Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Sauteed Radishes and Their Greens...and thinning carrots

Radish greens when young are wonderfully tasty.  Though they can be sauteed by themselves, their delectable, crimson roots can be included. Radishes become mild and a little sweet, somewhat like turnips when cooked. Though I enjoy mashed, buttered turnips, radishes are way more visually attractive than an off-white, mushy mound.

With its cheery green and red, this side dish would be a worthy addition to a Christmas dinner

Gardening holds many sensory delights, and tactile sensations are one of them. Radish leaves are a bit fuzzy, tickling my hands during harvesting and making me smile. Wash them and separate leaves from fifteen to twenty roots. Since my garden radishes are cylindrical ones, just a halving will do. With round radishes, cut several slices.

At the moment, the only vinegar in the world for me is Sherry.

Melt a tablespoon of butter in a skillet and saute briefly a minced garlic clove till translucent, about a minute over medium heat. Add a teaspoon of sugar and stir for a few seconds.  Toss in the radishes and stir occasionally until they start to brown.


Add the leaves and a tablespoon of Sherry vinegar and stir to mix everything together.

Too pretty!

Simmer, covered, for a couple of minutes until the veggies are tender, most of the liquid is gone, and the radishes are slightly glazed.  Any water clinging to the washed greens should be enough liquid, if not add a little water. Salt to taste, and to bring out the flavour even more, sprinkle a little fleur de sel just before serving.

Meanwhile in the potager, another root veggie, can pose a few challenges, though the flavour of home-grown carrots more than trumps any effort required, not to mention the extra bonus of soup-stock-enhancing leaves. One of the peskier aspects is to sow thinly since carrot seed is tiny. If sown thickly, meticulous thinning with its required clipped-off seedlings strewn about invites the carrot fly to come sniffing around to deposit its eggs which will hatch into larvae burrowing inside the carrot. Meanwhile you are happily walking around the carrot bed, lush with leaves, naively thinking about all that golden bounty which is sight unseen being devoured.

Mixing the tiny seed with clean, fine sand helps.  Also, after a while, the knack of thinly distributing seeds develops.  With my fourth sowing, the seedlings did not come up so thickly.


Thin the seedlings when they are about 3-4 inches high, preferably on a windless day and in late afternoon.  Clip them with scissors or using your fingers, pinch off level with the ground as not to disturb the remaining seedlings, leaving about 2-3 inches between each depending on the size of the variety.


Thinning the carrots while on my knees, I cursed and grunted in English, startling a trucker from Spain--his truck was marked with its country of origin--as he walked along the refrigerator truck depot entrance which flanks one side of the potager.  He also startled me, so we were mutually frightened for a few seconds until we managed to smile. At least we did not scream at each other like in that scene from the film, E.T. the Extraterrestrial. My noisy monologue would have been worse if not my using a gardening knee cushion. If you don't have such an indispensable item, please get one.


Try to remove all the felled seedlings.


Then cover the seedlings with horticultural fleece.  Keep watering as necessary right over the fleece and remember to check underneath for any needed weed removal from time to time.

For the last five days, I was out of commission because of a flu replete with muscle aches and extreme fatigue.  The only thing I managed to do was set out the potted seedlings each morning and bring them back in before dark. Today was the first day I began to think about any real work in the garden, like finally planting the remaining fifty seed potatoes--I had managed to plunk into the ground twenty-five early potatoes before the flu transformed me into a limp noodle.

The seed potatoes on the sill are well chitted and needed to go in the ground awhile ago

Dayo also is just recently getting back into his outdoor routine as he is mostly recovered from his paw injury though I am keeping a watchful eye. So we just hung out together while I took photos.

Precision patrol: Dayo neatly walks in between narrow rows of beets during his inspection

Dayo is pleased with how the David Austin climbing Falstaff rose with its damask fragrance is blooming

If you think Dayo is chomping on the cottage pinks, you are wrong.  He is judiciously weeding.

