Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greenhouse. Show all posts

Sunday 12 July 2015

Some Kind of Soup...

I'm not sure it's going to be very tasty soup. It doesn't look very pretty.
It contains some of these ingredients, perhaps I should have added a few more...
I'll call it 'cream of purple mangetout soup with garlic scapes' and will have it for lunch tomorrow. One of its problems is that it should have an onion in it and perhaps more garlic, but I have to consider my work colleagues!
This is the recipe:
  • Mangetout (115g)
  • Small potato
  • Garlic Scape (Just one, I'm hoping it will be garlicy enough)
  • 300ml vegetable stock
  • 150ml milk
  • Pepper and salt
The 'garlic scape' is the flower stem that appears on hardneck garlic. I don't know what variety of garlic I'm growing (due to the problem earlier in the year) but some stems certainly appear to have scapes. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I thought the plants had gone to seed but they have pretty good bulbs on so I'm going to treat the stems as scapes and consider them a delicacy like I've read about online - and our garlic definitely has curly flower stems like this picture (I don't know why I don't have a photo of our garlic!):
https://greencitymarket.wordpress.com/2012/06/15/what-do-i-do-withgarlic-scapes-by-amelia-levin-green-city-market-junior-board-member/
Garlic Scape
 Anyway, the reason I started getting 'creative' in the kitchen is because we got rained off the allotment. We hid in the greenhouse with Neal and Jane, our plot neighbours, a few times but it was too heavy and frequent to carry on weeding. We need to tidy the plots for the 'Hungerford in Bloom' judging next week. We aren't expecting to win, especially as there are so many empty places on Plot 7 at the moment. Of course, they may be full of weeds by next Sunday if the rain continues!
I've cleared a lot of the lettuce which has gone to seed - such a shame and I still haven't done my succession sowing of salad leaf!! I do have a few more lettuces which aren't quite trees yet though...
Lettuce shouldn't look like that!
There's a lot more room in the raised bed now, which is good because the florence fennel and some radish will probably appreciate the extra light and space.
I had to change the setup for the gherkins - they were going to struggle growing through the mesh so now they can climb up it instead.
Beautiful chard in the rain

Saturday 20 June 2015

Lens-Shaped Things and...

...other stuff.
I had to use that title because of these clouds we saw just as we were leaving the site at about 9pm this evening. I understand they're called Lenticular Clouds e.g. lens-shaped or lentil-shaped! Cool, huh?
Hmm, so what else is lens-shaped..?
This stone - we're certain this is a worked stone tool (we're always hoping to find such things!). Jamie found it on Plot 3. It's lovely and smooth on the flat sides.
 The edge definitely appears to have been worked - that can't be natural surely??
Er.... Lens-shaped...?
No, but pretty
Ok, I've run out of lens-shaped things, so this is what we achieved during our very long day on the allotment.
Jamie did a lot more digging on plot 3 and made a raised bed to go on that plot. We want to grow more chinese radish on there under cover so they have nice white skins.
I sorted out the greenhouse and we're now all planted up - no room for anything else. In fact, there may not be room for the things we've got in there if they grow well!
I'm feeling rather smug about the frame over the gherkins as I cannibalised several old cages to make it. I've hung strings down from the roof for the gherkins to begin their climb before they grab hold of the mesh.
Three Cornichon Paris Vert (mini gherkins)
Thanks to plotholder, Jonathan, for this healthy looking plant. Long cucumbers, so it's got some mesh to grab onto and hopefully the cucumbers will hang down through the shelving.
Burpless Cucumber

Thanks again to Jonathan for these two Tomatillo plants. They're like cape gooseberries, with Chinese lantern style fruits. Good for salsa when they're green (apparently) and jam when the fruits go purple. These are liable to grow out of control - they really need a metre to spread all round, so may need moving if they don't use the mesh as intended...
So, including two peppers (one chilli and one bell) and 2 tomato plants, there it is. All planted up. We've put some marigold in front of the tomato plants - to encourage bees/hoverflies for pollination and deter whitefly.
Yay! The asparagus peas have developed flowers. So pretty.

The plants always look sad initially as they grow flat to the ground, but they should bush out in time.
And here's the start of the courgettes...

Monday 6 May 2013

A Sunny Bank Holiday!

Such a lovely May Day holiday - there were a lot of other plot holders around making the most of the sunshine and amazing temperature. We had a barbecue but escaped early afternoon as it was too hot (my resolution not to moan when the sun shines is officially broken!). We'll go back to close the greenhouse down a bit later.
From Plot 7
Look how dry the ground appears, but a couple of inches down there is some moisture; In the morning there is dew so it's not quite as dry as it looks. Still no sign of parsnips or the broad beans we sowed a couple of weeks ago.
We've moved the flowers and beets which have germinated under the green mesh cloche, in the raised bed, which is cooler than the greenhouse.
Today I sowed these seeds in modules and they're in the greenhouse:
  • Scarlet Empire runner beans
  • White flowered runner beans - we don't know their name but they are apparently self-pollinating
I also sowed 4 small rows of Rondo F1 Florence Fennel. I sowed 3 seeds per 'station' and spread the stations out as each plant should be spaced about 15cm apart.
I also sowed a row of PeaWee 65 petit pois and Carouby de Moussane mangetout. Jamie repaired the pea frame which had gone rather wobbly since I moved it from the other quarter...
More potatoes have burst through!
From Plot 8
 

Sunday 5 May 2013

Seedy Sunday

We managed to get most of our seeds sown this afternoon. It was warm and bright and the wind had dropped since yesterday - Thank Goodness.
Our potatoes have started to appear. This is the most advanced in the second row - it appears to be a Red Duke of York which fits in with the plan, so that's a good start!
These are two rows of Paris Silverskin onions, for pickling, and one row of Apache red salad onions. I'll hopefully succession sow a few more rows of salad onions in here too. As ever, my rows aren't straight, but they're labelled and topped with seed compost so whatever :-)
This is Jamie, very neatly, sowing our carrots, Sugarsnax F1. Three rows under the enviromesh cover. He used a wooden pole to make the straight drills - wish I'd done that for the onions!
We also sowed the following and they've gone into the greenhouse:
  • Tom Thumb lettuce (half a tray)
  • Lambs Lettuce (corn salad) Cavallo (half a tray)
  • Swiss Chard Bright Lights (I've sown these in modules so I can keep the most colourful ones)
  • Celeriac Asterix F1 (in modules)
  • Brussels Nelson F1 (in pots)
  • Cabbages Minicole F1 (in pots)
The squashes are sown 3 per pot (apart from the Cornells Bush Delicata). I really only want one of each type but I'm sure the others will find homes if they germinate and grow.
  • Winter Squash Cornells Bush Delicata (in pots)
  • Winter Squash Uchiki Kuri (in pots)
  • Courgette Ambassador (normal green type) (in pots)
  • Courgette Floridor F1 (round yellow type) (in pots)
These were sown into the raised bed:
  • Turnip Oasis
  • Radish French Breakfast 3
  • Radish Chinese Dragon
 
And night scented stock have been sown around the grape hyacinths so they'll produce a lovely evening fragrance when we're sitting on our bench.