Love deeply. Laugh. Cry. Talk to God. Be realistic about the to-do list. Stay in touch. Hug. Dream. Smile. Break Bread often with Family. Spend Time with your Girlfriends. Shop til you Drop! Extend Grace. Be Quick to Forgive and Slow to Anger. Walk. Breathe. Sing. Dance. Read. Eat Chocolate. Savor a Good Glass of Wine. Wiggle your Toes. Sleep well. Life is Good!

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

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Real Men Eat Quiche!




My fave quiche recipe is from my late Mother-in-Love!
Simple!  Savory!  Cheesy!  Versatile!  A win-win recipe!





Nana's Quiche Recipe

10 oz. package chopped spinach, cooked
(squeeze the life out of it before adding to other ingredients!)

2 c. shredded sharp cheddar (8 oz)

2 T. flour
(omit if using packaged shredded cheese)

1 cup milk

3 eggs, beaten

1/2 teaspoon salt

Dash of black pepper

9" unbaked pie shell

3 slices bacon, cooked crisp and crumbled.


Toss cheese with flour.  Add other ingredients and mix well.
Pour into pie shell.  Bake at 350 for one hour.  
Cool slightly before cutting.  Note:  Recipe doubles beautifully!!

Simple as that!  





Today I opted for Swiss Chard over Spinach because I have plenty of it growing in the garden!  I also added diced onion and bell pepper and a sprinkling of red pepper flakes while sauteing the chard.  I doubled the recipe, adding cooked (drained) sausage to half and crisp, crumbled bacon to half.  You can use Kale or pretty much any green leafy vegetable, even broccoli and cauliflower or asparagus.  You can use any meat ... bacon, sausage, ham!  You can use any cheese ... whatever compliments the other ingredients!


There are many, MANY recipes for savory and sweet 'pie' 
on my Pinterest page!  You can find them here!



I'm also including a recipe link from The Rainforest Garden  for a Roasted Red Pepper Quiche (<< click)!   Take a moment a peruse Steve Asbell's site.  You'll find beautiful illustrations, photography and plant wisdom!  Steve is the son of my dear friend, Nancy Asbell.  Nancy lost a battle with Lupus awhile back and is missed so very much.  Her Grace Notes continue to inspire me and many others!  Nancy's daughter-in-law (Steve's wife) wrote the guest post featuring the Roasted Red Pepper Quiche!! Can't wait to try this one!!  




For my followers on Weight Watchers ...
following is a recipe I developed years ago. 
4 points for 1/4 of the entire quiche!  Yes!  Really!


LoFat Broccoli Quiche
(makes two deep dish pies)

10 oz. frozen chopped broccoli
1/4 cup chopped onion
1 - 8 oz pkg. Healthy Choice Fat Free Cheese (Cheddar/Mozzarella)
1/4 c. shredded low fat sharp cheddar
Second Nature Egg Product (equivalent of 8 eggs)
2 Tablespoons flour
1 cup skim milk
salt and pepper
1 teaspoon Parmesan

Add flour to cheese.  Toss.  Add remaining ingredients.  
Stir and pour into unbaked pie crusts. Bake at 350 one hour.


the math:  26 WW points combined
~ 13 each pie ~
~ less than 4 points per 1/4 pie ~


NOTE:  No!!  Fat free cheese and 
egg substitutes are no longer part of our diet!





Thursday, May 2, 2013

Continuing Education .... not just for the professional type!


home-stead
Noun:
1. a house, esp. a farmhouse, and outbuildings.
2. a person's or family's residence, which comprises the land, house, and outbuildings, and in most states is exempt from forced sale to meet debts.
3. the place you rest your head ... and declare, for tax purposes.

Verb:
1. to claim, settle and farm a parcel of land.





The word itself conjures up an image in the mind not unlike the above photo (source unknown).

