September – The Wrap Up

We had a very wet end to September this year, of the 66mm that fell during the month 55 of those fell in the last couple of days, so basically I went from worried about a lack of rainfall to frankly being a bit sick of it all in a matter of hours.  The thunder and lightning was fun though.  What would be great now would be some warm weather to ensure some good growth and finally my monster cabbages may develop hearts.

The other winter crop I am still waiting on are my broad beans:

They are flowering beautifully and have set a few pods, and I did see some bees on them for the first time today so hopefully I will get a bumper crop.  Perhaps the bees were attracted by the orange, mandarin or the lavender all of which are flowering.

  

I can always tell its Spring by the leaves forming on the fig which is growing under the fence from next door.

Potatoes have yet to surface in my new potato bed but all the pots have sprouted.  (Post Script – since initially composing this yesterday some have come through) I am growing Kipfler, Pink Fir Apple, Cranberry Red & Dutch Cream in pots.  The tomato seedlings are also looking good and are almost ready for planting out

 

Of the plants I have been overwintering I have had reasonable results.  All my chilli plants got through winter OK and those that I have repotted have all put on new growth.

The capsicums look like they are still alive and one has the tiniest bit of new growth so I am reasonably hopeful.

Of the eggplants the lebanese one didn’t make it through but the two others might.  Both put of new growth but a lot of that new growth has subsequently died back on one of them (my adorably son destroyed the labels so I’m not sure what the remaining plants are).

 

I’m really pleased with my garlic this year.  Well so far anyway.

I’m pretty pleased with the garden at the moment.  I’m harvesting celery, lettuce, watercress, leeks, beetroot, the last of the broccoli (although I do have some immature plants in a side bed) heaps of herbs – chervil, coriander, dill, mint, oregano, and thyme.  The tarragon is regrowing (after being almost smothered last year) and the chives and garlic chives I transplanted from mum & dads are doing well.  I should soon have broad beans and cabbages.  The only negative (aside from the onions I posted about a few days ago) is that my parsley is bolting and I don’t have plants that are big enough to replace it just yet.  Oh for a warm October and lots more growth….

To see what I did in the garden this month click here: September 2011

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Beetroot Rasam

I’ve recently started harvesting my latest crop of beetroot.  Partially because its ready and partially to make more room for my purple cabbages which are getting really quite large….. My dad also grows beetroot, and he reckons his current batch is about to bolt.  As a result I have been cooking a fair bit of beetroot.  Of all the dishes I have made with beetroot recently this Beetroot Rasam would have to be my favourite.  It is quite a sweet soup, spicy but sweet.  It goes well with other vegetable curries and rice.   This recipe is adapted from a recipe by Chandra Padmanabhan from her book Southern Spice.  If you enjoy South Indian vegetarian cooking I would highly recommend either this or her previous book Dakshin.

Beetroot Rasam

  • 1 medium beetroot – cooked, peeled & mashed.
  • 2 tsp tamarind puree & 1.5 cups water (or a lime sized ball of tamarind soaked in 1.5 cups of water)
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar (or jaggery if you have it)
  • 2 tsp oil
  • 2 tsp ground coriander
  • 1/2 tsp ground cumin
  • 1/4 tsp fenugreek seeds – ground
  • 1/2 tsp asofeotida powder
  • 1/2 tsp chilli powder
  • 1 tbspn dessicated coconut soaked in 1 tbspn hot water
  • Coriander leaves

Tempering

  • 2 tsp oil
  • 1 tsp mustard seeds
  • 1/2 tsp cumin seeds
  • one chilli sliced in half
  • 10 curry leaves

Heat the first lot of oil in a saucepan, add ground spices (coriander, cumin, fenugreek, asofeotida & chilli powder).  Add beetroot, sugar, tamarind & water and coconut.  Season with salt and cook for about 5-10 minutes (the beetroot should disintegrated into the soup).  In a small pan heat the oil for the tempered spices, when hot add spices & leaves.  When the mustard seeds begin to pop tip everything into the soup.  Garnish with coriander & serve with other vegetables & rice.

As mentioned previously this makes quite a sweet soup.  You may want to add less sugar or more tamarind to taste.

I’m sharing this recipe on Garden To Table over at Greenish Thumb – take a look at what else people are cooking from their gardens this week.

