early summer

garden in early May, all planted up and freshly mowed
garden in early May, all planted up and more or less mowed

Writing this towards the end of May, which is probably still Spring for some people, but I’ve harvested my first batch of strawberries. Where I come from that’s a summer activity, as are temperatures in the high 80s and the fact that School is out. Yes!

strawberries
first fruits

Here are the strawberries in question. These must be an Alpine variety. I wasn’t really paying attention when I bought them: just grabbed up the four strawberry plants waiting for a new home outside the Duke Gardens shop and made them a new bed. The fruit is ovoid, not overly large and has that distinctive Alpine flavour. Really good with locally made ice cream from Maple View Farm!

My other new fruit ventures are moving along nicely, although please feel free to skip this paragraph if you find fruit bush updates boring. Blueberries are forming, which is great but puzzling, since the label told me I needed two different varieties of blueberry for cross-pollenation or the fruit wouldn’t set. Well, the second variety I bought are still tiny bushes, twigs really, not a flower in sight. Hm. Not that I’m complaining. Raspberries are small, hard and green as yet, as you’d expect; rhubarb is looking healthy. Skinny but healthy. I’ve harvested a small fistful of wonderberries too, which I’ve frozen until I have critical mass enough for jam. People have been wondering what they taste like. Well, the one I tried was okay. Not amazing. Perhaps I need to let them ripen further. They’re supposed to be a dull not a shiny black apparently, so I’ll double check with the next ones that they are looking dull. Oh and the fig tree surprised me a couple of weeks ago by growing back. Really thought I’d lost it, to the extent that I was about to dig it out and use the space for tomatillos or something. So glad I didn’t!

Peppers. Let’s just stop a moment and think about peppers, because I am rubbish at growing them. I can mostly get them to germinate, but then they take ages to grow. In the time it takes a tomatillo to be bursting out of its pot with a load of flowers on it already, begging to be planted out (this was true by mid April), my pepper seedlings have barely managed four leaves. So I gave them longer, allowed them to dehydrate between waterings to encourage their root ball to develop. A couple of them vaguely responded to that by popping out another leaf. I called time on them a couple of weeks ago and put them in the raised bed with the arugula. They were supposed to have the whole bed, but you can’t argue with arugula once it establishes itself. Four frying pepper and a couple of thai pepper plants. Three plants were still there a week later, although one of them seems to have shed all its leaves. I’ll see how they do, but I think, officially, this is the last year I attempt to grow peppers from seed. Next year I buy starts. Hold me to that.

Sage. Or Salvia. I now have four varieties: ordinary, pineapple, scarlet and meadow. I need to find uses for sage… Other than just wandering up to the pineapple sage and stroking it.

And finally, a recipe. Pesto with garlic scapes and arugula (rocket for those Brit-side).

When you find a recipe as part of a blog, there’s always a little preliminary story about it. I can’t decide whether I find that endearing or annoying (just tell me the recipe already!!), but here I am falling into the trap. Because there’s a history to the garlic I’m growing. It started out life as some old cloves lost and forgotten in the bottom of my fridge. I noticed (I’m sure it was already winter) that they had sprouted, and just decided to stick them in the ground. If they liked it in the fridge, they’d surely love winter in North Carolina. There were several cloves at that point. Most of them sprouted; three hung on in there. Last weekend I noticed long bud stalks on them, curling like flamingo necks. Bizarre and pretty. I took a picture for Instagram, but what was I supposed to do? Let them mature?

The Instagram community pitched in with advice, and so I found myself going back to the garden a couple of days later and picking what I now know to be called scapes. I thought my ignorance of all things scape was just a freak accident of me looking the wrong way all my life. But then I sent a picture of said scapes (see below) to my parents who have gardened all their lives, and their parents before them, and they said, “What on earth are they?” In fact they dropped everything to FaceTime me immediately and ask what I was holding in my fist with the rocket. So, maybe we just don’t grow this kind of garlic in the North of England.

fistful of arugula and garlic scapes
fistful of arugula and garlic scapes

Enough of the story, here’s how I made the pesto.

Ingredients: A good handful of arugula, roughly chopped; 2 scapes (which is all I had), chopped; scant 1/4 cup of pine nuts; about 1/3 cup of olive oil; zest and juice of 1/2 lemon; salt and pepper to taste; at least 1/4 cup of grated parmesan; about 1/2 lb penne pasta or similar.

