Sunday, August 25, 2013

The joy of produce

There are many obstacles on a farm between desire and consumption. The drama of our corn, strawberries and beans have given us new appreciation for these food items, but not much for our bellies. So the wonder of having bushes full of raspberries and blackberries and vines over-flowing with grapes comes as a great relief from the struggle and the heat. Our blackberry bushes, planted and loved by those who came before us, are producing very well this year and have provided us with hand-fulls of sweet treats and blackberry juice for our kefir. They have also provided me with my first opportunity to tie my apron on and jump into the world of canning. I made my first experimental batch of jam last week, not really following a recipe (I probably should have since it was my first attempt) but more adding what I thought I should to make my ideal jam. The jam was met with such rave reviews by my hungry husband, that today I went back to the bushes and got some more to try again. When I had about a gallon of blackberries, I set to work.

We had some nice, plump show-offs as well as tasty, little modest ones.

After the berries had been cleaned and lightly washed they met the heat.

The masher - it's not just for potatoes anymore! At this stage I added the honey from my hard-working bees.

How pretty the jam is in its little jar! Homemade jam with our homegrown blackberries and with honey from our own beehive. What a treat!

Monday, August 12, 2013

Harvest Update

Well, it's been another month.  Things have been rocking along pretty well here.  Over all we've had some good successes and some, well, not quite successes.

The okra harvest has been great.  The few pictured last time are a good representative sample of what we have gotten this summer.  So far we have harvested enough for two sizable dishes (fried okra, of course) and it looks like we'll get a third before the weather turns cooler. 

Our corn was a disappointment. It just got fried by the hot, dry summer-despite persistent watering. We planted a little bit more this August, just to see if that does better as the weather turns. Also disappointing was our green beans.  Earlier this summer they were strong plants.  They were green, tall and were not letting any weeds near them.  But the very high temps and a bloom of grasshoppers did them in.  Too bad.

One fun surprise has been our grapes.  There are a few plants scattered over the property and they bore fruit without any real help from us.  As you can see we have a few varieties.  The big green and red ones are really just like supermarket grapes:  essentially seedless and quite tasty.  The little dark ones have tons of seeds; so much so they are hard to eat.  But they taste just like Welch's Grape juice.  We're going to think what to do with them.  Jelly is a good choice-which would be another first for us.

Lastly are our carrots.  And they look funny.  Lots of little spindly things.  A few that look like "real" carrots.  Our planting technique was probably to blame here.  The seeds were way too close together, and so few of them had any chance to grow large, or even get beyond stunted.  Also the weather was a factor too, but mostly "operator error."  One interesting feature to watch is how our double dug beds impacts carrot growth.  As you can see some are extremely long and wiry.  Is that a consequence of the bed depth or our less than ideal growing conditions?  At least we have quantity, if not quality.
Three varieties of grapes

Carrot freak show.

Carrot power