Tag Archives: lettuce

We got a FREEZER!

Our "new" chest freezer

Our “new” chest freezer

In December, Vic and I acquired a used Frigidaire chest freezer for the garage, thereby fulfilling a long-held dream of mine. We bought it from an old high school buddy of Vic’s for $75. Not sure of the capacity, maybe 12 cubic feet? It looks like it will hold at least double, maybe more, what the freezer on top of the refrigerator holds, which is 6 cubic feet.

We cleaned it out and plugged it in, and I began bargain hunting for sales. I put four half-gallon containers of water at the bottom to fill up space and “hold the cold” in case of a power outage. It is now mostly stocked, with room left over.

Our new freezer has two baskets.

Our new freezer has two baskets.

I have been envying the freezers of others for some time now, wishing I had more freezer room to preserve the bounty of summer. The real impetus was that my son Scott took a fishing trip to Alaska last summer. He had to buy a chest freezer to store all of the fish that he brought back. We have been bringing a few fillets to our house every time we have room for more, but we ran out of room in the house freezer over the refrigerator.

Lack of room is no longer a problem. We keep the fish in one basket, bread products in the other, Lean Cuisines in a grocery sack in the main body of the freezer, and boxes of pizza on top of the bags of frozen whole chickens (at 79 cents a pound!).

Since getting the freezer, we have been eating out less. Instead of visiting my favorite sandwich shop for lunch, I nuke a Lean Cuisine. Instead of sending out for pizza when I’m too tired to cook, I bake a frozen one on my pizza stone. I LOVE LOVE LOVE having a home freezer.

Call me a loony survivalist/prepper if you will, but I feel happier knowing that I have plenty of food on hand. Yeah, I know, if a disaster includes loss of electricity for more than a day, I’m screwed. But then I would turn to my shelves of canned goods, both store-bought and home-canned, as well as pasta and grains that are on hand. We have water stored in containers, a water purifier to filter water from my rain barrels or a nearby lake, and even a chemical toilet. We could cook in my Sun Oven solar oven, or the propane gas BBQ, or our propane campstove if we need to.

I feel well prepared for the variety of natural and manmade disasters that could strike southern California and temporarily disrupt delivery of food (tsunami, earthquakes, fires, riots, heavy winds, power outages, etc.) Speaking of power outages, we have them so frequently that both Vic and I have power backups for our computers. The power usually comes back on within a few minutes or hours. Our neighbor has an electrical generator, but he has pointed out how much gasoline it takes to run a generator for a day. Not sure I want to have that much gasoline stored in my garage. Has anyone else considered fuel storage for a generator?

Inventory list for our freezer

Inventory list for our freezer

Well, I didn’t mean to go off on a rant about being prepared for a disaster. They strike everywhere, and it is important to be able to get by on your own until help arrives, which, as we have seen from Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, can be a matter of weeks instead of days. I think we are good for six weeks at this point.

An important feature of our new freezer is an inventory list. This will help us know what is in the freezer and how old it is. I know, Uber Nerd. I’m pathetic. I made a similar list for our freezer in the kitchen, which is where I am now keeping vegetables.

The only thing from my garden in our chest freezer right now is two big bags of frozen whole tomatoes. I made a pot roast in my solar oven today and popped a half dozen frozen tomatoes into the pot, along with a couple of bay leaves from my little tree, plus some potatoes, onions, garlic, carrots and red wine.

Let’s take a look at my January yard and garden.

A pair of mourning doves rest in our liquid amber tree on a gray and misty morning.

Two mourning doves rest in our liquid amber tree on a gray and misty morning.

House sparrows and house finches crowd into the tree in between bouts of feeding at our seed feeders.

House sparrows and house finches crowd into the tree in between bouts of feeding at our seed feeders.

Seed pods of liquid amber trees become works of natural art in January.

Seed pods of liquid amber trees become works of natural art in January.

A light rain turns nasturtium leaves into saucers.

A light rain turns nasturtium leaves into saucers.

Another nasturtium leaf with water.

Another nasturtium leaf with water.

I couldn't stop photographing those leaves.

I couldn’t stop photographing those leaves.

Last one I'm going to show. I had more.

Last one I’m going to show. I had more.