Method: Toast the pine nuts first over a low heat in a dry pan if you want to (I don’t always bother). Throw all the other ingredients into a blender and pulse until nicely pulverized. Remove from the blender and mix in the grated parmesan. (If you plan to freeze the pesto, don’t add the cheese.) Meanwhile, cook your favourite pasta (I think with pesto you are supposed to eat penne-type pasta shapes, but if you aren’t Italian, just go with the shape that makes you happy). Toss pesto sauce with pasta and enjoy! Add extra cheese, I would. And pour yourself some prosecco. Everything goes with prosecco.

Serves 2.

 

from January to… June!

An online friend has pointed out that I need to update this blog and he is not wrong. When I logged in tonight to remedy the situation — beer in hand, because I need some help at the end of a working day — I discovered a post I started back in March. A post about planting onions. Well those babies are well on now. In fact, all the seeds I started back in February are sprouted and grown and in the ground…as you’d expect. Except for the lemon grass, which is doing amazingly well, but I haven’t yet researched what its needs are or dug it a hole it might like. This is making me think of what I might do next time I’m in the garden, but — guilt descending — something tells me it probably won’t involve putting lemon grass to bed.

Moving swiftly on for the moment: here is the garden, most of it, in a pic taken just yesterday! (See how up to date we are now!)

photo-39
The veg beds in June.

Let me explain what’s been happenin’. The closest bed to the camera is the one that grew all the wild cherry tomatoes and basil varieties so well last year. The toms were in the right-hand half. The left-hand half of this bed ended up being mostly fallow since the plants I put in there (edamame and herbs, I believe) were eaten by demon bunnies… or maybe box turtles, but I don’t want to imagine that. Anyway, that was last year. Obviously tomatoes couldn’t go back in to most of this bed — although try telling that to the volunteer tom seedlings. I must have weeded dozens of them out by now. Instead, I’m growing perennial onions and a row of leeks in an improvised raised bed. There was nearly a post on the making of that raised bed. Basically it involved a couple of days of hauling old cement blocks from another part of the property and hauling in bags of topsoil and Moonure (love that stuff!) from Home Depot. Both the onion sets and the leek seeds were gifts from Steven at Turkeysong. There should have been a post about that too, but if you’re following on Twitter or Instagram (and please do!), everything has been documented there. I think I’ll do some separate posts here to celebrate seed to harvest of the Turkeysong produce, so watch this space… Those leeks are going to be giant. COLOSSAL!!

To the left of the leeks and down a step, please notice one of my row covers, constructed out of halves of hoola hoop and chicken wire. The hoola hoop is sparkly to provide extra protection and glamour. You need a bit of glamour in the garden. Under that, although they’re pretty much bursting out now, are my fennel plants. Doing really well. When the cover comes off (probably next visit), I’ll take portraits of them and post. To their left are some tomatoes and basil. I’m only growing cherry-type tomatoes this year. Three different varieties: Matt’s wild cherry, because you can’t go wrong with those; Amy’s Sugar Cherry, and another Sugar/ Cherry variety whose name I forget. Hopefully all will make it to harvest and not get snacked on like my big heirloom varieties last year. Needless to say, I’m already on the look out for hornworms.

The middle bed has seen some changes! That used to be the Solstice Bee Garden — remember that? The first bed I dug! While my parents were visiting back in March (and helping put up a bit of anti-bunny wire netting round part of the perimeter of the deer fence… harder work than we thought, and we didn’t finish it…) I dug this bed out and replanted the three strains of native wild flower that had survived from the original garden (hyssop, bergamot and wild indigo). The flowers are now in a new bed running down one of the long sides of the deer fence. I’ll feature them next time… Where they used to be are now: Amish snap peas — zoom in on the pic, and you’ll spot them with their stick and string trellis. A bit of greenfly action on them, but otherwise making it. Near them (and still partially under a second row cover) are clumps of chamomile and some herbs — cat mint, echinacea and thyme. All grown from seed! At the extreme left of the bed, I’m growing peppers and trying to grow egg plants. But something is bothering the egg plants. They’re hanging on in there, but they don’t look all that happy.

On Sunday just gone I extended this middle bed. Not for use this year — just preparing the ground at this stage. I covered it with a layer of cardboard, and on top of that, a thick layer of leaf litter. By the autumn it should be ready for a cover crop.

And that leaves the hugelbeet, because the row of cotton isn’t visible in this pic. The hugelbeet has more tomatoes and basil, a couple of marigold plants and a fennel. Only the fennel isn’t doing well. It’s looking a bit crispy and unhappy. I was worried about that hugelbeet because I wasn’t sure it got enough sun. Turns out — now that I’ve visited earlier in the morning (ahem) — that it gets fantastic morning sun, and sun again in the late afternoon, so I think the toms in there will be fine. They need feeding, but I’m hopeful.

So that’s it. The state of play in early June!