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

A Melbourne Grown Curry – Can it be done?

I have a mission!  – To successfully grow all the ingredients for an Indian vegetable curry.

For this I figure at a minimum I need to grow:

  • Onions
  • Garlic
  • Ginger
  • Turmeric
  • Coriander (seed and leaf)
  • Cumin
  • Chilli
  • Tomatoes
  • Plus a vegetable to curry eg potatoes.

As I’ve sown more potatoes than you can poke a stick at, and plan on sowing more in a month or so, this part of the curry should not be a problem.  Even if all my potatoes fail I will just substitute eggplant or beans or anything that I do have when the other ingredients are ready.

Of the other ingredients Tomatoes, Garlic, Chilli and Coriander don’t present too many problems (although as I’ve mentioned before, Melbourne and Coriander usually don’t seem to like each other that much – however I have heaps in the garden at the moment so I am feeling confident!).  I have posted before on my attempts to grow Ginger and feel fairly optimistic that I can again achieve a large enough crop for a curry.  I have also attempted turmeric previously and whilst I didn’t really get much more than I planted I still think it would be sufficient for a meal.  This leaves cumin and most ridiculously onions.

Onions should and do grow well in Melbourne but I sowed mine late, and this is what they currently look like:

Which would be fine (if annoyingly slow) except they are growing right where I want to plant out these:

So the onions are going to have to be eaten as spring onions and the curry experiment may need to go on hold….or not…….as I do have these, planted in convenient location:

Shallots it is then to replace onions, which leaves cumin.

Cumin I really need to do some research on.  My first attempt to grow it entailed sowing some seed my mother had in her pantry (I usually sow seeds at my parents house – they entertain the kids whilst I play in their potting shed).  Interestingly what germinated, and I originally thought was cumin, actually turned out to be grass seed (well I’m pretty sure I grew grass not cumin…).  So either some got into the seed tray (and none of the others I sowed that day) or the cumin I bought had been adulterated with grass seed.  Which has actually got me thinking about how many other spices have been adulterated – perhaps I will sow some and see what pops up.

All this aside and I am no closer to growing any cumin.  So is there anyone out there who has successfully grown cumin, ideally in a temperate climate but frankly any info would be great at this point?  If not lets hope my spice supplier is more trustworthy than my mothers…..

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Posted in Alliums - Onions, Leeks, Garlic | Tagged | 7 Comments

Monday Harvest – 26th Sept 2011

I’ve had a couple of new things to harvest this week: beetroot which I haven’t had for awhile and spearmint which I am enjoying in tea.  I also have been cooking a few different things this week.  A change of seasons thing perhaps…

I found a recipe for Smoked Trout and Pea risotto, the leek, celery and parsley were all used in it.  I think it sounded better than it tasted – but perhaps that’s because I used a hot smoked trout rather than than cold smoked version that I generally prefer….none of this is the fault of these lovely vegetables though.


Avocados seem particularly cheap in Melbourne at the moment so this coriander went into some particularly delicious guacamole.

We had barbecued haloumi & chorizo on a bed of lettuce & watercress.   I made a beetroot, carrot and Freekeh salad to go with it.  It was my first try cooking freekeh and I have to say I really enjoyed it – the rest of the family though were fairly ambivalent.   Mr almost 2 threw his on the floor.  Oh the joys of feeding preschoolers….

The purple sprouting broccoli was a side dish for a roast chicken.

My daughter had a cold and as she requested noodle soup I felt obliged to make it – spearmint, mint, Vietnamese mint, Spring Onions, Coriander and a previously hidden chilli to go in it:

And now for my parsley adventures – if you read my Monday Harvest post last week you will know that I harvest parsley most days but don’t always mention it because I had run out of ways to photograph it.  Well this week I bring you: Parsley in unusual places.

Do you ever conceive ideas and then get a bit disappointed when the end result is not quite what you envisaged?  (I had big plans for a beautiful gingerbread house for my daughters fairytale themed 5th birthday party – she got the house, but decrepit was a better description that beautiful….)  Well this parsley project was a bit like that, I was picturing an inventive series of snaps with parsley in slightly surreal situations.  What you get instead is parsley ‘planking’ on top of a variety of garden features.  I still had fun taking them though.

