In the Garden – May 2022

The Citrus Garden

I’ve been conjuring up a plan to start planting vegetables outside of the vegetable garden, and it’s slowly coming to fruition.   The first garden on my list was the Citrus Garden, and rather than trying to work the entire garden, I mixed up a batch of manure and garden compost, and then proceeded to work it into the areas that I wanted to plant up.  With that done, the first thing that I wanted to do was relocate the broad leaf sage and then plant a traditional sage plant next to it.   With that quick task done, I set to work on the area where the Russian kale seedlings were to be planted, it looked like I had planted pvc pipe rather than seedlings, but it had a purpose.

You may, or may not note that I’m trying to keep walkways between the areas that are being planted for easy access.  The pathways will become compacted from being walked on, while the areas that are being planted up, mulched etc, will not – well that is the plan…  The little pathways will also provide easy access for weeding, planting and so forth.  The birds, however, have a different plan, and I now need to walk around, rake in hand, raking the mulch off the pathways and back onto the garden!

As the month progressed, I planted broccoli – Chinese (Kailaan), onions  – Barletta, French shallots, Swiss chard and begamot.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Strawberries

Already in place were quite a few strawberries, including three strawberry plants, ‘Reine des Vallees’.  Once you taste these little strawberries you really begin to understand what a strawberry should taste like.

The three ‘Reine des Vallees’ plants have thrived since planting, but as they are a clumping type of strawberry, they have very few runners, so anything that looks like it may have potential is pinned down to the soil to encourage growth.  The other interesting point  about this plant is that it doesn’t rely on the length of the day to produce fruit!  I find this fascinating, and am still amazed that I am continuing to pick berries now – the only problem is that they don’t make it into the kitchen, rather, they go straight into my mouth!

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I’m hoping that I can stop eating these delicious little berries straight from the plant so that I can make a simple little, refreshing sweet treat that I think they would be delicious in – Fresh Berries in Apple Jelly – no added sugar and just three ingredients!

Fresh Berries in Apple Jelly
Created for something light and refreshing to serve alongside a rich chocolate dessert!
Category: Brunch, Dessert
Style: Australian
Keyword: Apple, Berries, Fruit Jelly, Jelly
Quantity: 6 small glasses
Author: sbaskitchen
Ingredients
  • 300 ml pink lady apple juice
  • 3 gelatine leaves
  • 150 g of berries
Instructions
  1. Carefully warm the apple juice in a saucepan.
  2. Soften the gelatine leaves in a small bowl of cold water for 5 minutes.
  3. Add the softened leaves to the apple juice and stir over a low heat just enough to dissolve the gelatine, then remove from the heat, strain into a jug and allow to cool, (but not set).

  4. Pour a little of the cooled jelly mixture into the base of your glasses and allow it to just set in the refrigerator.
  5. Arrange a layer of berries on top, then add a little more jelly to cover the fruit.
  6. Refrigerate until set. Continue to build up the layers of berries by allowing them to set in the jelly before adding more.
  7. This will ensure the berries are evenly dispersed through the jelly.
  8. Allow to set in the refrigerator before serving.
Notes
  • If the remaining jelly starts to become too firm before you need it, simply warm it a little and then allow it to cool before adding the next layer of jelly and berries.

 

I don’t think that there is room for anything else in this garden at the moment, so just need to maintain and nurture!   That hasn’t stopped me from planning what to plant when the warmer months approach, though!

The Veggie Patch

Plantings
  • Broccoli – Purple Sprouting – Early (Bed #4)
  • Romanesco Broccoli interspersed with garlic in the little space left in Bed #6
  • Cabbage – Sugarloaf, and Broccoli – White Sprouting seedlings into veggie bed #9.  When that was done, I planted a basket full of golden shallots in between the rows.
  • Broccoli  – Green Sprouting and Spring Onion – White Lisbon (Bed #10)

A Peak into the Vegie Patch –
Beds 6, 10 and 9

Veggie Patch Plan

Weeding & Tidying

The root veg bed (bed #6) is neat and tidy, weeded  and mulched , the carrots are a bit patchy though – I’m having so much trouble with pests enjoying the tender carrot tops.  While I wasn’t sure if I should, I decided to tansplant the swede turnip seedlings, only time will tell if it was the right thing to do.  One thing though, the parsnips are looking fabulous!

