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Posts Tagged ‘kohlrabi’

I’ve missed you all!

We’ve had a fun couple of weeks, although the weather here has been a bit bonkers. The combination of mild sunny days with heavy rains has led to a burst of growth in the garden.  The irises, which were slow to start this year, are finally greeting passersby from our front yard.

In the enclosed verandah, the tomatoes seem to have stagnated, possibly due to the lack of light and heat. Hopefully October will bring warmer days to ripen the fruit.  The plants are now eleven weeks old and festooned with dozens of green tomatoes in varying sizes.  Here are the largest…

A tiny Venus Fly Trap has taken up residence with the toms in the verandah. We brought it back from the Better Homes and Garden Show, and it’s been quite the talking piece at dinner. We couldn’t resist setting off one of the traps (just once) to see how quickly it closed!

The potatoes that we planted in hessian bags a month ago are growing tall and strong.  They’re almost ready to hill up…

The assorted dwarf beans from New Gippsland Seeds have all germinated, but no luck so far with the snake beans – I suspect we’ve been a little overambitious and sown them too early.  We’ve planted more in seedling pots on top of the fish tank to see if they’ll shoot…

Our bed of kohlrabi is thriving.  We’ve been really happy with these plants – they taste like cabbage, are incredibly easy to grow and use, and they’re not plagued with pests in the same way that other brassicas are.  They also grow well from directly sown seed…

We peel, julienne and stir-fry the swollen base, then feed the leaves to the chickens and the scraps to the worms…

We made a decision this year not to plant any heading lettuce.  This small patch was grown from scattered seed, and I harvest salad leaves with a pair of scissors every two or three days.  It grows back remarkably quickly – even though I’d given the section below a severe haircut just a few days earlier, the gap was indiscernible. Wouldn’t it be lovely if all bad haircuts grew out that quickly?

Despite our decision not to plant heading lettuce, we were delighted to find these green oaks (at least that’s what we think they are) self-seeding themselves all over our yard.  They’re deliciously sweet and surprisingly hardy…

The celery is growing very well this year.  The nice thing about having celery in the garden is that you can bring in stems as needed, without pulling out the entire bunch…

The blueberries have survived their transplant shock-free and are ripening up…

Our young lemon tree is in its second year and trying to fruit, but Pete’s not confident that any of them will grow to full size yet…

The first crop of peas are finished, but this new batch are just starting to flower.  We have an entire month of rain predicted, which will really test this variety’s claimed mildew resistance…

And some photos for Joanna of a lovely acrobatic Soldier Bird feasting on a neighbourhood bottlebrush tree. Also known as the Noisy Miner (not to be confused with the pesky Indian Mynas), both the bird and the tree are native to Australia.  Aren’t they lovely?

Please, catch me up!  How have your past couple of weeks been?

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We’re growing some unusual edible plants in our backyard.

Having said that, they’re unusual to us, but they’re also some of the most commonly eaten crops in the world!

Above is a photo of common purslane, which has been growing in our yard for years as a weed.  We’re hoping to plant them in a more controlled fashion, once we’ve been able to collect some seed.  It’s widely eaten by many cultures, including the Italians, Lebanese and Chinese.  It’s an essential ingredient in Lebanese fattoush, and my mother knows it as both “mouse ear plant” and “horse tooth plant”.

When freshly picked, this annual succulent has a mild, pleasantly sour tang and more omega-3 fatty acids than any other leafy vegetable!

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If you’ve ever ordered a bowl of endamame in a Japanese restaurant, you’ll know how addictive these little soy bean pods can be.  What you might not realise though, is that almost all endamame in Australia comes frozen from China.

So it was with great excitement that we discovered that the Diggers Club were selling endamame seeds – fellow Aussies, if you’re interested in trying to grow them, they’re sold as “Soy Bean (Beer Snack)”.  We haven’t harvested any yet  as they’ve taken quite a long time to mature – but our three plants are laden with small pods and enormous promise!

