Showing posts with label Cottage Pinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cottage Pinks. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Pasta with an Asian Touch...and the flowery spring garden

It's been awhile since I have discovered tagliatelle goes well with red pepper flakes, garlic, and ginger. This time, however, I added pea shoots, soy sauce, and omelette strips.

Soy sauce imparts a lovely golden colour

While the pasta--throw in the shoots after five minutes--is cooking, make a thin omelette with one or two large eggs. When it is set, flip over and brown that side. Remove to a cutting surface and let cool a bit. Slice into long, one-inch-wide sections and reserve.  Mince pepper flakes, garlic, and ginger and saute them lightly in a little oil in the omelette pan. Add a few tablespoons of the pasta cooking water. Toss the tagliatelle, shoots, and egg with the garlic, red pepper, and ginger in the skillet. Sprinkle, or in my case, slosh with soy sauce and stir well.

The flower garden is coming into being with such ease -- mostly pink there, red here, and white over there but also with a splash of blue and a glint of gold.

Cottage pinks are good for hiding the knobby knees of rose bushes

Roses are continuing to astound. The seven Queen Elizabeth hedge roses are in the middle of their first blooming flush. We should get several such flurries of pinkness until autumn.


I suspect this glowing, deeply coral-coloured rose is Tropicana.


The repeat-flowering bourbon rose, Ferdinand Pichard, is a robust bush with clusters of fragrant, white-and-red striped blooms.

The cute bud on the right can't wait to embrace maturity

Cottage pinks (Dianthus plumarius) rank way high on my favourite flower list. They are not named for the colour pink but for their distinctive edging, as if a pinking shears had its way with them.

A double blossom variety with a red center and petals flushed light pink

Sweetness cottage pinks will flower all through the summer and autumn. Like many varieties of this species, they are easy, evergreen, and rewarding perennials, that is to say, they will give many, many, many, fragrant flowers that come back again and again and again. However, these are the only variety that will put on a summer display from seed planted in late winter. With all the others, the propagation can be done more easily via cuttings from a few nursery plants. 


The messy split calyx of Mrs. Sinkins cottage pinks is more than compensated by its fabulous fragrance.


Miniature glads chez nous prefer to volunteer in already densely planted beds, especially of the iris and lavender persuasion.

Behind the gladiolus are early season potatoes

Though I sowed soapwort last spring and transplanted them just this past autumn, they are already generously covering not only the ground but their own foliage with pink flowers.

A soapy liquid can be made by boiling crushed leaves and roots in water

Herbs like thyme and sage (below photo) contribute to the flower show by happily presenting some blues now that the irises, bluebells, and lilacs are no more.

Can you spot the small beetle-like insect?

It is always a thrill when the fruit-bearing stock of our garden show their abundance of flowers/immature fruit.

Grapes!

The green fuzzy ovoid is a peach-to-be.


A soft wave of white petals is harbouring the developing blackberry.


À la prochaine!

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Why I Have a Crush on Pesto

Though pesto has oomph, its lusciousness remains approachable.

Fulsome, but never standoffish

It accompanies pasta well, coating each strand with its awesomeness.

Linguine & pesto

In its expansive way, it will pair with many different pasta forms.

Corkscrew pasta & pesto

At first it shyly plays its role as a garnish for soups.


Then with an encouraging nudge by a spoon, it snuggles up to everything else in the bowl.

Chicken soup & pesto

Pesto enhances omelettes as well does a dollop on hard-boiled eggs.


French bread finds its soulmate when it meets up with pesto.


Why this flurry of pesto dishes?  There was one remaining freezer container with last season's harvest.  One way to preserve basil is by processing the leaves with olive oil, then freezing it in suitable containers. Defrost, add garlic, Parmesan, and my preference, walnuts and...


Presto, you got pesto!


This time I did not add the full amount of olive oil I usually do, but instead relied on the small amount used in preparing the basil for freezing. This thicker version went better with the non-pasta dishes.

This season's impending basil harvest may look unassuming, but through time its delectable charm will develop.


In the potager, steady spring rains--fairly unusual here--has kept everything happily moist, the hose curled up, and the rain-harvesting tank nicely filled.

Peas in the centre are pleased with the cool rain,  but not the strawberries on the middle left

Cottage pinks, which would be my desert island flower choice, are prominent in the garden at the moment.  Pinks can be white, all tints of red, and yellow, and their distinctive edges have given pinking shears its name.

Red 'pinks' on the left and the fabled Mrs. Sinkins with its intoxicating fragrance in the right background.

One of my favourite varieties has pale-pink, double blooms tinged with yellow.

Cottage pinks cover the knobby knees of roses very well.

Pinks readily propagate by cuttings and by seeds if you can locate a nursery source.  Their stalwart, silvered foliage is evergreen, making it an all-year-round ground cover and edging plant.  There are many different varieties, some with delicate coloured fringes/centres and strong fragrance.

Dayo's return to the garden was short lived as his paw injury once again became worrying. He will be confined inside the house for several weeks.


He has a chance to catch up on his sleep.  At least that is what I tell him, especially when he stares forlornly through closed windows.


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

How to make chicken soup
How to make pesto and preserve basil
How to make herb/garlic rolls for freezing