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Posts Tagged ‘growing garlic at home’

We learn something new every day…

Last year we planted garlic for the first time.  We grew it outdoors in an old concrete laundry tub, and were only able to produce small one-inch bulbs with tiny cloves.

This year, thanks to a tip from Gardening Australia, we stored the cloves in the fridge for a month before planting. In addition, we fed the plants with blood and bone, and this time most of them grew much larger…

Here’s one bulb, broken up and peeled.  Just three huge cloves…

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We’ve been short on time lately for preserving, so instead of making our usual passata, we’ve been slow roasting tomatoes in the oven instead.

We drizzle halved Roma tomatoes with oil and a scattering of salt, then pop them into a low oven for a couple of hours, until they just start to burn at the edges.  Halfway through the cooking time, we squish them with a potato masher to flatten them out.

These store beautifully in the fridge for about a week, but also freeze really well in ziplock bags, ready to be taken out and added to the pot whenever a concentrated burst of roasted tomato flavour is needed.

They also make a wonderful addition to dishes like Pete’s vegetarian paella…

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We’ve discovered that sometimes weeds help with pest control, like this one which seems to have attracted all the aphids in the patch, leaving the mint and garlic bug-free…

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Finally, we’ll never throw out a sprouting onion again!  We planted an old Italian sweet onion in the hopes of collecting seed, but had to move the chook dome before the plant had time to flower.  So we pulled it out and found it had grown into quite a lot of edible onion…

So now, whenever an onion starts to sprout, we plant it in the garden and ignore it.  If we need spring onions, I go out and break off some green shoots, and when it’s time to move the chickens again, we pull out whatever is there and use it in a stir fry!

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We tried growing garlic this year – not always an easy thing to do in Sydney, as we usually don’t get cold enough to set the bulbs.

We had planned to leave the plants in a bit longer, but the recent heavy rain necessitated some urgent harvesting before they rotted away. Once the leaves start to wilt, it’s best to keep all water off it from that time onwards.

Our garlic was planted in an old laundry tub and the resultant bulbs are pretty small – some are only a couple of centimetres (about an inch) in diameter.  But they have the most amazing aroma!  These now need to be cured (air dried in a shady spot) for two to four weeks – hopefully they’ll form hard papery skins and store well for the coming months.

A couple of the bulbs were threatening to rot, so we’ve broken them up for cooking.  We were delighted to find they’d formed proper cloves. The garlic was wonderfully pungent and strongly flavoured – definitely an incentive to try planting these again next year.  Our “crop” won’t be enough to see us through the year, so we’ll stock up again on Diana and Ian’s garlic once it’s ready.  It’s fabulous not to have to buy imported garlic!

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