Weighing In

The year isn’t nearly over yet, but our experiment this year of weighing all our harvests has proven to be a real eye opener. This week we hit the 800 pound mark, which is a lot of food anyway you look at it. But I really need to look at the individual numbers to make some sense of what it all really means.

tomatoes on kitchen counter in July

The number one vegetable we harvested is – no big surprise here – tomatoes. Even in a somewhat difficult year for tomato growing (high temps, drought), we’ve managed to haul in almost 200 pounds of them (193 pounds so far). I am wondering what the total might have been in a really good year, and what we would have done with them all! As it is we made sauce, salsa, puree, and also dehydrated and oven roasted a lot of them. The kitchen counter was covered in tomatoes for most of July and August, like the photo above.

some of the many summer squashes in June

With more tomatoes, we likely would have donated some of them, like we did with the summer squash. We got 74 pounds of it, and over half (46 pounds) got donated to the same places we took the produce from the church garden. We certainly could have eaten more squash this year, but the harvest was all in a two month period between 6/13 and 8/12. We ate all we could, and a lot of it went into bags of soup mix we froze for use this winter. But we don’t like it dehydrated, and I think it gets mushy when frozen (which is ok for soup), so that means we enjoy it fresh while we can.

Gold Nugget squash harvest, late July

Winter squash is more like a gift that keeps on giving. We harvested 77 pounds of it this year, including Small Wonder spaghetti squash, Delicata, Butternut, Acorn and Gold Nugget. We’re still enjoying it, since much of it is hanging out in the root cellar. I’m going to roast some butternut squash tonight and make soup with it. There’s still some Long Neck Pumpkin squash that is maturing out in the garden, so the number will go up shortly. All in all it was a great year for the winter squash. I added a lot of compost to the bed before planting and the plants loved it.

Apollo broccoli in June

Also loving a liberal dose of compost this spring was the broccoli (23 pounds) and cabbage (30 pounds). We ate a lot of each and froze some broccoli and slaw for use later on. As a result I planted only a few broccoli plants this fall for fresh eating. They have been slow to head up, but hopefully will give us a little bit before really cold weather sets in.

Yukina Savoy, Komatsuna and Golden Yellow pac choi in greenhouse bed

Also loving the compost were the greens. We’ve had some sort of greens every month of the year, including a lot of lettuce (38 pounds), spinach (14 pounds), and Asian greens like pac choi and tatsoi (18 pounds). The same bed behind the greenhouse that gave us broccoli and cabbage earlier in the year is now supplying us with Swiss Chard, if I can keep the deer out of it. I’m planning on moving a cold frame over the chard to help it overwinter. That way we should get a little bit early next year before we pull the plants. And I’ll have a variety of greens growing all winter in the greenhouse beds.

basket of cherries in May

The fruit put on a good showing this year. We got 61 pounds of blackberries (about 10 gallons), 16 pounds of blueberries and 29 pounds of strawberries. And our little dwarf cherry trees gave us almost 6 pounds of cherries. We also got a taste of raspberries in their first bearing year (1.5 pounds), and so far over 5 pounds of figs! We’re still waiting for our two Oriental persimmons to ripen, a process which is beginning to resemble Waiting For Godot. Though in this case, we have actually met the persimmons, as it were.

Purple Queen bush beans

It was a disappointing year for peppers, eggplant and sweet potatoes. We’ve gotten 21 pounds of eggplant, which is not much given the number of plants we have. We’ve gotten even less from the peppers (14 pounds). They just haven’t been happy with the weather. We managed to get almost 30 pounds of green beans before the vines dried up and died. Last year I gave bags of them away, but not this year. The ones we did have were certainly appreciated and enjoyed!

digital scale has been busy in 2010

The individual totals can be found here. I’ll use the information to plan next year’s garden, though it remains to be seen if we’ll weigh everything again next year. It’s been informative, but a lot of work weighing every last morsel. Well, almost every morsel. Some just didn’t make it in to the scale!

Posted in Gardening | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

October Bounty

The vegetable garden may have slowed down here but it’s not done by a long shot. This past week we harvested a nice and diverse mix of veggies that are possible here in fall with a little planning (and planting).

bucket of small fruited tomatoes

The small-fruited tomatoes (Juliet, Sun Gold, Black Cherry, Sapho, Golden Rave) yielded almost four pounds of fruit. They made three full pans of oven roasted tomatoes. But the early planted tomatoes like Early Girl and Champion aren’t done either. We had enough of them to put on burgers, and to enjoy a nice October BLT using some local bacon and our own sliced Honey Flax Bread.