As the lilacs turn brown, the roses are starting to bloom. If you have lilacs but not the flu comme moi, carefully deadhead them just below the bloom so as not to eliminate next spring's flowering.

Those brown masses are lilacs well past their prime

One of the seven Queen Elizabeth hedge rose bushes

Unknown rose, but one of my favourites with its deep pink, ruffled blooms

The peonies are soon to follow.


As will the lavender.


And the honeysuckle.

There is just a hint of their fantastic fragrance in the air

Meanwhile the white Spirea and dark-pink Weigela are holding their own along with Heuchera's delicate, coral blooms.


Not to mention red Dianthus and pale-pink perennial geraniums.

Low growing sedum in the front and heather & Abelia in the background

À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

Sowing carrots
Thinly sliced raw radishes on buttered French bread
Braised radishes without greens
Raw radishes and their greens garnishing a stack of sauteed polenta slices with melted Edam
Sowing potatoes

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

The Second Harvest of the Season: Pea Shoots...and planting blueberries

Linguine is one of my favourite pasta shapes as I regard it as spaghetti trying to become a noodle, that is, a Goldilocks shape, not too narrow, nor too flat. Since there are pea shoots coming up nicely in the potager, I added their pretty tendrils, succulent leaves, and juicy stems to my basic linguine sauce of capers, parsley, garlic, and Parmesan.


Pea shoots have long been enjoyed in Asiatic cuisine and are becoming popular outside that region.  They turn a dark green when cooked, adding a fresh, light pea taste along with a vibrancy only greens can give. Pea shoots are delicious raw too, making great salads.

When bush pea plants are about a foot high and before they flower, pinch off about four to five inches of top growth including the tendrils, some partially opened leaf growth, a tender full leaf and the stem below it.  I take just one pinching from each plant.  Peas shoots are so good that late summer I will sow some peas in a large pot just for shoots so I can keep pinching them off since they will not be grown for peas also. Additionally, peas can be sowed thickly so when thinning, you will be harvesting pea shoots at the same time.


Gather the ingredients: for one serving, about an inch-in-diameter of linguine, about five or six pea shoots, a tablespoon of capers, a tablespoon of fresh, flat-leaf parsley, a tablespoon or two of extra-virgin olive oil, table salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste, a sprinkle or two of fleur de sel, and several tablespoons of freshly grated Parmesan.


Cook the linguine in boiling water for about eight minutes and drain, reserving several tablespoons of the pasta water. Using the same pot, warm the olive oil on low heat and add the minced garlic and the washed pea shoots.  Stir and cook gently for about seven minutes or until the shoots are wilted, dark green, and tender.


Add the reserved pasta water, a tablespoon of capers, and a tablespoon of minced parsley. Toss the linguine in this sauce and simmer for about a minute or until most of the pasta water is gone. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper.


Top with freshly grated Parmesan and fleur de selThough pricey, fleur de sel lasts a long time and is an indispensable addition after cooking or on raw foods when using fresh, simple ingredients. It taste-enhancing edge is lost when heated.

Though not quite a noodle, linguine encourages slurping, and this version particularly triggered noisy enjoyment.


Peas being a cool-weather crop are always a challenge for me to grow as early spring sometimes can be non-existent in the southwest of France with late winter becoming summer without a significant transition.

Happily the first pea flower opened, signifying pea pods will develop before June.

About a month after sowing bush peas, I fertilized the young plants with an organic, NPK balanced product.

Sprinkle fertilizer per packet's instructions, scratch in, and water well

When the plants started to sprawl, I strategically placed twigs to help support their growth.  Though the variety is bushy and not a vine, I have found out if the weather turns inclement with strong winds and rain, the small bushes get entangled, making harvesting difficult.

Weeded, fertilized, watered, twigged, and mulched bush pea bed!

Each spring I try to add some new plants to the potager.  This time, they are asparagus, early season/new potatoes, and blueberry bushes.  As blueberries require a very acid soil of about 4.5 pH and my soil is neutral with a pH of 7, I filled up a large planter with a potting mix for acid-loving plants.

