking over. At least I hope so! As spring arrives I will have to keep a close watch for them.

lettuce harvest

lettuce harvest

My wife and I enjoyed the salad for lunch on New Years Day, along with a meatless Reuben sandwich I made on some homemade rye bread. It was great to start the year with something fresh from the garden.

first salad of 2014

first salad of 2014

I also used some of the sweet potatoes from storage to make some oven fries for dinner one night. I cut up one Beauregard and one Carla’s Purple, tossed them in olive oil then baked them until they were tender and started to brown. It made for a pretty (and tasty) mix. I love these purple sweet potatoes. They have a slightly drier consistency than Beauregard, and a great flavor. I look forward to more experimenting with them in the kitchen, and to growing more of them this year. I am so glad Carla decided to share them with us!

sweet potato oven fries

sweet potato oven fries

And I made a batch of Italian Wedding Soup, using some of our Jacob’s Cattle Beans, carrots, and some Lacinato kale.

Italian Wedding soup

Italian Wedding soup

That’s a look at what we are harvesting here in early January. To see what others around the world are harvesting or cooking up, visit Daphne’s Dandelions where Daphne hosts the Harvest Monday series.

 

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Stars of the Garden in 2013

Now that 2013 is winding down, it’s time for my annual review of what did well in the garden this year. I like to do a recap of star performers every year, and point out some of the also-rans as well. I’ll start with a vegetable that as been a real star here for the last couple of years, though it hasn’t always been that way.

I called 2012 the Year of the Carrot, as I finally had success with this sometimes challenging vegetable. Last year I managed to grow 20 pounds of carrots in a fairly small amount of space (about 16 square feet). This year I upped the harvest to 23 pounds in a similar amount of space. I love homegrown carrots, and the ones maturing in fall are especially tasty. Next year I hope to grow a few more, if possible. Yaya, Nelson and Hercules have done well for me here. Sugarsnax is a longer growing carrot and I ran into problems with it because the soil was not prepared deeply enough for them. The Sugarsnax I harvested were good tasting though. Despite having a loose silty soil, I think I am better off with shorter and more blunt shaped carrots.

fall harvest of Yaya carrots

fall harvest of Yaya carrots

One problem I had with carrots in the past was getting good germination, without the weeds taking over before the carrots were up and growing. Since I started covering the carrot bed with Agribon row cover material to aid sprouting, I’ve had much better results. I talked about how I do it in my Up With Carrots post earlier this year. I used this method both spring and fall this year and the results were great. My thanks go to Daphne for trying it and blogging about it back in April. I learn a lot by talking to other gardeners, and reading about what others are doing in their gardens.

using row cover material over carrot bed

using row cover material over carrot bed

2013 was definitely the Year of Squash here. I harvested 370 pounds of squashes this year, with 200 pounds being winter squash types. We ate lots of the summer squashes, gave away quite a few, and froze some for later use. The summer types produced longer than usual, giving us fruit well into September. Striata d’Italia, Enterprise and Gentry were the biggest producers this year. Next year I plan on adding the heirloom White Scallop and the hybrid Romanesco to the mix.

September harvest of Striata d

September harvest of Striata d’ Italia, Enterprise and Gentry squash

One of my favorite ‘new’ things to do with zucchini is make Spelt Chocolate Zucchini Muffins. These freeze well, and I made several batches of them with the end of season zucchini. I like to grate and freeze zucchini too so I can make muffins and bread after the fresh zucchini are long gone. I also made muffins this year with some of our blueberries, blackberries and cherries, which has earned me the nickname of “muffin man”. Below is a photo of me making some zucchini muffins, wearing the apron Lynda made for me. She’s no dummy – make him an apron so he can bake more muffins! I love the apron, and the fact she ‘rescued’ the material from a thrift store.

making zucchini muffins

making zucchini muffins

I planted more winter squashes this year than usual, adding quite a few vining types to the garden. The stars this year were Cornell’s Bush Delicata, Gold Nugget, Waltham Butternut, Kumi Kumi and Pennsylvania Dutch Crookneck Squash. The heirloom Amish Pie Pumpkin was a disappointment, giving us only one small lopsided fruit that never matured properly. It won’t be back next year.

Gold Nugget and Delicata squashes

Gold Nugget and Delicata squashes

The Kumi Kumi can be used like a zucchini when immature, making it a great dual purpose squash. I will grow it again for sure. I have already compared five of the 2013 winter squashes in my recent Pumpkin Smackdown.

young Kumi Kumi squash hanging out with 7 pound mature one

young Kumi Kumi squash hanging out with 7 pound mature one

Maybe 2013 should really be called the Year of the Cucurbit, since cucumbers did well also. 2012 was a bust for cukes. The ones planted in the greenhouse did not like the hot spring weather we had that year, and the hungry deer kept eating up the ones I had planted outside. This year the greenhouse crop did great, and so did the ones planted in the protected main garden area. We ate cucumbers and pickles almost daily, and still had plenty to give away. I think maybe I will plant a few less next year, but then who knows if it will be a good year or a bad year for them in 2014. Manny and Tasty Jade are my favorite parthenocarpic cucumbers for the greenhouse, and Green Fingers, Dasher II and Summer Top all did great in the main garden. I tend to be a fan of the thinner skinned and ‘burpless’ types, and my variety choices lean in that direction.