With the tomato plants nearing the end of their productivity, it was time to remove the plants and dispose of them, and then bundle the stakes for storage.   Any tomatoes that were still green were removed from the plants and spread out on trays indoors for ripening.  It all takes time, but is rewarding to see everything tidied up and still have tomatoes for a while after the plants were removed.

Finally I found time to do some work on the compost bins, closing off compost bin #2.   Compost bin #3 is now being filled, but  I still have to empty compost bin #4, which is a wire frame that I use to finish off the compost, once that’s done I can move the contents of bin #1 into it for finishing.

Some seed sowing & Propagating

I have only had time to plant a few seeds – I know that it was late, but it was worth it.

  • Cauliflower ‘All Year Round’ (old seed), these seeds have proven to be too old and did not germinate, but there was no harm trying.
  • Cauliflower ‘Green Macerata’ (planted 3 May – germinated 9 May)
  • Cauliflower ‘Purple Siciliy'(planted 3 May – germinated 7 May)

On a whim, I also scattered a mixture of salad seeds in a tub just outside the back door.  I have no idea what’s in it, I can just recall mixing a whole heap of old seeds some time ago, figuring that they may make a nice cut and grow planting! They were old seeds then, but it seems that sometimes it just doesn’t matter.

Seed mix scattered into a pot, coming through.

During a recent break at a little coastal village,  I collected a few cuttings, I just can’t help myself!  They have all been potted and now I must wait…

  • Ivy Geranium – such a pretty pink…
  • Perfumed geranium – I think it’s citronella
  • Succulents
  • Osteospermum (African Daisy) – Purple
  • Osteospermum (African Daisy – White
  • Bougainvillea – Pink

If the bougainvillea cutting doesn’t strike, I think that I may just have to go and buy one – how good does it look in the terracotta pot?

Spring bulbs arrived

When you receive the spring bulb catalogues it is just sooooo hard not to order everything, so what I do is select just a few and order 12 -15 of each, that way I can plant up a pot with one variety or just plant one variety all together in the garden for more of an impact.   I’m looking forward to seeing my little selection in bloom…

  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Love Call’
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Timeless’ – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Strong Gold’ – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Bokassa Tulip ‘Rose’

However, each year I get an email advising of a mystery box of bulbs – honestly, who can resist!  I love this little surprise packet, discovering the contents and working out where I will plant its contents.

This year’s mystery package included:

  • Allium sativum  – Garlic. ‘Australian White’ (2 bulbs) – having already planted my garlic, I managed to find some space and planted these in Vegie bed #6
  • Hyacinthoides hispanica – Spanish Bells Blue (10 bulbs) – planted in Duchesses’ Garden
  • Ipheion uniflorum syn. Triteleia uniflorum – Spring Star ‘Light Blue’ (50 bulbs) – planted in the Woodland Forest Garden
  • Iris x hollandica – Dutch Iris Mixed (30 bulbs) – planted in pots
  • Freesia refracta alba – Freesia refracta alba ‘Grandma Freesias’ (20 bulbs)
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Ice Follies’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Ice Follies’ in the Mauve Garden
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Las Vegas’ (3 bulbs)
  • NarcissusDaffodil – Mixed (25 bulbs) – planted in pots
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Tête-à-tête’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Tête-à-tête’ in the Spring Bulb Garden
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Sunlover’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Sunlover’ in the Spring Bulb Garden
  • Narcissus jonquilla – Jonquil ‘Grand Monarch’ (5 bulbs)
  • Ornithogalum arabicum – Black Pearl Lily (6 bulbs)
  • Ranunculus asiaticus – Ranunculi ‘Red’ (20 corms) – planted in the ‘Laundry Garden’
  • Tulipa hybrida – Double Tulip ‘Chato’ (3 bulbs) – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Denmark’ (4 bulbs) planted in a pots

Well, that was a little snippet from the garden in May.