At least two plants are needed to encourage fruiting

If the plant is root bound with roots coming out the bottom holes, then submerge the pot in a pail of water until it gets saturated. After tapping around the pot and on its bottom, I place the plant's main stem between two spread-out fingers while easing the blueberries out of their containers.


I always looks for slug eggs which resemble tiny beige pearls and squash them between my fingers.

There were quite a lot of slug eggs in one plant

I gently roughed the root ball all around with my fingers, so the roots would be encouraged to explore their new home.


To serve both as a mulch and as deterrent from cats digging pit stops in my lovely planter, I placed cardboard on the surface after watering the plants well.

Cardboard mulch weighted down with fragments of ever useful terracotta roofing tiles.

On the left, the strawberry beds are in full flower meaning strawberry harvesting is getting closer.

Various seedlings started indoors about six weeks ago are getting to close to being transplanted into their beds.


For a brief period, of about a week, lilies of the valley reign in the flower garden.


Dayo unfortunately has been unable to keep me company in the garden as he injured his back, right paw.  He needs to stay in for a few more days and on his regimen of medicines.


The fence separating our garden from Monsieur and Madame Ms is most likely the culprit.  Dayo scampers over it many times daily.      


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS:

Basic linguine sauce with roasted garlic paste
Sowing peas
Sowing indoors
Gruyere & pea shoots omellete

RELATED LINKS:

More information on growing and harvesting pea shoots by Willi Galloway at digginfood

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Polenta, Puhlease!...and the season's first harvest: radishes

When I was growing up in America, corn and its products comprised a big part of my eating.  The Calm One being of the British persuasion did not particularly warm up to corn bread, Indian pudding, hominy grits, succatash, and hushpuppies.  Additionally, the French regard corn mostly as animal feed.  So corn products and my cooking had parted ways quite awhile ago.  Though I knew of polenta, for some reason I never incorporated it into my menu planning.  Since creating a vegetarian menu for +Rajini Rao's birthday, I have become smitten with all things polenta.

Those dark flecks are dried thyme

Cooking polenta is a cinch: stir it into a pot containing three times its volume in water--I usually use one cup of polenta to three cups of water.  Keep stirring as you bring it to a boil, lower heat and simmer for about ten minutes until cooked.  Herbs can be added as the polenta is cooking.  Scoop out a sunny mound and top it with butter or grated cheese, and you got a nice, hot humdinger of a hunger-satisfying meal.  In these times of long gardening hours, I will make a pot of polenta and thyme--there is tons of it in the garden--and pour what we are not eating immediately into a small loaf pan, putting it overnight in the fridge.


Next day, I unmold and slice it.


The slices are then sauteed in butter on a medium flame.  Once browned on one side and flipped over, thin slices of cheese are placed on top.

Melting Edam cheese slices

As the radishes I planted about a month ago to mark the rows of slower growing carrots are now ready to harvest, I wanted to start including them in our meals.


Their refreshing bite added a nice taste foil to a stack of sauteed polenta slices and melted cheese.


In the potager, the nine fruit trees' blossoming is coming to a close.


Golden Delicious tree

Red Delicious tree in background

Their white and pale pink blossoms fall onto the grass in flurries.

Yellow flowering broccoli in foreground!

Fallen blossoms seen from the house resemble a dusting of snow

The asparagus crowns planted about two weeks ago are starting to sprout spears which of course I will not harvest so as strengthen their root system.


Most of the indoor sowing is done.  The seedlings are placed outdoors weather willing during the day and brought back in before dark.

Melon, tomato, basil, parsley, cucumber, butternut squash, Bell peppers, lettuce & Thunbergia Alata seedlings

Dayo becoming a furry centrepiece makes sure that I do remember to bring them in at twilight.


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

Planting asparagus
Sowing radish and carrot seed together

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Whooosh...It's Glorious Spring!

