Microgreens

Regular readers might remember that a while back Mr Fothergill’s sent me a pack of goodies.  Amongst the goodies were a Microgreen Growing Tray and a couple packets of seed.

I like the idea of microgreens and microherbs – small bursts of  presumably nutritious flavour that you can sprinkle on salads.  Sounds great….in theory at least, and ever so fashionable with any number of telly chefs…

From a growing perspective the general idea is that you germinate the seed and then harvest it once the green/herb has 2-4 true leaves.   The Growing Tray I was sent allows you to grow micro-greens without soil in much the same way I’m sure most people did  mustard and cress and cotton wool when they were in primary school.

The tray has a container which you fill with water and then a tray with lots of holes in it above.  The idea is that you place tissue paper onto the tray and then the seeds onto the tissue paper.  You spray the seeds regularly (the advice is 2-3 times per day) until the roots start to develop.  The roots then break through the tissue and find the water below which you can add a bit of water soluble fertiliser to if you like.

Microgreens

As you might be able to make out in the above picture I chose to sow the ‘Flavours of Western Europe’ mix.  This contains Pea Morgan, Red Amaranth and Cress.  It was in the sowing that I made my first error.  Although they are sold together the seeds didn’t grow particularly well together.  One day after sowing they looked like this:

Seeds germinating

and on day two they looked like this:

Day Two microgreens

You may have noticed that whilst the peas and cress have both germinated the amaranth hasn’t.

The amaranth did eventually germinate (by about day 10) but by that point the peas were almost ready for harvest.

Microgreens

I didn’t harvest them though and they went on to form something of a forest on my kitchen bench.

Pea microgreens

So did I like the tray and the seed mix?  Mainly yes but with a couple of caveats.

I loved being able to watch the seeds grow.   Seeing them send out their root first, then their seed leaves was fascinating, and definitely a real plus of growing them this way (especially if you have kids).   I enjoyed eating the peas, although I did think they would have been better if I had a place with more natural light as they got very leggy indeed.

Because I put the peas in with others they pretty much swamped the smaller plants and I wasn’t able to harvest any of them.   (Annoying as I really like egg and cress sandwiches). When I next use the tray I will definitely only grow one seed variety in each section of the tray (there are two).  I will also endeavour to find a better lit place for them.  Unfortunately the width of the tray means it wont fit on any of my window sills which is annoying.  A narrower tray that fits on an average window sill would be have been better for me.

As its warmer now I could move it outside as soon as the seeds germinate which would also be a good solution.  Keeping it inside until they germinate is advisable purely because of the need to spray they seeds with water reasonably frequently.  Out of sight is definitely out of mind as far as I’m concerned.

Finally did it live up to it’s claim about being able to harvest microgreens within 7 to 14 days?  In my experience yes in part.  The peas and the cress would have both been harvestable at 14 days.  I reckon that 7 is pretty ambitious…. My amaranth didn’t have true leaves at 14 days but it might have if I sowed it during a warmer period.

In a nutshell, the tray in particular is a fun product, particularly if you want to either; see how seeds grow or to garden without the mess of potting mix etc.  If only it wasn’t plastic….

Do you grow microgreens or microherbs?  How did you grow them.

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Posted in Spring Planting | Tagged | 9 Comments

Allium pain

When I was growing up we always had a veggie garden, although I have very little recollection about what was grown in it.  Tomatoes I remember, and silver-beet and carrots, but not much else.  What I’m almost certain of is it didn’t contain any garlic.  This is because the diet of the average Aussie kid of Anglo Saxon descent in the 1970s was almost completely devoid of garlic.  I say almost because I do have vague recollections of eating garlic bread.  Now by garlic bread I’m not refering to a lovely Italian loaf brushed with olive oil and rubbed with garlic.  I am of course remembering a French stick (oh so different from your average baguette) sliced, but never quite through, slathered in butter and crushed garlic and then baked.  Such a dish (admittedly quite delicious) was usually found on pub menus as part of their ‘counter meal’ offering so I suspect I would have first had it as a ‘side dish’ alongside my pepper steak and salad bowl.

I blame this upbringing for my current failure to grow good garlic.  What it doesn’t explain of course are my successes of recent years or indeed my father’s success this year.  Looking at the picture below.  Which do you think is my garlic?  Which is his?

Garlic

Clearly the one on the left is his, picked early it’s a hard neck variety whose scapes have yet to curl under signifying its ready to harvest.  Nice green garlic as opposed to mine (a soft neck which should be well suited to Melbourne’s climate) which kind of  looks like a slightly bulbous, particularly weedy, spring onion.

His has started to form cloves and has been used in a couple of dishes.  It’s scape I used to make a mint and scape pesto to mix with broad beans and serve on olive bread.  It’s cloves I used in a chicken pie.  I’ll be lucky if I have anything left of mine once I’ve peeled off the dirty layers.