The first nasturtium blossom arrived the last week of January this year.

The first nasturtium blossom arrived the last week of January this year.

The Mt. Hood daffodil leaves are more visible now.

The Mt. Hood daffodil leaves are more visible now.

Our old-fashioned purple iris seem to bloom randomly. My fancy bearded iris only bloom in real spring, not this crazy January spring.

Our old-fashioned purple iris seem to bloom randomly. My fancy bearded iris only bloom in real spring, not this crazy January spring.

The Florida Prince peach is bursting into bloom. It is the first of my stone fruit trees to bloom and first to be ready to harvest.

The Florida Prince peach is bursting into bloom. It is the first of my stone fruit trees to bloom and first to be ready to harvest.

No flower buds yet on my artichokes, but I keep checking. The plants are looking good.

No flower buds yet on my artichokes, but I keep checking. The plants are looking good.

Critters of some kind got most of my lettuce, but a couple of plants that weren't eaten too badly have managed to recover. I might get a few leaves.

Critters of some kind got most of my lettuce, but a couple of plants that weren’t eaten too badly have managed to recover. I might get a few leaves.

My broccoli is looking really good. I needed some for a stir-fry last night, so I harvested this half pound head.

My broccoli is looking really good. I needed some for a stir-fry last night, so I harvested this half pound head.
This is our olive tree after it got pruned. My Garden of Infinite Neglect (which hasn't been neglected since I put it into a raised bed) is under it.

This is our olive tree after it got pruned. My Garden of Infinite Neglect (which hasn’t been neglected since I put it into a raised bed) is under it.

Remember the raised sidewalk I showed in the last post? It's gone! I was worried that someone would trip over it.

Remember the raised sidewalk I showed in the last post? It’s gone! I was worried that someone would trip over it.

These are the bad tree roots that were raising the sidewalk. Bad liquid amber!

These are the bad tree roots that were raising the sidewalk. Bad liquid amber!

Our tree guy, Steve Fifita, is also our concrete contractor. He cut out the root and saved it for me. I plan to turn it into a hanging sculpture of some sort.

Here Steve finishes off the new concrete walkway. The board frames are now gone, and it looks good. We will keep it cordoned off for a while.

Here Steve finishes off the new concrete walkway. The board frames are now gone, and it looks good. We will keep it cordoned off for a while.

So that is what has been going on at our Green World the past few weeks. New freezer, new sidewalk on the south, new section of front walk, repaired deck in back, vegetables growing, fruit trees blooming, and spring flowers everywhere. Life is good.

Harvest Monday and Kitchen Cupboard Thursday, April 23, 2012

Hoo boy, I got busy and never posted for last Thursday’s Kitchen Cupboard, hosted by Robin. That’s where gardeners blog about what they used from their stored produce or made with their fresh produce. Here’s what I used last week.

Yum, yum, a ham sandwich made with my homemade bread and butter pickles from last summer, and freshly picked Deer Tongue lettuce from my garden.

This is a ham sandwich on Russian Raisin Pecan bread from Schat’s Bakkery in Bishop, CA. The mustard is homemade (thanks, Robin, for the recipe), as are the bread and butter pickles from last summer’s cucumbers. Still have two jars left. The lettuce is freshly picked Deer Tongue lettuce from my garden. Deer Tongue, Black-seeded Simpson and Lollo Rosa are my three favorite letttuces. Oh, better add Red Oakleaf to that list just for the pretty shape and color.

We also had eggs from our hens for breakfast, and some eggs went into a homemade banana nut bread.

I didn’t photograph the rest of my harvest from last week, which was just two avocados. So I’m going to put in pics of the actual garden, which I prefer anyway. I like to see gardens growing. My harvests are generally so pathetically small, that I’d rather photograph the living plants anyway.

Some of the tomato seedlings that I bought developed damping off, a fungus. I cut the tops off above the infection and rooted the tomato tops in glasses of water on the windowsill. They're now ready to plant. I'm also rooting some yams. Note the blue Mason canning jar. That jar is from my Grandma Wilson, and about 80 years old by now.

I'm still excited about my Red Flame grapes making their first flowers this year. I have no idea if these are flower buds or grapes. I'm just watching them grow in fascination, looking forward to my first home-grown grapes.

