Tuesday, 7 September 2021

So Long

I'm so happy that September has brought the heat and sunshine with it - aah, it's so welcome!

Cosmos
The cosmos flowers are doing weird things, as you can see. They started out with normal petals, but now they have something like an angry frill-necked lizard! Still looking beautiful though.

Nicola potatoes

We emptied one of the potato bags yesterday - the haulms were chopped down a few weeks ago because of the blight. These are Nicola potatoes (2 plants). A quick rummage in the top showed that it could be a good haul.

Nicola Potatoes

Look at that lovely lot! Delicious small potatoes. They're very good as salad potatoes but we've enjoyed them mashed and roasted too. A couple had a bit of blight so they won't keep, but we don't intend to store them for long anyway. Talking of blight, here are the tomatoes that we saved from the blighted crop.

Lizzano tomatoes

Lizzano are such a tasty tomato, such a shame that the growth was cut short. We're pleased that all of these semi-ripe fruits reddened up under our grow-lamp at home. Unlike the peppers which just went rotten! Clearly a fruit will only ripen if it's ready to. I'm having to make do with purchased peppers while ours are being mostly eaten by slugs in the polytunnel šŸ˜”

Peppers, tomatoes, garlic

This lovely dish is roasted peppers, garlic and onions with olive oil and a bit of chilly with basil to make it look pretty. It's so delicious with a salad or in sandwiches and lasts for 2-3 days. I'm having it with a potato salad for lunch today, mmm, I'm looking forward to it already and it's only breakfast time šŸ˜‹

We have started our first sweetcorn now. We plucked two large cobs. One was rather better pollinated than the other but still plenty of tasty kernels covered in butter. These are Early Bird. I don't think they're as tasty as the Lark that we usually grow but they are still good.

Early Bird Sweetcorn

I'm back working from home after a few days off. More of my colleagues are returning to the lab but still in fairly small numbers - so many of us have found working from home to be beneficial to our work and home-life, as well as reducing our carbon footprints. I'm expecting a 3rd COVID jab to be offered in the next few weeks which could improve the immunity for immunosuppressed people. For now we're relying on other people to have the jab and take the test every now and then. Thank goodness for the allotment so I'm not desperate to travel further afield.

Massive tromboncino!

There's me with our longest tromboncino squash and it's still growing! I may have to enter it into our Horticultural Show just because it's so amazing šŸ˜ There were 4 of us standing around talking about it the other day, it certainly draws attention! And that's the reason for this song title by Maya Hawke.

Tuesday, 31 August 2021

Monster

Crazy carrot

Well, thatā€™s August finished.

Grow your own and eat your neighbourā€™s veg
We took home this colourful selection of veggies yesterday. The yellow courgettes are from Nealā€™s plot (thanks Neal) and theyā€™re now part of a very yellow soup, along with that carrot (Five for the price of one šŸ˜„), shallots, garlic and flavoured with turmeric and sweet smoked paprika. I remembered to remove the courgette cores this time so itā€™s thick and creamy.