Green Garlic

So what went wrong?  Well I could blame it on Melbourne’s mild winter.  Or perhaps next door’s eucalypts which shaded it for much of the average winter’s day.  But instead I’ll blame it on my upbringing.  OK so I’m clutching at straws.  If you have a better theory then I’d love to hear it.

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Posted in Alliums - Onions, Leeks, Garlic, Autumn Planting, Spring Harvesting | Tagged | 32 Comments

Monday Harvest – 28th October 2013

I have had a really busy couple of weeks and as a result I failed to post my harvests last week which means double helpings this week.

My broad beans are in peak production at the moment.  As always I’m really loving them, as usual the kids are enjoying the podding process more than the eating one and as usual my partner is raising his eyes as I serve them up at yet another meal.  Still, at least I love them and will be very sad when they finish in a few weeks.

Broad Beans

I think there must be something about spring vegetables that divides people as featuring parsnips in a meal is similarly controversial in my family as using the broad beans.  A shame really as I have been pulling quite a few:

Parsnips

Ditto the radishes which feature in my salads but no one elses.

Easter Egg radishes

Fortunately everyone eats silver beet (provided it is cleverly disguised either by pureeing it into chicken saag or cutting it superfine and mixing with ricotta and hiding it in cannelloni etc).  The plants are bolting and I’m grabbing the leaves while I can.

Silver beet

The other things I am harvesting a lot of at the moment are leaves.  This is partially because I love them, partially because the rest of the family tolerate them but mostly because I finally gave into the kids requests for guinea pigs and they love lettuce!  Think 4 year olds and jelly at a birthday party and you get the idea of their love of leaves.

Salad Leaves

Those were my harvests, for more head over to Daphne’s for Harvest Mondays.

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Posted in Spring Harvesting | 25 Comments

Top 5 – Things I don’t know about harvesting

I got so much fabulous info from my last top 5 post – Things I don’t know about preserving,  that I thought I’d continue the theme, only this time I would concentrate on harvesting.  A lot of the other inspiration for this post has come from L from 500m2 in Sydney who not only enlightened me about when to harvest blueberries but also shares my frustration with parsnips that break during harvest.  Which not particularly co-incidentally is my number 1 this week.

  1. How do you harvest parsnips?  Carrots I find are usually nice and easy to harvest, generally coming away from the dirt they are in relatively easily.  Not so parsnips, which seem to cling to the soil and quite often break half way down.  Much like the large one in the photo below.   Parsnips - Hollow CrownSo how do you do it?  How do you harvest parsnips to ensure they emerge from the soil unscathed and ideally free from fork damage?
  2. Does cutting some coriander leaves encourage it to bolt?  It seems that everytime I start harvesting from a coriander plant it seems to bolt not long after.  Now this might be more about the tendency of coriander to run to seed in Melbourne’s climate but I wonder if the very act of ‘pruning’ it is accelerating the process.Coriander
  3. Does bandicooting potatoes effect total yield?  For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term ‘bandicooting’ it basically means: to rummage around in the ground looking for early harvests while the plant is still growing.  I have often wondered if this process affects total yield.  I  imagine that the yield is spread across the bandicooting period but is it affected beyond that.  Do you get less potatoes (or more) if you disturb it by bandicooting?kipfler potatoes
  4. Will cabbages and cauliflowers ever regrow after harvest?  Lots of plants can be treated as cut and come again.  Lettuce, celery, broccoli, fennel and so on.  With some of these you are only cutting part of the plant, but with others you can harvest pretty much all of it and it will still regrow (I am thinking about celery and fennel in particular here).  My question is what about cabbage and cauliflower?  Do they regrow at all?  Or simply take too long to bother waiting for?  Or is there some other reason you don’t hear about it happening?
  5. How can you tell if a melon is ripe?  Now this last one is part ambition and part hope.  I have yet to successfully grow a melon.  As in, have a vine set a fruit.  Admittedly I haven’t tried very often and those times I have I haven’t really had them in the right place to succeed.  I am considering trying again this year though.  And if I do, and if one sets, how will I know when to pick it?

And now that I have revealed my ignorance on these harvesting issues and dilemmas I await your wisdom.

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Monday Harvest – 14th October 2013

It’s weeks like this when I am very, very glad that Coburg has a Farmers Market.  I’m smack bang in the middle of a ‘hungry gap’ with many of my winter crops finished or finishing and the summer ones a long way of producing.

As lovely as my green leaves (this week they were parsley, coriander, rocket, silver beet and watercress) and radishes are, its really only the broad beans which offer much in the way of substance.

Spring Harvest basket

Fortunately we have had a fair bit of rain of late and the forecast for much of this week is for relative warmth so hopefully other treats aren’t too, too far away.

In the meantime check out what is filling the harvest baskets in the northern hemisphere by heading over to Daphne’s for Harvest Mondays.

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Posted in Spring Harvesting | Tagged | 13 Comments