The Florida Prince peaches are nearing harvest. But I didn't thin them enough and the fruits are pathetically small again this year. This picture makes them look big, but they're not. I'm thinking that they're going to be mainly skin and seed. Time will tell. They should be ready to pick in another few weeks.

Our dwarf Granny Smith apple tree has more blooms on it this year than ever. Our normal crop is 30 full-sized apples. We'll see what the 2012 fruit set is in another month or so.

Couldn't resist posting this pic of a rose. We had a really heavy fog this morning and everything was covered with dense dew. It was gorgeous out there.

This is the view of our backyard looking south. Herb garden is in the foreground, then the chicken coop and the roses, irises, grapes, apple trees, the plum tree, and the Florida Prince peach.

The rest of our backyard is occupied by more fruit trees and three raised beds for vegetables. This is bed #1. It has a few tomatoes, some Brussels sprouts that aren't making sprouts, some Lacinato kale that is at the end of its useful life in my garden, and a giant beet that I'm growing for the "Largest Beet" competition at the 2012 Orange County Fair. I grow mint and thyme outside this bed.

Bed 2 has tomatoes, leeks, Deer Tongue lettuce that is going to seed (it's an heirloom variety and I'll save the seeds), a Black Beauty eggplant that I planted back in 2010 that is still growing, and a row of Super Sugar Snap peas that has just sprouted along the right side of the bed. They'll grow up the metal trellis from Gardener's Supply Company, source of my beautiful raised bed frames.

Nasturtiums and narcissus are growing around the perimeter of the beds. I can hardly get through the tangle of foliage to walk around the beds, but I love the look. We have no lawn at all. Saves water.

Bed 3 with more tomatoes, a row of Blue Lake pole beans that just sprouted, strawberries, some bell pepper plants, a Black Beauty eggplant, and a couple of red cabbages that seem to be making heads. I haven't had a lot of luck with cabbage, so I'm looking forward to actually being able to eat a homegrown cabbage at long last.

I grow peas and beans up a metal pea fence by the deck. These are Mammoth Snow Peas, the second crop of the year to grow up the fence. When they're done, I'll plant pole beans.

I didn't plant this. It sprouted from my homemade compost. I figure it's a pumpkin or winter squash of some kind. I know that I should weed it out, but I just can't. I figure if it came from my compost pile, it must be something that I grew. But I had some mini winter squash that were hybrids, so it could be anything. Hybrids don't breed true. I'm afraid that my curiosity about what it might grow into may overrule my better judgement (OK, THEM. There are 8 of them sprouted.) Time will tell. What do you say, weed it out or transplant it and see what it grows into?

I bought some new orchids this year for the deck. Yep, they grow year-round outdoors in coastal southern California. I really like the three of them massed together.

That’s it for the backyard. Now let’s move on to the less glamorous front.

Our front yards are the showplaces of our properties, right? Sadly, not at our house. I have a vegetable garden right next to the sidewalk, and it never does very well. Consequently, or perhaps because, I neglect it. I call this my Garden of Infinite Neglect. It is so sad looking. I have plans to put in a raised bed here and see if that will improve growing conditions. It's going to rain here on Wednesday, so I am hoping to get that project done in the next two days. Or maybe I'll neglect to get "a round tuit."

I grow potatoes and yams in Gro-pots in our driveway. Here is a pot of potatoes that volunteered from little potatoes that didn't get harvested. I won't know if they're German butterballs or blue potatoes until harvest time. They could even be Russets. I've grown them all in these fabric grow-pots. I just add more fertilizer and reuse the potting soil and pots.

A pot of succulents in front of the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility has flowered. Nice flower.

I see artichokes on the menu for dinner tonight. They were almost ready to harvest on Friday when we left for the weekend, but I didn't want them to just sit in the refrigerator. This one is a bit past prime. But it will go great with some chicken or steak cooked on the BBQ.

My strawberry pot got a bit neglected last year, but the strawberry plants survived. I fertilized and watered them, and am hoping for at least a small crop of berries this year.

Our Fuyu persimmon tree has a half dozen flowers on it. It didn't produce any fruit last year. It might this year, but I STILL don't have it planted. It's in its original nursery pot. I think it would do a lot better if I actually put it into the ground. It's going into the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility, which is always loaded with weeds.

