Posts Tagged ‘Gardening’


Well the green beans have been coming in really well for about three weeks.  While we all love fresh green beans, we can only eat so many steamed and buttered green beans.  I decided to start coming up with some different recipes.  This one is a nice combination of some starches and vegetables.  It makes it a bit more filling than the straight green beans by themselves.  Another thing that makes this recipe particularly excellent is that 100% of the ingredients come from the garden or our pantry.

The ingredients:

  • Fresh Green Beans
  • Fresh Yellow Potatoes
  • Bacon Flavored Textured Vegetable Protein (Bacos)
  • Minced Garlic
  • Dehydrated Onion
  • Olive Oil

Dice the potato into 1/4″ to 1/2″ cubes and boil for a few minutes.  The goal is to cook them without letting them get too soft.  Slightly undercooked should be about perfect.  Drain and set aside.  Begin steaming the green beans.

In shallow pan heat the olive oil and begin to sauté the garlic and onion.  Add the potatoes and lightly brown the outside edges of the potatoes.  After the potatoes have browned, add the drained green beans.  Mix well and serve.

Finished Beans and Potatoes

Finished Beans and Potatoes

I have some questions for you today.

  • How many butchers are in your hometown?
  • How many cheese makers?
  • How many mills to grind grain into flour?

While self sufficiency is great.  Can we realistically expect everyone to butcher their own chickens?  Grind their own grains?  Make their own candles?  I just don’t think we can be a great nation with a few million self sufficient islands that never talk to each other and need no help from each other to make it through the week.  Local farmers and gardeners are the first thought that comes to mind when people think “Eat Local”.  The reality is that the farmer is but one link in a local chain that needs to be reestablished if the local food movement is to gain any significant ground.  Small local bakeries, mills, deli’s and creameries need to be established and utilized if the movement if to gain ground.

As a community we need to find a balance between buying bread baked in Kansas City and shipped throughout the US, and everyone having their own little patch of wheat, grinding it into flour, and baking it into bread in their back yard.  Maybe if farming isn’t your cup of tea you need to consider becoming a butcher, baker, or candlestick maker.

Iceberg lettuce is the best selling lettuce in the United States. It is a head lettuce.  It has almost no flavor.  It has very little fiber and a low nutritional value.  In fact, the most abundant nutrient in iceberg lettuce is water.  However, due to its superior shipping qualities, iceberg has been the most available and best storing in small commercial packages which accounts for it popularity.  Iceberg lettuce has become so invasive in mainstream American cuisine (an oxymoron?), that many people feel the flavor, texture, and color of leaf lettuce indicates that something is wrong with it.

Personally I prefer the flavor that leaf lettuce brings to the salad.  It doesn’t quite carry the crunch that a head lettuce does, but if you have some good radishes or celery in the salad, the missing crunch of the lettuce isn’t missed at all.  I particularly like the way the slight bitterness of the lettuce merges with the sweetness of the carrots.  Followed by the bite of the radish on the tongue.  Maybe I taste all these subtleties because I very rarely put any kind of salad dressing on my salad.  The closest I come to using a salad dressing is a bit of black pepper or a squeeze of lemon juice.

Unfortunately this marginalization of our food is happening in all of our natural food stuff.  Tomatoes that have been bred to store better and bruise less during shipping are selected over tomatoes that taste best.  Apples that are uniform in color and shiny to catch the eye are selected over apples that have the best taste.  We’ve even gone as far as sacrificing the taste of fresh watermelon for the convenience of eliminating the seeds.  Our arrogance in food production and selection stretched to fruit trees bred and selected that will not bear fruit.  Individuals that wanted the fruit tree as an ornamental were annoyed with the fruit drops throughout the season.

One of the scariest outcomes of the industrial produce revolution is a loss of genetic diversity in our crops.  Today eleven varieties of apples comprise 90% of our apples.  41% of those are Red Delicious.  According to Gary Paul Nabhan 86 percent of the apple varieties that existed before 1900 have been lost.  We will never get them back.  Why is this loss of variety sad and not just disappointing to our pallets?  A virus, mold, or other disease could come along and wipe out the narrowing plant diversity, with no alternatives that might be resistant to the new one.  Remember the American chestnut tree?  Probably not if you were not alive before 1940.  Chestnut blight destroyed about 4 billion American Chestnut trees, and reduced the most important tree throughout the American East Coast to insignificant presence.  what if that happened to the Red Delicious Apple, or the Beef Steak Tomato?  Slow Foods has put together an excellent brochure on Forgotten Fruits, it is well worth the read.  You can download the PDF here.  As part of RAFT’s 2010 “Forgotten Fruits” initiative, this brochure details the history, decline, nursery practices and local restoration efforts designed to bring back the most endangered heirloom apples to orchards, backyards, farmer’s markets, restaurants, and home kitchens across the country.