Until next time…

Happy gardening

Links:

 

 

In the Garden – May 2022

The Citrus Garden

I’ve been conjuring up a plan to start planting vegetables outside of the vegetable garden, and it’s slowly coming to fruition.   The first garden on my list was the Citrus Garden, and rather than trying to work the entire garden, I mixed up a batch of manure and garden compost, and then proceeded to work it into the areas that I wanted to plant up.  With that done, the first thing that I wanted to do was relocate the broad leaf sage and then plant a traditional sage plant next to it.   With that quick task done, I set to work on the area where the Russian kale seedlings were to be planted, it looked like I had planted pvc pipe rather than seedlings, but it had a purpose.

You may, or may not note that I’m trying to keep walkways between the areas that are being planted for easy access.  The pathways will become compacted from being walked on, while the areas that are being planted up, mulched etc, will not – well that is the plan…  The little pathways will also provide easy access for weeding, planting and so forth.  The birds, however, have a different plan, and I now need to walk around, rake in hand, raking the mulch off the pathways and back onto the garden!

As the month progressed, I planted broccoli – Chinese (Kailaan), onions  – Barletta, French shallots, Swiss chard and begamot.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Strawberries

Already in place were quite a few strawberries, including three strawberry plants, ‘Reine des Vallees’.  Once you taste these little strawberries you really begin to understand what a strawberry should taste like.

The three ‘Reine des Vallees’ plants have thrived since planting, but as they are a clumping type of strawberry, they have very few runners, so anything that looks like it may have potential is pinned down to the soil to encourage growth.  The other interesting point  about this plant is that it doesn’t rely on the length of the day to produce fruit!  I find this fascinating, and am still amazed that I am continuing to pick berries now – the only problem is that they don’t make it into the kitchen, rather, they go straight into my mouth!

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I’m hoping that I can stop eating these delicious little berries straight from the plant so that I can make a simple little, refreshing sweet treat that I think they would be delicious in – Fresh Berries in Apple Jelly – no added sugar and just three ingredients!

Fresh Berries in Apple Jelly
Created for something light and refreshing to serve alongside a rich chocolate dessert!
Category: Brunch, Dessert
Style: Australian
Keyword: Apple, Berries, Fruit Jelly, Jelly
Quantity: 6 small glasses
Author: sbaskitchen
Ingredients
  • 300 ml pink lady apple juice
  • 3 gelatine leaves
  • 150 g of berries
Instructions
  1. Carefully warm the apple juice in a saucepan.
  2. Soften the gelatine leaves in a small bowl of cold water for 5 minutes.
  3. Add the softened leaves to the apple juice and stir over a low heat just enough to dissolve the gelatine, then remove from the heat, strain into a jug and allow to cool, (but not set).

  4. Pour a little of the cooled jelly mixture into the base of your glasses and allow it to just set in the refrigerator.
  5. Arrange a layer of berries on top, then add a little more jelly to cover the fruit.
  6. Refrigerate until set. Continue to build up the layers of berries by allowing them to set in the jelly before adding more.
  7. This will ensure the berries are evenly dispersed through the jelly.
  8. Allow to set in the refrigerator before serving.
Notes
  • If the remaining jelly starts to become too firm before you need it, simply warm it a little and then allow it to cool before adding the next layer of jelly and berries.

 

I don’t think that there is room for anything else in this garden at the moment, so just need to maintain and nurture!   That hasn’t stopped me from planning what to plant when the warmer months approach, though!

