My harvest poundage is climbing! I should be able to beat my total of 224 lbs from last year, but I won’t hit my goal of 300 lbs produce. Not this year at least.

A small Moon and Stars watermelon

October turned out to be my most productive month this year. Because the tomato and summer squash harvests were low, the bulk of my harvest this year came in the form of apples, winter squash, and watermelon. I’m particularly pleased by the watermelon, because it is the first time I’ve succeeded in growing some. My new community garden plot was good for something at least. The apples were mostly from my dwarf Granny Smith tree at home. I forgot to weigh the contribution separately of the Gala and Fuji apple trees, but it was tiny.

This is almost the last of my tomato harvest. I still have a half dozen tomatoes that may ripen before Thanksgiving. But they're done setting fruit.

Lunch was a medley of sauteed beans, celery, shallots and bell peppers on brown rice.

I have been taking care of a friend’s community garden plot while she has been on vacation. Some of her green beans had become quite elderly. They weren’t heirloom green beans as far as we know, so there was no sense in letting them dry to save beans for planting for next year. I picked them as overgrown but not dry green beans, shelled the beans, and cooked them for about 20 minutes. The white beans turned green, much to my surprise. I sauteed shallots, celery, and bell peppers in olive oil, added the beans, seasoned the dish and served it over brown rice. Very healthy, quite tasty.

 

For October, my harvest was :

FRUIT

9 lbs 10 oz Apples (mostly Granny Smith–I forgot to weigh them by variety, but there were some Fuji and Gala in there too)

11 oz Lemons (Eureka and Meyer)

8 oz Limes

Subtotal Fruit 10 lbs 13 oz

VEGETABLES

31 oz Beans, Green

4 oz Beans, Cherokee Trail of Tears, dry

24 oz Beets

34 oz Bell Peppers

9 oz Bok Choy

75 oz Carrots, Kyoto Red

33 oz Chard

46 oz Eggplant

14 oz Garlic

3 oz Herbs

3 0z Kale

15 oz Lettuce

4 oz Mizuna (a Japanese mustard green)

25 oz Onions

22 oz Summer Squash

27 oz Winter Squash

25 oz Tomatoes

209 oz Watermelon

SUBTOTAL Vegetables 603 oz

TOTAL PRODUCE 37.7 lbs plus 16 eggs

Last year my October harvest was 17 lbs, so I’m pretty pleased. To see what others are harvesting, visit Daphne’s Dandelions.

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This is such a beautiful day that I went to the Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve at the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach.

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I stopped at the Bolsa Chica Conservancy’s Interpretive Center. A class on environmental interpretation from CalState Long Beach is here, and I got a video of some of the students handling a king snake, one of several snakes that live in the building for interpretive purposes.

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Harumph, I have no idea why the videos are upside down. I took them right side up. Sorry about that. Bear with me as I figure out this iPad.

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Chicken Video!

I am in a location with no WiFi, but five bars of Internet access. Let’s see if that is enough for me to load my chicken video.

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Ye, I think I did it. The secret is having enough bars of reception for the iPad. The sweet part is that with my upgraded WordPress account, I can now load videos directly without having to put them on YouTube.

Arg, now all I have left to do is figure out why the video loaded upside down. Bear with me, folks, I’m learning.

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Another beautiful day in paradise

It’s another beautiful day in paradise here in Huntington Beach. Temps are headed to the mid seventies and the sun is shining brightly. I’m still playing with my iPad, can’t seem to put it down. I’m sitting on our deck while blogging, not in my office. Too nice a day to be indoors. Pics below show my snow peas in bloom, oranges and avocados about ready to harvest and broccoli coming along nicely. Can’t say that this is easier than writing on my Dell, but it’s fun.

Garden chores that lie ahead are scooping compost out of the bins from the bottom and putting it into bed three, then planting red cabbage.

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Attempting to upload a photo from iPad

I’ve made a bit of progress. I can write a draft on my iPad using the wordpress app, but can’t figure out how to upload it from there. I had to go to the bookmarked page for my blog to upload, not using the app. Shafts nuisance. This can’t be the way it’s supposed to work. I had visions of being able to take photos and blog while sitting in my nice little plot at the community garden.

Today I’m going to try again to upload a photo from the iPad’s camera, ie the iPad’s library.

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Ah ha, I can success! (that was what the Japanese postdoctoral fellows in our lab said when their experiments worked. The phrase has gone into my vocabulary.) so here was the issue. The Internet connection simply wasn’t good enough. I was doing the right things, but the iPad wasn’t responding. Anyway, the photo above is of my raised beds in the backyard, photographed yesterday. Next step, see if I can upload a video. That may be problematic given the file size. If it works, the video is a tour of my garden. Maybe I’ll start with a shorter one of my three chickens.

