The remaining borlotti beans are drying on netting attached in the top of the polytunnel. The smaller squashes may go up there later when we need to use the chair!
More of the tomatoes are finally ripening but the peppers are remaining obstinately green. With the temperatures dropping to about 4° most nights I wonder if they’ll ever ripen…but you know some good things do come to those who wait. This Chinese Dragon radish was sown months ago, did nothing during the heatwave and finally started to appear a few weeks ago. I thought it would be woody, but no.It’s hot fresh flavour was a great addition to this lunchtime potato salad with raw beetroot and Chinese cabbage thinnings.
I bought a julienne peeler recently and it’s perfect for carrots and radish but the beetroot was a bit too tricky and messy, so I just sliced that really thin. We’ve been enjoying carrots and pak choi in a couple of stir fries recently too, the Blue Dragon sauces make life easy. But as I’m mentioning brands, if you see these Itsu Bao buns for sale, buy them! They’re so delicious! Talking of delicious..Here’s the bean, carrot and courgette meal I made the other day with
last years beans, a can of chopped tomatoes flavoured with smoked paprika,
garlic and a little rose harissa.
Someone had cut back overgrown sections of the allotment hedge, so I thought I'd pick the rosehips if the birds aren't going to get to eat them - there are still plenty in the hedge for them. This is the recipe I intend to use to make rosehip jelly which I've never made before. The author of that recipe is quite funny and she is so right - the thorns are so nasty!! I'm a bit concerned that the irritable seed hairs get mentioned quite often in recipes, I hope my draining bag is fine enough to capture them...
The zinnia flowers are still creating a buzz - sorry 🤭 - with bees and hoverflies. I think this is a Common Carder bee (David, please correct me if I’m wrong!) and the hedge is alive with buzzing insects on the ivy flowers. We've also seen a dragon fly zipping about recently - such a huge insect but it never sits still for a photo.
So, you may be wondering, why the title song by the Sugababes? Well, Jamie dug up our single Desiree potato plant and …
Oh dear they're really not pretty and though a little scab on a baked spud can add to the flavour I wouldn't want to risk one of them! That’s what a dry Summer can give you. I just hope they taste okay once they are peeled and mashed. And here are the Sugababes.
Your desirees look really ugly. That is odd. My desirees have never been better. Heavy cropping and huge tubers. So big, I looked up views about using them as baking potatoes. My cara crop is less since I planted fewer! I found, to my surprise, that one of the plus points for desirees is that they perform well in drought conditions. This seemed to be the case with mine but not yours. Very odd😐
ReplyDeleteThe plant died back rather quickly compared to our other spud varieties and I'm pleased to say that most of our other potatoes have been small but tasty - just a few have had hollow heart :-( Glad to hear that yours were good, we must have been doing something wrong or they just don't like our soil
DeleteThose potatoes look other worldly. Our soil just won’t dig when it is so dry. The meal looks just our sort of thing.
ReplyDeleteThere were sections of that patch which were just dust, but we had a bit of rain (5mm) the other night so that was most welcome.
DeleteOh me too - a one pot/pan meal is always my favourite kind