A Berry Good Harvest Monday

This July I have been harvesting all sorts of things.  I wish I had the time to post weekly like so many of the others that list at Daphne’s Dandelions but at least I’m getting something posted!  In the beginning of July I pulled up my garlic from the community garden plot and it looked great despite the rust.  I think there was definitely an effect on the size but there are still some fair sized heads there and it should last us for a few months at least.

Also in the beginning of July I harvested the rest of the peas and composted the vines.  It’s good because I needed the room.  But I did plant a bunch more Mammoth Melting Sugar snow peas at the community garden for fall.

I harvested some kale from the garden plot as well this month as it is doing fantabulous.  I have many bunches of green onions ready to eat and I harvested a head of raddichio this evening.  I also had some rainbow chard from my home vegetable beds tonight and expect that I will be eating that nightly for a week or so.

All month now I have been snacking on blueberries.  I have 5 bushes located in the front potager / perennial garden and 4 of the 5 shrubs are new as of last year so really I’m only eating berries off of one.  But so far it has produced more ripe berries than I can pick and eat fresh so it’s just right and I still have plenty to ripen still.  I eat them in salad and of course on pound cake and whipped cream. mmmmm.

My yellow alpine strawberries are producing berries but I think that perhaps I put too many (5) plants in the small planter on my patio as they are small and turn brown and hard quickly. the leaves are yellowing a but to despite my regular watering, full sun, and fertilizing.  I’d happily accept any advice on improving these plants as this is my first year growing them. 

Here are 2 of the ripe ones with a red thrown in for comparison.  They have a unique strawberry favour that I can only describe as strong strawberry with a hint of banana.  They also have the texture of a cooked banana – some what starchy and mushy – but the texture is not off-putting, it’s more “melt in your mouth”.

Finally – lettuce lettuce lettuce!  I have been eating Super Gourmet Salad blend since March from seeds I planted in January.  The heads are just now starting to bolt but I’m hoping I’ll keep them going until at least August. 

 

 

 

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July 19 2010 | Growing Food and Harvest | 11 Comments »

Harvest Monday No. 1

Again this year I’ve planted wayyy too many vegetables, fruits, herbs, and other edibles in my wee garden.  Those who pop by for a visit get something to take away and many times it’s something they haven’t tried before.  What drives this lunacy? 
 

Biological curiosity? Yep.  

Culinary experimentation?  Check.  

And maybe a little bit of an addiction?    

Ahem, well, “Harvest Monday” seems to be a good time to begin cataloging the craziness so here we go with what I’m harvesting now in my urban yards, container gardens and community garden plots.  The links will lead to more information, whether it be a project I’ve been working on or the seeds that I used (almost always from West Coast Seeds): 

June-bearing strawberries 

Shiitake Mushrooms 

Rouge d’Hiver Lettuce 

 

Rouge d'Hiver Lettuce in Wine Barrel

 

Super Gourmet Salad Blend 

Cascadia snap peas 

Sugar Daddy snap peas 

Mammoth Melting Sugar snow peas 

Wild Arugula 

Wild Arugula or Rocket / Roquette

 

Green Onions 

Egyptian Walking Onions 

Rosemary, sage, thyme 

Italian Flat Leaf Parsley 

Hot N’ Spicy oregano 

Par-Cel (celery-flavoured parsley) 

Sweet basil  & Thai basil (from windowsill indoors) 

Celery (overwintered) 

Super Gourmet Lettuce in Wine Barrel

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June 07 2010 | Growing Food and Harvest | 13 Comments »