The last couple of years I've become familiar with a lot of new-to-me buzzwords.  Juicing (not as in sports enhancement).  Homesteading.  Foraging.  Charcuterie.  Organic.  Dehydrating.  Alternative (heathcare, cleaning products, toiletries, ....).  Drying Racks.  Cheese-Making.  Rain Water Catchment.  I learned more about old buzzwords I'd already incorporated into our lives.  Composting.  Vertical Gardening.  Square Foot Gardening.  Rotation Gardening.  Bread baking.  Meat grinding.  And, 're-growing' more celery, ginger, scallions, and a whole lot more food from the scrap ends!  Who knew?!!

It may seem like an enormous pile of contradictions. I'm in no way professing to be an all-organic, fair-trade, eco-friendly, never-gonna-buy-anything-made-in-China, carry my own 'green' bag to grocery kinda gal.  I've made a hodge-podge of eclectic choices and incorporated many changes ... slowly, subtly, sporadically ... into our life the last few years.  We will always be consumers to some extent or another. I still prefer the old light bulbs.  I still use the dryer.  Though I do use a drying rack during the less rainy seasons and have turned to using woolen dryer balls in lieu of dryer sheets.  I don't have chickens or goats, or raise rabbits.  Though we do eat wild boar and venison and pheasant because my husband hunts.  We catch the fish we eat too.  I want to learn how to make the best pasta, the best cheese, the best sausage, the best pizza.   Though we still occasionally frequent our favorite local restaurants.  I still drive an SUV (eight years old and paid for).  I still take my dogs to the groomers for baths.  I still use a dry-cleaning service ... not for dry cleaning but for laundry of my husbands shirts.  I am contemplating returning to the ironing board, but for now, I have too many other irons in the fire!  :-)

Why?  Well, it's simple, really.  Because I can.  I do it because I can, not because I have to.  Not because I can afford to.  Because I can learn to do it before I have to do it ... and before I can't afford other options.  Because I honor my grandmother by using many of the skills she taught me when I was younger.  I do it because I want to.  It's not easier.  We all know it's easier to run to the doctor when we feel ill.  To get a shot.  To pop a pill.  Or, to just grab a pesticide or commercial weed killer, instead of  mixing up a safer, equally effective alternative.  But, easy isn't always better.  The better (for me) way takes more time, skill and discipline ... a day filled with shortcuts.  I learned that for the first time when I decided to home school 14 years ago.  And, when I decided to learn and try alternative measures for a few health issues.  I'm still learning.  I still take shortcuts ... but I'm more selective; more mindful.

I've started paying attention.  You know how it goes?  Life gets far to busy to be concerned with what's going on in the news.  Prices have been going up the last few years at the grocery store.  Big time!  That alone re-energized the gardener in me.  Learning about GMOs and organics further motivated me to start canning and preserving what we grow and what I can acquire from local gardeners.  Healthcare is fast changing.  I've avoided gallbladder surgery, bone spur surgery and rotator cuff surgery by seeking alternative routes.  I didn't share that to boast, but simply to say 'there is always a better way' ... unless you find yourself in an emergency and unable to speak up ... being at the mercy of the healthcare system  ... which is not all bad.  Conventional medicine and procedures do have their place in times of emergencies and life threatening situations.  That's another blog post altogether!




One should never be so comfortable, confident and complacent to think hard times won't fall upon them.  I have friends who've lost jobs.  And, friends who've had to re-invent themselves because the labors they offered have become a lower priority as people make cuts in their budgets.  I've seen many, many businesses close.  Businesses which have been around for 30 years or for only two.  Some, who's temporary entitlement incomes have been reduced.  Many who's weekly paychecks have recently had huge, ragged bites taken from them.  We've had our own 'Rob Peter to pay Paul' moments.  Hardships penetrate all of our lives.  A little learning goes a long way in keeping one afloat.  Learning helps one to be prepared for leaner times.  But, what good is learning without practical application?   One must learn not only from books, but from trial and error.  I've made many mistakes along the way ... learning curves.  Making mistakes is part of incorporating the newly learned skill into the eating, breathing and walking day-to-day routines.  This is how gardening is mastered; how baking is taken to new levels; how health is improved; how we learn to depend on ourselves and our faith more.