Nope, didn’t work. Back to the drawing board.

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Still playing with my iPad

Now I’m using the wordpress app to write a post. I can see the typing on the screen at least, but I see no way to upload a photo.

Ok, I see how to upload a photo. I have to click on the tiny keyboard icon to make the keyboard disappear from the iPad screen. Then I click on the photo icon, choose the photo from the library and click to upload it. Except it didn’t upload. I’m thinking that maybe my Internet connection isn’t strong enough since I don’t have WiFi here at home. I’ll try again sometime from an internet cafe using their WiFi. So for now, no photos or videos from my iPad unless someone can tell me how to make it work.

Well, rats. I can’t even upload this text to my blog using the wordpress app. What the heck am I doing wrong? Or is it my connection?

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Blogging with my new iPad

Arg, I’m pulling my hair out. I got a new iPad 2 and there is soooo much to learn. I upgraded my wordpress account so I could upload videos directly from my iPad. Then I couldn’t type anything on my blog. I installed the wordpress app, but this isn’t wor
I did it. I made a post. But when I went to edit it, the screen was blank. Well, I’m typing blind here. Let’s see if a photo will load on using this scree.
king the same as on my computer. I can’t figure out how to even load pictures now, much less a video.

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How to make a pumpkin pie from scratch

And I mean really from scratch, starting with a pumpkin.

I grew three Amish pie pumpkins this year. They are supposed to get up to 90 lbs each, but mine were small, like New England pie pumpkins. One of them rotted before I could process it, leaving me with two small pumpkins. I’ll get four pies out of them.

If you didn’t grow your own, buy a sugar pumpkin. They are smaller and rounder than the Connecticut Field or Howden pumpkins that are grown for jack-o’lanterns. Or use a butternut squash. All make very good pumpkin pies. You can try making a pie with a field pumpkin, but the flesh of some of them can be fibrous and flavorless, not ideal for cooking.

Cut the pumpkins in half and scrape out the seeds and stringy fiber with a serrated grapefruit spoon.

If the pumpkin was an heirloom variety, not a hybrid, you can save the seeds for planting next year. Spread them out on a paper towel to dry, stirring them occasionally to ensure that the ones on the bottom dry out too. Store in a plastic baggie.

Some people like to eat pumpkin seeds, but I’m not among them. That is, unless someone else has taken off the hulls. I don’t like chewing all of that fibrous seed husk. But if you want to make your own pumpkin seeds, toss them with oil, salt them and bake. Not sure how long or at what temperature, but probably 300 degrees F for 15 minutes.

Put the scraped pumpkin halves cut side down on a cookie sheet, add enough water to cover the bottom of the sheet and bake at 350 degrees F for 60 minutes.

The pumpkins are done when a fork slips through the skin and flesh easily. Note that two of the halves above have fork piercings in them. Let the pumpkins cool enough to be able to handle them comfortably.

Use a serrated grapefruit spoon to scoop out the cooked pumpkin flesh, leaving the rind behind.

The rinds go into the compost bin. The scooped out flesh goes into a colander.

I use my mother's old colander that dates back to the 1930s. It still works fine. Modern cooks call this a "chinois."

Rotate the pestle, pushing the flesh through the small openings. The long fibers will stay behind in the colander. You can also use a potato ricer for this job. You could use a food processor instead of the colander, but I don’t like the texture of the resulting product as much. It comes out with a texture more like baby food, and yet can still have long strings in it if you use a food processor.

Scrape the last of the pulp from the outside of the colander.

Scrape the outside of the colander to get all of the pumpkin pulp, and measure it in a cup. You will need 1 3/4 to 2 cups of pumpkin for most recipes. If I’m working with large pumpkins, I measure out 2 cup quantities of pulp puree and freeze it in baggies. I flatten out each baggie before freezing so the pumpkin pulp will store flat in the freezer. Since each package is thin, it also thaws quickly when you want to use the pumpkin in a recipe.

Make enough dough for two pie crusts. Drape crust to fit the pan and trim if necessary.

Flute or crimp the edges of the crust.

Assemble the ingredients for the pie filling. Note the eggs. They're from our hen Chicken Little.

Two beautiful pies. These homemade pies will be more tan than the fluorescent orange of a store-bought pie.

There is absolutely nothing else like the taste and texture of a pie that you made yourself from a real pumpkin. Now here are the recipes.