BLT sandwich with grilled eggplant

Also gracing the BLT’s was some leaf lettuce from the greenhouse. It’s finally cooled down enough here (at least at night) to allow lettuce to shine again. We harvested it all summer but the quality went way down as the temperatures went up, up, up! It’s nice to have the good stuff back again. Add some grilled eggplants (mostly Fairy Tale) and we had the makings of a great lunch.

We also got our first taste of fall turnips here this week. I cleaned out some old seed back in August and planted some each of three different small white “salad” turnips: Hakurei, White Lady and Oasis. I figured that with our heat and drought this year, these smaller and quicker maturing varieties would stand a better chance of doing well than the old standby Purple Top White Globe (which I also planted). So far that has proven to be true.

Hakurei, White Lady and Oasis turnips (L to R)

I fixed the turnips greens one night along with some chopped turnips I threw in and they cooked up in no time. My wife is more fond of the turnip greens than she is chard, but I have to say my favorite green is whichever one I am eating at the moment because I like them all!

Beauregard sweet potatoes

We actually had some very light frost this week. It wasn’t enough to kill anything, but some of the sweet potato vines did get nipped and turned black so I decided to dig them up. They weren’t going to get much bigger without some rain anyway. The yield was disappointing. Last year we had 27 plants that made 69 pounds of sweet potatoes (2.56 pounds/plant). This year we had 18 plants that made 25 pounds (1.4 pounds/plant). The Centennial variety yielded a bit more than the Beauregard.

Centennial sweet potatoes

Both are curing before they go to the cellar. At least they were nice sized, if not plentiful, and had no major rodent damage. And also on the brighter side, this year we planted more winter squash than last year and they did outstanding. No doubt the fact that the squash sized up earlier while there was more moisture available made a big difference.

bowl of fresh figs

I harvested more sweet, yummy figs this week (about a pound) and more Swiss Chard. I also picked two of the greenhouse cucumbers that we made into refrigerator pickles.

Sharon cucumbers and early tomatoes

The cucumbers were planted in the greenhouse bed on August 1st. It remains to be seen how well they will do in this fall planting, but at least we’re going to get a few cukes out of the experiment. I’m not going to heat the greenhouse to keep them going, so I’m guessing by early November they will get pulled to make room for some Asian greens I’ve got started.

That’s what was going on in the gardens here this week.  We harvested 38 pounds, which makes our yearly total 798 pounds. For more harvests, visit Daphne’s Dandelions.

Posted in Gardening | Tagged , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Applesauce

Today is applesauce making day here, after a road trip earlier in the week to Reid’s Orchard just across the river in Owensboro KY. We brought back one and a half pecks of apples, three varieties in all: Fuji, Golden Delicious and Winesap. We’ll use these apples for sauce, drying, baking, making apple leather, and just plain eating. We made a trip to the orchard a few weeks earlier and came back with four other varieties that are already eaten and processed.

When we bought it three years ago, Happy Acres came complete with four overgrown and untended apple trees. After attempts to prune them into shape, we have decided to throw in the loppers (so to speak) and buy apples instead. We may decide to plant a few dwarf apple trees someday, but for right now our plates are full enough without adding anything else.

30 foot tall Red Delicious apple tree

When my mom was alive I could count on her to make enough applesauce to keep me supplied, but now that she’s gone I’ve had to learn to make my own. Mom liked to make it with early apples like Lodi or Yellow Transparent, when she could find them. Many others swear by Macintosh for making sauce. Me? I’m going to use what I’ve got, and today that’s the three varieties mentioned above.

apples cooking down

We occasionally use applesauce in recipes that call for it unsweetened, so what I’m making is going to be only very lightly sweetened. I’ll freeze it in one cup containers for use all winter. If I want more sweetness when eating the sauce I’ll add a little sweetener, or maybe top it with some granola for a bit of crunch.

basic applesauce

This is a good recipe for making a small batch of applesauce. Peeled, chopped apples are simmered until soft, then mashed up into a chunky sauce. It can easily be doubled or tripled to make more.

Basic Applesauce Print This Recipe Print This Recipe
Adapted from various recipes

5 cup apples, peeled cored and chopped (about 2 pounds)
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup sugar
1 tbsp ascorbic acid mix (like Fruit Fresh)
1 cinnamon stick, 2 inches long
1 dash salt

1. Combine first 5 ingredients in a large saucepan; bring to a boil.
2. Cover, reduce heat, and simmer 35 minutes or until soft. Discard cinnamon stick.
3. Mash with a potato masher to desired consistancy. Stir in salt.

Servings: 5
Yield: 2-1/2 cups

Nutrition Facts
Nutrition (per serving): 99 calories, 2 calories from fat, <1g total fat, 0mg cholesterol, 9mg sodium, 103mg potassium, 26.5g carbohydrates, 2.9g fiber, 21.2g sugar, <1g protein, 39.7mg calcium, <1g saturated fat.