I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes.

Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things,
trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, 
changing yourself, changing your world.

You're doing things you've never done before, and more importantly, 
you're Doing Something.

Don't freeze, don't stop, don't worry that it isn't good enough, or it isn't perfect,
whatever it is: art or love or work or family or life.

Whatever it is you're scared of doing, Do It.

Make your mistakes, next year and forever.

~ Neil Gaiman ~




Be where you are.
It's your own journey.
Do it, or simply ... don't.  


UPDATE 9/7/2013:   I still use the drying rack ... indoors and out (dryer is rarely used anymore! That alone cut nearly $100 off each of our summer power bills compared to last year)!   We no longer use the dry cleaner to take care of my husband's shirts.  I iron them all now.  That cut a $50/month expense!   I'm baking sourdough weekly (perfect for diabetic husband), canning, gardening and whatever else I take a notion to learn!


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Compost Gold!



COMPOST ... the GOLD of the Garden!


I was skeptical at first.  But I went ahead and tried it.  Yay!  When I first started I needed a way to use up the pulp from juicing.Perfect!  Layered it daily with pulp and brown leaves (of which I have an endless supply).Then I started adding coffee grounds, tea bags, egg shells, vegetable peels and scraps from the kitchen, and shredded newspaper (no colored print), layering with brown leaves and/or dried grass clippings.

No fancy or elaborate bins or unsightly piles.Nope!  I picked up two scratch and dent trash cans and began my layers.After the first one was topped off, I began the second.  Now, I have a full can for the spring season and by the time the fall season comes around, I have another can ready to top dress or work into the soil.  Spreading the love throughout the garden!  I'm no longer skeptical!  This stuff is amazing! 






Read more about sources for your compost bin, 
pile or can at Old World Gardens!






Monday, April 16, 2012

Garden Projects


The Latest Project!

Nephew-in-love disassembling useless deck!
Note:  This has been an idea in the back of my head for some time,
but it surfaced from my husband's mouth first!!  Yes!!


Recycled "useless deck" boards to build a raised bed garden! 
Huge tree roots revealed resulted in altered U-Shape.  It'll work!
Drainage cloth added to line and lessen erosion (area slants toward bulkhead).
Gravel needed to level out space so we aren't tripping on trunks (also under soil).
Note:  the soil was given to us by a friend who had way to much after landscaping!
It's already provided soil for three other beds both here and given to family
and friends!  Shared the love!  All we had to buy were the amendments, 
which included vermiculite, peat moss and compost!
If I remember correctly even the cloth and gravel were a trade-out!
I ♥ bartering!


Covered soil with straw to lessen erosion and seeds washing away from 
coming rains next three days.  Also helps retain moisture.
Lettuce boxes moved from back porch to partial shade!


Upside down tomato cages will make great tee pees for the sugar snaps!
Transplanted kale, beets, chard and basil from other locations.
Background tee pees are blueberries covered with an old shrimp net (birds!).

Now to take a few days off (only because of rains) to tackle less back-breaking chores!



Happy Gardening!





Link up @ The Morris Tribe

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

The list never ends!


Go here!
Go there!
Do this!
Do that!

This is what kind of day it has been so far!
Not unlike yesterday when a friend and I 
went on a wild ride to Wilmer looking 
for a nursery that no longer exists!  
But, my big find was 6' tomato stakes!  
Woo Hoo! (it's the little things!)




The highlight (so far today) has been meeting 
an old friend for lunch at Rock 'n Roll Sushi!
And I saw my sister, Tammy!  Togetherness!

Heading to the studio for an hour or so
and then out to the garden!  I'm gonna try 
my hand at vertical gardening along the fence 
where we cleared out the monster shrubs.
Always good to learn something new!




I think I just discovered that the birds 
aren't eating my strawberries!  Bo is!





