All posts by charmaine

Herbs

In my attempt to become of better cook I am using more fresh herbs in my cooking.   The nice thing is that the food tastes better. The crappy thing is that fresh herbs excluding cilantro are very expensive at the store.  $3.00 plus for a little basil.

This year as we brought out the lights to start the plants for outside and I started the kitchen window container garden.  Our kitchen window does have one problem.  It hardly gets any sun light.  I’ve thought about hanging a light down from the ceiling but that would be ugly.  I’ve looked on-line at a few different products such as aero gardens and some boxes with adjustable lights.  If what I’m doing right now doesn’t work I will have to try one of the other methods.  I’m hoping that has the plant get big that they will do ok in my kitchen.  I have also plants a bunch of herbs to start the herb garden outside this year.

The other things that I’m trying right now is cold weather veggies.  I thinking about planting them on the side of the house this year.  I think the micro-climate over there is a bit cooler than the main garden.

We have also started our tomatoes and peppers and they are coming along just fine.  It would be really cool this year if we could start all of our vegetables and  flowers from seeds.  Then the only thing that we will need to purchase from the nursery this year is a few replacement trees and a few more bushes.

Garden Goodness

Now that the garden is in full swing we are in the process of deciding what to do with everything that we have grown.  This week we bottled peppers, and tomatoes.  It’s only our second time bottling and our first time with our own stuff.  It’s been an interesting learning process,  reading, buying items and reading some more.  I’m not sure if bottling is any cheaper than just buying can goods.  The initial investment it’s that bad but it does take time and energy to produce a bottle of tomatoes and big can of tomatoes at Costco is so cheap.  The real test will be it they taste any better than the can tomatoes.

Today I decided to use a bunch of the tomatoes to make what we call tomato cook down,  I also made jalapeno cheddar bread.  I just bought a new enamel dutch oven to try baking it in and it work out really well.  The only issue with the dutch oven is that I had to remove the handle to the lid.  The handle can only be heated to 350 degrees which is a problem when you are baking bread at 450.  I can understand having a plastic handle when cooking on the stove top way less likely to burn your hand but for me it doesn’t work.  After some research on the internet It appears that a lot of other people have had to same problem.  The dutch oven that I purchased was only $55,  prices for the oven range from 50-70 depending on the store that it is purchased at.

Cheddar Jalapeno Bread

Weeding Plants

Our garden has a very interesting thing happening in it.  We currently have a bunch of squash, melons and radishes popping up all over the place.  As I pull Squash out by the handfuls I decided it was really really funny to be weeding out squash.  I haven’t planting radishes this year so it was very surprising to pull one out of the ground.

Planting

Our garden is starting to look like a garden.   Right before we left on vacation at the beginning of the month, I borrowed my parents tiller and spent all the free time I had for two days tilling and digging.  We planted potatoes, summer squash and pumpkins around 7:30 p.m. right before we had to leave to get to the airport for our flight out to Puerto Rico.

This year we are trying something new.  We have created raised beds with with walking rows between them that are lined with straw.  Back in April I brought home a stack of gardening books from the library and James read about raised beds.  We also started a compost bin after watching a DVD that came with my gardening magazine.

There is a lot to learn about gardening and each year we feel a little more successful.   We continue to learn from our mistakes.  We just learned that you should always plant pumpkins, and winter squash directly into the ground as seeds.  They just don’t transplant well at all.  Now it says as much on the package but you can buy all of these as plants at the store and we wanted to get an early start on the giant pumpkin so we planted them inside.  It’s funny because looking back on last summer our pumpkins that we planted from seed did ok but the plants that I bought from the store only produced one pumpkin between 12 plants.

Today we worked on the corn patch it didn’t get very far since the top soil that I order and was suppose to be here at nine didn’t show up.  When I called the guy that was going to do it around one and he still didn’t have it I canceled the order.  We were just too tired by that point.  I still need more top soil but I guess that will have to wait for another day.

We did get a chance to plant our tomatoes, onions, cucumbers, beets, and raspberries.  As I write it out it seems like a lot less than what it felt like while we were doing it.