I found this recipe for great tasting tomato jam - forget catsup this stuff is better: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/10/06/tomato-jam/
It's also nice that you only have to core the tomatoes and you can freeze the jam. :thumbsup
Just went to a farmers market tonite, this is what I noticed they were getting:
Butternut Squash - $.50 ea.
endive - didn't see this
salad mixes - $3.00 per 1/4 lb.
spinach - didn't notice price on this
delicata squash - didn't notice price on this
punpkins - varies by size
beets - $4.00/bunch...
That's a great setup vfem, every gardener should have one. And great repurposing of leftovers - I think we've got a couple of extra doors around here........ ;)
That's it, I've had it with the hybrid tomatoes. I've got both Brandywine and Early Girl ripening like crazy now, and it's not worth it to grow the hybrid. Pics and story here: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/09/22/a-tale-of-two-tomatoes/
Anyone else feel that way about the hybrids...
I grew Silver Queen and Doubly Delicious this year, they were good; but we had some from a farm stand that was really good so I asked what it was. They said Bread & Butter - so I've googled for that type of sweet corn on the web but so far have not had any luck. Anyone heard of this type and...
I found another use for lavender, lavender wands to use as moth protectors in the closet. They smell great, and I think they look pretty neat too:
I put instructions and pictures on how to do it on my website here: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/09/08/lavender-wand-moth-repellant/...
Well, thanks to everyone's advice, the lavender did great and now I'm trying to find other uses for it besides bouquets and sachets. I found instructions for a "lavender wand" for moth protection and tried it - really like the results so instructions for making lavender wands are here...
I think you just answered something I have wondered about for years - why did the old time gardeners always, always plant sunflowers? My great-grandfather did it, my grandfather did it, and I have always wondered - they generally only grew something if it was going to contribute to the dinner...
Very good Steve, the Yukon Gold's have pretty much lived out their season, and if I harvest and find they did fine, it's been a successful strategy I'll use next year: rotate the potatoes to a new bed, use an early maturing variety, and be done with potatoes before the potato beetle population...
The potato beetles struck in my garden, so I did a blog post about them here: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/08/01/potato-beetles/
Does anyone have any other great ways of preventing this pest and it's damage? :barnie
I was looking into which fruits and vegetables had the highest pesticide loads, and was surprised by what I found. So, I wrote about it, and identified the best and worst here: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/07/25/produce-pesticides/
It makes me happy about some of the things I'm...
Tonight it's blackberry cobbler, technically the blackberries are not from my garden, they grow wild here very prolifically, so all I have to do is pick. Got a love it!
The cobbler recipe is on my website here: http://www.betterhensandgardens.com/2010/07/14/blackberries-and-cobbler/