Saturday Spotlight – “Easter Egg” Radishes

I grow a few different radish varieties.  Watermelon radishes, French Breakfast, and Daikon (Mouli) but my favourites are the Easter Egg radishes.  In all honesty I’m not sure that this a result of any great superiority in flavour (although they do taste great).  I just think they look good, and photograph nicely.

Easter Egg radishes

Easter Egg radishes are a nice little round radish that come in a variety of red and purplish (and occasionally) white colours.  They are nicely peppery and look and taste great cut into quarters and served on a plate with a sprinkle of a really nice eating salt.

The other reason I love these radishes is that they are lovely and easy to grow.  They can be sown year round in Melbourne and develop quickly, although exactly how long they take does depend on the season.  They take longer to develop in cool weather.  I tend to sow radishes whenever I have space in the beds, in between slow developing crops or as an interval crop between seasons.

I don’t find radishes need any particular care or conditions, other than the usual bit of fertiliser and water.  I do find that the actual radishes (rather than the foliage) occasionally get nibbled both by mice and by slugs and snails so a bit of protection or nearby traps can help.

A nice simple relatively trouble free crop.  What more could you ask?

Do you have a crop or variety that you grow purely because you like how it looks?

Saturday Spotlight is a series of posts highlighting particular varieties of edible plants.  If you have a favourite, or even a less than successful variety of a plant and would like to include it in the series then please leave a comment with a link below.    I have created a page (above, just below the header) with an Index of all the Spotlights to date.   I will add links to any new posts below and in next weeks post as well as ensuring they appear in the Index.  

New posts from this week:

Millionaire” Eggplant – Our Happy Acres

Savoy Cabbage – Garden Glut

Purple Sicily Cauliflower – Home Sweet Kitchen

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Posted in Brassicas | 11 Comments

Saturday Spotlight – Celeriac “Giant of Prague”

This has been my first year growing celeriac so I’m not sure how much insight into it I can offer nonetheless I thought it would be worth recording my experiences for this weeks spotlight.

CeleriacI have really enjoyed growing celeriac this year, or actually that should probably read these two years as I  sowed the seed last year.

I sowed the seed in mid Spring, potted up the seedlings in late Spring and eventually planted them out into the garden in early summer.

I chose a spot in the garden where they could sit, slowly, slowly developing and I wouldn’t get too annoyed about how long they were taking to mature.

And take a long time they surely did.  I harvested the first one in early Winter, a full 9 months after I initially sowed the seed.  When a crop does most of their growing over winter (eg garlic) I can forgive 9 months development time but if they occupy space over summer then they have to be pretty good to deserve their space.  I have to admit I have been really pleased that I planted and persevered with them.  In part because they are good eating and in part because they are ready at a time of the year when not many other crops are available for harvest.  As a result I think they have deserved their space, of course if you’d asked me in February I probably would have said something a little different.

I have spotlighted the variety “Giant of Prague” purely because that is the variety I grew.  As I’ve never grown any other varieties I don’t have a comparison point but as my experiences were relatively successful I would definitely grow the variety again.

I gave my celeriac plants plenty of food and water as well as mulching them well throughout their growing period and I suspect all three are key to their success.  When I say success I am perhaps exaggerating a little as my celeriacs weren’t huge, they were about 2/3 of the size of the average supermarket specimen.

Celeriac

Whether that is a variety issue, the fact that my plants were grown in partial shade, or something else entirely I can’t really say.  What I can say was that I did actually find the smaller size more manageable than the larger ones.  Celeriac stores really well whole but as it quickly discolours when cut them you tend to have to use it all in one go.  As a result the smaller size was something of a blessing.

Celeriac tastes a lot like celery but with a texture, when cooked, that is a lot like swede or turnip.  I mainly use it braised with lentils or in hearty vegetable and chicken soups.  Because I like it so much cooked in those things and I only grew 6 plants this year I haven’t experimented much with it.  I will save that for next year.  On Tanya from the Cooks Pyjama’s recommendation I have also started using the leaves in stock to great effect.

Have you tried growing celeriac?  What do you regard as the keys to success?