Monday, March 19, 2012

Gardening

Spent St. Patty's Weekend 
with a lot of green . . .
in the Garden, that is!

We spent the weekend outside in the garden.
Did a little planting (apple trees, lavender, agapanthus, bluebells and coreopsis and tomatoes).  
A little shrub trimming and removing. A little tree trimming.  
Dismantled part of an old wooden swing frame.  Saved the monkey bars for my blackberries!  
The old Lady Banks had to come down ... it was dieing. : (

Strawberries!  I popped that red one in my mouth!  Yum!


"Margarita Garden"
as in Margarita Pizza!
Romas and Basil!


Might get a couple more harvests from the collards.
They seem to have slowed down a bit.
We've been getting collards from this little patch for nearly six months!

Our back porch salad box!
We get two or three salads a week off these three boxes!
Last night I snipped enough to chop for tacos!


My Mint Tower!
Must keep mint contained or it would take over!

Top to bottom:

Chocolate Mint

Apple Mint
Orange Citrus Mint
Spearmint

Sweet Mint
Peppermint
and one just labeled "mint"

~

On the list for this week:

Plant the blackberries and raspberries
Prepare ground and plant squash, zucchini and eggplant.
Stake ALL the tomatoes.
Prepare pots for potato plants.
Research Vertical Gardening!

Also, balance the checkbook and other paperwork,
get some studio work done
and get started digging thru my garage.
No telling what I'll find out there!


Have a beautiful week, y'all!
Keller enjoyed a sprinkle donut!
Or, I should say she enjoyed the sprinkles!


Monday, March 12, 2012

Garden Update!


What a dreary rainy day.

We accomplished so much in the garden yesterday!
My hubs has one more raised bed to build ... 
following deconstruction of a small deck.
It will be prepared for growing herbs and greens!

I'm committed to spending lots of time 
in my art studio this week.
(Procrastinating)
Maybe I'll include watercolors of these pics!
Last of the Fall/Winter harvest!
Except for the collard greens.  
They are still producing!


Swiss Chard


Purple Cabbage



GARDEN UPDATE:

Still growing:
We have little strawberries everywhere!
Onions and Garlic are just beginning to change 
from green to a light beige on the tips.
Kale has doubled in size.
Collards are still producing (we've been 
harvesting weekly for nearly five months!)
Mints (5 varieties), chives, parsley and 
cilantro still growing since last spring!
Mixed lettuces  - We've been eating from our 
back porch salad mix since last spring!  
      Every few weeks I just sow more seed in to the mix!

Yesterday, the following went in the garden:
Roma Tomatoes
Basil
Bell Peppers (Red, Yellow, Green)
Jalapenos
Sweet Banana Peppers
(more) Swiss Chard
(more) Strawberries
Cherry Tomatoes
Lemon Tomatoes
Roma Grape Tomatoes

Still waiting to be planted:
Misc herbs
Talladega Tomatoes
Eggplant
Squash and Zucchini
Heirloom Tomatoes
Potatoes (fingerling, red and sweet)
Sunflowers
Lavendar

Still looking for:
Yummy Bells
Yellow Pear Tomatoes

Hope to throw in:
Watermelon
Cantaloupe
Honeydew

Blooms on:
Blueberries
Peach
Plums
Oranges

New growth on:
Blackberries
Raspberries

Anxious to see growth on rooted 
'store bought' organic cut-offs!
Celery
Pineapples
Green Onions



Sunday, March 11, 2012

Soil & Sour Dough Under My Nails!

Hey Guys!


Sorry I was AWOL yesterday.   We attended a funeral in the middle of the day and spent the rest of the afternoon and evening with the family.  A beautiful tribute at Little Flower for Mrs. Norma!  Her sweet smile and nature will surely be missed by many.


Today my dh is building me two new raised beds and mixing soil for the garden!  (Pics tomorrow)


I've been in and out between baking bread and pulling weeds and bossing him around!  {grin}

The dough almost tripled in size while I was outside!

