Blog: Category: Vegetables & Fruit

Garlic Whistles

Garlic Whistles

What the heck are these weird looking things? Garlic whistles, of course! But what are they good for?

The harvest begins

The Start of Harvest Season

Zucchini, Patty Pan Squash, Cucumbers, Tomatillos, Ground Cherries, Okra, Basil and Tomatoes — the first significant haul of the harvest season is upon us! Amazing colors, inspiring art and amazing smells, inspiring cooking. 🙂

Purple and Green Kohlrabi Vegetable

Unusual Vegetable: Kohlrabi

I was introduced to kohlrabi at a very early age. My grandmother used to grow these and I would just eat them up like mad! As I grew older and my grandmother didn’t grow them as often, I began to notice that you couldn’t get these at the store. In fact, most produce clerks or home gardeners that I asked

Handful of blueberries and raspberries

Harvest Flashback: Blueberries & Raspberries

It’s almost December right now as I write, but here is a throwback to July when the raspberries and blueberries were in full production! In July and August, a handful of raspberries and blueberries is not an uncommon snack for garden visitors. I have 18 blueberry bushes, some of them 10+ years old, many around 5 years old and a

Glass Gem Corn

Grow Glass Gem Corn for a Lovely Autumn Decoration

If you love decorative corn, you should try growing the variety called “Glass Gem” — the kernels come out in all kinds of wild colors, mixed around on each ear seemingly randomly. They dry well and make a very interesting autumn decoration and conversation piece! Here are some things to know about growing corn: Corn is pollenated by the wind.

Zucchinis, Tomatillos, Tomatoes, Grapes and blueberries

‘Tis the Season to Celebrate a Bountiful Harvest!

Summer might just be a memory, but this is the time of year that here in the U.S.A. we celebrate the things that we are thankful for, and we celebrate with food and our bountiful harvests from the previous growing season. This year, 2020, may have been a strange year, but one thing that I am thankful for is that

Tomatoes in cook-pot

Making Homemade Tomato Sauce

Ever have those summers where you’ve got so many tomatoes that you don’t know what to do with them and you can’t even give them away? (It seems like that happens to me every year now-days.) If this sounds like a familiar problem to you, you should try making tomato sauce… It’s really easy, takes only a half hour, and

Dehydrator full of raisins

Homemade Raisins

Making homemade raisins takes a lot of work and takes a full two days of running the dehydrator on medium-high heat, but the raisins are so flavorful and different than what you buy at the store! For these raisins, I had two paper grocery sacks of purple seedless concord grapes, a full stack of 10 dehydrator trays, and that equated

Pumpkin carving setup

Pumpkin Carving — Don’t Toss the Seeds!

This year was a great year for pumpkin farmers! (Ok, I’m just guessing on that one, but the pumpkin patches around this neck of the woods were bursting at the seams with families hunting for the perfect jack-o-lantern material this year–saw it with my own eyes!) Because we weren’t sure how Covid was going to affect Halloween, people planned a

Cuke-smelling Pumpkin

What’s with this smelly, little, green pumpkin?

Last fall we tossed a bumpy green pumpkin out into the garden to compost (and get picked apart by animals) and this spring, up came a squash-y looking plant near that spot. Several months (and many flowers) went by and eventually the little plant put on one, medium sized, olive green pumpkin. We left it alone until the cold weather

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