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Kohlrabi are a new vegetable to me – Wikipedia tells me they’re a member of the turnip family, although I find them a good substitute for broccoli stems (which I love).  They grow very easily and the chickens adore the leaves!

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Even though we’d resolved to only grow roma and cherry tomatoes, we couldn’t resist trying just a few plants of these Principe Borghese tomatoes.  An heirloom Italian variety, they form delicate oval heart-shaped fruit.  We haven’t had any ripen enough to pick yet, but even the green ones are looking gorgeous.  They’re dry, fleshy tomatoes which are apparently well-suited to sauces and drying.

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In our backyard, we have a very large lilly pilly tree.  Also known as riberries (which is enough to convince my Pete that they might have been the original fruit used in Ribena), this Australian native fruits prolifically, although we have never had as substantial a crop as this year’s.   Perhaps it’s a combination of all the rain we’ve been having, and the increased number of bees in the yard.

The fruit of the lilly pilly tree is extremely versatile for cooking.  It’s not great for eating raw, but we’ve turned it into lilly pilly jelly, which we’ve then used as a glaze on roast meats and in our onion marmalade. Maude recently made a very nice lilly pilly cordial as well.  I have a few more ideas to play with…will let you know how I go.

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I’ve always known these long skinny eggplants as Japanese eggplants, but the seeds we bought were marked as “Lebanese”.  Either way, the four plants in our garden have produced a wonderful crop over a long period of time – we’ve already harvested several kilos off them, and as you can see, they’re still producing prolifically.

The small fruit are sweeter and tenderer than their large counterparts, and the seeds less bitter.  They’re a great addition to a curry or stirfries.

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These are pigeon peas – a completely new variety to me, but apparently one of the most widely eaten plants in the world.  Known also as toor dal, they are high protein, drought resistant and widely cultivated and eaten in India, Eastern Africa and Central America.

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A few more – we’ve tried to grow horseradish, but to no avail, as something “stole” our plant – we went out one morning to find it completely gone, from the root up!  Also, we’re hoping to grow turmeric and asparagus, once we’ve found a permanent spot for them in the yard.

Are you growing any unusual edibles in your garden?  We’d love to know  of any suggestions you might have!

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In my kitchen…

…are a set of beautiful old etched glasses from the 1950s.  Our beloved neighbour, Mrs M, passed away in July, just a week shy of her 93rd birthday.  Her daughter Sarina gave me these glasses to remember her by…

In my kitchen…

…are three jars of Pete’s lilly pilly jelly, made from the fruit of the large tree in our backyard.  The lilly pilly is a tall growing Australian native, which produces tart red berries in abundance.  We harvested the fruit a few months ago and stored it in the freezer until we could find the time to turn it into jelly…

Here’s a Wikipedia photo of the lilly pilly berries…

In my kitchen…

…is a small bunch of kohlrabi, a gift from Jimmy at Flemington Markets.  The bulbs were delicious both raw and stir-fried in oyster sauce, and the chooks loved the leaves…

In my kitchen…

…are boxes of new season Roma tomatoes, which we’ve been turning into fresh and roasted tomato passata.  The great bonus of this process is tomato water, which I’m drinking chilled as I type..

In my kitchen…

…sits a box of dark Belgian chocolate cane toads, a gift for Big Boy’s English lecturer, to thank him for getting our son through the semester!

In my kitchen…

…is the first head of lettuce from our new garden.  Up until now, we’ve been picking off leaves for salad, but this is the first complete plant we’ve “harvested”.  It’s very exciting!

In my kitchen…

…are two bags of rice. The first is a gift from our generous friend, Moo – bomba paella rice from Valencia, Spain, known as the “king of paella rices” for its ability to absorb three times its volume in liquid.

The second is a box of carnaroli risotto rice from Italy – slightly longer grained than the more traditional arborio rice, and supposedly better at keeping its shape during cooking…

Tell me, what’s happening in your kitchen this month?

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