I got some free irises from someone a couple of years ago. They are supposed to be white with ruffled edges. This one is neither. But I like it anyway. This is the first year of bloom for it. The other irises from that source are still small and haven't bloomed yet. Maybe they're the white ruffled ones.

And that is the state of my home garden on April 23. I’ll blog about my community garden plot some other time. On to my itty bitty Harvest Monday.

Fruit

14.5 oz avocados

Vegetables

2 oz Deer Tongue lettuce

Total Produce 1 lb 0.5 oz plus 10 eggs

If you had a harvest, or you just want to see what others are harvesting, visit Daphne’s Dandelions.

February fruits, flowers and veggies in a southern California garden

I built our front yard pond myself. We gave it a "lick and a promise" cleaning last month, but it needs additional work to keep ecological succession at bay.

Spring has arrived here on the coast of southern California. For us, spring is a long, drawn-out affair, with new things popping into bloom every week.

This year, I plan to photo-document what is in bloom each month, posting the results around mid-month. We have a small yard, 6,000 square feet, with most of the ground occupied by house, driveway and sidewalk. Still, I do the best I can with the space that I have, growing food, maintaining habitat for wildlife, and having flowers to lift my spirits.

Spring is an especially fun time for this photo project with my young fruit trees coming into bloom and my raised beds for vegetables seeing their first spring. Come take a peek at ”granny’s bloomers.”

The paperwhites that I planted by the side of our pond and dry streambed have finished blooming, but the snowdrops are in their prime.

Our pink magnolia tree is quite pretty this time of year.

Our August Pride peach is the second of our stone fruit trees to come into bloom, with the first blossom on Feb. 14 this year.

Most of the August Pride peach flowers are still in tight bud.

With three camellia bushes by the front walkway, we should have pink blossoms from January into March.

Pink cobbity daisies carry out the pink theme for February on the other side of the front walkway.

Even the flower buds on the dwarf Eureka lemon tree are pink.

One out of three of our dwarf Eureka lemon trees has set fruit already. The Eureka lemons have pointier ends than the Meyer lemons and are more sour.

The Garden of Infinite Neglect by the front sidewalk is looking less neglected than usual with a refurbished flower border. I have kale, collards and beet greens ready when I want them, savoy cabbages that might ripen some day, hopeful sprouts of yellow onions, and newly planted seeds of beets (Chioggia and Lutz Greenleaf), Bright Lights chard, baby bok choy, and yellow summer squash.

Garden of Infinite Neglect from the other direction.

I have navel oranges bigger than this head of savoy cabbage. Well, it's trying.

The chickens and I have been working on weeds in the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility. I pull them, they eat them. Finally I can see my eight artichokes and 50-plus red onions above the weeds. Someday in the next month or so, this garden should get some sunshine as the sun moves north (or we tilt, however you look at it).

Green onions, strawberries and ginger grow in pots along the driveway. I can hardly wait to see a sprout in my pot of ginger.

I'm not so organized that I have an all pink garden. The first of my freesias opened this week and they're everywhere. They've naturalized in the yard and I just let them grow. They fill the spring air with a delightful fragrance.

These lovely little Epidendron orchids bloom all year long. I have several pots of them. Other year-round bloomers in my yard are Nemesia, allysum, gazania, rosemary, lavender, lantana, and probably some others I'm forgetting.

Whoops, one of my readers pointed out that these are Epidendrons, not Dendrobiums. I was given this orchid by a friend, and misidentified it.

The lavender Scabiosas are doing well this spring.

Pansies grow in the flower border of the Garden of Infinite Neglect. Oh, look, I have a lavender theme going.I want to try making some lavender sugar this spring. Apparently you just pick the flower heads and put them into a sealed jar of white sugar for a few months.

Lavender smells wonderful and attracts bees to the garden.

I'm growing purple cauliflower this year too, a new variety for me called Graffiti.

I'm even growing blue potatoes. Here is the first shoot.

So much for the front yard. On to the back.

I liked the play of light and shadow with this wacky shot of a red cyclamen.

