Showing posts with label Hot peppers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hot peppers. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Coaching for April

Spring is SO ON!
 The Test Garden is nearly planted for the warm weather, the poppy field is blooming and we're positively drunk with Spring around here.
Plus, the bees are extra busy which is so YAY!
So this coaching update is ALL SPRING ALL THE TIME with a Spring Must Do section to lead us off and updates on all of your warm weather crops.
Spring Must-Dos
#1 MUST DO: Soil Prep
If I catch you skipping this step, I will spank your buns with my favorite trowel. And not just because that trowel is perfect for spanking, but because your soil needs you right now!

I know that all you want to do is race out to that garden and start slamming plants in the ground. I DO, TOO. But resist the urge to skip prepping your soil because this is the #1 way to make sure that you will get the healthiest, most productive, most GIANT FRUIT PRODUCING crops this warm weather season.
#2 MUST DO: Garden prep
Drag out those garden structures (bean trellises, tomato cages, cucumber and melon fencing, etc) and make sure they're in good order, make sure you're stocked with good organic fertilizer like worm castings or storebought organic fertilizer and get those garden tools working.
#3 Must do: Plant. Finally.
Plant to plan - If you already have a crop rotation plan in place, you're awesome. Follow it.

If not, plant this year's crops somewhere new - So, if you had tomatoes in one spot last year, don't plant tomatoes (or any plant from the nightshade family) there this year. Even better would be to avoid planting anything from that family in that spot for the next 3-5 years, but we're reasonable. Keep track of where you plant what so that next year this is an easier process. 

#4 BONUS: Record your glory
This is a bonus in the truest sense of the word because recording and tracking your harvests throughout the season rewards you in a billion ways. Or, maybe a hundred. Or ten. Whatever - it's more than one.

Like, you'll know how long it takes you to go through your soil amendments, what crops are worth growing vs buying locally, how much of a yield you can expect from each crop and - the best bonus ever - the value of the crops you're growing.

For instance - I know that I got 240 pounds of produce out of the warm weather Test Garden (which included 107 pounds of tomatoes) at a value of $658.12.

Do you know what your garden did last summer? You could.

Make a copy of this free online spreadsheet and get started tracking your harvests this year and see if you don't love it. 

Beans (Fabaceae)

Now: Grabbing those lines
Next: CLIMBING TO THE SKY AND BEYOND
  
To do: Dust the area around the plants with diotomaceaous earth so that critters don't chew the stems to nubs.
Some varieties we like:
Rattlesnake pole beans: Good fresh as string beans or whole beans, frozen or as dried beans. Plus - purple speckles! Cuteness!
Fortex pole beans: Our standby pole bean that stays tender and slim in its pod for way longer than other pole beans we've tried (like Blue Lake and Kentucky Wonder) that get huge and fat and tough. Plus the seed is wicked easy to save and grow again next year.
Silver Cloud Cannellini bush beans: This was an experiment last year that we thought we'd tired of until we had some of these dried beans over the winter and then HOLY MUTHER OF BEANS THESE ARE AWESOME and the big jar of beans from our summer harvests disappeared. So, we're growing them again. For more awesomeness. Also good as a fresh shelled bean - fun.


Blue Coco beans
  



Now: Sow your new crops

Next:
 Keep your eye to the soil for germination

To do: Keep that soil mo-ist.
Carrots, especially, take FOREVER to germinate and they need to stay evenly mo-ist in the soil as they're getting ready FINALLY ALREADY to germinate. So, for the 20 or so days while they're lingering in the soil being big fat teases, make sure their soil doesn't dry out. Otherwise, they'll just never appear and you'll be all BOO. 

Try covering your carrot growing space with cardboard (write your sowing date on the cardboard and the date 20 days after that date so that you know when to remove the cardboard) after sowing and watering in the seeds so that the soil can stay nice and mo-ist while the seeds germinate.
Here are a couple that we like:
Miami F1 Hybrid: Super sweet, consistently cylindrical with feathery strong tops and good storage qualities. As though any will make it to storage...pfffffffffffft.
Romance: Well, who doesn't need more romance in their lives, right? Kinda seems odd to find that in a carrot, but who are we to judge? Oh right, we're totally judging. These are supposed to "glow" orange and be perfectly sweet and glorious at 6 inches. Que romantic.
RIGHTEOUS (Miami F1) CARROT!

Cucumbers (Cucurbitaceae)


Now: True leaves (the first ones that look like real cucumber leaves. They'll have little serrated edges.)
 
Next: Transplanting into the garden or putting on their first tendrils
 
To do:  Sprinkle some diotomaceous earth around these guys to keep the nibblers at bay. Plant some nasturtium nearby for cucumber beetle repelling action.

