Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Thirds, please!


Eliana is a pasta loving fool just like her Mommy. If I allowed it, she’d blissfully eat pasta for three meals plus one snack each and every day. (And really, so would I!) Obviously, I don’t serve her pasta all day every day. But I know that when pasta is served, it will be gobbled up with no questions asked. What I didn’t expect was to feed her a third serving of pasta for dinner tonight!

Now that fall is setting in and the weather is cooler, I decided I should use the remaining basil from our garden sooner rather than later. To me a big bunch of basil means one thing: it’s time for pesto. Yum! The recipe I used is below.

Pesto Sauce
·    Fresh basil
·    Pine nuts, toasted (I used walnuts in this batch. See the explanation below.)
·    Garlic clove(s), peeled
·    Shredded or grated Parmesan cheese
·    Olive oil, salt and pepper
·    Reserved cooking liquid from the pasta
**There are no amounts listed on this recipe because it all depends on the amount of basil I use. I like a lot of basil. For all ingredients except the Parmesan, I start by adding smaller amounts and work my way up because it is easier to add more of anything to the food processor than to take away.**
Toast the pine nuts over low heat for a few minutes until they are browned and fragrant. All ingredients go into the food processor. Puree. Taste and adjust levels as needed.
If I’m putting this over pasta, I reserve a mugful of the cooking liquid, drain the pasta and add it back into the pot. I add the pesto, which is kind of a paste consistency, and begin adding the reserved cooking liquid from the pasta. I mix it all up and add more water as needed to help thin out the pesto and avoid adding a lot more oil.
Variations:
- Add organic baby spinach as well as basil
- Add fresh lemon or lime juice to brighten up the flavors
- Substitute the pine nuts with toasted walnuts (I just discovered this by accident. When I opened up the freezer to grab the pine nuts, there were none. Gasp! But, there were walnuts, so toasted walnuts went into this current batch of pesto.)

I used gobbetti-shaped pasta for this batch and served it with fresh grape tomatoes that were quartered.

Now this pasta shape looks fun!
Happy Cooking!

Saturday, October 6, 2012

How did our garden grow?


How did our garden grow? Wellll, apparently, a green thumb I do not have. My visions of eating a homegrown salad of cucumbers, tomatoes and herbs did not happen. No recipes with our very own okra or squash were cooked either. Other than my being a newbie at this gardening thing, I think a few factors worked against me. First, we have a lovely, very big deck that is West-facing. It is a-ma-zing!  Except for the mid- to late afternoon when the sun is so incredibly intense and it is unbearable to be outside. Those parts of the day might have been a bit too harsh for our garden. Second, my plants might not have been the heartiest. Perhaps buying plants from a hardware store versus a garden center wasn’t a great idea. Third, we might have had some birds who came along every so often to poke at the tomatoes and steal the tiny little cucumbers the day they showed up. Matt is my witness that tiny cukes did appear, and then were gone. I needed to ensure that I didn't dream them  up!  
My mom, Suzanne and I will be formulating a new plan for next summer’s garden. At least we have been enjoying most of the herbs all summer long! I love being able to walk out with my kitchen shears and a smug smile, snip off what we need and continue with my cooking. And Eliana has enjoyed playing in the dirt and finding "acceptable" leaves to consume, such as the basil leaves she pulls off before I can stop her. So, our garden hasn't been a total loss!

Planting day, July 1, 2012. Our plants were so young and full of potential! Here's the story of that day. 




A bit of overzealous watering on my part caused me to remove one of the squash plants that got a bit ill. I replaced it with another basil plant a few weeks later. I also tried things like crushed eggshells as fertilizer after my friend Cortney tried it on her tomato plant. (Thanks, Cort!)
A flower on our squash plant! A good sign!
A tomato appeared!

During the month of August, things were looking up! Flowers were showing up on the squash and cucumber plants, the okra was getting taller and more tomatoes were popping out.  


Come early September, I realized that the sun was likely causing some damage. So, I created a very sophisticated "sun block" for my tomatoes and kept my fingers crossed. 

My high-tech sun block for the tomatoes.
Big green leaves, yellow flowers and ripening tomatoes. Not too shabby!
Hmm, how quickly can I grab another leaf? She's distracted by taking photos anyway...
But, ooh! Tomatoes. Love those things. Maybe I'll just pick one for dinner.
Got one! Woohoo! 
But, when nothing but tomatoes came up by last week of September, I admitted green-thumb defeat. The squash and cucumbers no longer had flowers or even any green parts and the okra never did anything after an initial growth spurt. The tomatoes were ready, so I let Eliana enjoy picking them.

Woohoo! Another tomato.
Wait. That was too easy.
You mean I'm ALLOWED to yank them off their stems?
Well alright then. Bring on the picking!

And so, that's how our garden grew. Or, err, didn't really grow. We will try again next year! 

P.S. If you have any gardening tips, ideas or suggestions, please feel free to post them in the comments section below. Thanks!!