Spring has exploded in the southwest of France. Though all the rushing around is exhilarating, I try not to get overwhelmed as various windows of opportunities get ready to slam shut right on my soil-encrusted fingers.  Therefore from time to time, I walk through the garden while pretending I am a visitor who appreciates the whole garden and nothing but the whole garden with its freshness, colour, fragrance, inspiration, and companionship.

Maple & box elder in background; lilacs, bearded irises, roses & violets in foreground.

So invigorating to see pastel lilacs etched against the vivid blue sky.

How lilac panicles flower: lovely contrast between darker buds and opened blossoms.

Briefly I can forget the nagging evidence of pressing tasksWhat weeds which will become almost impossible to remove once the soil dries as hard a rock? What block bed needing spading this instant to allow sowing spinach so in one and half months I can transplant the tomatoes into the same bed?  What transplants bursting out of their small pots?  What fresh growth on established plants that will get too big for cuttings if I don't get my secateurs out this second? I don't see any!  I see just exuberant life.

The larger of the two apple trees is casting its shadow on the lawn.

If that fails, I go and munch some digestive biscuits which The Calm One keeps in a cupboard near my potting room in the sous sol and of which he thinks I am unaware.  Or I should say, he once thought I was unaware as the stack of cookies' rapid loss of height, that is, a reverse Pinocchio's nose, reveals my behaviour. Increased caloric output coupled with no spare time necessitates snacking, quick meals, and even better, food cooked by someone else. Knowing my last and long-awaited nursery order has finally arrived and that my presence in the kitchen will be sparse if not completely non-existent, The Calm One has made his family's classic, Kitchen Sink Potato Salad It will feed us for about four days. Yay!

Please pile it on! And then some.

It goes well with Saucisses de Strasbourg.  OK, hotdogs!


Walking around the quartier is also a way to relax and provides the opportunity to see others' front gardens.

Bluebells in the centre background, flanked by peonies and fronted with overhanging aubrieta.

In the potager, the garlic planted last autumn was recently fertilised. Dayo helpfully reminds me however that I still need to weed and mulch the bed.

Temporary feline mulch

I tell him that I am waiting for the fresh grass clippings to dry out.

I managed to spade around the small peach tree in the background, but still have to weed & fertilize it, like yesterday!

In between planting the onion sets and the early potatoes, I remembered to put spinach seeds in water for an overnight soaking which encourages faster germination.  Fresh seed is crucial to get a good yield from spinach.  Since I plant two crops, one in early spring and another in late summer, I go through a packet in one year.

I love my new & oh so soft gardening gloves:  chocolate/chartreuse suede & leather sensuality!


Spaded, one-inch-deep furrowed bed waiting for spinach to be sown

After draining the soaking water--I use an old, small kitchen sieve--dry the seeds on a paper towel so they can be more easily placed in the furrows (made with the pole end of the rake) and put about twelve of the large seeds, each spaced several inches apart, in short rows for a four-foot-wide block bed.  Using a rake, cover with soil, tamp down with the back of the rake, water and keep surface moist until they sprout.

Dayo himself gets overwhelmed at times:  should he sip from one of his preferred drinking vessels or should he inspect the newly arrived blueberry plants?

White flake in the watering can is an apple blossom petal; sometimes their determined flurries resemble snow.

Being conscientious, his thirst can wait a bit longer until he finishes the more pressing task of ensuring the blueberries are in a good state.


The bay leaf harvest starts in spring as their pungency lessens as late summer/autumn approaches, though I have been known to pick their evergreen leaves when there is snow on the groundHarvest alternately up and down the stems so as not to leave bare patches.  Wash, dry, and place on a rack or a plate for about two weeks until you can crack a leaf in half and the bracing and uplifting fragrance is noticeable.  Put in lidded bottles--I reserve the small jars which capers come in for storing dried herbs.


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

Planting garlic cloves
Sowing Onion sets
Planting potatoes