Saturday, 19 March 2011
Back to school...
But I made my first ever dish of it tonight (how did I go so long not making it?) and it's delicious ... Even though I do say so myself!
I basically followed this recipe from the web, but it is fairly straightforward. And it was a bit of a bargain, as the cauliflower - still in perfect condition - had been reduced to 20p! Can't say fairer than that :-)
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Tastes of Lincolnshire...
The afternoon has been made even nicer by virtue of the fact that the latest edition of "Good Taste" magazine has just been published, and there are plenty of copies around the cafe to pick up and have a browse through.
I have managed to receive every copy since the project started (published by Tastes of Lincolnshire) and it's always a joy to read and find out about all the "foody" related things going on in the county. It's also reassuring reading about the people and producers who are passionate about local, seasonal, organic food - a subject becoming more and more important to me. As it should perhaps be more important to lots of people, as Lincolnshire produces a vast percentage of the veg grown in the UK (e.g. Did you know that Lincolnshire produces 57% of all the cabbages in the UK, on just 2.6% of it's area!)Now, I can't deny that I am always particularly drawn to the picture and recipes for glorious looking baked goods, cakes, ice-cream, local fruit & veg...I mean...who wouldn't be! But I do also take note of the articles on local growers and producers. This issue has an article on Rapeseed Oil (first grown in Lincolnshire as 'Coleseed' in the 13th century); one about trials growing more than 200 varieties of Tomato at Henrietta's Garden; an article on the ever-so-woolly 'Lincoln Longwool' sheep, one of 23 breeds on the 'at risk' list; and plenty of local news and events in the coming months.OK. So, this has sounded like a bit of an "advert", but I imagine every county has something similar, and something that supports local business, local growers, and local consumers can only be a good thing.
Coffee finished now. And yes - I did have a slice of home-made cake too!
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Friday, 18 March 2011
Steaming piles of...
I am collecting a load later today from a kindly local Freecycler. (You gotta love FreeCycling!)
Obviously it'll mainly go in various places in the garden and on the plot and be left to rot down for next year's use. But I will be using some on the Plot (as the owner said that the pile has been building up for years...good, wholesome stuff it sounds) in some of the beds. With care of course!
Wednesday, 16 March 2011
Fairweather Gardener (If but it were...)
It isn't that I lack commitment, or that I don't mean well... it's just that when it is cold, wet, grey and miserable, there seem to be so many other things on the "To Do" list - admittedly things that are indoors - that are more attractive.
I will use my time productively though. I am going to sort out the Pantry in the Church Lane Kitchen, to ensure I am sorted and ready for all the various goodies that will get created from the produce of the Plot & the Garden (if I ever get out there and actually grow stuff!) I may even be brave enough to post a before & after shot later...we'll see.
But despite the weather, the seedlings on the windowsill seem happy enough - more peas have pushed their way through the surface, joining a couple more Kale seedlings and now I have Broccoli coming up too. Hurrah!
Tuesday, 15 March 2011
Stirrings...
I spent a productive few hours down on the Plot, and started to get to grips with weeding one of the beds - which will hopefully contain (amongst other things no doubt!) Broad Beans, Potatoes and Brussels Sprouts, with some Marigolds and Foxgloves possibly thrown in for good measure. The planting combination along with the floral component, comes from ideas gleaned from Andrew Sankey's Companion Planting book that I mentioned before. If I get it right (!) then the plants should either work to support the growth of eachother or go some way to putting off the pests. We shall see - I have every faith in it!
Monday, 14 March 2011
Sowing the seeds...
And as I have managed to find a few quiet minutes sitting outside in the slowly setting sun, what better use of my time :-)
Here is the current list of seeds that I have sown in propagators (I use the term advisedly!) on the windowsill, ready for planting out further down the line on the Plot. They were all sown on the 7th March 2011... for future reference.
OH - and I have some 1st Early potatoes that I've planted into a growing 'sack' outside, to see what happens. They are "Home Guard" for this year. As it's my first year of growing any great volume of Potatoes, I have no experience of this variety - so it will be a voyage of discovery! I'll be putting the rest down on the Plot along with the maincrop "Cara" which I have chitting happily indoors. They'll be in this week I think...
Saturday, 12 March 2011
Starting to catch up...
My biggest excitement this week has been putting to use a present that I received for Christmas - a garden shredder. It has languished in the shed for a couple of months, but I've now put it to good use. I tested it out on a few prunings and bits & pieces from the garden, and was fairly happy with the results.
