taken 7/26/14 |
Zinnias |
Green peppers |
This material coupled with zucchini, broccoli rabe, cucumbers, beans, peas and peppers and a wonderful selection of herbs all coming ripe made the garden a place of bounty this week.
Although we have harvested previously, this was the first time we filled that basket while at the garden. Here is a view in the basket.
I spread everything out on a table so you could see all that we retrieved on our water and harvest run on Saturday.
The purple basil to the left has been turned into herbal vinegar (check out this post if you want to make an herb flavored vinegar yourself.) The lemon balm (above photo, top left) was bundled and hung up to dry. The genovese basil (front left) became a caprese sandwich with ham, mozzarella cheese, fresh tomatoes and a drizzle of olive oil on toasted bread. It was marvelous!
There were enough beans to fill a pint basket (the square wood basket you see at the farmers market) which means we have at least a pound and can make a full recipe of a green bean dish. Now to decide which one. I will post the recipe once we decide what to make.
The broccoli rabe (just above the tomatoes in the above photo) is the sweetest broccoli I have ever tasted and as a result it rarely makes it to be cooked. I eat it raw as a snack during the day.
orange thyme with needle-like leaves |
I also cut orange thyme (far right by the peas.) This is being left to dry in a paper bag like the thyme I have harvested before (see July ___) I generally cut only one thyme per day so I can remember which one I cut and keep them from getting mixed together in the harvesting basket.
Lemon balm before harvesting |
Cucumbers - you have too look for the fruit, it is hidden under the large leaves. You think you have none, then pull back and leaf and find more than one. |
We harvested the bush beans today and have been debating harvesting the pole beans, but I know that both pole and bush beans will continue to produce until the vines die int he fall, so I think I will harvest the pole beans and save a later collection for drying to use in the winter.
From Bounty to Problems
Most of the issues this week are simple and not too upsetting or difficult to overcome. The tomatoes still have the dark spot and the blossom end rot I have mentioned before. This is due to the cooler wet weather.
You can see the black spot on this non-ripe tomato |
peas turning brown |
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