The Veggie Patch

Plantings
  • Broccoli – Purple Sprouting – Early (Bed #4)
  • Romanesco Broccoli interspersed with garlic in the little space left in Bed #6
  • Cabbage – Sugarloaf, and Broccoli – White Sprouting seedlings into veggie bed #9.  When that was done, I planted a basket full of golden shallots in between the rows.
  • Broccoli  – Green Sprouting and Spring Onion – White Lisbon (Bed #10)

A Peak into the Vegie Patch –
Beds 6, 10 and 9

Veggie Patch Plan

Weeding & Tidying

The root veg bed (bed #6) is neat and tidy, weeded  and mulched , the carrots are a bit patchy though – I’m having so much trouble with pests enjoying the tender carrot tops.  While I wasn’t sure if I should, I decided to tansplant the swede turnip seedlings, only time will tell if it was the right thing to do.  One thing though, the parsnips are looking fabulous!

With the tomato plants nearing the end of their productivity, it was time to remove the plants and dispose of them, and then bundle the stakes for storage.   Any tomatoes that were still green were removed from the plants and spread out on trays indoors for ripening.  It all takes time, but is rewarding to see everything tidied up and still have tomatoes for a while after the plants were removed.

Finally I found time to do some work on the compost bins, closing off compost bin #2.   Compost bin #3 is now being filled, but  I still have to empty compost bin #4, which is a wire frame that I use to finish off the compost, once that’s done I can move the contents of bin #1 into it for finishing.

Some seed sowing & Propagating

I have only had time to plant a few seeds – I know that it was late, but it was worth it.

  • Cauliflower ‘All Year Round’ (old seed), these seeds have proven to be too old and did not germinate, but there was no harm trying.
  • Cauliflower ‘Green Macerata’ (planted 3 May – germinated 9 May)
  • Cauliflower ‘Purple Siciliy'(planted 3 May – germinated 7 May)

On a whim, I also scattered a mixture of salad seeds in a tub just outside the back door.  I have no idea what’s in it, I can just recall mixing a whole heap of old seeds some time ago, figuring that they may make a nice cut and grow planting! They were old seeds then, but it seems that sometimes it just doesn’t matter.

Seed mix scattered into a pot, coming through.

During a recent break at a little coastal village,  I collected a few cuttings, I just can’t help myself!  They have all been potted and now I must wait…

  • Ivy Geranium – such a pretty pink…
  • Perfumed geranium – I think it’s citronella
  • Succulents
  • Osteospermum (African Daisy) – Purple
  • Osteospermum (African Daisy – White
  • Bougainvillea – Pink

If the bougainvillea cutting doesn’t strike, I think that I may just have to go and buy one – how good does it look in the terracotta pot?

Spring bulbs arrived

When you receive the spring bulb catalogues it is just sooooo hard not to order everything, so what I do is select just a few and order 12 -15 of each, that way I can plant up a pot with one variety or just plant one variety all together in the garden for more of an impact.   I’m looking forward to seeing my little selection in bloom…

  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Love Call’
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Timeless’ – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Strong Gold’ – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Bokassa Tulip ‘Rose’

However, each year I get an email advising of a mystery box of bulbs – honestly, who can resist!  I love this little surprise packet, discovering the contents and working out where I will plant its contents.

This year’s mystery package included:

