Grazing From the Land
Perhaps my favorite part of the summer growing season is when there are a variety of things becoming ripe in the garden. It is such a joy to step outside my back door and pick a couple handfuls of this or that to incorporate in our meals for the day. Above is the result from one morning trip about a week ago.
We are finally starting to get some peas after we succeeded in preventing the rabbits from eating them. It won't be a bumper crop due to the lateness of the year and the intense heat wave we are getting as I type up this post, but it will be enough for a taste which is what I mostly want.
The potatoes are fantastic! They are large and they appear to be plentiful with the new method I used for planting them. I wanted to dig out a few "new" potatoes but I'm not sure at this point they qualify for that. We will be using them heavily in our diet from now until we harvest the remainder for storage. We haven't yet mastered the storage part so really only get a few months out of them in storage before they wither away.
The carrot crop is also fantastic and has surpassed our best crop I can ever remember in terms of size and quality of the carrots and they still have more to grow I hope. We tried a different variety this year which I'm sure helped as well as the improved soil over last year. After taking this photo, the girls wanted to make a carrot cake so I went out and harvested a large bunch more to have for that and also to have some for snacking.
The onion is actually a small one that I accidentally pulled while weeding them. Most of the other onions are about three or four times larger than that and looking great thus far. Last year if you recall was my first ever onion disaster as we only got a few that grew, all the rest rotting in the ground before they matured. I don't have a handle on why that happened but I'm hopeful at this point that it won't repeat.
Not shown but talked about already in a prior post is the garlic crop. I cut off the scapes and preserved them which you can see above in the the two pint jars. The bulbs are still a bit on the smallish side of what you find in the stores but are looking good. They still have quite a few green leaves so I'm waiting for more of those to turn brown before harvesting them.
You can see one daikon radish which is a volunteer, one of several, from last year.
Finally, my wife planted a couple partial rows of flowers and they are starting to bloom and grace our counter tops and table these days. Our youngest especially, loves to go out and cut a bouquet to arrange and put in a small vase/pot of her liking.
What a bounty, Ed Congratulations.
ReplyDeleteIt's my preferred kind of presents and best of all, I can get them daily for months on end!
DeleteIt all looks wonderful!
ReplyDeleteThe carrot cake was fabulous and the potatoes went into a dish that was also tasty.
DeleteI just do flowers. I tried veggies once long ago but it didn’t do well, and I’m am not a big lover of veggies, so that was that. I do try to eat my minimal veggies, but I don’t love them for the most part.
ReplyDeleteI would guess photos of flowers attract more of a following than photos of veggies!
DeleteWhat a treat! I love carrot cake, right up there with hummingbird cake. It's great to have those in the house who love to bake. :)
ReplyDeleteI have never heard of hummingbird cake. I'll have to do some internet searching.
DeleteI agree. There's nothing better than food right out of the soils
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to convince someone of that until they have grown and eaten something themselves.
DeleteHow great is that! Congrats on growing your food!
ReplyDeleteIt is a hobby that keeps me out of trouble... and from more expensive hobbies.
DeleteThat's a pretty good haul for an early harvest! Funny that those daikons are still hanging around.
ReplyDeleteThey certainly were the right cover crop of choice, if only I had the electric fence back then.
DeleteOh peas and new potatoes in a white sauce,I can almost taste it! My maternal grandmother always made it from the first potatoes and peas! Nice haul and carrots always taste so good right out of the garden!
ReplyDeleteI've read that on your blog but I have never had that dish though it sounds delightful. I'll have to try and search for a recipe.
DeleteLovely photo, Ed. Your statement, "It is such a joy to step outside my back door and pick," really has a lot of meaning considering your garden history. I haven't had an abundant carrot harvest is several years, but carrot cake is a good idea!
ReplyDeleteIt really does. I loved how much room we had at our old garden but not being able to pick everything at the peak of ripeness, or when needed wasn't desirable and having to condense all our garden work into a single day of the week regardless of weather was downright horrible. I'll take my smaller, not as good soil garden outside my back door any day!
DeleteIt's so exciting to pick that first harvest. Good eats!
ReplyDeleteIt is one of my favorite times of the year.
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