Masses of pink jasmine grow up two trellises and over our deck, filling the air with a sweet, heavy scent.

The first flowers just opened on the Sunshine Blue blueberries.

The first flowers have opened on my tomatoes. This one is an Early Girl.

My citrus harvest is winding down. I have five navel oranges left, and three Valencia oranges (the entire crop from that new tree), which I won't harvest until the navels are gone.

My limes are long gone, but I still have a baker's dozen of ripe Meyer lemons, four ripe Eureka lemons, and more lemons coming along.

I'm experimenting with a January planted zucchini. The first tiny buds have just appeared. Remind me later in the season how excited I am by this.

I am currently growing this Green Oakleaf lettuce, plus Red Saladbowl, Lollo Rossa, Red Sails, and Black-seeded Simpson, in addition to a tray of mesclun salad greens.

I planted these double paperwhites around my raised beds fairly late in the fall, so they're in prime bloom now.

I also grow nasturtiums and parsley around the raised beds. The nasturtiums are just beginning to bloom.

The mint never totally dies back in winter, but it's just now getting its spring growth spurt. I use it for tabbuli.

Those tiny fuzzy things are baby Florida Prince peaches.

Raised bed #3 has been in a state of suspended animation since I planted it last October. It's finally starting to grow now, with lettuce, spinach, radishes, cauliflower, red and yellow onions and Super Sugar Sprint peas.

My three raised beds give me a lot of pleasure as well as food. Bed #2 is featured in this photo, with chard, red and green savoy cabbage, leeks, lettuce, and garlic. Behind it is bed #1 with bell peppers, garlic, mizuna, lettuce, carrots, parnips, and chard.

The three apple trees and the plum don't show up well in this photo because they're still dormant, but you can see our coop where the three hens live.

Spring is such an exciting time in the garden. I hope you enjoyed your tour.

Fruit and veggies in a southern California garden in December

We just had four days of rain, but today the sun is shining again. I snapped these pics earlier in the week, just before the series of storms rolled in off the Pacific.

Dwarf sugar snap pea seedlings planted Nov. 15

German white icicle radish planted Nov 23

Lettuce seedlings

Spinach, cheddar cauliflower, and red and yellow onion sets are up also, but the purple cauliflower crop is a bust. No sprouts. These are all in raised bed #3.

Raised bed #2 with parsley in front

Raised bed #2 is still magnificient with chard, lettuce, spinach, leeks, red and savoy cabbage, and cauliflower. I’m playing a waiting game with my first head of cauliflower to see how big it will get before I harvest it. I think what this means is that I’m setting myself up to harvest it just a hair before it bolts or flowers out or whatever the heck it is that a head of cauliflower will do.Bell peppers ready to pick

Bed #1 continues to produce bell peppers. We’ve tried for years to grow bell peppers with no success. They were always thin-skinned and bitter. This year we’re getting perfect bell peppers. I sprayed the plants with blossom set (a plant hormone) early in the season and again in the fall. I don’t know if that is the difference, or the type I planted. I got a 6-pack of mixed color peppers from Lowe’s and they’ve produced peppers all summer and are still going strong. I have about 20 more coming along in various stages of growth.

Navel oranges

Winter is time for citrus in our neck of the woods. We have navel oranges, Eureka and Meyer lemons, and Bearrs limes ready for harvest. The valencia oranges will ripen later in the season.

Fruit trees grow all along our back fence. Here are Fuji, Gala, and Granny Smith apple trees, plus a Florida Prince peach and a Santa Rosa plum.

We have about 20 fruit trees, some in the ground and some in pots, in my urban orchard.  Some are dwarf, some semi-dwarf, and some are full-sized. The apple and stone fruit trees still have most of their leaves, but they’ll fall soon. I have some bird feeders here, and you can see the chicken coop (still no chickens! I’m such a procrastinator) in the background. I grew vegetables here a couple of years ago, but the trees cast too much shade now for anything except lettuce.

 I do some container gardening in front, where there is more sun.

Green onions in a terra cotta bowl

Bok Choy in a bowl

I grow green onions year round in these terra cotta bowls, planting them from seed. Baby bok choy also does nicely in these bowls, but it’s a cool weather crop only. Once the bok choy is eaten, this bowl will revert to green onion production. I use the potting soil over and over, just adding Sure Start organic fertilizer prior to each planting.

