In which there is a big Farm brag: all the crops and what we do with them
It's been a heckuva growing season--and we aren't done yet!
Photo of the Haenaheim garden taken this morning. Corn is almost ripe, salad greens are almost big enough to vote, the herbs are demanding union pay. |
I make regular visits to Bellingham, and pack as much garden produce as I can manage into "goodie baskets" for my mom and auntie.
"We don't care about rain. We halp pick goodies for Grannie." |
I'll try to describe things in chronological order--no promises, though. The summer flew by and we were frequently swamped
We start the spring harvests with salad crops: spinach, chard, radishes, peas and baby carrots, plus calendula flowers.
pretty |
The rhubarb is the first non-salad crop to explode out of the ground. We really have too much of it, but it's hard to just kill some of the earliest plants on the property because they are so exuberant after the long winter.
Foxie Loxie and April rhubarb. He remains small. The rhubarb doubled in size by the end of May. |
I mostly use rhubarb to make rhubarb marmalade, but Nancy makes pies and gives some to me! I consider this a very good arrangement. |
Another "early crop" is strawberries, which start to ripen in mid-May.
The garlic was not a tremendous success this year because I planted them in a place where they didn't get enough sun.
Ingredients
- 4 roughly chopped garlic scapes
- 1/8 tsp sea salt
- 1 egg yolk
- 1/2 lemon, juiced (about 1 Tbsp)
- 1/3 C olive oil
- 1/3 C vegetable oil
Instructions
- Wash and roughly chop the garlic scapes. Trim off and discard the flower bud. In a food processor finely mince the garlic scapes with the salt.
- Add the egg yolk and lemon juice to the food processor and pulse until fully incorporated.
- Next, with the food processor running, very, very slowly pour in both of the oils. It’s important to add them slowly so that it emulsifies with the egg. Continue to process until the oil is fully incorporated and the aioli is creamy like mayo.
- Serve immediately or store in the refrigerator, supposedly for a week but it actually tastes fine for a month.
I don't love raspberry jam, but since I grew ginger this year (in the bathroom, the only place warm/humid enough for tropical things like ginger), I made ginger-berry jam. |
Ginger-Berry Jam
Ingredients
- raspberries
- ginger (if you freeze the ginger root, it's easy to grate it finely without being overcome by stringy fibers!)
- lemon juice
- sugar
Combine the amounts you have in a big pot over medium heat and adjust ginger and sugar for flavor. When it's bubbling gently, add some pectin (about 1 package or 6 tablespoons for every 4 cups of berries) and let it boil for a minute or two. Then spoon into jars and water bath can according to the directions on the pectin box or the Ball Canning Book.
This was a record year for blueberries. I think we harvested the first berries in July, I am still picking a half-quart every week now in September.
Pro tip: buying mason bees this spring definitely boosted the blueberry yield! |
I don't do anything fancy with most berries--rinse them off, put them in freezer bags, and toss them in the freezer until winter. |
The cucumbers this year are astonishing. We lost the first round of plants to slugs, so I picked up a few cuke starts at the farmer's co-op and threw those in the ground. When I checked on them a month later, they were barely growing. When I came back after that, they apparently regained the will to live and now I'm swamped with them!
This one looked a lot like the pufferfish we have at the library. |
Also, after years of trying unsuccessfully to grow dill, it grew.
I DIDN'T PLANT ANY DILL THIS YEAR. Several plants grew from seeds that I must have planted two or three years ago! |
Dill relish, sweet relish, and some refrigerator pickles...and the plants aren't done producing yet. |
I did plant onions, but I didn't expect them to grow much. |
I've never been successful with onions either. Until, apparently, now. Surprise!
I planted lots of beans this year, because Pooh Bear is not a fan of pumpkin and we needed some kind of vegetable to add to his food bowl each day. Patty suggested beans, so I grew a bunch.
Volunteer calendula (leftovers from Monica's tenure in this space) overran the beans eventually, but since the soil was poor I let them grow to help amend the dirt. |
The poor dirt didn't yield many potatoes, with the exception of the fingerling variety called "Makah Ozette," which didn't seem to mind the lack of nutritious soil and my spotty watering routine in early spring.
I've grown sunflowers for yonks--long enough that the birds and the plants themselves are doing some of the seedings for me. Since I probably started with hybrids, the plants have de- and re-hybridized into random and weird little varieties unique to this garden.
Sunshine all summer long |
It's been brilliant to have Jim join me in the gardening adventures this year. We spent last winter and spring (and um, also all summer) watching "Gardener's World" episodes together, which has inspired and educated us both.
Jim took over the scruffy bed below the house, and has turned it into a properly landscaped bed that looks like it belongs to adults instead of chipmunks. |
We also planted more flowers around the yard and in the veg patch, simply to make the local bees happy. |
I'm not gonna lie: the gardens in September are pretty chaotic.
But through all the weeds and volunteer flowers, we are still harvesting heaps of food.
|
Still pending:
Looks like we'll be making apple cider this fall! |
Yes, I'm getting tired. But who cares?
I can sleep when the sun goes down. |
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