One for us!  The others for three different neighbors on the creek!
The neighbors on the this side of the creek will get the next round!

Yes, I immediately cut the heel off and devoured it!

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Semi-Wordless Wednesday


Mornin' Y'all!

I spent the first part of the morning canning!
This Sweet Pickle Relish is the best I've ever tasted!

Hijacked Cookbook from my Daughter!

Simmering!

Water Bath!


Five Pints!
Listening to the pings as I blog!
1-2-3-4-5!  Yay!
~


Look at my little sprouts!!!
Beans and Tomatoes!






My favorite Little Sprout!





Linking up with Daphne over at
Join us!

Monday, January 9, 2012

For My Gardening Friends!  I came across this blog last night while perusing Pinterest !

It took over 20 years of gardening to realize that I didn’t have to work so hard to achieve a fruitful harvest. As the limitless energy of my youth gradually gave way to the physical realities of mid-life, the slow accretion of experience eventually led to an awareness that less work can result in greater crop yields.  Read More!

Saturday, January 7, 2012

I ventured out today by myself.  First time in over six weeks.  The boot came off two days ago.  I'm taking it slow and cautious.  As instructed I am swapping the boot from the now healed broken foot to the other bad foot in an effort to alleviate some of the pain by immobilizing it.  We'll see.  Not very optimistic about it.  Doc is pretty certain it's nerve pain and arthritis.  MRI and x-rays show no reason for the kind of pain I'm having in that foot. 

I Can Do This!

I've be forced to re-evaluate my activities - which is the last thing I wanted to do once getting out of that boot.  You should see the to-do notebook list I've compiled.  I'm reducing the 7-9 outdoor art shows (which has been my regular routine the past four years) to only 1 in 2012.  Only one.  O-N-E.  It's an easy one day event nearby with lots of help.  Physically I just cannot take on what I have in the past.  Because of the orthopaedic issues, I also had to give up keeping my angel/granbaby girl full time.  That was spiritually excruciating.  I mourned.  I grieved.  I finally came to accept it (sorta-kinda-in a way).  Then, she got to stay with me Friday ... the day after the boot came off.  I never realized how tired I was each day and how much energy it took the last two and a half years.  Maybe it's because I've had a low activity level the last five weeks recuperating (along with the fruit salad mix of other issues).  I know I'm not 100% yet ... and may see-saw between good days and bad days.  I'm hoping for more good than bad.  I will pace myself.  Save up the energy for get-togethers and pressing activities.  My glass is half-full!  My heart is even fuller!  I ♥ my family and look forward to regaining a familiar pace!


Anywho!  I ventured out today and had lunch with my sister and then made a ever so slow walking tour stop by the garden center at Lowes.  The seed-starting trays had arrived.  I bought a couple to go with the ones I already had.  As well as another two long, narrow planters for shallow things (i.e. chives, green onions, lettuces, etc.) to grow on my back porch.  I also acquired two very large pots to grow a couple of potato varieties in.  Tomorrow I will get the seeds I've been gathering in their respective containers and place them in my little greenhouse off the dining room.  I'm hoping all the seeds will germinate into healthy, strong transplants for my spring garden. This will be the first time I've tried to plant a garden without buying transplants.
 

There is so much to be done.  Inside and outside.  My studio is a complete wreck.  I can't even begin to think about returning to painting before that declared disaster site is cleaned up.  Before that happens, the overflow from the pantry must be dealt with ... thanks to my canning projects that require the more sturdy shelving location.  The guest room is also a declared disaster because of the orthopaedic apparati (is that even a word?!) occupying the room ... most of which can be put in the garage, which in and of itself has it's own micro-chaos.  Not as bad as it was before my husband took advantage of my clumsiness on crutches and took over the much needed task of, shall I say 'attempting to organize' MY garage?  A very valiant attempt at that!  Add the dining room table where all my business records are scattered ... not to mention the back porch where gardening chaos reigns because I had the metal shelving on the porch relocated to the greenhouse for my seed starting.  Did I just come full circle?! 


