Showing posts with label Getting Ready for Spring Gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Getting Ready for Spring Gardening. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Patio Garden


Lavender............................... peppers, tomatoes, tomatillos...............more lavender


Sweet Basil......................... Tomatoes.................................. Curly Parsley


Stevia................................ Tomatillos, Peppers........ Texas Tarragon..............More Tomatoes

Thank you Mother Nature for all the rain, rain, rain last week and for all the sun, sun, sun this week. The perfectly mixed combination has made my patio garden green, green, green!

Tonight's menu: Pesto with bow tie pasta, grilled shrimp, roasted yellow crookneck squash, sun tea with stevia and lemon.



This is the best cookbook, ever! The spine of my book is broken, the pages are falling out, but I love it just the same. I bought this cookbook about 20 years ago, I think I was about two years old, yeah two. I even bought one for my sister. I knew that as we got older and wanted to cook, this was the book for us!

This Pesto recipe is so easy, and a favorite in my house. Every summer my nieces and nephews request to make Pesto, and I let them. Sometimes my kitchen walls end up splattered with flecks of green, but it wipes off and there is nothing better than a child learning in the kitchen! The great thing about this recipe is you can add or subtract ingredients and it still is really, really good. Our favorite Pesto recipe is from the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook pictured above.

Pesto
Original recipe from Better Homes and Gardens Complete Guide to Food and Cooking
1 c firmly packed fresh basil leaves
1/2 c firmly packed parsley sprigs with stems removed
1/2 c grated Parmesan Reggiano or Romano cheese
1/4 c pine nuts or walnuts
1 large clove garlic, quartered
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 c olive oil

In a blender container or food processor bowl, combine basil leaves, parsley, Parmesan or Romano cheese, nuts garlic, and salt. Cover and blend or process with several on-off turns till a paste forms, stopping the machine several times and scraping the sides. With the machine running slowly, gradually add oil and blend or process to the consistency of soft butter. To serve, dollop some of the pesto atop hot soups or toss with hot cooked pasta. Makes about 3/4 cup.

Nutrition information per tablespoon: 76 Kcal, 2 g protein, 1 carb, 7 g fat (2 g saturated), 3mg cholesterol, 110 mg sodium, 66mg potassium

Shrimp
Created my own little recipe.
1 T light olive oil
Juice of 1/2 lemon
Juice of 1/2 lime
dash of salt
few grinds of fresh pepper
1 T fresh chives
12 shrimp tails on, thawed
3 skewers or foil

In a medium size bowl, stir together the first six ingredients. Add shrimp and lightly toss. Let sit for ONLY a minute or two minutes. If you own skewers, place four shrimp per skewer. Place on grill for about 1 minute per side or place shrimp on a foil bed, sides raised and cook. Shrimp are done when the shell turns pink and the flesh turns opaque. They will cook quickly.

Roasted Yellow Crookneck Squash
My sister taught me how to make this simply delicious summer time vegetable. It's a favorite.
Thinly slice squash lengthwise about 1/4" thick
Place on a bed of foil, lightly oiled with olive oil.
Sprinkle with water, freshly ground pepper to taste and grated Parmesan Reggiano, about 1-2 tablespoons. Place foil bed containing squash on hot grill and cook till just tender, and cheese is melted.

You can also make this in the microwave or oven. The directions are all bit different.
To microwave, arrange sliced squash in single layer, if you can, on a microwave safe plate. Really wet a paper towel or two and cover squash. Microwave on high for about 1-3 minutes or until tender. Be careful, the water will create steam! Once tender, remove from microwave and season with pepper, and Parmesan. Serve.

Oven: Lightly grease the bottom of a baking dish with olive oil. Arrange sliced squash in a single layer in a 9x13 baking dish. Sprinkle with water, and season. Bake, covered, in a 350F oven for about 10 minutes, remove foil and continue baking for 5 minutes or until slightly tender and the cheese has melted. I have baked the squash in the oven uncovered, the squash tends to dry out a bit.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Water



Summer: Hot, humid, lots and lots of activity... need water!

I used to NEVER think twice about drinking water from my tap. Now, it would never cross my mind to drink water straight from my tap. My brain immediately thinks filter first please, then drink the water.

Years and years ago, I thought Kent, Ohio had the best water straight from the tap and I wasn't alone. I know, shocking! Does anyone drink water straight from the tap anymore? Kent city water was refreshing and odor free. Not the case now. Now, it has an odor, chemical taste and is not real refreshing straight from the tap in my opinion.

