Thursday, June 15, 2006

yesterday's lunch


Baby greens (Black-seeded simpson & merveille des quatres saisons) with mini-mozarella balls, bresaola (the store was out of prosciutto), and a balsamic vinagrette....eaten outside in the garden.

Today's lunch was similar, except without the fancy meat -- because A sat down and ate the whole damned package as a snack (he was supposed to be feeding a little bit to his sister). 'What, you couldn't even save me two pieces to put on my salad?' I said. 'Well, C threw some of hers on the floor, you could eat that', he said. What a nice kid he is, eh? I swear to God, i will have to think up some appropriate punishment...ideas?

(i think he was really kidding about eating the stuff on the floor, but i did eat it -- that meat is too expensive to waste...and a little dirt never hurt anyone anyway...)

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

rocket!

Baby roquette salad with parmesian cheese curls -- the first 'fruits' of my gardening efforts this year. The dh decided he did not want prosciutto on his salad...

I am happy to report that the rocket seems to be the right kind of lettuce. This was a big to-do here -- in France they have something called 'roquette' which is really a type of arugula, and my dh loved it. But the arugula they have in the stores here is a different variety, so once we moved back to the states he could not find his favorite lettuce. And when i was ordering seeds, it was quite difficult as well. I made the best guess -- this stuff, called 'wild arugula' in the Baker Creek catalog. And it seems that i was right. I do admit it is pretty bitter stuff -- even the baby greens are bitter. I am kind of afraid of what the full-grown one will taste like.

Monday, June 12, 2006

gratuitously cute

Here is a picture of Miss C running around the big ellipse...
This was a few weeks ago, when we were planting the seeds.
Now the tomato plants are taller than her, i think!

let's try this again

Proto-tomatoes!
Ok, i admit, this is a cheat. The one plant that has tomatoes is 'Black Pineapple' which i bought, it was greenhouse-grown. The ones that i have grown from seed are not that far along -- they do all have flowers though.

Lettuces -- Black-seeded simpson and mervielle des quatres saisons:
I love the colors. They need to be thinned, yum yum! The roquette is even tighter. On tonight's menu is a salad of baby roquette greens with prosciutto, balsamic vinagrette, and parmesian cheese shavings -- the first food from the garden! I will have to take a picture.
C planted her carrots too close together. Well, it was her first time planting seeds...
Here is eggplant 'Rosa Bianca'. I am showing off my beautiful plant while i can -- before the bugs turn it into a stick. At least that is always what happened to my eggplants in the past...most of them have outgrown their milk jugs now and are beautiful big leafy things. Hopefully they are big enough to withstand the insect onslaught -- and maybe having the marigolds planted right there will help a little too. I don't know that it is really true that marigolds keep away the bugs. They do make the garden look cheerful, though.

Watermelon plant! I have high hopes.
Bush beans...

and 'White Wonder' cukes. The other ones (mexican sour gherkins) are up too, they are very small though and not much to see.

Overall germination this year, for all the seeds i planted in the garden, was somewhat poor -- maybe 60% or thereabouts. I also had had a nighttime marauder in my garden though (Critter Ridder seems to have helped) so i don't know if the seeds didn't sprout or if, as is more likely, they sprouted and were immediately eaten for somebody's midnight snack.

varieties i am growing

Tomatoes: Cherokee Purple, Yellow Bell, White Currant, Rouge d'Irak, Brandywine. I also have one plant of 'Black Pineapple' and one plant of 'Yellow Pear' that i bought at a local sale. Yes, i know 'Yellow Pear' is boring but i like them anyway. I have it in a pot on the patio, i thought it would be fun for Chloe to watch and pick them.

Eggplants: Turkish Orange & Rosa Bianca

Cucumbers: Mexican sour gherkin & White Wonder

Lettuce: black-seeded simpson, merveille des quatres saisons, and roquette

Carrots: St. Valery

Leeks: American Flag

Watermelons: Petite Yellow

Bush beans: Royalty Purple Pod

Basil: Sweet Genovese

Ornamentals: Hyacinth bean, Sunflower 'lemon queen', and marigolds ('safari yellow' i think? Some common ones that i bought a whole flat of. These are the only thing in the veggie garden that i did not grow from seed myself.)

I got my seeds from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds and Southern Exposure Seed Exchange. I will put these links (and others) in the sidebar when i get a chance.

they grow, they grow...


Here is a current picture. Things are growing nicely. I should have all the tomatoes staked by now but i don't -- i am really bad about that, and they are a mess. I do not find it a fun job.

I have a bunch of pictures but blogger is taking forever and a day to upload pics today so i will save them for another time.

weekend 'work'


We found C a child-sized wagon for $3 at a yard sale.





We finished planting vegetable seeds -- C planted some too.


I went to 'flower day' and bought roses (and some marigolds). Look what i got -- a rose actually named Nicolas! With the right spelling too. Of course it is red, so i didn't put it in his garden!! Perhaps that was bad of me, because the rose pricked me twice while i was planting it..maybe i should move it? Maybe he is sick of this white theme. It is possible, we will see....

For Nicolas' garden i bought two roses -- Rosa rugosa alba and it's double form, Blanc Double de Coubert. Neither of them are blooming yet so i will not post pictures until then. I couldn't decide which one to buy, so eventually i bought both...the perfect solution, eh?