What can you do?  It’s easy if you are a gardener.

  1. Plant an heirloom variety.
  2. Enjoy the fruit of your labor.
  3. Save the seed.
  4. Share the seed.
  5. Plant the variety again next year.

If you can afford the 40.00 fee, join an organization like Seed Savers Exchange (http://www.seedsavers.org).  There are sites run by generous people like Johnny Max for trading seeds that don’t cost a thing.  He has set up a site I’ve used a couple times. Heirloom Seed Exchange (http://www.heirloomseedswap.com/).  You can even buy heirloom varieties at the local hardware store.  Just look for them and try to plant a variety or two.  You won’t be disappointed with the taste and you may become addicted to the fun of preserving our food heritage.

I seeded several paper pots of tomatoes a couple weeks back.

Paper Pots

The tomatoes were the Roma variety.  When I seed in the paper pots I will typically sow two seeds per pot and then thin the seedlings to one plant per pot.  Tomato seeds are very easy to save your own on, have a fairly decent viability time, and are pretty carefree as far as seedlings go.  That said, I don’t feel as guilty when I have to thin them.

Freshly Seeded Tomatoes

Pots Just Seeded with Tomatoes

Thinning seedlings is important because they will compete with each other in the same pot or cell and both will suffer.  Roots will compete with each other for moisture and nutrients.  The leaves of one seedling may shade the leaves of the other to prevent the plants from growing at their full potential.  This shading can quickly cascade into the elimination of the weaker seedling.

There is usually one or more of the seedlings in a pot that is stronger than then other.  When this is the case the choice of which seedling to eliminate is simple.  When it is fairly even, I will usually eliminate the one closest to the edge of the pot.  Other items to consider when deciding thinnings are: straightness of stem, size of leaves, appropriate shape of leaves, color of plant, and speed of germination.

Two Week Old Tomato Seedlings

The best method for thinning any seedling it to cut the stem at the soil line.  This method is much better for the other plant(s) in the same pot.  There is no disturbing of the roots and no risk of crushing or tearing the other plant’s stems.  When I thin my tomatoes, it is usually a good time for me to rotate them in the starting trays as well.  A down side of starting seeds under fluorescent lighting is the the seedlings at the edge of the light receive less light and will need to stretch to reach the center where the light is the strongest.  Unfortunately this will lead to some unruly and twisted stems if not handled with the plants are young.  All you need to do is move some of the seedlings from the outside to the center and vice versa.

Close up of a tomato seedling

The window is indeed closing on starting tomatoes from seed in Michigan.  I will typically put my plants outside about the Memorial Day Holiday Weekend.  Our last frost date is May 15th, so Memorial Day Weekend puts us a couple of weeks past than and reduces the chance of a frost well below the nominal 50%.

These plants should be ready to go out by the middle of May.  I have a couple wall-o-water devices that I will put around some of my tomato plants, but with the Romas a harvest all at once is preferable, because they are used for canning sauces, salsas, and pastes.  A lot of tomatoes at one time is a good thing for efficient processing.

So get to planting if you haven’t yet!

There are basically three ways to plant onions: direct seeding, transplants, and sets.  Tonight I’m going to talk about sets, because that is what I put in the garden before the sun went down.

Holes awaiting the insertion of the sets

Sets are onions that were planted as seed the previous year. Sets are usually purchased, but  you can raise your own sets but you’ll need to direct seed them late June so they are large enough to harvest by fall.  Bigger isn’t better when it comes to sets.  Big sets may split into two bulbs an have a tendency produce a flower stalk very early.  BTW don’t try to store it or let it mature further.  It will not put any energy into growing larger and in will have a significantly reduced storage life.  Pull and use or dehydrate at once, or consider saving the seed.