Kent is a small town, and used to be known for great tasting water. No kidding! In 1996, David Letterman and Jay Leno praised Kent, Ohio for having such tasty water based on the Berkeley Springs national water tasting competition. If I am not mistaken, one of them came into town and did their own little study and maybe even enjoyed a glass or two of Kent's cool, refreshing tap beverage.

In 2004, Kent won the Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting Bronze Award for municipal water and the Silver in 2006. Did you notice, bronze to silver! I'm not certain but I think the bronze in 2004 was a step down from 1996, I'm just saying. I do not know what happened over the last few years, but the city water tastes like gutter water and not a single award in sight. Kent should have bottled and sold the tap water back in 1996.

Well anyway, I was thirsty the other day, real thirsty. Digging and laying brick in hot, humid weather - well, you get the idea. Here's a few ways to jazz up water.

My favorite vegetable to add to water is cucumber, and I'm out, so no picture. I don't think you need me to paint you a picture here do you? Try it, you'll really like it, maybe even straight from the tap, but my tap water always filters through my Brita filter first.

Orange, Frozen grapes, Fiji apple, Watermelon, Lemon
After my third glass of water I have more fruit than water, and then I call it lunch.

A tall glass of cold water
I was out of cucumber, but try it...it's fab! and the reason why I'm out!

Summer Project #1

Flying solo...

On your mark, Get set, DIG!

Being single sometimes is for the birds!

I miss doing home projects of some sort with a spouse. Another warm body helping with this project would have been nice. We wouldn't fight, we would work together like two peas in a pod, (wink)! But then I wouldn't own 100% of the bragging rights to this little number!

I laid this little brick walkway all by myself, thank you very much! Did I mention I did it ALL in ONE day? Yep, one day. Minus all the neighbors stopping by to see what I was up to, I would say it took me about 4-6 hrs. Working around the tree roots was a royal pain, but worth the effort. I really like how it turned out so far, and I am almost finished. I still need to plant a few bulbs, add pea pebbles and river rock. The 40# rock bags are still sitting in the driveway, right were I dropped them.

Oh, and on a side note...my arms are shaping up nicely. Load and unload 40# bags of sand, stones and a stack of bricks does a body good.

Hot diggity, diggity

Notice my nice stacking job

Short a few bricks (ha), and too many roots!

Decided to split a hosta and fern to add more green.
The middle spot is missing a brick because of a huge root knot.
Lowe's sells a 1"depth brick that I am hope will do the trick.

Blue, Black, Red...

Red Raspberry

Blueberry

Blackberry

Blue, black and red! No, I'm not talking about the bruises I acquired over the weekend doing yard work, I'm talking about my berries bushes!

I planted 12 blueberry bushes last year. 8 survived the winter. The mailman stomped a few to broken twigs, and the cold winter temps zapped the other two.

The blackberry brush times 2 is more like a flowering oak tree! It's huge and has a bit of a lean. The red raspberry bush times 4 are spreading, flowering and look healthy, phew! I need to get a handle on the spreading thing, I don't want encourage disease only healthy growth! Now to cover them all with yards and yards of netting, because the birds have been circling!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Getting Garden Ready!



I know it's not garden season yet, but I have cabin fever and I need to think about what's around the corner, and that would be SPRING! Spring can't come soon enough for me this year. I am not always a fan of digging in the dirt, and swatting at mosquitoes, but it's all worth it when I know a fresh BLT and a cold glass of fresh watermelon lemonade is just around the corner. Have you ever had a fresh watermelon lemonade? It's the best summer time drink!

Every summer I plant a garden for practically nothing! I can rent from May - September a 20x20 piece of land from my local garden club for $10 dollars. Talk about a bargain! The Garden Club will till the land, section it off, assign each gardener a site number, and the best part, the land even comes with a WELL!


Right before planting, I start to get a little nervous. Why? you ask.

It's like getting ready for a trip. Do I have everything? Did I pack too much, or too little? All the seed packet pictures look delicious and I get overly excited and buy, buy, buy way too much to plant in my now, not so big 20x20 space. So off to the drawing board, and after taking pencil to paper and drawing up a plan, I end up buying two sites and I still think I am over planting for the space. Oh well, I grew up in a tiny house with a too many siblings, and turned out just fine; so why should it matter if my plants are a bit over crowded?

All too often my over crowded garden has been reduced in size by pesky bugs, hungry woodchucks, rabbits, and deer. They know a good thing when they see it! I also try my hardest to keep my garden organic and not to use chemicals, but I can not control what someone else is using blowing onto my plants.
Somehow it all works out and my entire family, friends and neighbors eat all summer long from my garden.

I can not wait to share some of my favorite garden tasty treats! You won't even know you are eating healthy, I promise!

More to come!

Helen