 

 

 

For the record this week I used parsley in: Puttanesca sauce, Fritters, stock, tabbouleh and the freekeh salad and risotto mentioned above.

For more Monday Harvests have a look at Daphne’s Dandelions.

 

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Posted in Spring Harvesting | Tagged | 19 Comments

One Stick at a Time – Growing Celery

There’s not a lot at harvesting stage in my garden at the moment.  The garden looks great – its just that things are either finishing or not ready yet.

The shallots are still growing, the broad beans are only just flowering, the cabbages are yet to heart, the silver beet’s flowering and the parsley’s gone to seed.  I’ve even had to pull out two of the purple sprouting broccoli plants to try and give the cabbages room and a bit of a hurry up.

What I do have is celery (even if it is getting a bit old and strongly flavoured).  I pretty much always have celery, which is good because I use a fair bit of it.  I use the skinnier stalks and leaves in stock, I use the stalks in risotto, I use the best stalks in salads and quite often I just eat it as is (well as soon as I’ve washed off the slugs anyway).

I treat my celery as a pick and come again crop, harvesting from it at a rate of about a stick per mature plant per week until it eventually decides to procreate and goes to seed.  I try to have about 4 -5 plants big enough to harvest from in the garden at any one time.  I replace them yearly (even if they don’t bolt), as soon as the new seedlings are big enough, as the younger plants have better flavour.

When harvesting from a pick and come again plant I try and cut the stalk as low as possible, preferably just below ground level if I can (although sometimes due to the plants positioning it is too hard to get very low and the plants survive without many ill effects).

 How I grow Celery

I grow my celery from seed saved from the previous years plants.  The original seed was a hand me down from my father who got his plant from someone who called it perennial celery (they also grew it from their families saved seed).  It self seeds in the garden and if its in an OK place I usually leave it to get on with growing.   I also sow it into seed trays and usually pot the seedlings up once before planting out.

I sow seed in Melbourne’s Spring (Sept – December) and in Autumn, the Spring ones for my main plants to get me through winter and the Autumn ones are a back up in case the established plants bolt before the new ones are ready to produce or I need to move the plants to make way for other crops.  To be honest the Autumn sown ones often bolt at the same time as the spring sown ones.  Reflecting on it, it is probably best to simply sow seed (with protection) at the start of Spring, unless you are really pushed for space and need the flexibility of having some spare plants.

I don’t mind my celery green and as a result I have never tried to blanch it.  If you want to have a go at blanching then you need to wrap something round the stems for about a month before harvest (I know people who use newspaper or milk cartons with the end cut out for this purpose).

Celery likes a lot of water and is a pretty heavy feeder (whenever I’ve grown garlic near it the closest bulbs are usually stunted).  I try and dig in lots of compost prior to planting and give it a liquid feed about every 2 weeks.  The amount of food and water seems to have a big effect on the plant, as does the season.  In winter when the plants get lots of food and water I get lots of long thick and deliciously crisp stems.  If I neglect to water or I plant in poorer quality soil the stems are skinnier, shorter and not as crisp – fine for cooking but a bit tough for eating raw.  My understanding is that this is because celery is best when it grows quickly.  Even with reasonable amounts of food and water the flavour does seem to concentrate in warmer conditions.  I also find that as the plant ages the flavour becomes stronger – which again is fine for cooking but less good for salads.  I presume this is why some people prefer to harvest the whole plant at once when it is comparatively young.

I tend to plonk plants here and there throughout the garden where ever there is space – but generally where it is easily accessible to enable regular picking.  If planting it in a group it needs about 20 – 30cm between plants.

Pests & Annoyances:

Whilst I find celery relatively trouble free to grow I do get quite a lot of slugs hiding between the stalks, they seem to eat the occasionally hole in the plant in the stalks (although rarely all the way through) and leave weird patterns on the outside.  They don’t usually cause so much damage that the stalks are inedible.  I use beer traps to try and coax them out as because they hide between the stalks I only find them when harvesting.

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Posted in Autumn Harvesting, Greens - Lettuce, Spinach, Beets, Spring Harvesting, Spring Planting, Summer Harvesting, Winter Harvesting | Tagged | 4 Comments