Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

How long does it take a bell pepper to turn red?

In keeping with my theme this summer of, "things I don't know about gardening," I had to look into this question recently.

I really wanted a lot of bell peppers this year, since they are kind of expensive and I tend to use them a lot. Unfortunately, only two of our plants survived this year.  And only prospered once the corn stalks were down.  One grew a single large pepper early in the season.   It was green and Brian promised me that if I waited long enough it would turn red. So I waited… And waited…

In the meantime our second plant actually grew about five or six peppers before it got knocked over in a storm.  They were good, but I never got to get a red one off that plant. So I continued waiting on the loan green pepper.  

It was full grown for at least a month before it finally started turning darker green, and then within a few days changed to a bright red. I let it redden for a few days and finally could not wait any longer and picked it. I think it will be delicious in one of my favorite soups, this bourbon corn chowder.   I was so close to giving up on this pepper, but I'm glad I waited.  A good lesson in patience for me.

And my wait of over a month seemed on par with what I've read, which says anywhere from a couple weeks, to six weeks, to never! 

Monday, August 25, 2014

When Should You Pick Your Tomatillos? (and other information about shy tomatoes)

This was a question I wouldn't have ever imagined having to google a few years ago.  We picked up four tiny tomatillo plant seedlings at the market this spring and are completely amazed at the size of these plants.  We let them get a little out of hand, and we now have tomatillos everywhere! 

They are even climbing up the sunflowers that are towering over the garden.

So, to answer my question above, when harvesting them you wait until the husk starts to separate, and turn brown.  It's pretty easy to tell, and they'll snap right off the vine almost as easily as a tomato. Brian actually started plucking them right away when the husk split and they were still green, but they ripened up in the fridge over a couple weeks before I came home.

This one's ready to go.

We learned even more about tomatillos this year when one of our plant's tomatillos had a definite purple look to them, and we had to google that too.  Apparently one of our four plants was of the purple variety.  Most of them were really only purple on the outside (maybe not all the way ripe), but several were purple all the way through like this one.

And I remembered that the great thing about tomatillos compared to tomatoes is that you do NOT have to skin or seed them, as you might tomatoes.  We used the recipe from the Ball Blue Book cookbook (rather than my old recipe here, which isn't a proven canning recipe), and actually canned our first months worth of fruit, almost 8 pounds worth.  I haven't canned in a good decade or so, since my bad jelly incident in 2003, and found it time consuming but worthwhile.


Tomatillo salsa has a definite sweetness to it that you don't get from tomato salsa.  

In other garden related news, we brought back some of my grandma's cucumbers from her beautiful, meticulous garden, and made some fridge pickles based on this recipe here from the food in jars website.  I have never made homemade pickles before, but I normally go through at least a jar of dill pickles every week so these have been fun to have on hand.
Our other main harvest from our garden have been tomatoes.  Brian brought a tomato plant home from work one day (a freebie someone was getting rid of), and we transplanted it into one of my patio pots, thinking it would be a small balcony plant.  But after it was damaged in the first storm that came by, I replaced it thinking it wouldn't survive.  We put it down in the garden just in case it did, and it sure surpassed all our expectations by doing well.  We let it get as large as it could within the garden, and have already taken 5 pounds of edible fruit from it.  It definitely taught me some lessons in patience and expectations.  We made about 3.5 jars worth of spaghetti sauce out of our tomatoes so far, and expect to get a few more jars worth.



And our tiny little plot of garden is not done yet!  I'm hoping to harvest the sunflowers, and after Brian harvested all the corn a couple of pepper plants that we had given up on long ago surfaced and are maturing everyday!  Plus we've had lots of beautiful flowers all season.  I think our first year having a back-yard and garden was a success.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Blueberry Adventures (and Other Produce Pursuits)

So this summer, two of our main sources of entertainment have been going to farmer's markets and orchards. Two things I never really did in my own childhood. Since I lived on a farm there was no reason. We could get fresh eggs from an aunt or pick strawberries from my grandmother's patch. We didn't need a market or an orchard to help us connect to our own food supply. But out here in Delaware, we need to.

We've been up to Wilmington for a small farmers market in Little Italy (Saturdays, 9-1, 8th & Bancroft Parkway), headed over to U of D's own market on campus at Mentors' Circle (11-2 on Thursdays), and found the best selection at Newark's own farmer's market that operates every Sunday (10-2, 280 East Main Street) where we can easily head to after church. Among other things, we've gotten a lot of green beans, some rhubarb (made my first strawberry-rhubarb pie-it was fantastic), fresh herbs, and of course baked goods for Brian.
Theodore at the UD Farmer's Market.

Milburn Orchard has also been a favorite destination of ours this summer, and for the first time in well over a decade, my blueberry feign of a husband got to go blueberry picking. It was the orchard's first year for blueberries, and they had three different varieties to choose from. The first variety is probably the reason I mistakenly thought I didn't like blueberries. They just don't hit my taste buds right. But in the following rows, I finally realized that blueberries might not be so bad after all. For years I have baked blueberry pies without tasting them, skipped the blueberry sauce on waffles, and picked blueberries out of fruit salads. I just thought they were not the berry for me. However, by that night around 9:30 pm I had a piece of blueberry pie that made me seriously doubt my behavior. IT was delicious! I can understand now why Brian is always begging me to make this pie for him.
Since we the perfect fresh blueberries to use, I went all out and even made the pie crust from scratch, and watched the blueberries go from this:

We had a fun time at the orchard, though we are still riding this East coast heat wave to the fullest. Theodore and I ended up back in the car in the air conditioning while Brian was still picking. He would have probably stayed out there until his basket was full if I let him.












I've also kind of fell in love with my mother-in-law's garden this summer. I love to see things growing, and her garden has so much variety. She brought us out a bunch of peppers and eggplant and kohlrabi among other things. It's even better than a farmer's market.

Sunday, May 3, 2009