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Posts Tagged ‘purslane’

We’re having a wet and cool December here in Sydney, and the garden is quite confused by it all.

The Lebanese cucumbers are starting to recover, after being battered by weeks of rain…

Basil grew brilliantly in the yard last season, and the newest plants are promising to do the same.  We’ve planted several varieties this year…

Our perennial leeks in the top bed are flowering…

We’re yet to harvest any, but our asparagus patch has been growing like mad.  The Spice Girl gave us a single small pot when we started the garden, and this is what it’s turned into.  Hopefully next year we can start eating them…

Apples in Sydney?  I’m not convinced, but Pete was keen to try. The trees are producing small fruit again this year, but I’m not getting my hopes up…

Dwarf beans, on the hand, seem to grow brilliantly here…

Our onions were transplanted from a previous bed and after nearly a year, we’re finally starting to get bulbs…

We managed to grow one full sized onion!

Before moving the chickens onto the garden bed by the fence, we pulled out all the remaining perennial leeks…

…and replanted their 28 babies in the recently cleared front bed…

The potatoes in sacks have been an interesting exercise.   They’ve suffered from the wet weather, but are still growing well, and we’ve recently hilled them up, unrolling the sacks in the process…

The sacks themselves, though, haven’t held up all that well.  And these were doubled up too…

Pete is carefully growing purslane (which everyone else considers a weed), as he knows how much I love eating it…

We’ve provided our rhubarb with a little shade, and it’s suddenly doing brilliantly.  I think it’s really enjoyed the rain and the cooler weather…

Our dwarf white peach tree is growing well…

It produced several peaches this year, although the cooler growing season has resulted in slightly less flavoursome fruit than last year…

And finally, a photo of our bull capsicums, which are being grown indoors.  I think the seeds came from the CityHippyFarmGirl – thanks Brydie! The first one has just ripened…

Anything exciting happening in your gardens at the moment?

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Do you remember the café press?  They were all the rage about ten years ago, when we lauded their ability to turn bread and antipasto into dinner in ten minutes flat.

I remember many dinners of Turkish bread stuffed with prosciutto and fancy cheeses, served with a simple salad. And then, all of a sudden, they went out of vogue.  Which is a shame, as they really did make the worknight dinner a simple affair.

These days, ours is only ever dragged out to make crackers.

As I’ve mentioned before, we bake all our own bread at home, with the exception of Lebanese pita bread.

I’m sure I could make it at home, but with the Baalbek bakery just a few minutes down the road turning out hundreds of fresh rounds daily (at 20c each), it seems a bit redundant to do so.  And I’m pretty happy with the ingredients they use too – “wheat flour, water, salt, sugar and yeast”.  Can’t argue with that!

Whenever a packet of Lebanese bread gets a little stale, I turn them into crackers, by simply toasting them in the café press.  It only takes a couple of minutes per slice, and the end result is a dry, crisp cracker that keeps well for several days in an airtight container.  It’s the perfect accompaniment to cheeses, an antipasto plate, or dips.  We keep a packet of Lebanese bread in the freezer specifically for this purpose, and now no longer buy water crackers or crispbreads when we’re preparing a cheese plate.

Today,  all the ingredients came together for a fattoush salad.

As the chooks were ready for their next rotation, Pete cleared all the continental parsley from the incumbent bed, and brought it in along with a large bunch of purslane.

  • 1 round Lebanese bread, toasted until crisp and broken into shards
  • 5 – 6 radishes, washed and sliced
  • 3 Lebanese cucumbers, washed and sliced
  • 4 tomatoes, chopped
  • 10 spring onions, chopped
  • 1 cup purslane, washed and chopped – you can just use the leaves, or include the stems as well, like I did
  • 1 cup flat-leaf parsley
  • 1 cup mint leaves

These are the quantities listed in the original recipe, taken from Abla’s Lebanese Kitchen, by Abla Amad.  I used more bread and fewer cucumbers, but the salad was still delicious.  Abla recommends splitting the pita bread and toasting it in the oven for 4 – 5 minutes until dry and crisp – I, of course, used the café press.

To dress the salad, combine the following ingredients, pour over and toss through.  I used less salt than the 1 teaspoon specified – personal preference on my part.

  • ½ teaspoon ground allspice
  • 2 teaspoons ground sumac
  • ½ teaspoon fine sea salt (original recipe called for 1 teaspoon salt)
  • freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 100ml lemon juice
  • 100ml olive oil

We served our salad with more pita bread crackers and hommus, for an easy and delicious Saturday lunch!

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In my kitchen…

…is a bag of Syrian za’atar.  The gentleman in the Arabic nut and spice store convinced me that it was better than the Jordanian product I normally buy, and I couldn’t resist the artistic presentation – reminiscent of the coloured sand in glass bottles that were all the rage when I was a child…

In my kitchen…

…is a bottle of Canadian maple syrup, a gift from our friends Kevin and Carol who were over there for a holiday a couple of months ago…

In my kitchen…

…are three loaves of sourdough fruit bread, made to a new formula I’ve been playing with – a variation on the one I made last year.

The dough has 500g of fruit to the 1kg of flour (800g flour/100g rye/100g spelt) and contains a mixture of dried cranberries, Turkish figs, sultanas, currants, golden raisins and the wonderful candied peel I found at Harkola last Christmas…

The peel gives the bread a festive fruit cake touch, although I didn’t make my own like Heidi does

In my kitchen…

…is a plate of greens from the garden, including basil, Italian parsley, purslane and sorrel..

In my kitchen…

…is proof positive that my friend Marty loves me!  He spent six months sourcing this kopi luwak as a surprise for me.  The coffee beans are a rare delicacy – eaten and then shat out by civet cats, whose digestive processes ferment the beans (which come out whole), resulting in an incredibly smooth and mellow coffee…

I took a handful to Manny, the world’s best barista, and he ground  the beans and made them up for us to taste.  It was a sublime and perfect way to spend an easy afternoon…

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

If you’d like to do an In My Kitchen post on your own blog, please feel free  to use this format, and to leave a comment here linking back to your post.  We’d all love to see what’s happening in your kitchen every month too!

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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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