Wednesday, July 18, 2012

How will our garden grow?


To me, part of making Eliana a teeny tiny foodie is teaching her not just to like a variety of tastes and textures but to have an interest in where her food comes from. On Mondays, we take our weekly trip to the grocery store and as we gather our goods I talk to her about all the foods we see and buy. We stop to touch, smell and, in her case, taste the green beans- see photo below. Or, whatever it is that we are looking at.

A view from above. She's in the carrier as we do our shopping. New meaning to eating on the go.

I’ve been thinking a lot more about how far our food travels as well. What is the cost to our health, and to the health of the planet, if our organic strawberries travel here from the other side of the country? There has been a constant debate going on in my head: local vs. organic? And then there is the seasonal factor as well. Obviously, produce that is in season is tastiest, healthiest and cheapest so we’d be silly not to buy it. We are lucky in that there are a few farmers markets each week that we can shop from, too. The farmers markets are also a place where I can get seasonal, local produce that might not be organic, but is very low in pesticides. So, we’ve been frequenting them more and more.

But, still, I want Eliana to have an even deeper connection to the process of getting our food. So what did I do? I recruited my mom and Suzanne, “Susu” to Eliana, to help me plant a garden! Before I go into that story, you need a little backstory first.  Suzanne is my father-in-law Steve’s girlfriend and one of my favorite people. Suzanne keeps a garden at home so I knew she’d be a great choice to help me out. And then my mom, is obviously my mom so she is a top choice to help me with many projects, too. She has always been the resident horticulturalist who has cared for our houseplants and even coached me a few years ago, via Skype, to move one of our plants into a newer, bigger home. Every time she comes into town, she is tasked with caring for one plant or another that needs a little TLC. Mom and I have always talked about how “one day she would help me plant a garden.” But, last year when Matt and I moved to an apartment with an amazing outdoor space, and my mom and I could finally start a garden, I was very pregnant and stuck on bed rest. And then two weeks later, I was in charge of a newborn. Not optimal conditions for getting my green thumb on. Sigh, my garden would have to wait.

When the warm weather arrived this spring, I started getting really, really impatient about my lack of a garden. I wanted my garden and I wanted it NOW! But, my mom lives in Florida. (Where, yes, she has a drool-worthy garden.) And when she came in town for Eliana’s birthday party, there was a lot of other stuff going on so we didn’t get to our little garden project. Well, actually, any time she might have had was taken up by birthday related projects she was tasked with completing. 
Cupcake toppers had to be cut-out and glued onto popsicle sticks

Banner letters had to be cut-out

My mom spent forever stringing each photo so it looked perfect

Yeah, she pretty much rocks.

Anyway, with my mom not scheduled to come into town for a few more weeks, I set off on the gardening project with Suzanne. The other weekend, Suzanne and I drove to Lowes, gathered some vegetable plants, soil and supplies and came home to get to work. Suzanne knows a heck of a lot more about this gardening thing than I do so at the store the conversation mostly went like this:

“Jory, honey, what else do you want to get?”

“Uhhh, I don’t know Suzanne. What else do we need? I guess we need dirt, right?”

There were slim pickings at the store for a variety of vegetables that looked healthy. I’m realistic, so went for actual baby plants as opposed to seeds. Maybe next year I will plant from seeds. I’m also impatient and wanted to be able to eat these vegetables before the weather turns cold. So, we came away with 2 cucumber plants, 3 patio tomato plants, 2 okra plants, 1 leek plant and, wait for it…wait for it…2 yellow squash plants. Yep! I WILL make myself like those icky yellow squash plants. (Oh yeah, did I mention that I’m stubborn, too?)

So, we came home, called Matt and his dad, Steve, to come help us drag everything upstairs and got to work. Before we began, Suzanne soaked the deck where we would put the planter boxes so it would cool off a bit. Of course, we chose one of the hottest days yet to embark on this project. Then, we set up the two wooden boxes that would house the vegetables. Again, it was pretty much Suzanne directing me, which was just fine. She was the sensei to my karate kid. A little bit of soil into the bottom, a water-bath for the plants and then into the box with more soil on top. We also re-potted a basil plant my mother-in-law, Lauren, gifted me, and also put an herb garden and mandevilla plant that Steve and Suzanne brought over into new pots. Our garden was taking shape!



After a long and sweaty day, the garden was done. It was too hot for Eliana to stay outside with us, but Matt brought her out periodically to check on the progress of our work. And she plastered herself to the door to watch from the inside as well.





Aren't you done yet???
Over the past few weeks we’ve been enjoying a bounty of fresh herbs, but no vegetables have come up yet. With the exception of a little over-watering related illness that took out 1 okra plant and 1 cucumber plant, the vegetables seem to be thriving. Woohoo! 
My mom says the cucumbers will replace the flowers. Cool!
And, before you know it, I’ll be posting a recipe about preparing delicious yellow squash. 



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