Courgette soup
The radish are the best weā€™ve grown for a long time. Jamie sowed them later than we normally would.
Multi-coloured radish
Theyā€™ve avoided the pest damage that they usually get, butā€¦. that may change quite soonā€¦ as I found these 3 large white butterfly caterpillars in the cage šŸ™„
Large White Butterfly caterpillars
We picked the last of the tomatoes, as you can see the blight was well and truly into the stems. The red(ish) tomatoes are under the grow lamp at home to ripen (hopefully) and the remains of the plants have gone into the green bin at home.
Blight on tomatoes
And Iā€™m sorry to report another crop fail - one of the Boston squashes has succumbed to blossom end rot. Probably because of the lack of rainfall during fruit development and, although weā€™ve been watering a lot, clearly not enough so the plant has suffered calcium deficiency. Some of the tromboncino have also suffered, but nobody minds cutting 20cm off the bottom of them! Iā€™ll add some lime when preparing the plot for next year.
Blossom end rot on Boston squash
Things arenā€™t all doom and gloom, though the mood isnā€™t helped by the weather - look at the grey sky and there was a north-easterly wind chill.
Grey August sky
The Borlotti beans are colouring up nicely. I donā€™t think Iā€™d bother with the dwarf ones again which seem to be growing at the same speed as the climbers and arenā€™t so prolific.
Borlotti beans
Iā€™ve also decided to keep them all for drying as we have plenty of runner beans and dwarf french beans to eat fresh, at least for the timebeing. Borlotti are my favourite dried beans but the Gigantes are also beginning to fatten up now.
Gigantes beans
The plants are still looking very much alive, with only the foliage on the squash (not all of them) dying back. You can see the courgette plants in the background.
So, that was the last day of August and the song title is provided by The Automatic. Itā€™s mostly referring to the carrot but it also makes me think of Winter šŸ˜©

Saturday, 28 August 2021

Living in the Past

With a few days off last week I was lucky enough for them to be the sunniest weā€™ve had in a while. We had a barbecue at the plot. The sunshine ripened up some of our tomatoes before blight got them. Not many, but happy to have had some!

The peppers are still green and we may not get any if the slugs have their way. Each visit to the plot we check the plants and invariable another healthy looking pepper has been ruined by slug or snail damageā€¦and sometimes we catch them in the act šŸ˜–
Slug on pepper
Eurgh, so many slugs and theyā€™re so big!! We donā€™t help ourselves really, with so many hiding places on our plots. At least weā€™ve finally cleared a rotten raised bed that was sheltering at least 15 big orange slugs and Jamie dug through the area. There, that looks better. Our broad beans will over-Winter there.
At least most of the beans are avoiding damage and runners or french beans are part of most meals at the moment.
Scarlet Empire runner beans
And thereā€™s plenty more to make a proper meal these days.
Mixed veg
That green squash is a tromboncino. One of the plants has produced these green fruits. The flesh is slightly more yellow than the usual light green fruits; the taste is the same, pretty bland. Quite a few of the fruits are really long but are rotting at the flower end and arenā€™t forming the bulbous seed end; seemingly because they havenā€™t been pollinated.
Dark green tromboncino
Our carrots wouldnā€™t be winning any prizes in the Horticultural Show on 18th September! Sadly we wonā€™t be joining in this year due to my shielding from COVID-19 but at least it means we donā€™t have to worry about ā€œDonā€™t eat that! Keep it for the showā€ šŸ˜„
Silly carrots
Weā€™ve pulled our first Kestrel potato plant. They seem to have escaped slug damage too, which is quite unusual for our potato harvests.
Kestrel potatoes
The song title is specifically chosen for Neal who requested some Jethro Tull. As he won the ā€˜HAHA Tallest sunflowerā€™ competition last week and he insists on using imperial (10ft 3 inches) rather than metric (3.12 metres) I opted for this song title.
Tallest sunflower
šŸ˜„ Well done Neal! This song will be with you for days!

Sunday, 22 August 2021

When it Rains

 ā€¦ Everyone gets wet!