Saturday Spotlight is a series of posts highlighting particular varieties of edible plants.  If you have a favourite, or even a less than successful variety of a plant and would like to include it in the series then please leave a comment with a link below.    I have created a page (above, just below the header) with an Index of all the Spotlights to date.   I will add links to any new posts below and in next weeks post as well as ensuring they appear in the Index.  

I didn’t do a spotlight last week and I’m not sure that anyone else did either.  The New Spotlights the week before were:

Florence Fennel – Garden Glut

Turmeric – City Garden Country Garden

Kossak Kohlrabi – Our Happy Acres

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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 23 Comments

Monday Harvest – 15th July 2013

After spending much of the past week away I have completely failed to take any photos of my harvests this week so I plan to reuse some from previous weeks.  As a result some of these images might be a little familiar.

I harvested my second to last celeriac yesterday and used it in a vegetable soup.  I have really enjoyed the celeriacs I grew this year and despite the long growing time I can see that I will have to plant them again for next year.

Celeriac

Also for soup and stock I harvested a number of herbs including thyme, parsley, bay leaves and celery stalks.

Herbs for stock

The only other thing I harvested this week was some more broccoli for a stir fry we had tonight.

Broccoli

My calabrese is a little slow at the moment and although it is producing side shoots there doesn’t seem to be anything like the volume I’ve had previously.  Hopefully now that the days are slowly starting to get longer it will pick up again (I suspect the warmer temperatures forecast for later this week will also assist).

Apologies for the lack of a spotlight this week and thanks for the feedback on my readers question last week – all very much appreciated.  This week I have another query; a (presumably Australian) reader’s garlic has been completely dug up and eaten by something.  Any ideas about what it would be and how to prevent it?  Birds dig up mine but they don’t eat it and so far the rats have left mine alone so I’m really not able to offer much advice.  It would be lovely if someone else could.

Of course you could head over to Daphne’s Dandelions and ogle some harvests instead.

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Posted in Winter Harvesting | 31 Comments

Monday Harvest – 8th July 2013

Before I kick off with my harvests this week I had a question from a reader that I had no idea how to answer.  Does anyone have experience with apricot trees and their ailments?  If so Nola would love your help.  This is her query below:

Hi Liz (and all),

 I wonder if anyone has any ideas about apricot trees and their ailments? Mine developed what looks like a deep split in the bark last year which it sealed up with sap.
All seemed OK but I did think the harvest was down a bit. This winter the trunk has developed a bigger split about eight inches long..(20cm?) and a great gush of sap has come out pooling around the base of the tree. If it had been a person I think I would have called an ambulance. It is planted in a wet area of the garden…which hasn,t been a problem up until now…as you will understand. Could this split be a consequence of too wet feet do you reckon? Or has anyone any ideas…please? I,d hate to loose this wonderful tree.

Harvestwise the garden is slowing down, it seems to be really struggling with the lack of sun this year.  Ironically our weather has been lovely and sunny for the most part this winter (save the last few days) but the short days at this time of the year coupled with the long shadows and my neighbours trees mean that the plants don’t really get to appreciate it.  Despite this I do seem to have a few pics to share this week and here they are:

My third celeriac.  I have two more in the ground.  I’m really pleased I planted these.  The have taken a long time but I have a section in the middle of my biggest bed that I can’t actually reach from the outside which suits long growing crops like celeriac so the wait has been the issue it would have been otherwise.

Celeriac

Thinking about it many of this weeks crops are long maturing.  This ginger took a good 8 months to mature.  The leaves finally died down this week so I decided to harvest.  I was contemplating leaving it and hoping for a bumper crop this year but I just don’t have the self control for that.

Ginger

Cauliflowers aren’t the quickest of crops either but I was pretty pleased with this one.

Cauliflower and broccoli

The broccoli was quicker but no less delicious for its brevity.

I decided this week to harvest many of the remaining chillies and capsicums.  A couple of the plants were looking pretty sad and sorry for themselves and I decided that they’d probably stand a better chance of surviving winter if they didn’t have fruit to worry about as well.

Chillies

I have a tendency to forget to photograph greens, but this week I managed to capture a bunch of Cavolo Nero which I took to my local food swap (along with some Kaffir Lime leaves, Curry Leaves and Chillies).  I got some tamarillos and oranges in exchange.

