Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Friday, October 5, 2012

Swiss Chard and Green Tomatoes

At the end of August, before our vacation, Michael planted Rainbow Swiss Chard. Chard is popular in Mediterranean cooking and reputed to have high nutritional value. Still, it's a thick-leafed business, so I either need to cook it or.....my favorite: make it into pesto. Eh voila!

Rainbow Swiss Chard, preparing for a bath...
actually, this, ladies and gentleman, is bath 1 of 3.

....and into the collander for a nice drip-dry.
So, how do I make swiss chard pesto? I'm glad you asked. First, be sure to have a schnauzer nearby to get behind legs and between feet. This makes the process particularly exciting, notably when you're moving between cutting board and food processor. Be prepared to reprimand the young lad frequently and point to the kitchen door repeatedly, to little avail. Next, fill your food processor with olive oil (one glug), a fist full of almonds (right now they're the most reasonably priced nut available at Costco, two shakes of parmesean (from the pour-out side not the shake side), two cloves of garlic (peeled, crushed, and finely chopped), a squirt of lemon juice (for good luck...no, actually to keep the greenery from browning so dramatically), and  a teaspoon of salt. When all that is in the processor, add chopped swiss chard (chopped so that it actually processes, rather than only partially processing and leaving large shredded leaf pieces along the processing bowl sides...such sights cause Savannah to make a frowny face).  After you've done all that (I had so much chard, I did the above method three times), you have pesto to freeze the willies out of, like this:
And in it's final form: pesto!  It's in the freezer for a long winter's
nap. Well, I'll probably wake some of it up in a week or so.
Now, let's talk green tomatoes. I harvested a metric ton of them yesterday morning. It's supposed to frost this weekend, so I thought I'd better get them now. Unfortunately, the reporter here forgot to take a picture of all
the green tomatoes in the dish drainer (we put her on bathroom cleaning detail as punishment for her negligence) and I don't have a picture of that 'metric ton' of tomatoes, but I assure you there were many. My drainer fairly floweth over. So much so that after I cut up 3/4 of them, I filled up a 6-quart slow cooker bowl, and I still had some left over....like enough to crowd the countertop. I mean, holy bananas, right? Anyway, my Mum makes a really good green tomato sauce, much like marinara, that she serves over pasta. I asked her to email me the receipe, and this is what I made in the slow cooker, with a few of my own little tweaks. What you see below is (and I apologize for my rampant inexactitude, but I eyeball most of my ingredients when I'm not baking, so a lot of these measurements are very idiosyncratic, like the pesto receipe above...like a fist full of almonds, Savannah? Can you be a little more vague? You'll see that yes, yes I can be.):
>>Green tomatoes, quartered, and about 2" beaneath the rim of the 6-quart slow cooker bowl.
>>2 red onions
>>several cloves of garlic (to taste)...I start with 4, and any additional cloves obviate the need for concern about a) vampire attacks or b) general invasion of personal space by others (great for public transportation riders who hate crowding!)
>>2 glugs of oil
>>about a tablespoon of paprika (or, my method, two quick and forceful shakes from the bulk container)
>>2 teaspoons pepper
>>2 teaspoons salt

The beginnings of green tomato sauce (with a few red tomatoes in there
because we had them handy)
After it cooked for four hours (the funny lady here forgot that turning on the knob means nothing until the appliance is plugged in and that took an hour for her to realize...you know, I was looking at it going, 'why isn't it getting hot?'), I used my immersion blender and made it into a genuine, stick-to-the-pasta sauce. When I was boxing it up to put in the freezer, I sampled extensively. For all my ingredient-measuring inexactitude, it cooked up beautifully.
Meanwhile, on the pepper front, our dehydrator produced a lovely baggy of Hungarian Hots, Wax Hots, Habaneros, which all will, in time, be contributing their concentrated fire to chocolate chip cookies. Here they are in a rather un-glamorous shot. Like a bunch of mummy finger, they are:
Egyptian Mummy-fingers...*cough*
No, actually, they're dehydrated hot peppers.
Finally, like the program Sunday Morning, I'll leave you with a nature scene. Pleasant Valley in fall:
Moment with nature: the color of autumn in the valley. It gets more vibrant
every day.

Moment with nature: the color of autumn behind the farmhouse.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

This week with the Guzes


Cobbler from some super ripe and fantastic little peaches.

The heat has been vicious here, so we've been performing a lot of indoor activies....first cooking and then preserving; after that, a few garden images....
Banana chocolate chip bread, packaged for Michael's lunch.

Green beans with onions, white sauce, and curry powder


Although we canned one batch of beans, we're
using the Food Saver Mom and Dad got us for
Christmas for this batch.

Michael rocks the Foodsaver

This cute birdhouse was made by an elderly man who
sells them at the Harmony Christmas Market. If we look
a little closer, you'll see it's occupied....

...avian triplets. Michael got this one. They were
camera-shy and hid their heads every time I came close with
the camera.


Lovely lemon-yellow sunflowers, near the top bar.


The bee garden flowers along our back fence.

And a close-up of those pretties...

Another shot of the garden...all sorts of lovelies
Our butterfly bush came back. I was so worried when
its limbs took so long to green this spring.
 
Our stargazer lilies are in full bloom.

Monday, July 11, 2011

It's mid-July and the garden, she is beautiful!

Behind the fence that protects our berry bushes,
there is a small pig waiting to bite ankles. Watch it.

Our purple Grandpa Ott morning glories are the first
to bloom every year. Just goes to show that
grandpas are usually early risers.


From far to near: volunteer sunflowers, Country Gentleman
sweet corn, black beans, moribund garden door.

From near to far: black beans, hot peppers,
cantalope, watermelon, and cucumbers.


Bun's pole bean trellises

The blooms on our Scarlet Runner Beans are so
pretty, no?


And some winter squash shot a runner under the
pole beans and into the pathway.

We have a series of little watermelons. They
start out as little nubbins.

Zucchini on the vine...the next posting will contain
a picture of the cake I made with them.

Three kinds of beets and a variety of carrots. Tomatoes are furthest away.

Our Lady of Perpetual Watering watches over our
strawberries. She's not the best berry guardian, though.
The house wrens in the bird houses near the garden
are chowing on our little red beauties before I get them.
 

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Some new lovely things....

Pies! Raspberry on the left and rhubarb on the right.
Granola with a mound of rasins in the background.

Remember these? The seeds for the bee garden
have turned into beautiful flowers.

Michael checks the ladies in the hive closest to the woods.

The ladies, they're hungry. They're clustered on the feeder.

We add another super to both hives. Go, girls, go!

Michael refills the feeder on the top bar.

Michael checks the cukes.

We got four already!

Our bee observation chairs.

A bee visits our onions...and this could make for
some interesting honey.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

From Our Herb Patch


Oregano, chives, and cilantro


Chocolate-mint tea and lemon balm


Sunday, May 15, 2011

Preparing the Garden

Michael tilling the potato patch. It's been raining here so
much, we haven't been able to draw out rows yet.

Baby robins in our garden gate.
There are four little sweeties in the nest.

Radishes are coming up!

Our strawberries are producing blooms. Soon, there
will be shortcake for dinner!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

The garden, she begins!

With a few flowers in my garden, half a dozen pictures
and some books, I live without envy.
   - Lope de Vega

Our poor, forlorn garden gate,
soon to be replaced!

Beet and radish seeds have been sewn.
 
Our oregano, chives, chocolate mint, and
lemon balm have volunteered again this year.
 
Rhubarb (to the left) and new asparagus,
yet to sprout! Jasper and Fred,
in the background.

Soon, we'll have strawberries....mmmm
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...