I'm pacing myself.  This will take awhile!   I'm extending grace to myself. I'm venting using y'all as a therapeutic release!  And, BTW,




Thursday, January 5, 2012


Garden Planning!

Within the next week I will get seeds (organic and heirloom varieties)
 in planting trays so they will be ready for transplanting first of March,
after the predicted last frost (end of February if Farmer's Almanac is right!).
Gonna set everything up in my little bump-out greenhouse off the dining room!


My goal is to try ever so hard to resist buying transplants and grow everything from seed.
The only thing I can think of (if I don't find seeds) would be Yummy Bells and a couple of herbs.
The hubs is gonna build me two more 4x4 raised bed frames and prepare the soil mix for me!

I'm hoping to get out of this boot soon - doc appt today.
But, there is a lot to do out there just to get ready. 
Planting season is two months away!
Canning season will be close behind!


1.  Plant seeds in flats (Don't forget to mark!).
2.  Clean up the fall garden and supplement with compost.
3.  Re-trellis the blackberries.
4.  Add a raspberry!
5.  Gather bamboo stakes (compliments of a neighboring bamboo wall)
6.  Build bamboo tee pees
7.  Relocate herbs and tender greens to partial shade.
8.  Configure a climbing apparatus for peas.
9.  Get transplants in ground
10. Sow some seeds directly.
11. Mark everything.
12. Journal everything.
13. Mulch everything
14. Don't forget the flowering stuff too!
15. Keep bird feeders filled!
16. Plant new Blood Orange Tree
17. Find a plum tree!
18. Look into espaliered apple and pear trees.
19. Fertilize fruit bearing trees
20. Trim hedges and overgrown stuff

.... it goes on and on .... 

Monday, August 22, 2011


Getting Ready for Fall Gardening!

I've been reading one of my "end of summer reads"
about square foot gardening and am intrigued!
My husband built me a 4'x4'x12" box this past weekend.
I already have an 8'x8' raised bed garden
with eggplant and bell peppers still going strong.
This weekend I will fill it with the SFG recommended soil mix.
Hoping Fall garden transplants are at the garden center soon!

I can't remember where I found this photo of a SFG.... oops!


Hoping to plant:

spinach
mesculan
carrots
broccoli
strawberries
sugar snaps peas
fingerling potatoes

Monday, October 25, 2010

Lettuce Pray . . .

The raised bed garden is full of weeds from the summer so I decided to do some back porch gardening this fall. The only thing that interested me was the lettuces. I brought home Butter-crunch, Romaine and that old standby, Iceberg. Hope to get some spinach too. I also adopted a new rosemary since my transplanted monster rosemary didn't survive. This one can graduate up from pot to pot on my back porch. Isn't that where they are supposed to thrive anyway? At the back door? I went to the garden center looking for crotons for a huge golden yellow pot my husband bought this summer for his container garden, which was the overflow from the raised bed. I found a pretty potted mum too which I thought would go well with the bright colored pot and crotons. I think it all came together nicely and brightens up the porch. I already miss my big mosaic pot but this punch of color is a pretty good substitute for now! All that's left is to pray the Gardening Angels whisper "Grow! Grow!".
Except for the Hibiscus and Spirea, the back yard is barren of flowers and flowering shrubs after ripping everything out this past summer. We lost so many plants to a mysterious disease. All the Knock-Out Roses and the Indian Hawthorne died. The vegetable garden didn't thrive either. That was the first disappointing harvest we've ever had. I think we will sterilize the bed over the fall/winter by putting a tarp over it and letting the sun heat it up. I'll have to read up on that process again and get it started this upcoming weekend. Tony asked me to pick up a Farmer's Almanac. Maybe next spring we will plant on time!

I need to spend some time updating my garden journal. It's stuffed with seed packets and plant identification pokies and ideas. What? What's a pokie? You know! Those little white things the nursery pokes down into the plant to let you know what it is and where to plant it!

Happy Fall gardening!