Walking back from the Plot I had noticed that behind the Church was a heap of dry, woody cuttings from one of the trees in the churchyard that had been 'pruned'. I checked with one of the church wardens that it would be OK, and promptly set to work nicking piles of it!
And what a treat - the resulting shreddings are brilliant... dry, crispy little flakes, that were just the thing I was looking for to cover the paths on the Plot. I had thought that I would need to end up buying bags of bark chips from the garden centre, so what a result! Not to mention the fact that it was free, local, organic - you can't say fairer than that ;-)I have started sowing some seeds indoors this week to get a few crops underway. There had been some which I'd "overwintered" in the garden, but due to somewhat inclement weather (!) only the garlic and onions have survived. I have plenty more of those filling up the Plot, and lots of packets of seed waiting in the wings, ready for the off. I do follow the instructions/timings on the packets to some degree - although not always - and often I go with what feels "right" at the time. I have no doubt that there are those who would gasp at my slightly haphazard approach to things. But I have to admit that that is half the fun! I will give an inventory once things are definitely on their way. I also planted up some seed potatoes in sacks yesterday.
Armed with bags full of fresh wood chippings, I started the process of covering the paths between the beds on the Plot. There are plenty more to cover, and I've only really done a light 'sprinkling' so far, but it certainly defines the beds really nicely, and makes it a much less muddy proposition, walking around the Plot. Now to decide what to grow in my newly defined beds.Although I have a long list of all the fruit and veg that I would like to grow on the Plot, I am also going to try my best to follow the 'Cottage Garden' principles of companion planting. Back in the Autumn, I made a trip to Gainsborough for their L.O.A.F. day - Local, Organic, Apples, Fairtrade. Great idea! There were lots of stalls, exhibitors, groups represented and so on, and also free talks given on various topics. I went to one on Companion Planting given by Andrew Sankey, which was fascinating and really struck a chord with me - especially the basic principles of working WITH nature, avoiding monoculture and making use of the experience of hundreds of gardeners and farmers over hundreds of years. That may all sound rather high-minded, but everything Mr Sankey outlined seemed to make perfect sense to me. So much so I even bought his book, and I'm not known for splashing my cash around!Suffice to say I have been happily doodling plans for the various beds I have on the Plot, and matching up those crops that I want to grow with their ideal growing partner (or "partners" -they just don't care, they're very free with their love some of these plants you know!) and then adding in any so-called 'tonic' plants to the mix as well. I am hoping for quite an interesting looking plot later in the season - watch this space!
Having cleared quite a lot of over grown hedgerow on the Plot, I came across a clutch of eggs, nestled in a damp hollow in the ground. It was fairly clear they had been there for some time and weren't part of a current brood. My allotment neighbour was called over, and he informed me they were most likely to be Pheasant eggs. Each egg was about 5cm long and had fairly non-descript colouring - perhaps there was the slightest hint of green/grey/blue - there were 4 of them lined up on the ground.And he also added a warning not to drop one or break it, as he said I'd soon know about it... warning heeded!
And down the garden path...
I finally got round to planting the VIctoria Plum tree that I had picked up a while ago in ALDI for the bargain price of £3.99. Well - it would have been rude not to! I do love the idea of having an "orchard", burt sadly there really isn't that much room in the garden. I have two mature apple trees (one a cooker, one an eater) of slightly indeterminate breeding. I think one is a Bramley Seedling and the other...? Well, who knows! So hopefully this year I can get them identified at an "Apple Day" event. I have also planted a Lincolnshire Heritage variety - Barnack Beauty - but this may not fruit for a while yet. So you see - what with the Plum now as well, I'm doing quite well!I'm am rather excited to see my rhubarb coming on apace. A couple of heads were donated to me by a family member, and the others I have grown from seed. The year after I planted them I thought they had ALL given up the ghost. Weedy, thin stalks, lacklustre growth... really not very happy. I lavished affection on them but to no avail. So to see them putting on a great show already, early in the season, certainly bodes well for Rhubarb Crumble and the like later on in the year. I also have a couple of new plants starting off that I will be putting in down on the Church Lane Plot, so if they do well, it may be a bumper year. Fingers crossed!Although I am rather focussed on growing things to eat, I am not averse to there being some beauty in the form of flowers in the garden (or on the Plot for that matter). Some were planted, and others have just appeared. I quite like it when that happens...
Tuesday, 8 March 2011
Time flying..
It is still clearly "March" which a bit of a nip in the air, but once you get working, you soon warm up. Yesterday was a "Church Lane Garden" day (photos later) and today I am heading down on the plot. Lets hope the weather holds!
A full, illustrated, and slightly more exciting post later today - off to do some work!