This was today's impulse buy...i could not resist the color and the fragrance. It is a 'Renaissance Rose' (whatever that is), named 'Amelia'. In any case it is some new development in the world of roses. I am just pleased with how pretty and fragrant it is....


Here is another picture of C, 'helping' in the garden...

a geek in the garden

I didn't put these pictures on the main blog because they are very hard to see but i am going to put them here just for completeness. This is me doing the ellipse. The second thing i learned from this process is 'don't ask the carpenter to take a picture that is related to math'. Not that Randy doesn't know math -- you need alot of math to be a carpenter. But you see, for some reason it did not occur to him that the picture i wanted was the one where both foci were in the picture. Something like this, but with me in it.
If you recall, an ellipse is the curve that is traced out if you take a loop of string and two points (called the foci). Put two pins in your paper, loop the string around the points and pull tight with your pencil. If you then trace your pencil around the two points, you will have an ellipse. A circle is just an ellipse with the two foci in the same place, the center. Planets (and comets) rotate around the sun in ellipses, with the sun at one focus.

Now, the first thing that i learned from this process is something i know already -- always check your math. I carried wrong, twice in fact and it took me really a long time to get the length of the string right. The whole day was gone by the time i was able to dig the beds...

Garden beginnings

Ok, so i finally finished putting in the raised beds of my vegetable garden. In fact as of now i have even planted all my seedlings, and was hoping to have planted all the seeds...but we did not get so far. I do want the kids to help with the seeds, and it was a busy yard-sale-ing type of day today.

Anyway, so i will put up some pictures. These are pictures taken before the seedlings were put in, and unfortunatly right after the maple tree dropped a million 'helicopters', they litter the place.

So i must explain myself a bit. I love tomatoes...a lot of tomatoes....a lot of heirloom tomatoes. And of course other vegetables too, i like them very much...when you decide to plant like 40-50 tomato plants though, plus lots of other stuff, in your backyard, it takes up a lot of space. And they aren't that particularly nice to look at or deal with. The standard vegetable garden is not, in general, something you would necessarily want to spend alot of time admiring. But if it takes up a third of your yard, you can't exactly ignore what it looks like.

Eventually, i found my solution to this problem when we visited the gardens at the Chateau de Villandry. The kitchen gardens (potagers) were of particular interest -- in fact i utterly dislike flowers planted in the French style. But planting vegetables this way -- in raised, shaped beds, edged with boxwoods, and beautifully-raked gravel paths allowing access to everything -- now there is an exquisite idea.

So my vegetable garden is the poor woman's version. Not enough space for a square, so i chose a rectangle. Not enough boxwoods to edge all the beds, they at present are only seedlings (supplied by my mother, thanks mom) that go around the perimeter. Can't afford pea gravel for the paths, so i used mulch. Plus it's a bitch to photograph because the perspective is all off. But you get the idea -- this is the view from the third floor balcony. You see, the beds form an ellipse.

Behind the veggie garden (and in front, but you cannot see that in the pic), there will be eventually more lawn -- it has been seeded for a week but nothing is showing up yet but a bunch of pigeons who seem to enjoy snacking on the seed. So i cannot say that my hopes for that one are particularly high...

This is the view from the second floor back window, so you can get some better idea how the whole thing works. See, i finally got that table & chairs out. The livable part of the yard essentially is that small lawn right now...you see it degenerates in the corner there and turns to construction debris.


This is the degenerate corner, as you see. It was a great victory, though, to be able to pile all this junk in one corner of the yard. Since it used to be everywhere....one day, it will all be used up, or put away, or thrown away. And the flower bed will continue around in a circle, to a shady, sheltered, green quiet nook with a bench. One day.

This is the view from the ground level. If you are very perceptive you will notice that the lines seem ever so slightly off. They are -- i would say about 5 degrees...

See, it took me hours to measure and triangulate the vegetable garden, and to make the big ellipse in the traditional way using a string and the two foci. (i am not good at measuring things exactly) And then it took me a good long time to dig out the paths and build up the beds. At this point i noticed that it was not exactly quite right, but i was not sure if it was an illusion because the right-side fence is not straight. Eventually, looking from the third floor, i could see the problem. The whole construction does not go perpendicular to the garage like it should. There is a slight angle (5, maybe 10 degrees). And this is because last year, when i first made the line (the line you can see as the line of the grass), i just eyeballed it, i did not check that it was truly perpendicular to the garage. (you can imagine that much cursing ensued upon this realization).

At this point i was not about to redo this whole thing, especially considering we might demolish the garage ANYWAY.

I have, however, been waiting for my husband to give me hell about it. His last unfortunate comment about my landscaping techniques was last year, when i just told him to buy any grass seed that said 'sun/shade mix' and he gave me a long lecture about how i needed to use exactly the same brand of the same mix throughout the lawn because otherwise it would look 'half-assed'. So certainly this particular screw-up merits even more descriptive language.

First post!

This is a blog dedicated to my kitchen garden. I just thought it would be a convenient way to journal the process and keep it all in one place, separate from my main blog. I wanted to see the pictures of the vegetable garden as it grows up and out (and out of control no doubt). I tend to grow heirloom varieties and use organic gardening techniques, and the garden itself is laid out in a quasi-formal French manner (hence the title of the blog). Of course, with vegetables you simply can't be too formal.

The first few posts will just be repeats of the ones on my main blog...