May 27, 2018 Zucchini, cucumbers, celery leaves, basil, New Zealand Spinach leaves, and our daily radish. Not pictured but consumed were raspberries, mulberries, Egyptian Walking Onions, and mint leaves for a refreshing iced mint tea.June 1, 2018 The last few days I’ve had a stomach issue due to a medication. While my family ate cucumbers and basil, the only thing I consumed from my yard was the last of my dried peppermint leaves from last year. Peppermint tea is amazing for settling an upset stomach. So, currently the dehydrator is full of mint leaves for future use. Hopefully, not for future medicinal use!June 2, 2018 Cucumber Harvest!June 3, 2018 – tonight I’ll be making a basil vinaigrette using basil, parsley, garlic, and onion from the yard. It will be served over a salad of spinach, tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, and mozzarella cheese. This will accompany a Greek Bean Soup I made using from the yard: celery, oregano, and bay leaf.June 4, 2018 Last night’s basil dressing was so delicious that I made it again! In addition to the basil, parsley, onions, and garlic I picked for the dressing, I also harvested more cucumbers, a few tomatoes, and some celery. The stalks will be chopped up into tonight’s salad, the leaves will be saved for soup stock.
June 5, 2018
Picked 3 more cucumbers today and a few tomatoes. We’re getting a bit tired of cukes so the only thing we’re consuming that came from our yard are some green onions in a potato salad and some of the dill relish I made a few days ago in our tuna salad sandwiches. I have another row of cucumbers just now reaching toward their trellis. I may have overplanted! LOL
Also, it’s officially hot here in Central California so iced mint tea with mint from the yard is being consumed in large quantities. I’d prefer to make Mojitos with all of the mint but the sometimes the demands of the real world don’t mix with Mojitos!
A bed of unruly Egyptian Walking Onions – left to fend for themselves for a season (or two!)
Several years ago, I bartered some seeds with a gardener in Washington State for some Egyptian Walking Onion bulblets. I have them growing here and there in odd corners of the yard, but their main bed is in a narrow area that borders the driveway in the front yard. As you can tell, they share the bed with three fruit trees from left to right – an orange, a persimmon, and a tangerine. I planted them and have pretty much ignored them and yet, they prosper! Definitely my kind of plant. And although they are recommended for full sun, they seem quite happy in the filtered sun they get through the canopy of the fruit trees. I’m guessing they are especially happy for that filtered light when we get several triple digit days in a row during our Summer months!
Here in Central California, Egyptian Walking Onions are a perennial. I mainly treat them as green onion, although I’ve heard you can pickle the tiny little red bulblets. But honestly, who has time to laboriously peel the cute little things?!? This year, I absolutely had to pay them some attention. The bed is far too densely planted but not because of any help on my part! They freely multiply themselves – consider them the allium version of a tribble.
So, what to do with the things? I gathered an armful and headed to the kitchen.
An armful of unwashed Egyptian Walking onions.
First they needed to be cleaned and sorted:
A two-sided sink is useful for this task. Make sure the trimmings are on the side with the garbage disposal so you can quickly dispose of unwanted creepy crawlies! (Not to worry. No ladybugs were harmed during the cleaning of these onions!)Cleaned and sorted!
To the left are the smaller, most tender shoots which I finely chopped and stored for use on our daily green salads for the week. In the middle are the tougher, older shoots. While these can be used as fresh green onions, they are stronger tasting and tougher to chew, so I tend to chop these and freeze them for use in casseroles, scrambled eggs, and stews. I like to have at least a gallon or two in the freezer for this purpose. To the far right are the “bulbs” and the tougher green stems. They are slender like a shallot but I feel they really need to be cooked to be edible. While you can freeze them to help break down the fibers, I like to quickly blanch them, throw them in the dehydrator, and then grind them up to use as powdered onions.
The tougher sections off to the steamer to be blanched before hitting the dehydrator.Out of the steamer and into the dehydrator!
The armful I cleaned today allows for about two trays of the white ends, and then the remaining trays were filled with unblanched sections of greens from the middle section. What doesn’t fit in the dehydrator heads off to the freezer:
Flavor for the coming Winter’s soups!Dehydrated onions pulverized in a coffee grinder used exclusively for spices.
The dehydrated onions from 2 weeks ago finally made it to the coffee grinder I reserve exclusively for spices. Six cups of dehydrated onions make about one cup of powdered onions. I love using this powder in my homemade ranch dressing and my spinach dip, but it does lose it’s potency after about six months so grind it in small amounts and store it in a dark cupboard. My suggestion is to grind up what you can use in that time and store the remaining dehydrated onions without grinding them. They will last about two years if stored in a cool, dark cupboard.
Now, time to rinse and repeat the above process about 5 more times!
Closing tips:
By the way, the green lid on top of the jar is from a parmesan cheese container. The screw on lid will fit the top of a small mouth canning jar and has two tabs: one for shaking product out and one for pouring large amounts. These lids are perfect for spices!
Also, please note the classy painter’s tape label on my jar. I sterilize and reuse my jars over and over. I even have jars that belonged to my Grandmother! But one thing that drives me absolutely bonkers are adhesive labels that won’t wash off. Painter’s tape peels right off with no scrubbing. Perfect for someone who doesn’t want to spend hours with a scrub brush and a bottle of Goo Gone!
For the first tomato! Yes, it’s only a grape tomato, but it’s still very exciting! But, don’t tell anyone else in my family about it’s existence because I’m probably not going to share!
Do you see this patch of oregano? It shouldn’t exist. I pulled it all out two years ago to make room for lavender and some seasonal veggies. It was gone, gone, I tell you! I saved a small section of the plant and potted it in a nice sunny spot in the backyard, underneath the fig. Don’t even get me started on the escapades of that plant! It has escaped the confines of it’s large pot and is taking over the lawn in the backyard. At least it smells nice when we mow.
So, what do you do when life gives you oregano? I figure you have three choices: 1) You can spend the rest of your life cursing and chasing down the insidious rhyzomes 2) You can give up and monocrop your entire garden, lawn, flowerbeds, sidewalk, adjoining neighbor’s yards, potholes in the street, until eventually the entire country is covered in oregano 3) You can eat really well!
Where keeping up with garden beds already planted and preparing new beds before it gets too late, is almost overwhelming! But fear not, I haven’t abandoned all hope quite yet. I’ve been prepping what was my old compost bed for an experiment in beans and kale (post and pics coming soon), prettifying a formerly desolate corner of the yard, and keeping things wet and happy! Here are a few pictures from tonight’s garden wanderings:
The New Zealand Spinach bed is taking over the world! I’ve got to carve out some time to deal with this beast and soon, or I won’t be able to get at my garlic and cucumbers!
The Jerusalem Artichokes are almost as tall as I am!It’s not only the bees who are happy in my tiny, mismanaged garden!
Okay, off to put another load of oregano into the dehydrator! Happy Gardening!
So sad, there don’t seem to be any ripe strawberries in my garden. As soon as they ripen, the berries seem to disappear and Sluggo just doesn’t seem to be effective against the two-legged variety of snails! LOL