We're always growing:
Lemon: These guys may not look like the cucumbers you're used to seeing at the store, but OH are they tasty. Nice mild and sweet flavor great for eating fresh, adding to gin cocktails (seasonal cocktails!) or pickling. 
National Pickling: This is our favorite variety of cucumber for pickling as gherkins (pick them when they're the size of your thumb) or whole dills when we find big ones hiding in the plants. SNEAKY HIDERS! They're back! 

Early spring greens (Asteraceae)


Now: They're germinating, alright.

Next: They'll start crowding up.

To do: Keep that soil mo-ist and thin them to 1 plant every 2-3". If you're growing a succession crop (a row every few weeks for greens that go on and on), sow a new row this week while you're thinning the row from two weeks ago. 

Greens we love:
Rocky Top Mix: We have a block of this in the Test Garden growing between the beans and below the trellis. When the sun starts to get hot, the beans will climb the trellis and shade the lettuce area just in time to cool the space and let the lettuce grow into summer. And because we can't get enough of spring greens, we usually plant a container or two that can be moved to the dinner table when it's ready for salads.
Box of salad greens nearly ready for dinner

Herbs & FlowersHerbsandFlowers
Cilantro (Apiaceae)
Has your cilantro germinated yet? If so, sow a new row so that you get a successive crop. 

Did you plant it from a seedling? Harvest it often (leaving the center leaves and stalks alone to continue growing) so that it doesn't go to flower (bolt) right a-fricken'-way.


Nasturtium (Tropaeolaceae)
It's time again for ALL NASTURTIUM ALL THE TIME until first frost that's waaaaaaaaaaaaaay off in, like, December or something. 

Grow the easiest starting, fastest growing, best cut flower making, best cucumber beetle repelling crop of all time (in NorCal anyway) in your garden this year. 

Just get your hands on some nasturtium seed and go nuts. Plant it around your cucurbitaceae crops (cucumbers, melons, squash, pumpkins) to keep the stupid cucumber beetles (don't be fooled - these are NOT green ladybugs) away and you're set.

Marigolds (Tagetes patula)
These guys are your best defense against vegetable loving pests. Sow seed anywhere and everywhere and then, if you're not a big fan of their flowers (like yours truly), just appreciate the fact that they're keeping your garden safe all summer long with very little (aka NONE) attention. Plus - their petals can be added to salad, compound butters and all kinds of dishes to fancy them right up.
Nasturtium galore shading the roots of the Concord grapes

Onions (Amaryllidaceae)

 Now: Harvesting as bunching onions
Next: Harvesting as bulb onions

To do: If you can't possibly wait until your onions form full bulbs, you can harvest now as bunching onions. Just pull, rinse and enjoy. Or don't rinse - be a daredevil like that, you hippie.
Fertilize with a nitrogen fertilizer or worm casting tea every couple weeks until you see the actual onion-y looking bulb start to push its way through the surface of the soil. 
To harvest as full bulbs, feel the neck of the bulb (where the green tops and round bottoms join up) for a soft-ish spot. Squeeze here and, if it's bendy, bend the tops over. This will dry them out and then you can harvest the full bulbs when the tops are fully dry. 
Red baron onions

Peppers (Solanaceae)

Now: Getting settled in the soil
Next: Putting on a little height

To do: Make sure they're caged or netted and getting infrequent but deep watering (we like 30 mins, 3 days/week unless it rains).
Keep some good organic fertilizer or worm castings handy so that when they start to set flowers, you can give them a side dressing of fertilizer so that they have the food to make more flowers and then FRUIT.
How to side dress: Dig a shallow trench near the plant's base (but not too close - you don't want to damage the roots or main stem), add the recommended amount (per the bag) of fertilizer, cover with soil and water in well.
Peppers we love to grow:
Magnum Habanero:  It's orange and hot and makes the crazy best margaritas ever. Grow it you love and hate yourself.
Purple Jalapeno: Purple jalapenos in salsa is a nice way to change up an old favorite and, plus, it looks extra spooky.
Padron: It is impossible to have too many of these. We eat these like everyone else does - by dry sauteing and then dousing with good olive oil and some sea salt. We've thought of eating them some other way, but whatever. 
Corno di Toro (sweet): WE'RE SO STOKED FOR THIS SWEET PEPPER. We grew it last year and couldn't get enough. Sweetest, reddest, hugest - it's a total winner. 
Netted pepper

Tomatoes (Solanaceae)

Now: Getting settled in the soil
Next: Putting on a little height

To do: Make sure they're caged and getting infrequent but deep watering (we like 30 mins, 3 days/week unless it rains
Keep some good organic fertilizer or worm castings handy so that when they start to set flowers, you can give them a side dressing of fertilizer so that they have the food to make more flowers and then FRUIT.
How to side dress: Dig a shallow trench near the plant's base (but not too close - you don't want to damage the roots or main stem), add the recommended amount (per the bag) of fertilizer, cover with soil and water in well.
Tomatoes we always grow and love:
Jaune Flamme: We pledged our undying love to this tomato a few years ago when we first tried it out in the Test Garden. We love it so much that we made a movie out of it.
Better Boy: Our most reliable fresh and canning tomato that reliably gives us 50 pounds of fruit per plant every year. Love this guy. 
Better Boy tomato

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Coaching for January

So, who's stoked for the spring garden season to begin? If you're frantically waving your hand around, you're in luck because it has begun!

No, really.


And if you're planning to grow crops like tomatoes, peppers, eggplant or anything from seed that says "Sow indoors" on the packet, your time is here to get your seeds ordered and your indoor space set up for seed starting.





Each type of vegetable has its own set of rules for getting growing and some of them have a bit more wiggle room with those rules. Here's a list of the most popular homegrown vegetables and how to start them from seed so that you actually end up with the vegetables that you want. 

FYI: We're using the last frost date of March 1 to determine when to start the seeds in NorCal.

A list of equipment for starting seeds indoors is at the end, so just keep a readin'. 

Basil
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil lightly covered with soil or start indoors 3-4 weeks prior to transplanting outdoors by surface sowing (don't cover) and keeping mo-ist

When to start: 2/1 indoors, after 3/1 outdoors 
What to expect: Germination in 5-10 days

Beans (Pole)    How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1" deep, 3 seeds per pole
When to start: End of February or after soil temps have exceeded 60 degrees, so after it's been 60 degrees during the day for a week or more 
What to expect: Germination in 3-7 days. Climbing the trellis within a month of germination.
  
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1/2" deep, 3-4 seeds/inch, no need to thin
When to start: After soil temps have exceeded 45 degrees. So, like, whenever you want in NorCal.
What to expect: Germination 7 days, young greens in 2 weeks
  
Carrots
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, lightly covered with soil, 30 seeds/ft, DO NOT LET SEEDS DRY OUT
When to start: End of February or after soil temps have exceeded 60 degrees, so after it's been 60 degrees during the day for a week or more 
What to expect: If moisture is kept consistent and temperatures warm, germination within 1-3 weeks (yes, they take forever to germinate)

Corn
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1" deep, 1 seed/hole, in blocks of 4 rows (for pollination to occur)
When to start: End of March or after soil temps have exceeded 65 degrees, so after it's been 65 degrees during the day for a week or more 
What to expect: Germination in 7-14 days

Cucumbers
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1" deep, 4-6 seeds per mounded hill
When to start: End of February or after soil temps have exceeded 60 degrees, so after it's been 60 degrees during the day for a week or more  
What to expect: Germination in 7-14 days

Eggplant
How to sow: Start indoors with bottom heat and supplemental light to 12 hours/day, 1/4" deep, 1 seed/cell
When to start: 1/11 or 8-10 weeks before last frost
What to expect: Germination in 10-21 days

Kale
How to sow: Direct in the garden, lightly covered with soil to 1/4"
When to start: Early spring for a spring/summer crop
What to expect: Germination in 10-21 days

Lettuce
How to sow: Direct in the garden, lightly covered with soil to 1/4" according to the depth indicated on the package
When to start: After February 1, while temperatures are still cool
What to expect: Germination in 7-10 days

Melons
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1/2" deep, 4-6 seeds per mounded hill
When to start: End of February or after soil temps have exceeded 60 degrees, so after it's been 60 degrees during the day for a week or more 
What to expect: Germination in 7-10 days

Peas
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 2" deep, 6" apart
When to start: Early spring for a spring/summer crop
What to expect: Germination in 7-14 days

Peppers
How to sow: Start indoors with bottom heat and supplemental light to 12 hours/day, 1/4" deep, 1 seed/cell
When to start: 1/11 or 8-10 weeks before last frost
What to expect: Germination in 10-21 days

Squash
How to sow: Direct in the garden soil, 1/2" deep, 1-2 seeds every 3'
When to start: End of February or after soil temps have exceeded 60 degrees, so after it's been 60 degrees during the day for a week or more 
What to expect: Germination in 10-14 days

Tomatoes 
How to sow: Start indoors with bottom heat and supplemental light to 12 hours/day, 1/4" deep, 1-2 seeds/cell
When to start: 1/25 or 8-10 weeks before last frost
What to expect: Germination in 7-10 days
  
Seed starting equipment for indoor growing
Bottom heat: Heat mats
Trays: 11x22 tray
Flats: 72 cell flat
Grow lights: 4' fixture
Soilless mix: Seed starter mix

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Spicy green tomato pickles


I have two questions for you:
  1. Do you have green tomatoes hanging around on your plants?
  2. Do you like Bloody Marys?
If you answered yes, have I got the canning recipe for you.

OK, to be fair I should have asked three questions, with the third being:

    3. Do you know how to can tomatoes?

But, if you don't know how to can tomatoes and you want to learn - Indie Farms has a session just for that. Learn how to use a canner, can some tomatoes, turn your back on storebought canned tomatoes forever - it's a good time.

Meanwhile, if you're looking to do something with the green tomatoes on your plants that will never ripen as the season is about over, this recipe is a delicious combination of my standard tomato canning recipe and my pickle recipe and results in a most fabulous cocktail garnish, appetizer platter winner and green olive stand-in.

"Green" can mean anything that's not 100% ripe. Just for the record.

I gave these as part of my holiday gifts last year and they were the biggest crowd pleaser of all the preserved foods. Even more so than my blackberry jam which shocked the pants right off of me.

Don't worry. I was home alone when it happened.

SO! Ready to preserve the final remains of your summer tomato harvest?

Get to it already. Then take those tomato plants out and put some cover crops in already - it's October!

Sheesh.

Spicy Green Tomato Pickles
Notes in italics

Makes 6 pints (or, in my case, 6 half pints and 2 pints) 
Ingredients
3+ pounds green tomatoes, washed and halved or quartered (bite size is what we're going for)
3 1/2 cups vinegar
3 1/2 cups water
1/4 canning salt (kosher salt works fine)
6+ garlic cloves  (1 per jar)
1-3 T red pepper flakes (you decide how hot you like it)

Equipment
Hot water canner with rack
Canning tools: Jar lifter,  jar funnel, tightener
6 pint jars, 6+ half pint jars or a mix of jars
Lids and bands for all of your jars

To make
Wash your tomatoes and cut them into either halves or quarters with the intention of making them all about the same bite size.


The reason it's important for them to be about the same size is that they'll all process the same and you won't have some that are overdone with some that are less done. 

It's all about consistency of doneness, is what I'm trying to say.


Combine your salt, vinegar, red pepper flakes and water in a large saucepot. Bring to a boil.

We used the full 3 tablespoons because we like it spicy at the test garden.

 If you're using more or less tomatoes than the 3+ pounds in the recipe, you can adjust your water and vinegar mix accordingly - just keep the ratio intact. So, like, if you only have a pound of tomatoes, use 1 1/2 cups of water and 1 1/2 cups of vinegar. 

The ratios are what's really important, so don't be sad and not do this if you only have a pound of tomatoes. You don't *need* 3+ pounds to make this, it's just what I had when I made the recipe. I also will not judge you if you start a full hot water canner for 3 pints of these tomato pickles - they're *that* good.


Pack your tomatoes into hot sterilized jars, leaving 1/4" head space. That's what is recommended out in the great wide world of canning, anyway. 

Did you know that was out there? It is. It's great.

Add 1 clove of garlic to each jar and ladle the hot peppered vinegar mixture over the tomatoes.


Remove air bubbles with a tiny spatula or that little plastic wand that comes with some of your canning tool sets.

Put on the two piece lids and bands.

Process 15 minutes in your hot water canner.

This time around, we had a full house of pints and half pints.

Allow to cool, then make some Bloodys, have your nicer neighbors over for appetizers and cocktails and then throw away your green olives because you're done with those.

These you're just getting started with.

Also, can I ask a favor? I promise I won't get greedy with my favor-asking. 

When you're done canning, let that water cool and then use it to water your plants. Or rinse off your windshield. Or wash your dog. Or something other than just dumping it down the drain.

It's perfectly good sterilized water. You could probably birth a baby with it, but I am not recommending that because I don't know nothin' about birthin' no babies. Also, that screams liability. 

Anyway, as a favor to me and Indie Farms, please don't waste water. Or birth babies on our instruction. Thanks, friends.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Vietnamese Table Salad

This week I tried out a few new Asian inspired dishes. I wouldn't necessarily call them "traditional" or necessarily derived straight from any particular genre of Asian cuisine, but just inspired.

This recipe was from Sunset for Sizzling Saigon Crêpes: Bánh xèo

Don't worry if you can't pronounce the name. I can  not. But I sure can eat the resulting recipe. 




And how.


This recipe uses a ton of vegetables, so you can also clear out the last of the lettuce in the garden, prune back basil to normal heights, and use up any onions, jalapenos and chives you  have on hand.


Sunset says that this, in its homeland, is known as a table salad, but I'll just say that we ate it like one might eat tacos. Which is something with which we're a more bit more experienced, living in Northern California and all.




Beauty is that these aren't crepes like you get at those crepe type places where they just wrap a crepe around whatever filling (which is also good, but still), but instead like an egg-less and gluten lite omelet that's got pork, onions, chives, mushrooms and bean sprouts all in the batter and therefore INSIDE the crepe.

Very good, people. Very good.

And, since I didn't make any changes to the recipe, you can see what Sunset has to say on the subject.