Soaking wet bee
Poor little bee, clinging on to his cosmos stalk. We know how he felt! It was the first time in months that we walked to the site because the roads were at a standstill due to the M4 being closed.
We knew it was raining but what rain! We were drenched before we were halfway to the site, but we needed to pick runner beans and it is nice to see the site in all weathersā€¦
Raindrops on bean flowers
I thought Iā€™d practice some macro shots. The Gigantes and Scarlet Empire runner beans are still full of flowers and beans. The weather makes it feel like September so Iā€™m forgetting that we have (probably) another 2 months of growing time for the squashes and at least some of the beans.
Scarlet Empire runner beans
The runners, garlic and shallots are key ingredients of our meals at the moment.
Spaghetti, beans, shallot, garlic. Tomatoes
And the Nicola potatoes are a really tasty variety. 
Trug of veg
Theyā€™re delicious hot or cold and weā€™re really enjoying them mashed too. This meal is based on my mumā€™s ā€˜yellow fish pieā€™, with plant-based This isnā€™t bacon rather than fish and it is SO DELICIOUS!
Not Bacon pie
The pumpkin foliage has really died back, but the other squashes are still growing. Iā€™ve been checking the squash tunnel for fruits. There are definitely two Boston squashes, two Spaghetti squashes and two Crown Prince squashes, plus quite a few Festivals and Honey Boats. 
Squash tunnel
There are no giants at the moment (apart from some ridiculous tromboncino!) but that suits me. I must say itā€™s pleasing standing in the tunnel looking up through the vines. A lot of the fruits seem happier forming closer to the ground, particularly the Festival squash and I gave up trying to get them to grow in the right direction so now the tunnel can only be accessed from one end.
The swifts were gathering on the power lines so perhaps theyā€™re thinking theyā€™ve had enough of our weather too!
Swiftā€™s gathering
Dare I say that the polytunnel tomatoes are still surviving blight and are beginning to go orange. The peppers are refusing to colour up but a branch has snapped off so Iā€™m hoping theyā€™ll ripen in the kitchen window.
So that was it for a day off work on Friday and a soggy Saturday.
Fennel flowers
The song is provided by Paramore.

Monday, 16 August 2021

Just Got Lucky

Echinacea

I thought I'd start the post on a happy picture, as the next photo is a less happy one - our tomatoes haven't escaped blight so this lunchtime I chopped off all the leaves in the vain hope that some may actually go red. I'm envious of all the tomato harvests I'm seeing on social media!

Tomatoes after blight
What a poor show! So it appears that we'll have to keep buying tomatoes for the rest of this year šŸ˜” It's a shame because everything else in most of my meals is home-grown at the moment.

The runner beans are really paying out. And a branch snapped off my dwarf borlotti beans, so I had some of them in their pods along with the first picking of Speedy dwarf beans.

Scarlet Empire runner beans

All of the beans apart from the Edamame are producing beans now. The Edamame have only just started to flower, so not sure whether they'll produce in time - the plants look healthy but the weather is definitely feeling like September.

Edamame beans

Harvests are a bit more varied, (well, different shaped courgettes!) but how many more courgettes, cucumbers and beans can I eat??

I've made another batch of marrow and carrot soup, flavoured with celeriac stems. I should have removed the centre of the marrow, as the soup is a bit watery; I may need to add a potato to it to thicken it up a bit. Iā€™ll see how it tastes tomorrow.

We have plenty of garlic - good job I'm working from home and not socialising! And I harvested a first Tromboncino for this tasty meal.

That's the before photo and I scoffed half of it before getting a photo after it was cooked, with a bit of cheese on top. It has Ancho chilli flakes added to the carrot, shallots and garlic; theyā€™re not hot but add a lovely flavour - it covered two meals as Jamie's refusing to eat any more Summer squash šŸ˜ƒ
Thatā€™s me, making holes for planting the leeks at the weekend - look, the sun shone and it was warm. We now have 40 leeks puddled-in, thanks to our plot neighbour Neal. Weā€™d be waiting rather longer if we used our specimensā€¦! How pathetic are they šŸ˜„
Leeks are such a tasty addition, particularly as our shallots didnā€™t produce very much. Jamieā€™s been trying to buy pickling vinegar to pickle a small jar of shallots but has found that in short supply - along with other items. Is it COVID-related or BREXITā€¦ or maybe a bit of both?

Anyway, (donā€™t get me started) Iā€™ll drag myself away from my two favourite subjects. The song title is provide by The Jo-Boxers and Iā€™ve chosen it because more and more Iā€™m reminded of how much ā€˜luckā€™ can change peopleā€™s fortunes - good or, sadly, very bad. Stay safe all.