Manny cucumbers from greenhouse

Manny cucumbers from greenhouse

Sadly, 2013 will not be called the Year of the Onion, as this kitchen staple once again proved problematical for me. My 2013 onions did not do well, except for the Red of Tropea, and a few Candy plants. I didn’t pay close enough attention to day length when selecting varieties. The bulbing of onions is linked to day length, and our latitude here in Southern Indiana puts us in the zone of intermediate day types. I set out quite a few of the storage onion Big Daddy, which is a long day type that just didn’t bulb up here at our latitude. We grew mostly Superstar and Candy at the Impact Community garden, and they did better. Next year I will concentrate more on variety selection, and I would like to find a storage onion to grow. Does anyone know a storage variety that does well with our intermediate day length?

onion harvest

2013 onion harvest

It was a great year for blueberries though, as our planting matures and the plants start to hit their peak. My wife did all the work on this crop, from harvesting to weeding to preserving. She managed to bring in over 50 pounds of them this year. I think that makes her the Queen of Blueberries!

blueberries ready for eating or freezing

2013 blueberries ready for eating or freezing

In addition to eating them fresh and freezing them, she also dried quite a few this year. You can read about how she did it on her blog with her How To: Dried Blueberries. They have been lovely added to cooked cereals and other dishes. And it’s great to use blueberries from our own garden that don’t have any added sugar or preservatives, not to mention that they have been organically grown and never sprayed.

dehydrated blueberries

dehydrated blueberries

It was a great year for peppers too. I won’t go into any detail here, since I did a two part recap of them already: 2013 Pepper Roundup Part 1 & Part 2. Last year I made a lot of the hot peppers into hot sauce. I did that again this year, but I really had fun experimenting with dehydrating peppers and grinding them up. I made lots of Homemade Paprika and Homemade Chile Powder. This is a fun way to make your own unique spices, and it was amazing how the different varieties of peppers made such different dried powders. Next year I plan on doing more experimenting with both sweet and hot peppers.

Homemade Paprika

Homemade Paprika

It was a mixed year for tomatoes, with the slicers struggling and the smaller fruited ones doing well. Most of the paste tomatoes did great also. I did a recap of them too (you can read it here), but I will say again that Viva Italia, Health Kick, Rio Grande, Super Marzano and Ludmilla’s Red Plum all were great performers. Speckled Roman and Amish Paste did poorly, and I won’t be planting them next year.

Super Marzano paste tomatoes

Super Marzano paste tomatoes

2013 saw melons come to Happy Acres for the first time. I planted the muskmelon Ambrosia, galia melon Diplomat and the Canary melon Brilliant this year. All did great, and I plan to grow all of them again. I can only hope they all do as well next year! I want to add the Hollar’s Sensation melon for 2014. Homegrown melons are a real treat and it is nice to grow good-tasting varieties that can’t be bought around these parts.

Burpee

Burpee’s Ambrosia cantaloupe

And I need to give a shout out to greens while I’m at it. Kale was the first harvest of 2013, and we enjoyed it in spring and again this fall and winter. Red Ursa, Beedy’s Camden and the Wild Garden mix all did great for us this year, as did the Italian heirloom Lacinato. I wasn’t always a fan of this crinkled, blackish-green kale, but now it is one of my favorite treats from the garden. It’s also one of the prettier plants in the garden, and a dependable performer here. It goes by several other names, including dinosaur kale, cavolo nero, and Tuscan kale. It’s tasty and productive no matter what you call it!

dew covered Lacinato kale

dew covered Lacinato kale in September

I hope you have enjoyed this review of some of the veggies and fruit that performed well here in 2013. As the year draws to a close, I hope 2014 is a great year for all of you out there. I’ll be back soon with more adventures from HA!

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Homemade: 2013 Christmas Ornament

Once again, my wife and I both made Christmas ornaments this year. I started this tradition back in in 2005, when we were still dating. That year I decorated a papier mache birdhouse that I painted and sprinkled with glitter. It had a roof made of pine cone scales from a cone we found while out walking together. It has hung on our Christmas tree every year since then. But I’ve also been making ornaments since I was much younger, and I have many of those older ornaments with me still.

Birdhouse from 2005

Birdhouse from 2005

It is my custom to wait until the last minute to finish the new ornament, keeping it a surprise until I unveil it on Christmas morning, and this year was no different. My 2013 ornament was a tree made from several pieces of green felt, and decorated with red garland and some sequins for bling. I got one piece of felt from Lynda – just enough to whet her curiosity, and then bought a couple of additional pieces in other shades of green.

2013 ornament on tree

2013 ornament on tree

Lynda has been making ornaments too for several years now, and this time she made a lovely snowflake. She used her Silhouette Portrait to cut cardstock, then painted it with glitter and added some ribbon and a little bling. I think it turned out to be a lovely ornament, and so delicate looking. It’s hanging next to one of the ornaments we made together two years ago.

Lynda

Lynda’s snowflake ornament

She also used one of the cutout snowflakes to make me a handmade Christmas card. She is one talented and artistic lady!

handmade Christmas card

handmade Christmas card

Our two new ornaments are hanging together on the little tree on our mantel. Who knew when I made that first ornament for us back in 2005 that before long our tree would be nearly full of them?

Christmas tree on mantel

Christmas tree on mantel

I hope you have enjoyed seeing our 2013 Christmas creations!

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