Beetroot & Orange Jam

It has been a good year for beetroot.  It has also been a fabulous year for oranges.

Too fabulous for many of the farmers as bumper crops have lowered prices domestically whilst the high Australian dollar has seen export sales plummet.  After years of drought and pests it is the dollar which is currently causing citrus growers pain amid something of an orange glut.  It seems that my daily juice is not enough and so I have been looking for other ways to use oranges and indeed to encourage others to use oranges.  Today’s enticement is Beetroot & Orange Jam.

Beetroot & Orange Jam

Note: The below recipe makes enough for one small jar – I have written the recipe in a small quantity to show it can easily be made with one medium beetroot.  If you have more beetroots it would make sense to double, triple, or quadruple the amounts given here.

  • 200g beetroot peeled and finely grated. (I use the same size grater as I do for Parmesan cheese).
  • 200g sugar
  • 2 oranges
  • 200ml water
  •  1/4 tsp chilli powder (optional – this amount works as a flavour enhancer rather than adding any real heat to the jam – if you are unconvinced then pls omit)

Zest one of the oranges and reserve the zest.  Cut the oranges in half and juice them retaining the empty orange skin.  Place the water, grated beetroot, orange juice and orange skin halves into a saucepan.  Bring to the boil and simmer until the beetroot has cooked – about 1/2 hour.  Remove the orange skin and add the sugar and chilli powder if using.  Bring back to the boil and cook until the mixture thickens and reaches setting point.  Stir in the zest, cook for another minute or so.  Pour into sterilised jars and seal.

  

I enjoy this jam with both sweet and savoury things.  It is good on toast or on scones (I keep thinking I must try it on pumpkin scones) but it is also good with cheese and cold meat.

To see what others are doing to preserve their seasonal produce head over to the Garden of Eden.

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Posted in Greens - Lettuce, Spinach, Beets, Recipes, Spring Harvesting | Tagged , , | 13 Comments

Growing Sweet Potato in Melbourne? Impossible Dream?

A couple of months ago I found this in my cupboard.

I posted the picture with my Monday Harvest post and Shawn Ann helpfully told me what she did with hers.  She twisted off the shoots and placed them in a glass of water to grow roots.  I did as instructed and this was the result:

Look at those beautiful roots!  Here they are again from another angle in which you can also see the leaves.  It was the evolution of the leaves that I found most interesting and really regret not having photographed along the way.

Essentially the leaves went from those strange pinky orange things to the beautiful green heart shapes they were when I planted them out yesterday.

All in all it has taken 2 months for them to go from; shoots on a plant, to developing roots, to being potted up, left on my daughters windowshelf to grow, then in the past 2 weeks taken outside to harden off before being planted out yesterday.  It will be interesting to see if they do anything.  I would love a harvest like Dave’s at Our Happy Acre’s but in Melbourne’s climate that is unlikely.  I think I will settle for any sort of tuber at all, and eating a few leaves along the way.

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Posted in Potatoes, Spring Planting | Tagged | 9 Comments

Photo-Vember: A sign of good things to come?

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Posted in Tomatoes | Tagged | 8 Comments

Harvest Monday – 31st Oct 2011

Ahhhh the excitement of a new crop and this week its Broad Beans!

We had pasta with bacon, broad beans, pine nuts and lemon.  Here they are again from another angle (I actually think I should have waited a few more days before harvesting as some were fairly small – having said that all were absolutely delicious!).

The rest of this basket went into a salad:  radish, lettuce, celery, mixed leaves and parsley.  In fact this seems to have been the week of lettuce, or rather I seem to have photographed more of the lettuce I harvested this week.

As I posted earlier in the week I made vegetable stock with the parsley, thyme, bay & green garlic from the picture below left and the selection in the one on the right went into a lovely vegetarian Harira soup.  Harira is Morrocan, typically made with lamb and is often eaten with dates to break the fast during Ramadan.  It is a lentil and tomato soup with spices, chickpeas and broken up bits of vermicelli pasta through it.

  

This week also saw the end of our carrots for the moment as I have run out of space to sow more.  I think you can guess what happened to most of them…..

  

Other than that pictured above I also harvested a fair bit of celery to fill with cheese and gobble.  This stick is looking fairly relaxed about its intended fate though….

For other harvests from around the globe connect with Daphne’s Dandelions today.

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To Pick or Not to Pick – That is the Question!

This cabbage is testing my patience!  Actually the 5 others I have growing that have not even reached this stage are more annoying but this one is causing me to have the most self restraint.

You see it has a heart and I could harvest it.  But then its grown so much in the past week that perhaps I should leave it to get a bit bigger…. But then I really want to know what it tastes like…But then if it tastes really good I might regret not letting it get bigger so I’d have more of it.  This is what it look liked 6 days ago:

I planted out cabbages as seedlings in mid April once I finally got rid of the pumpkin from the bed.  Little did I know quite how long they would take to mature…..

By the 3rd June they looked like this:

By the end of June they had got a bit bigger:

They grew and grew over winter, by the end of September they looked huge, but heartless.

Even on the 11th October there wasn’t really much to see:

But now, now one of them has a heart, albeit a small one, and I could pick it.  But should I?

I hope it tastes nice…….

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Posted in Brassicas | Tagged | 10 Comments