tiny bee on a globe mallow in our front yard |
Globe mallow, a native plant, growing in our front yard |
While we were gone, one of our neighbors picked the ripening vegetables in our garden and the apples that fell from our trees and canned salsa, spaghetti sauce, and apple butter. Tom got busy the first weekend we were home and canned more tomatoes--35 pints total for the season so far. And this week, I have been cleaning up the garden and planting seeds that I hope will have time to germinate, grow, and produce before the first freeze. I should have planted the seeds --two kinds of arugula, a spicy mustard mix, Crimson Crunch radishes, a mesclun mix--mid-August, but I didn't free up any room for fall planting until I dug the potatoes. Then Tom transplanted onions into two of those rows. But when we returned from Washington state, I cleared out the cowpen daisies that were past their bloom, and Tom pulled up a couple of dead tomato plants. Gardening here is an experiment for us, anyway, and we can always blame any failures on our being newcomers and unfamiliar with the climate.
Yesterday I spent all afternoon making salsa from tomatoes, peppers, and cilantro from our garden. I'm a slow worker when it comes to cooking anything more than dinner. I'll chop up some vegetables, take a break and read some headline news on my computer, return to chop up more vegetables, take a break to check on the garden, and return to the work at hand. That's why it took me all afternoon. Also, I simmered the salsa for 75 minutes to get it to the right consistency.
salsa ingredients from our garden, serrano peppers, tomatoes, bell peppers, cilantro |
Salsa simmering on the stove |
five little half-pints of salsa for the freezer |
Sunlight and shadow--cats getting their morning yard time |
Cassie in the daisy fleabane flowers that haven't opened yet for the day |
birdhouse gourds |
more gourds |
early morning in the garden at Casa Malpollos |
Tomato plants escaping from the greenhouse; shadow of a neighbor's shed |
A high wind yesterday blew apples from the apple trees |
No comments:
Post a Comment