Once you have your sets, sort into large and small. Plant the larger sets for green onions and plant the smaller ones as storing onions.  The smaller sets will produce the bigger onions.  Onions will tolerate a light frost.  I try to plant mine in mid April here in Michigan. Plant onion sets, pointy end up, 1½ to 2″ below soil.  Pack the soil around the bulbs. Choose a location with at least 6 hours of direct sunlight. More is even better.

Sets are not the only thing to do with onions however.  You also need to look into transplants and direct seeding.  If you want to raise a winter’s supply of fresh onions, you’ll need to plant onions from seedlings in addition to onions from sets.  I’ve noticed that onions from sets don’t store as long as those from seeds.  A way around this is to dehydrate your onions and store them that way.  It may be a bit smelly, but it is our preferred method of storing onions.

Red onion sets next to a still open hole.

Sets are onions that were planted from seed last year. Sets for white, yellow and sometimes red onions are available from mail order catalogs and even some grocery stores. You can raise your own sets but you’ll need to direct seed them in the garden by July so they can grow big enough to harvest and store in fall. Buy onion sets that are firm and marble size but have not sprouted. Big sets may split into two bulbs or produce a flower stalk very early. (When an onion sends up a flower stalk, pull the onion and use it; it will not continue to grow larger nor will it store well.) Sort sets into those large than a dime and those smaller. Plant the larger sets for green onions and plant the smaller ones with adequate spacing: they’ll produce bigger onions.

Because sets tolerate light frost, you can plant them outside when temperatures reach 48 degrees, around the middle of April in the Twin Cities. Plant onion sets, pointy end up, 1½ to 2″ below soil. If you’re planting big sets for green onions, space them close, almost touching. If you’re planting them for full size onions, space them 3 to 4″ apart. Firm the soil around the bulbs. Choose a location with at least 6 hours of direct sunlight. Sun all day is even better.

If you want to raise a winter’s worth of onions, you’ll need to plant onions from seedlings in addition to onions from sets, as onions from sets don’t store as long as the others.

Transplants:
Raising your own seedlings for transplants gives you a jump on spring in late winter, more choices of varieties to raise, plus it’s less expensive than purchasing transplants. Transplants are available through mail order and some garden centers. Regardless of the source, transplants will give you bigger onions by fall. Onions need to be planted indoors 8 to 12 weeks before transplanting outside, so plant the seeds in February to transplant onion seedlings outside in May. Buy only as much seed as you will use this year. Onion seeds don’t remain viable for much over a year.

The most important thing to remember when buying onion seed is day length, especially if you’re ordering from a national mail order firm. In Minnesota, we need to buy “long day” onion seeds because our summer days can be 16 hours long.

In the south, day length varies less and averages about 12 hours of light per day. Onions for southern gardeners are “short day” onions. You can raise short day onions in Minnesota but they will bulb as soon as day length reaches 12 hours and you’ll get small onions.

Long day varieties start to bulb when day lengths are about 14-16 hours. If you start onion seeds indoors, keep lights on only 12 hours each day to give the plants a suitable night. Onion seedlings will form bulbs too early if exposed to long days at any time during their development. You will not get anything bigger than sets.

Plant onion seeds ¼-½” deep in a sterile seed-starting media. They can be planted 3 to a cell in recycled four or six packs or sow thickly in rows if you plant in a deep (4″ to 6″) flat or other container. Keep tops trimmed 3-4″ tall. Water regularly to maintain adequate soil moisture.

Onion seedlings need to be hardened off before transplanting outside, after danger of frost has passed. Expose young plants to outdoor conditions gradually, over a two week period.

Plant seedlings 4″ apart and just deeply enough to catch in the soil. When mature, they’ll appear to sit on top of the soil.

Once outdoors, keep onions well watered, about an inch a week. Watering is critical when the bulbs start to swell. Water stress produces stronger flavored bulbs. Add fertilizer, based on a soil test, at planting, then again when leaves are 6″ tall and lastly when bulbs are starting to swell.

Direct seeding:
If you want to plant onion seeds directly in the garden, you’ll probably be most successful with green onions (also called scallions). Our short season makes success less likely when direct-seeding bulb-type onions.

Plant onion seeds in a sunny location where soil drains well. Cover the seeds with ½” of soil and water them regularly. Harvest when the white portion is pencil thick.

Harvest: