Wednesday, July 30, 2008

New Raised Bed for Fall

This is my new raised bed, just finished on July 28th in time for a fall crop. What a lot of backbreaking work that was! First my husband and I had to dig up all of the weeds, then turn the soil over. We placed the concrete blocks and dumped in at least a ton of soil that was delivered in a pile on our driveway, so we had to hand shovel the whole pile into the bed. We slept well that night, you betcha!
Not a very exciting post I guess, but it was an excuse to use a picture of my new doggie. :.) I can't help myself, just look at that face!

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Herb Garden

This is the herb garden on July 25th. As you can see, I planted it in the ground, not in a raised bed. I figured it was okay to put them right in the ground since the only other garden I really ever had in my adult life was in this same neighborhood, about 1 mile from here, and the herbs I planted grew awesome in the ground.

So here we have baby heirloom sunflowers along the back fence, with a red trumpet native, non-invasive honeysuckle growing up the center trellis. Unfortunately the honeysuckle doesn't seem to be doing too well. I would have thought since it was native it would have grown like crazy, but it seems to be hardly growing at all. Maybe it isn't getting enough light due to the shadow of the fence. I think I may try to move it to a sunnier area.

Then, if we move clockwise in a spiral from the bottom right (I did try to plant this herb garden in a spiral, not sure if you really can tell) there are two little heirloom calendula plants, a wispy dill that really didn't do well at all so you can barely see it, oregano, spicy oregano, rosemary, sage, more wispy cilantro that barely grew, roman chamomile, thyme, lemon thyme, and tarragon. Everything was a plant from the nursery except for the calendula, dill and cilantro which were all seedsaver heirlooms that I direct sowed.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Late July Garden & Zucchini Recipes

Well, I was going to take my new dog kayaking today, but the weather didn't cooperate. So now I'm stuck inside while it rains, and have a minute to do a quick blog post. Here is a recent pic of the garden. I'll show some more detailed pictures soon, but suffice it to say the grape tomatoes, zucchini, cucumbers, peppers and herbs are doing fantastic!

There was a little problem with blossom end rot on the peppers that has finally gotten under control. But just look at this bounty, not bad for my first real garden!Now here is my favorite salad treat to make with all of this:
Zucchini with Lemon and Mint
*1 medium zucchini
*juice from 1/2 lemon
*1-2 tsp olive oil
*5-10 mint leaves
*salt & pepper
*nasturium blossom for garnish (optional)

Slice zucchini very thin (a vegetable peeler or mandoline helps). Chiffonade mint (pile all the leaves on top of one another, then roll them up. Slice into thin strips). Mix zucchini slices with lemon juice, olive oil, mint, salt and pepper, then serve. Note: amounts are approximate. Use less lemon or mint to taste.

And look this zucchini is bigger than my dog!
It tasted really good! I made marinated grilled zucchini sticks with it. I swear they were better than french fries (and that's saying a lot).
Grilled Marinated Zucchini Sticks
*1 extra large zucchini (or 2 medium, or 4 small)
*1 large garlic clove, minced and
mashed to a paste with 1/2 tsp salt
*2 tbls fresh lemon juice
*1 tsp white wine vinegar
*1/8 cup olive oil
*1 tsp fresh thyme (more to taste)
*1 tsp red pepper flakes
*salt & crushed black pepper

Cut zucchini in half long-ways, then in half again so you have four pieces. Cut off the seeds (longways, like slicing off a triangle of seeds). Slice again longways, and then crosswise in about 3-4" length, so that they are steak fries like sizes, as in picture above. Place in a dish large enough to put them flat in one layer. Add all other ingredients and mix well with hands or tongs. Marinate for at least 3 hours or overnight. Carefully lay across grill, and cook on low, for about 5 min. on each side. Finished stick should be crispy on the outside, tender on the inside, and look something like this:

Monday, July 7, 2008

Gardening is a Lot of Work

Well, I am very sorry about the lack of new posts. I do have a huge backlog of garden photos, but discovered soon after I started this blog that gardening is a lot of work! I've been spending all of my time out there, with none left to spend on the computer. Plus, of course, who wants to be spending their free time inside on the computer in the summer?!? Not me! So, I guess sooner or later I will update this blog- it may be over the winter though. haha (hopefully not!)
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Based on a work at grow-peace.blogspot.com.