  • Allium sativum  – Garlic. ‘Australian White’ (2 bulbs) – having already planted my garlic, I managed to find some space and planted these in Vegie bed #6
  • Hyacinthoides hispanica – Spanish Bells Blue (10 bulbs) – planted in Duchesses’ Garden
  • Ipheion uniflorum syn. Triteleia uniflorum – Spring Star ‘Light Blue’ (50 bulbs) – planted in the Woodland Forest Garden
  • Iris x hollandica – Dutch Iris Mixed (30 bulbs) – planted in pots
  • Freesia refracta alba – Freesia refracta alba ‘Grandma Freesias’ (20 bulbs)
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Ice Follies’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Ice Follies’ in the Mauve Garden
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Las Vegas’ (3 bulbs)
  • NarcissusDaffodil – Mixed (25 bulbs) – planted in pots
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Tête-à-tête’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Tête-à-tête’ in the Spring Bulb Garden
  • Narcissus – Daffodil ‘Sunlover’ (5 bulbs) – planted with existing patch of ‘Sunlover’ in the Spring Bulb Garden
  • Narcissus jonquilla – Jonquil ‘Grand Monarch’ (5 bulbs)
  • Ornithogalum arabicum – Black Pearl Lily (6 bulbs)
  • Ranunculus asiaticus – Ranunculi ‘Red’ (20 corms) – planted in the ‘Laundry Garden’
  • Tulipa hybrida – Double Tulip ‘Chato’ (3 bulbs) – planted in a pot
  • Tulipa hybrida – Triumph Tulip ‘Denmark’ (4 bulbs) planted in a pots

Well, that was a little snippet from the garden in May.

Until next time…

Happy gardening

Links:

 

 

The Vegie Patch – Six weeks later!

It is six weeks since I announced that The Corner Patch had now become a Vegie Patch, and look at it now.

With the Christmas Festivities in full swing, I was struggling to find time to get out to work in it, but somehow managed to steal an hour here and there, and while most things have been planted much later than they should have been, they appear to almost be growing before our eyes.

All the fruit trees have now been trimmed and tied to the wires to train them for the espaliered fruit edging of the area, and, with much persistence, Duchess, for the moment, has been blocked from the area – every now and then, I’d hear a noise, or see a movement, and there she was, making her way along the edge totally oblivious to the fact that I was there! But letting her know she had been discovered and best leave, she would show me where she was entering thus giving me another job to do, in blocking her route!

Some of the plants in the patch have travelled with us, and are siblings of plants that my parents grew quite some years ago – rhubarb, strawberries and asparagus, I also continue to try and grow everything from seed. Having the plants from my parents makes the vegie patch an even more special place to be.

All of the strawberries (except the three pretty pink flowering ones) are siblings of those that my beautiful dad, who is now with the angels, gave to me many years ago, and the asparagus, my gorgeous mum nurtured to what is now a good sized patch at our old family home.

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It was so hard to leave the asparagus run up to fern – but if we want to have a bounty of this delicious treat we must be patient – hopefully next year!

 

The rhubarb, well, I think it’s from plants that we had growing when I was a child, and that is a long time ago! I still remember the bowls of rhubarb and custard our mum would put before us to finish a meal. We were very lucky…

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The rhubarb patch.

I persist with growing almost everything from seed – unfortunately I had to admit defeat on a couple of fronts, although having planted more seed, maybe should not have caved so early. But I am so excited to say, that given I had a lot of seedlings ready to go, we are already enjoying the fruits of our labour at meal time – strawberries with our breakfast; salads using various leaves, edible flowers and fresh herbs; snow peas in our stir fries, rhubarb and strawberry compote with our yoghurt; and our one solitary apricot became a little dessert to finish an evening meal this week.

They say that gardening is wonderful for your health – how true. You can exercise, relax and wind down almost simultaneously! You are providing flowers to fill your vases, food for your table and nutrition for your body! What a wonderful and giving hobby it is…

Until next time…

Bon appétit!

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Links:

Rhubarb and Strawberry Compote

Sustainable Gardening Australia

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Paddock to Plate!

Part of what I am about is using local and home grown produce as much as I can, so recently I purchased another side of lamb from Forge Creek Lamb, and while you can select the cuts that you would like, I prefer to dress the lamb myself. You see I was raised on a sheep and grain farm about 500 km from where we now live, so am quite familiar with the various cuts of lamb, having observed and helped my mother and father dress many during my childhood and teenage years. One thing that I learnt was that there was very little waste. My mother was meticulous ensuring that all the meat was saved and frozen, even the tiniest of skerricks! Fat was rendered down and the fresh dripping was used to fry the BEST fish and chips – usually redfin fish that dad had caught, the bones were used to make stock for soups, the little bits were used to make pies, and so on.   So with that memory, I set to work.

