“Our” Summer Garden

A dear friend recently asked me how my garden was doing, and it made me realize that I’m not giving credit where it is due – I may yap about my garden all the time, but really I’m just consuming the fruits of my dear husband’s labour.  I may occasionally water the garden when he’s short on time, but he’s the one doing the heavy lifting! In my opinion, we make a great team – he makes sure there are always fresh herbs and veggies available, and I’m always looking for creative ways to use them (or in the case of our peas this year, who to share them with!).

I find that my CSA deliveries get a bit boring in the summer once our garden kicks in – I end up ordering a lot of fruits or just stick to the basics (thus the lack of CSA delivery posts in the last few weeks).

This year, our herbs include Genovese basil, cilantro, rosemary, dill, mint, garlic and oregano.



We’ve planted sugar peas, snap peas and heirloom radishes which we’ve already begun to enjoy, along with our strawberries (which survived after being transplanted from the ground into a planter last year).  The radishes we planted were from a mixed heirloom variety pack, so each one you pull from the ground is a surprise.  The first batch of strawberries this season weren’t that sweet, but the ones we’ve picked during the past few weeks have been amazing.

From the nightshade variety of vegetables, we planted tomatoes, eggplant, tomatillos, poblano peppers and a few varieties of chill peppers.  We planted two varieties of tomatoes, and a third plant came up on its own from last year’s garden.  The ones we planted intentionally are two heirloom varieties – Paul Robeson, Orange and Green Zebra; the third plant was a low-acid yellow tomato, which always yields so much fruit (and keeps coming back each year – we planted this tomato 2 years ago, and it is the second time seeds from the prior year have popped up into a surprise tomato plant.  We planted our tomatillo plants from seed, and most of the seedlings survived – as a result, we have five tomatillo plants in our garden – I see lots of salsa in our future.  We also have two types of eggplant – an Italian and a Japanese variety.

We also planted Armenian cucumbers, carrots, beets and zucchini.  Our garden has so much going on this year – I’m guessing that in a few weeks, I won’t be buying many vegetables at the farmers market.

CSA Delivery – May 16, 2012 – Yes, More Basil and Peaches

I think I might have been able to reuse my picture from last week, because this week’s delivery brought more of the same.  I’ve been having so much fun with the fresh basil – I can’t wait until we have it readily available in our garden.

The peaches taste absolutely delicious with yogurt and granola – I’m hooked (as long as I’m not racing out the door in the morning).

I’ve been either grilling or sautéing the zucchini with some onions and it tastes great seasoned with a bit of salt and pepper.  We decided to plant it in our garden again this year, but hopefully we’ll be able to keep up with it instead of producing mutant zucchini.

CSA Delivery – April 25, 2012 – Basil again!

Did you miss me? I feel like I’ve been on a bit of a blogging hiatus – it has been a busy few months, but I’m ready to hunker down and get back into this routine again.  Besides, my foodie project list is getting way too long, and with the summer months fast approaching, it is only going to get longer!

This week’s delivery had basil again (yay!) – I used last week’s basil in a pesto – wonder what I should make this week?

I love the fresh, young zucchini that I received in this week’s delivery – we’re going to plant zucchini in our garden again this year, but I think I’m going to try to pick it when it is very small in size.  It grows like a weed anyways, so I’m sure that will be the only way to actually use it all up.

Romaine lettuce is destined for tacos again…mmm..tacos…

Haven’t decided what I’m going to do with the broccoli, avocado and potatoes yet – maybe I’ll bake the potatoes again and top them up with cheesy vegetable goodness.