Rhubarb

The rhubarb plant is coming along nicely. Each leaf that sprouts is bigger than the one before. This is the first year in the garden for this plant, and I’m supposed to let it grow all year without harvesting so the root can get big and strong. But I can never wait. By February or March, I may harvest a few stems to put into a coffee cake. That’s the only way I like to eat rhubarb.

Artichokes in the Garden of Perpetual Responsibility

I really only wanted a couple of artichoke plants, so I bought two of them, thinking that my perennial artichokes had completey died. Turned out that they were just dormant. Then it turned out that the pots that I bought had two artichokes each. Then, inexplicably, I bought another pot of artichokes. I’ve ended up with eight artichoke plants, more than I really intended. Oh well, I like artichokes.

See all that lush growth around the artichokes? They’re mostly weeds. Somewhere hidden in those weeds are about 30 red onions that I planted from sets around the artichokes. I’ve not tried onions in this bed before. This plot gets precious little sun in the winter, as the neighbor’s trees to the south shade it pretty completely. Now that I have a break in the rain, I need to get to work on those weeds and see if I can find the onions.

Kale

Collards

Savoy cabbage struggling to make a head

An eggplant defying the season

I think I’ll name my garden by the front sidewalk the Garden of Infinite Neglect. Since I got my lovely raised beds in back from Gardener’s Supply Company, I’ve pretty much ignored it. Yet it continues to provide us with kale and collards. If I bothered to harvest them, there are eggplants and beets ready as well. There is always more to do in a southern California garden. It never sleeps.

(To read more of Lou Murray’s environmental writing, see her weekly column, Natural Perspectives, in the Huntington Beach Independent at www.hbindependent.com /blogs_and_columns/)

Harvesting broccoli and lettuce in Salinas Valley

field of lettuce

Fields of baby lettuce in the Salinas Valley, California

Adding videos to my blog seemed like a great idea. I took some videos in Monterey with my Nikon Coolpix P-90 (great little digital camera) last week, first ones I had taken with that camera. But how to post them?!?!?

WordPress doesn’t accept .avi files, which is what my camera takes. I logged onto the wordpress forum and got my answer. Sort of. You have to upload them to Youtube first. Ack, another thing to learn. All this technology.
     Turned out that was fairly easy, as well as sharing them on my Facebook page (which isn’t public) and Twitter. I did that from the Youtube site. But to insert the videos in my blogs, I had to go to the “insert” section under drafts and click on “video.” Piece of cake.
      Here is a shot of agricultural workers harvesting broccoli in the Salinas Valley. 
 
     I know it isn’t the most gripping film in the world, but it shows how the workers follow a slow-moving tractor, bending and cutting, bending and cutting, then tossing the broccoli up to the people on the platform, who wrap it. Check out the victory dance of the guy on the left in the white sweatshirt as he nears the end of the row and a brief break as the tractor swings to go down the next row.
harvesting Romaine lettuce

Agricultural workers harvest romaine lettuce in Salinas Valley.

Romaine and iceberg lettuce, as well as cauliflower and probably other vegetables, are harvested the same way. They don’t get washed, but are packaged right in the field. We saw all of these things on our Ag Ventures Tour with Evan Oakes (agventuretours.com).
     From the field, the vegetables go into boxes, which go into trucks, which go to refrigerated warehouses. From the warehouses, they go into refrigerated trucks for shipment to distribution points, and thence to other refrigerated trucks and to your grocery store. A LOT of fossil fuel gets burned in the processes of cooling and shipping.
field of artichokes

Field of artichokes in the Salinas Valley

     It is sooooo much better for the environment if you can grow at least some of your own food at home. Even a little bit helps. You can even grow some things in containers. Here in late October, I have bell peppers, chard, cauliflower, cabbage, leeks and salad greens growing in raised beds from Garden Supply Company. I’m growing green onions and bok choy in pottery “color bowls” right now. I also have artichokes, rhubarb and red onions growing in the “Garden of Perpetual Responsibility” and kale, cabbage, chard, collards, and eggplants growing in our front yard by the sidewalk. What are you growing in YOUR garden?