Firstly I set up my kitchen – bowls each for meat to mince, casserole meat and sausage meat set up close to where I would be dressing the meat; a baking dish for the bones; a bag for the fat (I think we’re probably a little more wary of animal fat nowadays, so mainly use olive oil and peanut oil for frying) were close by; my stand mixer was set up and the mincing attachment placed in the fridge; knives steel, hacksaw and chopping boards were layed out; an area with my vacuum seal machine was set up with various sized bags at the ready; and, finally a pile of tea towels were stacked up. Then I set to work….

So this is what happened

  • The loin was boned out and tied at one inch intervals, wrapped tightly in plastic wrap, and then popped in the fridge for a while, before being cut into little noisettes.
  • Little cutlets were cut, their long rib bones were boned from the flap before being trimmed, and all of the excess fat was removed.

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  • The flap takes time as there is quite a bit of fat to be removed, and invariably you will end up with the odd hole here and there, but they are easily filled with some offcuts. When it was done, it was laid out flat on a large piece of plastic wrap and then rolled up ready for packaging and freezing. The flap is delicious filled with lamb sausage mince, rolled and wrapped in prosciutto and then cooked at low temperature for a while . It makes for a delicious hot meal with veg, but alternatively makes an amazing sliced cold meat for sandwiches or salad.
  • The shank was removed from the shoulder and Frenched.
  • The shoulder was partially boned out.
  • The neck takes quite a bit of work, removing the ribs and cutting the meat away from the vertebrae. But it is well worth the effort with the finished product rolled and slow cooked for a delicious warming meal.
  • The hind shank was removed from the leg and Frenched.
  • The hind leg was totally boned out and butterflied in readiness for summer family gatherings. It will be cooked on the BBQ.

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  • The chump was boned out.
  • Larger off-cuts were set aside for casserole and stir-fry
  • Smaller off-cuts were minced
  • Fattier off-cuts were minced together with seasonings to become sausage mince.
  • Finally the bones were roasted and then placed into a large stock pot with water, onion, celery, carrot, bay leaves and peppercorns and left to simmer away for a few hours. After being strained and allowed to set in the fridge, the fat was removed and the stock was pressure canned in Mason jars for use at a later date.

I know it sounds like a lot of work, and I can’t lie, it is! But I have a beautiful product to work with and the most amazing childhood memories to guide me along the way. I hope that my efforts have ensured that the lamb I cook has been treated with the utmost respect – from paddock to plate!

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Now with all this beautiful Forge Creek Lamb in the freezer, I have the delightful task of coming up with the best way to prepare and serve it. The first meal that I prepared with it used the little lamb noisettes. I simply pan fried them to pink and placed them on a small disk of fried potato.

To accompany these little noisettes we had steamed peas, baby broad beans and asparagus topped with roasted baby rainbow carrots. On the side I put a little roasted beetroot and goats cheese, and to finish it off, I prepared and a delicious sauce with the lamb stock, white wine and aromats. I was so happy with this plate of food, inspired by the lamb and a trip to the local farmer’s market where I purchased all the vegetables to accompany it.

Of course we had to have dessert – Tarte chantilly aux fruits rouges – a berry and cream pie with the first strawberries from our garden.

The work still continues on the corner patch, it is now fenced and has a gate. We’re still waiting for the timber to box the beds, but hopefully it will be ready next week! I have managed to get a few things planted though, including a Boysenberry.

Until next time…

Bon appétit!

Links:

Tarte chantilly aux fruits rouges – Berry & Cream Pie

Slow Cooked Lamb Chump

Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks

Glossary

Corner Patch

Forge Creek Lamb