Cavolo Nero

My final photograph this week is of less of harvest and more of a thinning.  I’m growing turnips for the first time and have treated them much like carrots.  That is I sowed pretty thickly and have been gradually eating the thinings as they reach radish size.  I have no idea if this is normal practice but I have really enjoyed them with a sprinkling of salt.

Turnips

And those were my harvests this week.  For more head over to Daphne’s where the Northern Hemisphere gardens should be producing some lovely summery things.

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Posted in Fruits, Winter Harvesting | Tagged | 16 Comments

Saturday Spotlight – ‘Mint’ or ‘Common Mint’

I grow a lot of mints: Spearmint, Peppermint, Vietnamese Mint (which isn’t a true mint), Basil Mint, Chocolate Mint and so on but the mint I like best, the one I use most is usually sold under the imaginative name: ‘Mint’.  (Or very occasionally ‘Common Mint’ or ‘Culinary Mint’).  In the first (or perhaps second) season of the Australian version of Masterchef contestants were asked to name that herb.  Mint came up and one contestant over-thought it and wrote ‘spearmint’.  She went home as the answer was judged incorrect.  The mint used most commonly for culinary purposes here always seems to go under the label ‘mint’.  Since that episode I have looked at the mint in every nursery I go to and every single one always has a mint simply called ‘mint’.  I actually think it probably is some sort of Mentha Spicata (spearmint) cultivar but unfortunately I can’t be more precise than that.  Incidentally I also grow a mint that I bought labelled ‘spearmint’ and although it tastes pretty similar to ‘mint’ it isn’t as vigorous and its leaves a significantly smaller and pointier.  This is what my ‘mint’ looks like:

Mint

I use a lot of mint in both food and drinks and as a result I grow a fair bit of the stuff.  Mint grows year round in Melbourne, although it does slow significantly over winter and can get a bit dry and unhappy during the height of summer.  I grows well in semi shade – a few hours sun a day and can be grown, albeit a lot less vigorously, in pretty much full shade.   I usually have two big pots of mint growing at any one time.  I harvest from one and let the other grow on.  Having two pots lets me stagger dividing the plants.  I try to divide my mint in Spring and Autumn and whenever the new leaves are particularly small.  I find that mint tends to produce large leaves during vigorous growth and smaller leaves when it is growing less vigorously.  Production of smaller leaves tends to mean that the plant is getting low on food and root space in the pot, although the plants do also seem to naturally produce smaller leaves in cooler weather.

For a post on how to divide mint click here.

Mint grows really easily from root cuttings and as a result it is hard to get rid of if you plant it directly in the ground.   Unless you have an area you really want to fill with an easy edible green (I have one such area under some eucalypts and in shade much of the day) it is probably best confined to pots.

Mint

I find mint is at its most vigorous in spring and so is best propagated then, although you can grow it any time in Melbourne.  Propagation can be from division, root and/or shoot cuttings, or from seed.  I’ve tried all three.  Generally I think that if want to grow mint and don’t yet have a plant then the easiest way to get one is either ask a friend with one for a piece to propagate from or to buy a small potted plant.  Once you have one plant you can easily propagate more from cuttings and division and as a result buying a packet of seed seems like a bit of waste.

I use my mint in salads (particularly Middle Eastern and South-East Asian ones), dips, drinks, marinades and even in cooked dishes.  Aside parsley it is the herb I use, and enjoy, most.

Cucumber, Feta, Mint & Pomegranate Salad

Do you grow mint?  Which types do you grow?

Saturday Spotlight is a series of posts highlighting particular varieties of edible plants.  If you have a favourite, or even a less than successful variety of a plant and would like to include it in the series then please leave a comment with a link below.    I have created a page (above, just below the header) with an Index of all the Spotlights to date.   I will add links to any new posts below and in next weeks post as well as ensuring they appear in the Index.  

New Spotlights last week were:

Purple Cauliflower – Garden Glut

Sabah Honey Pineapple – Kebun Malay-Kadazan Girls

Fiesta Broccoli – Daphne’s Dandelions

Profuma Di Genova Basil – From Seed to Table

and from this week:

Florence Fennel – Garden Glut

Turmeric – City Garden Country Garden

Kossak Kohlrabi – Our Happy Acres

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Posted in Herbs & Spices | Tagged | 22 Comments