Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2014

The Rain in Spain Stays Mainly on the ?

It has been raining cats and dogs yesterday, all night and today. Some areas are under water, some areas have flooded. I am waiting for the pond to form in my backyard. Maybe I will get some tadpoles, anything but snakes! We are lucky so far, trees still standing, but look at those branches almost touching the ground!

My garden is doing well, as much kale as we might want. Someone continues to dig in my pot of arugula on my front porch, but who?
                                                                             


No need to wash the deck furniture or the grill, nature is doing it for me, can't paint the deck when it is soaking wet every other day, so I get to take a rest?

I have multiple barriers for my hydrangeas as our starving deer love them, but per our difficult and very long winter, the coldest on record in years, my hydrangea just started blooming this week. Mine are younger, but the older plants at my Mom's house have not yet started to bloom and last year they were  truly gorgeous!

                                                                           
Wow, and the branches of my Thornless Honey Locus trees (that are not so thornless) are nearly
touching the ground this morning per their wet leaves! Will the branches break off? Stay tuned!

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Grilled Veggies, Baby Arugula Salad, and Salmon




The very top photo is my baby arugula growing in a pot next to my house, thus when I need to make a quick salad, I do not have to run in the backyard to my garden. Someone has been digging in it. I cut what I need and it grows back. Later today I will plant more seed in the dug out area of the pot.

I lightly coated the salmon with a bit of oil, a very tiny coating before placing the pieces, skin side down on the grill. I love Costco's Copper River Wild salmon - I buy a big slice and cut it up. When I have lots of company, I buy a whole salmon at Costco and grill the entire fish, very impressive for my nephews!

 However, I grill my vegetables first until tender and then take them off the grill before cooking the salmon as I am always afraid of contaminating something, having been trained as a microbiologist over 40+ years ago!

Try to get an assortment of colored vegetables to grill. My theory is if we have a variety of colors, it is healthier than our entire dinner plate being of one single color, like all brown. My middle sister used
to give this advice to her family when eating out, order a "colorful plate," not all "brown food," for
example.

The vegetables include sweet potatoes, vidalia onions cut in half, zucchini, and yellow squash. I had cut the squash into strips as the eggplant was cut into circles. My husband dislikes eggplant, but will eat anything from the grill.

While the food was cooking, my sister and I enjoyed hummus and blue chips on the deck.

I make humus and baba ganoush (eggplant hummus) too, but these are subjects for another post.

In regard to grilling salmon, I put it on the hot grill skin side down, reduce the heat to about #2 on my grill, cover, and leave it alone for about 10 minutes, perfect every time! Of course, I cleaned any remaining scales off the skin before placing on the grill and I do wash my fish in cold water as do not like seeing scales. The skin holds the fish together and I do not mind if any of the skin sticks to the grill.

I have to use a timer as do not want to eat undercooked fish and hate overcooked salmon.

The most wonderful part of grilling out is "NO pots and pans."

Wonder what I will grill tonight?

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Found in the Greenbean Patch


I have a bumper crop of parsley, cilantro, arugula, and basil. I have made my first large batch of pesto as a topping for pasta and pizza and have made much parsley salad. I love to watch everything grow and share the produce with members of my family and neighbors.

My cherry tomatoes are starting to turn red. My Mr. Stripey and Hillbilly heirloom tomatoes are still green. My garden was planted late this year and whoever is eating my squash plants and some of the branches of my tomatoes is still in the area. Whoever it is also knocked down some of my large green tomatoes.

I saw a rabbit jump out of my garden. He ate all of the zucchini plants but left me a couple butternut squash plants that are intermingled with the arugula. I think our bunny does not like arugula or the marigolds around the garden but jumps over my low plastic gate that has protected squash plants in the past.

I would love to plant a fall crop of beans. Seven years ago, I found a newborn kitten in my garden patch, exposed to a hot August day with a storm on the way. She is now a house cat and we love our dear Precious most dearly. However, my husband will not let me plant green beans as our Precious allows us to live with her in our house. She is truly a full member of our family and loves to be hugged and sung to by my mother.

Our vet helped us much with suggestions for taking care of our newborn kitten seven years ago and we have become more and more attached to our Precious as the years go by. This August 23 we will celebrate her seventh birthday. Unlike the Cheetahs pictured on my web site at
http://www.raskinfo.com, our Precious was found alone in our garden and I tried to be the best kitty mother I could.

In case you are wondering what is under Garfield, it is a towel with a hot water bottle as the vet said that we had to keep Precious warm. In her earliest days, with little hair, we had to keep the temperature in the house at 90F in August for our dear Precious, who was named by our vet!

Precious does not like anything I grow in my garden but she loves a vase of Lovage (Levisticum officinale) from my mother's garden. Lovage reminds me much of celery but has a much stronger scent that Precious enjoys playing with whether it is green or dried.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Gifts from the Garden

The parsley is wonderful, the cilantro is flowering so that I can collect seeds for next year as is the arugula.

My cherry tomatoes are ripe but someone has been munching on my summer squash plants and knocked down large green heirloom tomatoes.

I planted the Italian, flat leaf, parsley this year from seeds, and it is doing wonderfully. The basil I planted from seed is growing as fast as the basil plants I purchased at a local nursery. I planted the basil seed in between my tomato plants as I read they do well growing near each other.

We have been lucky to have some rain almost everyday and my garden includes mulch.

The bush cucumbers are small but very tasty and crunchy. There is nothing like a just picked cucumber from the garden.

In regard to seed germination, the arugula germinates most quickly, followed
by cilantro. About a week later the parsley and basil appeared.

The marigolds around my garden include many bright colors and are doing well.

I have made salads with the parsley, arugula, and cilantro as well as some wonderful egg dishes. Arugula loses the spicy taste when cooked.

I wish I knew who was eating my squash leaves as I never had this problem before.

Help, does anyone out there have any ideas or had any experience with an animal eating squash leaves and/or destroying some of the branches on my tomato plants?