Monday, August 29, 2011

harvest from the past few weeks

It's been a while since the last post!  Our gardening/blogging activities are in negative correlation with the summer temperature.  It's really difficult to garden in the 90-100+ degree weather.  When we do get out there, we mostly just harvest and weed.  While we have been slacking, the garden has not.  It continues to give out amazing produce.  During our absence from the blog, we had some firsts (corns, bitter melons, muskmelons).  We also had some lasts (R.I.P. cucumbers and patty pans).  Although summer is just starting to get hot around here, we can feel the seasonal change coming in the garden.

Here are some of the harvest pictures from the last few weeks:

harvest basket

harvest basket


frosty lima beans

harvest

corn and pumpkin

peaches & cream corn

harvest basket

charentais melon




Thursday, August 4, 2011

the figs are ready

figs

We started harvesting figs last week.  They are ripening rather quickly.  We are harvesting a plastic shopping bag full about every other day.  There are 3 or 4 fig trees in the property, but only 1 of them is in the garden.  The rest of them are in the little planting area by the driveways.  I didn't plant them, so I don't know what variety they are.  I just call them the "green kind" (as opposed to the kind with purple skin).


fig tree

fig tree

This is the fig tree in the garden.  It's at the center of the garden, so it receives plenty of sunlight.  Other than watering it a few times a year, we really don't pay much attention to it.


figs

I thought this one looked like the Piranha Plant from Super Mario Brothers.  I felt like it was coming to get me, so of course I had to eat it first.


figs

Figs are a relatively new fruit to me.  I didn't grow up eating them.  In fact, I had never seen one (dried or fresh) before I moved to California.  I have to admit they are not on the list of summer fruits/vegetables that I look forward to.  I just kind of forget about them... until I bite into a perfectly ripe one.  Every year they remind me of how delicious they are all over again, sweet like honey with crunchy little seeds.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

golden corn tassels

golden corn tassels

golden corn tassels and dark green bean leaves

I snapped the above pictures late in the evening last Saturday.  These corn tassels were especially visible in the almost dark garden.  The golden color looked even brighter against the dark green bean jungle.

I took the picture of the corn ears the next day when the lighting was better.  I can't wait for them to be ready.  I keep looking at sweet corns when we go to the supermarkets or the farmer's markets, but I refuse to buy any (ok, I basically refuse to buy any vegetables).  I want my corns!

peaches & cream corn

Monday, August 1, 2011

harvest

harvest basket

tomato harvest


The garden continues to bless us with good varieties of summer veggies.  There are something new ripening every week.  I haven't bought any produce in a couple of months.  I feel like I'm getting as good of a selection from my garden, if not better, as it is from a supermarket.  Not to mention they taste better and have less mileages and storage life.

The huge green tomatoes above are Aunt Ruby's German Green, and they are my new favorite green tomato.  They are so pretty when they are ripe, light green with a tint of yellow and pink blush.  We refrigerate them and cut them into slices to snack on.  They are juicy, sweet, and refreshing.  The perfect snack on a hot summer day.  The  catalog describe their flavor as spicy.  I think they are rather mild but very flavorful and delicious.

My previous favorite green tomato was Green Zebra.  Unfortunately, the two Green Zebra plants I started from seeds turned out to be something else (Black Krim, I think).  I wish I had some Green Zebras to do a side-by-side taste test.

These are pictures of some of the harvest from last week.  In the pictures are - Black Krim tomatoes, Beefsteak tomatoes, Aunt Ruby's German Green tomatoes, Sun Gold cherry tomatoes, luffa gourd (Chinese okra), Big Bertha pepper, Better Belle pepper, Sweet Banana pepper, Birdseye chili peppers, Japanese eggplants, patty pans, cucumber, Delica pumpkin, Yard Long beans, Summerfest Komatsuna, purple mustard, green onions, garlic chives, and edible amaranth leaves.

summer harvest

veggie harvest

veggie harvest

Monday, July 25, 2011

weekend harvest - seeds

We don't have too many pictures of veggies to show off this week.  We had a couple groups of friends who came to visit the garden last week.  We had fun walking around the garden.  Everyone tried their hands in harvesting veggies and took home the harvests.  And, of course I forgot to take pictures of those harvests.

harvest

 I did take pictures of the harvest for Saturday night dinner.  The cucumbers are slowing down.  The tomatoes are ripping faster than we are picking.  On Saturday and Sunday, we picked tomatoes both in the mornings and the afternoons.


oxheart carrot

This big fat carrot was one of the only two seeds that came up from my failed seed sowing in March.  The other one I picked too early so there wasn't much of a carrot.  Then I kept forgetting to pick this one.  I chopped this one up and cooked it in soup.  It was nice and sweet.  This variety is Oxheart.  They grow very short and fat, so they are good for heavy clay soils.  We don't have heavy clay soils.  I just like to grow different varieties for fun.

Although we don't have too many edibles to show off this week, we do have some non-edible harvest to share.


stargazer lilies

Here are some stargazer lilies we harvested for cut flowers.


common chive

saving chive seeds

I let some chive flowers go to seed so I can plant more next year, although I think there will be some volunteers next year.  There were a lot seeds dropped to the ground.  The seeds were kind of a pain to collect.  It was hard to separate the dried up mini flowers from the seeds.


celery seeds

saving celery seeds

I have a monster celery plant going to seed.  It's been there since last year.  I harvested some of the seeds last Sunday.  I can't wait for the rest of the seeds to dry up, so I can dig up the plant and grow something else there.

I had a much easier time collecting these seeds.  I just used a fine sift to separate the debris from the seeds.  I heard celery seeds can be used as seasoning for cooking.  I'm going to give it a try.  I guess you could count these as part of the edible harvest.