PIE CRUST for two 8″ pies

2 C unbleached flour, preferably organic

3/4 tsp salt

1/2 tsp ground cinnamon

1 T sugar

2/3 C plus 2 T shortening

4-5 T cold water

For shortening, I use half Crisco and half butter. Mix dry ingredients. Using a pastry wire/blender, cut in the shortening until the mix is like cornmeal. Stir in the water bit by bit using a fork until the dough balls up around the fork. Roll half of the dough out on a floured pastry board. Use the upside down pie pan to measure the crust. You want a circle that is 1 inch larger all around than the pie pan. Fold the crust into half, then half again to transfer it to the pie pan. Unfold. Settle the crust into the pan and crimp the edges. Repeat for the second crust.

PUMPKIN PIE FILLING

4 eggs

2 C pumpkin puree (or one can)

1  12 oz can evaporated milk

1 C sugar (I use organic sugar, which is a bit brown and has a great flavor)

1 tsp salt

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1/2 tsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp ground nutmeg

1/4 tsp ground allspice and/or cloves

1/4 tsp mace

Mix salt and spices with sugar. Beat the eggs and add other ingredients in order given, adding the sugar-spice mixture last. Pour into two 8″ pie shells and bake at 375 degrees F for an hour or until a knife inserted into the center comes out clean.

 

(If you don’t have organic sugar, substitute 1/3 c brown sugar for 1/3 C of the white sugar. The amounts of spices can be varied to give different flavors to your pies. Mace isn’t used much in cooking any more, but it is a fabulous spice and needs to be back on America’s spice shelf.)

Bon appetit!

 

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Harvest Monday, and fall planting in my backyard garden

I am almost done planting my backyard vegetable garden for fall. I specify backyard because I also grow vegetables in the front yard (I even grow potatoes and yams in the driveway using fabric Grow Pots!) and my community garden plot. Here in southern California, we garden year round, growing eggplants, tomatoes, squash and peppers in the summer, and broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower and lettuces in the winter. So, one garden area almost planted out for fall, two to go.

Raised beds for growing vegetables in back.

This is an overview of half of my backyard. You can see that I’m not working with very much space. These three raised beds are from Gardeners Supply Company. My beds are going into their third year, and look as good as new. I just love them.

I added two bean towers and some black metal trellising and pea fencing from Gardeners Supply this past spring. They’re performing nicely as well. I particularly like the black coated metal trellising that I put into the raised beds for growing peas and beans. They are designed to fit perfectly, and the black coating is more elegant than the aluminum-look pea fencing that I have set up next to our deck.

Mammoth Melting Sugar snow peas growing up a pea fence by the deck. I grow parsley, basil and dill in front of the peas, along with nasturtiums and allysum.

The openings are closer together on the black trellising than on the pea fence, which the peas like better. If I were doing it over, I’d skip the zig-zag pea fencing in favor of the black trellises, even though the black ones were more expensive. The black ones just look better.

As for the bean towers, I just love them. I can grow a lot of beans and peas in a very small space with these towers.

Raised bed # 1 has been planted with broccoli, cauliflower, spinach, and brussel sprouts, with some beets and lacinato kale left over from a previous planting.

Raised bed #2 has some eggplants hanging on from summer, plus some lettuce, leeks, one lone red cabbage that is struggling to make a head, broccoli, and some peas starting up the new black trellises.

You can see that I let that eggplant go a bit too long. It turned from glossy black to egg color. No worries. I picked it yesterday, pared off the tough skin, and made an eggplant Parmesan, using the last of my tomatoes for the sauce, plus homegrown onions, garlic, and herbs.

Raised bed #3 has some holdover tomatoes plus savoy cabbage, some peppers that have seen better days, and some peas starting up the black trellis in back.

To make even better use of my space, I plant herbs and flowers outside the raised beds. This bed has allysum and parsley around portions of the exterior. You can see the base of the bean towers in back at the left of the photo. I have a few green beans remaining, but the season for beans is over. The other bean tower has some newly planted Super Sugar Snap peas that haven’t sprouted yet.

My only remaining task for the back is to pull out the spent tomato and pepper plants, add compost, and plant my six-pack of red cabbages. I’m hoping to find room to transplant some deer-tongue lettuce that I started from seed a few weeks ago. The texture of deer-tongue lettuce is fabulous, with great flavor too. I count that as my best new-to-me vegetable from last winter. It’s an heirloom, so I saved seeds from last year’s crop to grow this year.