Posted in Food, Recipes | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Sunflower, Squash and Sweet Potato Stew

First let me say right upfront this is NOT a recipe. Instead it is a tribute to a rather unlikely combination, a stew of sorts, that we created here in the last few days.

empty compost bin, waiting to be filled

About a week ago I emptied our two compost bins, sifting out about 15 bushels of finished compost in the process. Compost is like a magic elixir for gardens, and it is highly valued by most gardeners – me included. One of my goals here at HA is to make as much compost as possible. To accomplish that we compost every scrap of organic material we can lay our hands on, and try and keep the bins working year round.

finished, sifted compost

There’s a lot of good information available about starting and maintaining a compost pile, and I’m not going to get into the nuts and bolts of composting here. Lately I’ve been re-reading Wendy Johnson’s great book Gardening at the Dragon’s Gate and in it she has a chapter titled “Life Into Death Into Life”. There she offers both an ode to the wonderful art of composting plus detailed information about the science behind it. It makes for fascinating reading, and I highly recommend the book to all gardeners and nature lovers.

According to her, every compost pile is unique and has its own character and charm. At the Green Gulch Farm Zen Center in northern California, where she lived and gardened for many years, they even named some of their most memorable compost heaps. I liked the one called “Holy Shit”, which was a pile that was largely comprised of  fresh horse manure.

Inspired by her book, I have decided to name our latest compost creation. After thinking about all the materials that went into it, I called it Sunflower, Squash and Sweet Potato Stew. We shredded all the materials that went into this pile with our chipper/shredder, and in doing so we combined both old and new ingredients that were available.

For example, underneath a bunch of blackberry trimmings I found a lot of dried squash vines that we pulled up from the church garden at least a month ago. They went into the shredder, and onto the pile. So did the blackberry trimmings. We also cut down the dried Lemon Queen sunflowers, which the finches had pretty well picked clean of seeds. The shredder made short work of the thick stalks. And some of the last things to get shredded were the green sweet potato vines that were left after digging the sweet potatoes this past weekend.

That’s not all that went on the pile. We also had some branches from Lynda’s shrub trimming frenzy from a week or so ago. And I took all the stuff that didn’t make it through the compost sifter and ran it through the shredder. Things like corn cobs and peach pits were reduced to shreds, and went back for another trip in the Brown Gold Yugo. I finished the pile two days ago.

steamy hot compost pile

This morning I went out to check and see if the pile was heating up. I dug my hand a few inches down into the moist material and quickly drew it out. The pile was steamy hot! I hope to be able to turn it over into the second bin in a week or so, and start another pile in the first bin. That is, if my back recovers. Yesterday morning it cried “Uncle” and went into a spasming fit of pain.

Since then, the heating pad has become my new best friend, and I have been taking a break from heavy work. Perhaps I should have named the pile “Oh My Aching Back”. I guess I needed a break, and this is a good excuse. Maybe it will give me some time to think up possible names for the next compost creation!

Posted in Gardening | Tagged | 2 Comments

Pumpkin Seed Pesto

Pumpkin seeds (or pepitas) were treasured by Native Americans for both their culinary and medicinal uses. It’s easy to see why, because the seeds are tasty and a good source of protein and minerals. Pepitas take on a whole new dimension when lightly roasted. They are often sold this way as a snack food.

I first made this pesto to go with spaghetti squash, but it has since become a favorite pizza topping as well. This is a great way to use fresh basil when it’s plentiful.

Pumpkin Seed Pesto Print This Recipe Print This Recipe
Adapted from various recipes

1/3 cup raw hulled pumpkin seeds
1/4 cup dried tomatoes
1 cup fresh basil leaves
3 cloves of garlic, minced
1/8 tsp salt
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese

1. Toast pumpkin seeds in dry skillet over medium heat until lightly browned and starting to puff and pop.
2. Soak dried tomatoes in water until moistened; drain well.
3. Place first six ingredients (pumpkin seeds through olive oil) in food processor. Process to desired consistency (the mixture will be more like a paste than a sauce). Add oil or a small amount of water for a thinner pesto.
4. Stir in parmesan cheese.

Servings: 12
Yield: 3/4 cup

Nutrition Facts
Nutrition (per serving): 87 calories, 68 calories from fat, 7.8g total fat, 1.8mg cholesterol, 81.2mg sodium, 111.3mg potassium, 2g carbohydrates, <1g fiber, <1g sugar, 3.2g protein, 33.9mg calcium, 1.5g saturated fat.

Posted in Recipes | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments