Friday, August 29, 2008

Not So Ripe....

Jen and I have been going to the Summit farmers market for a few weeks now and one of my favorite stands brought watermelons this past Sunday. Knowing that I have not the slightest idea on figuring out when mine would be ripe, I decided to ask the stand. It was real interesting to see everyone at the stand shrug then default to the owner. When the question reached him, his initial reaction was a slight chuckle. He did tell me that 90% of the time, the tendril (pigtail) that is opposite of where the melon attaches will start to shrivel and die. When this starts, the melon should be picked within a few days. I was so excited that when I got home my curiosity got the best of me and I cut open the biggest watermelon in the patch...Much to my chagrin, the result was an under ripe, only slighty pinkish flesh. The kids tried a slice despite our warnings and made funny faces before spitting out the whole bite.
I guess I need to have patience with the last two melons.

With the nights uncharacteristically cool through the end of August, some of my tomatoes do not seem as happy as I would like to see them. Jackson and Charlotte seem to not mind as they tramp into the garden with me to pick about 5lbs a day now. Still tops on Charlotte's list is the yellow cherry and although Jack keeps pointing to them all as his favorite, I think if push came to shove, he would side with the yellow cherries as well. Jen has settled on the Marglobe for hers and I can't fault her. It is medium red in color and slightly smaller than a tennis ball.

Most of the radishes have sprouted. The coolness is however working well for the new seedlings. We should be able to start harvesting within the next two to three weeks. As for the beets and carrots, the Chioga have seem to germinate the fastest and closest to 100% whereas the carrots and golden beets still seem to be struggling to germinate. In the spring I was concerned that it was something I had done wrong but now, I am leaning more toward a seed issue. Next year I think I am going to expand my fall plantings to include chard and spinach. Early success here has made me want to plant more and more next fall.


Food Harvested:
All tomato varieties except the Golden Ponderosa
Round 4 of the sultan pea
Unripe watermelon #1

Things Planted:
none

Seeds Saved:
Marglobe Tomato
Purple Cherokee Tomato

Preserved/Cooked:
None

Things to Remember:
1. Next fall, plant more of a fall crop
2. Replace left over carrot and golden beet seeds due to poor germination
3. Teach Charlotte what ripe vs. green tomatoes are
4. Keep away from Orange Queen Tomatoes, although small and pretty, not much flavor for me.
5. Fence off watermelon area from deer.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Tomatoes Galore

Tomatoes are starting to come in now. Seems that they are about 2-3 weeks behind most other people's plants. I think I need to not winter SOW the seeds but start them indoors in Feb. and let them get some size before I transplant. The plant sizes are now mostly slowing down in growth and topping off at about 7 or 8 feet for most of them. So far, the best tasting tomato has been the Marglobe and Purple Cherokee. The Black Krim was good but a little bland, the black cherries were not as sweet as I would have wished but the yellow cherries are a huge hit with the kids. Although Jen is not much of a fan of Cherries, I will grow them for the kids every year, maybe even two plants. Their appetite for tomatoes is insatiable.

The radishes sprouted (both white icicle and red globe) and I also just noticed the Chioga Beets starting as well. Nothing for the carrots or the golden beets. With the Chioga starting as quickly as they did, I am not so quick to blame myself for doing something wrong. Once the garden starts to finish up, I think I have decided to buy some 4x4's and build up the upper bed to better define the walkway. Eventually I can do the same to the bottom bed and have a fully defined walkway where I can lay weed barrier and nice stone. I have to make sure Sam the Scarecrow is OK with it first though.

Jen and I discovered the Summit Farmer's Market which is 10x better than Scotch Plains and Westfield. There are about 10 vendors including fresh seafood, local beef /lamb/poulty, local cheese and the kids favorite, a pickle vendor. This past Sunday was our second time going and we managed to plan meals relatively well. We ate two local meals where nothing came from out of the state (except butter, sea salt, butter and olive oil). We have been eating a lot of red beets, chard and fresh eggs all from here.


Oven Baked Sea Scallops:

  • 1lb Sea Scallops (about 12-15 scallops)
  • 4 Tbsp melted butter
  • 5 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 large shallots, chopped
  • 2 pinches ground nutmeg
  • dash of salt
  • 1 cup seasoned breadcrumbs
  • 1/4 cup fresh grated Parmesan Cheese (optional)
  • Olive Oil

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Clean, dry and place scallops in a bowl. Add melted butter, garlic, salt and nutmeg and scallops and mix. Place in baking dish arranging to one layer. In a separate bowl, mix breadcrumbs, cheese (optional) and enough oil to see it START to clump (about 4 Tbsp). Pour evenly over the scallops and place dish in the oven for 45 minutes or until the breadcrumbs are browned.

Food Harvested:
Tomatoes, Tomatoes, Tomatoes
Lemon Cukes

Things Planted:
Nothing

Preserved/Cooked:
Carrot Cake
String Bean Salad
Local Sea Scallops

Seeds Saved:
Nick's Yellow Cherry Tomato
Black Cherry Tomato

Things to Remember:
1. Use 4x4 to clean up the edges of the garden
2. DO not plant so heavily on the cukes
3. Move the tomatoes to the higher part of the bed
4. Tomatoes need more spacing

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Smile

Today is an office day which has been happening less and less frequently as of lately. With not much time, I want to jot a few things down. First, I am loving Jen's pictures more and more. The tomato reminds me of someone smiling. I have lots more to show but don't have much time to load them right now.

For next year, I have read lots of different ideas with lots of pros and cons. As for layering of newspapers for the purpose of controlling weeds on walkways in the garden, although the ink may now be soy based and the paper made without harmful chemicals, many newspaper companies add a chemical over spray to speed up the ink drying time. Using Straw for the same purpose, you need to make sure the straw was not contaminated with chemicals or treated post growing with pesticides. The more and more I read, the more and more I wonder where all of this is going. Now even the organic growers are hesitant to call be state recognized as organic with the extreme price of certification and for me, organic is losing meaning with the governments ever expanding definitions on what is classified as organic.

Food Harvested:
Cherry Tomatoes
One Marglobe Tomato

Things Planted:
None

Preserved/Cooked:
Summit Market Tomato Seeds fermenting
Set aside Lemon Cukes and Black Beauty Zuch to preserve seeds.

Things to Remember:
1. Move all trellis to a different area and plant less seeds
2. Build 4x4 borders to keep things neat

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Scarecrow Sam

With Jen wanting a clothes line for the last few years and no real place to put a temporary one, I finally went to Home Depot for the 4x4's and pulleys for a permanent one. Charlotte and I spent about an hour getting different things and when we got home, Jack came running to the gate to tell me that I had to go pick something in the garden. To my surprise, Jack led me by the hand and introduced me to Sam the Firefighting Scarecrow. I think he will be a recurring permanent fixture in the garden. I particularly like the fire boots, fire hat, pearls and silver necklaces. He however did scare the bejesus out of me when later I was digging, bumped into him as I caught a glimpse of him out of the corner of my eye; I really though it was someone in the garden with me!!

Tomatoes are starting to come in. Got our first Marglobe which the kids promptly split for lunch and a Black Krim. The Cherry Tomatoes are starting to come in regularly and Jen decided to try her hand at photography.....Next Year I want to try some different staking methods without cages. The cages became too much and were way too small. Most of the plants especially the Black Cherry and Nick's Yellow Cherry are approaching 8 feet tall and the Mortgage Lifter and Italian Market Wonder need much more support as they are prolific producers so far.

Fall planting from my understanding should happen about 6 weeks prior to the first frost. Since that would be now, I returned that upper half of the garden, flattened out the rows, removed all weeds and planted more like a square foot gardening method. I replanted the rest of the Icicle Radishes, heirloom carrots, golden beets as well as picking up chioga beets and organic red globe radishes. This will be my first attempt at fall cropping and square foot gardening methods so we'll see.

Last weekend Jen was not feeling great again. She decided to man-up and we took the kids peach picking. It is the beginning of the season in NJ so the only peaches ready were donut peaches. These are small but packed with flavor. Jack and Charlotte managed to pick just over 10 lbs in less than 30 minutes. Since they were not 100% ripe, into a paper bag they went for 2 days. The end result, I am sick of peaches but I managed to cook a peach pie that Jen and the kids loved.

Peach Pie
  • Pie Dough - enough for a top and bottom
  • 5 cups skinned and sliced peaches
  • 2 Tblsn Lemon Juice
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1 tsp nutmeg
  • 1 tsp Cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 Tblsn butter

    In a bowl, mix all dry ingredients. Toss the peaches with the lemon juice to coat then with the dry ingredients. Turn into a pie crust. Break butter into bits placing on top. Cover with second pie crust and place little slits to allow steam to escape. Place into a 450 deg. preheated oven for 10 minutes then reduce heat to 350. Cook for 40-45 minutes or until bubbling. Let cool completely before serving.

New format for me stealing some ideas from other blogs I follow. To help me when I go back to older posts and as a reminder:

Food Harvested:
Cherry Tomatoes, Sultan Beans, Last of the Squash

Things Planted:
Golden Beets, Chioga Beets, Icicle Radishes, Red Globe Radishes, St Viceroy Carrots

Things Preserved/Cooked:
Peach Pie

Seeds Saved:
Yellow Yarrow, Harbinger Peas

Things to Remember:
1. Thinning of all things is required. I did not believe in this in the spring and I got very few small carrots, radishes and beets.
2. Prepare for larger tomato plants than your 3 foot cages will support.
3. Weed, Weed, Weed. Letting it go will allow it to overtake your garden
4. Start seeds for Toms and Peppers earlier - like January indoors.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

One Tomato, Two Tomato, Three Tomato, Four

This past week we had a good amount of rain and many of the tomatoes were not doing well. All of the cages are 3-4 foot tall and most of the plants are starting to top 6 feet tall. Their weight and the small cages meant I had to make a trip to Home Depot to get stakes and spend an hour taming all of the bent and broken branches. There are still a few places I need to re-stake. I did however manage to get the seasons first four cherry tomatoes. 2 Black Cherry and 2 Yellow Cherry. Jen ate all 4 and the yellows seem to be her preference to this point. In the next week or so, there will be easily close to 50 tomatoes ready. For next year, I will definitely need more space and taller, more sturdy cages. Specifically, Mortgage Lifter, Black Cherry, Yellow Cherry, Black Krim, Italian Market Wonder, Marglobe and Violet Miclado all will need 6 foot cages.

The cukes are really starting to produce, I am getting about 3 or 4 picking cukes every other day now and the lemon cukes are just starting to take off. My only problem is that there are slicing varieties in there that are growing but not producing. I guess time will tell. As for the watermelons, I now officially have 4 small ones. One about the size of a quarter, one a golf ball, one a baseball and one a softball. I guess I need to figure out how long to let them grow, when will the be ripe, how to pick them.....I guess I have a few weeks yet to figure this all out.


Planting will start again this week. I need to clear much of the grass from the rows that are no longer producing and I am going to take a different approach for fall planting. I will try to no-till and use a version of the square foot planting method. I have not really decided on anything as of yet so all is subject to change. I am going to replant some more beets, carrots and radishes for the fall. The grass continues to be a problem and although I may be only keeping it at bay and not solving the issue, I am fine with that at this point. Most of the suggestions given have involved chemicals and pretty aggressive containment methods none of which I am comfortable with.

Last Wed was the talk at the library for Slow Food. Margret Noon was the speaker and although the format and presentation was not that great, the topic was intoxicating. I never thought I would call myself someone who cared where his food came from. To me as a kid, a garden was fun and the food it produced was no more than a bonus to what you get from a store. The more and more we read about eating local, being conscious of where your food is from and the benefits of local eating to your local farms, community and more so yourself, I think we we sold ourselves before we got there and decided that will end up becoming members of the North New Jersey Chapter.