October has been a surprisingly good harvest month for me, with about 34 lbs of produce. That puts my total harvest for the year up to 196 lbs, with more crops coming along. I’m certainly going to break 200 lbs, and hope to at least equal my harvest last year (without the community garden) of 224 lbs. Maybe my harvest poundage is as much related to the amount of time that I have to garden as the amount of space that I have. I tended to neglect my home garden this year in favor of working the soil in the community garden.

I love being able to go out into the garden to "pick lunch." Yesterday's lunch was a turkey-Jarlsberg cheese sandwich on a croissant with homegrown lettuce, plus a medley of potatoes, whole wheat pasta, homegrown green beans, and pesto made with homegrown garlic, basil, and parsley.

Harvest for the week ending October 23, 2011

FRUIT

7 oz lemon, Meyer

6 lbs watermelon

Subtotal FRUIT 6 lbs 7 oz

VEGETABLES

10 oz bell peppers

4 oz black dried beans

6 oz beans, green

1 lb carrots

6 oz chard

1 lb 13 oz eggplant

5 oz garlic

2 oz herbs

9 oz lettuce

1 lb onions

6 oz tomatoes

9 oz winter squash

Subtotal VEGETABLES (116 oz) 7 lbs 6 oz

TOTAL PRODUCE  13 lbs 13 oz, plus 4 eggs

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Why I’m behind on putting in my fall garden

I have reasons for being so lax in posting to my blog recently, and reasons why my fall garden isn’t completely in yet.

My plot at the new community garden, photo taken July 4 2011. Edison says that my nice redwood borders have to go.

First of all, my lovely redwood bed borders at the community garden have to come out. We are gardening underneath Southern California Edison power lines, and they have decided that while our outer bed borders that delineate each plot can stay, the inner beds must go. They will allow plastic edging, but not wooden bed borders. Many of us have spent an average of $1500 putting in raised beds and filling them with amendments. Too bad. Those wooden beds have to be out by December 31. I’m harvesting my summer crops and letting the ground go fallow so I will have room to rework the soil and put in new borders. Arg, more expense. I’m growing $100 carrots.

My plot at the community garden, looking NE.

The plastic chicken net fence that you see above was completely ineffective at keeping out rabbits. My first fence was a nice wire rabbit fence that kept out the rabbits, but Edison made us remove all metal from the gardens. I had a bunny living in my garden all summer long, eating my crops whenever it wanted. It chewed holes in this plastic netting as fast as I patched them. I’ve since added some white plastic trellis fencing, but I’m not finished with that project.

Each time I have to do another construction project at the garden, it eats into the time available to actually grow crops. What an utter nuisance this community garden has become. It seems that every single thing I bought for it had to be replaced with something inferior to meet their rules and regs, which changed AFTER we put things in. I can’t really express here how frustrated I am, but a lot of nasty four-letter words come to mind. At this point, I’ve put so much money into my plot that I don’t dare give it up. I just have to hope that this process of sinking cash into the ground is coming to an end, and that I can get to actual GARDENING soon, not just spending more time and money on something else that has to be replaced.

OK, enough ranting. Now on to the other reason why my gardening time has become limited.

Our son Scott with his new son, Mike

Our son Scott and his wife Nicole have presented us with our first grandson. After five precious granddaughters from our two sons, we’re happy to have a grandson. We all expect Mike to be our last grandchild, which makes him all the more precious.

Baby Mike, one day old

His three older sisters, five-year-old twins Allison and Lauren and three-year-old Megan, think he’s just adorable. And so do the rest of us.

I’ve been spending a lot of time in San Diego, not in my garden. While his mom and dad take care of baby Mike, the other Nana and I are taking care of the three little girls. I take Megan to preschool, music class and gymnasium, while Nana Maria gets them all dressed, does an unbelievable amount of laundry, takes the twins to kindergarten and helps out with the little one as well. Nana Maria is actually doing most of the work. I just schlep Megan here and there and play with the girls, but that’s important too. Papa Vic helps out with cooking and cleaning on weekends. It takes a village!

Megan loves to cook. So far we've made banana bread and pecan-raisin-pumpkin bread together. I measure and she mixes.

Megan said that she wanted to remember how to make the quick breads, so she wanted to “write down the recipe.” Since she’s only three, she can’t read or write yet. Naturally, I wondered how she planned to do that. No problem for her. She drew pictures of eggs, a stick of butter, a cup of water and the box of mix. Pretty clever.

Megan at gymnastics class

Allison on the balance beam at gymnastics class.

Lauren on the balance beam at gymnastics class.

So I’m busy helping raise grandkids in addition to my garden. One of these days I’ll get the rest of my fall crops in. Somehow.

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