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Thursday, August 27, 2015

From my garden, August 2015



This has been a great month for garden produce for us. I haven't bought any fresh fruits or vegetables all month long. In fact, the only fruits and veggies I've bought this month were a little bit of dried fruit (for fruit and nut bars) and some canned and frozen veggies for fall and winter use.

But for our consumption in August, our garden and orchard (plus a few free bananas here and there) has provided all that we needed.

So, for the month of August, our garden provided:

  • 2 heads of cabbage
  • lots and lots of lettuce
  • uncountable numbers of tomatoes
  • over 50 pears
  • about 30 quarts of blackberries (about half are frozen still)
  • some summer squash and zucchini
  • some Swiss chard
  • some kale
  • a few baby carrots
  • lots of green, waxed and Romano beans
  • many cucumbers, eaten as salads (I still need to make some pickles)
  • just a couple of beets
  • 2 meals of baby potatoes
  • a second harvest of watercress (early spring is when the main harvest of watercress is ready)
  • lots of herbs -- sage, oregano, thyme, basil and rosemary
  • a few handfuls of blueberries at the beginning of the month
  • about 10 red apples
  • lots of rhubarb
  • about 200 shallots
Our most prolific veggie has been tomatoes -- we've eaten fresh tomatoes just about every day of August, followed by pears  and blackberries (3 or 4 times per week, each).

I prefer to use the cabbage, fresh, in slaws, with our garden cabbage. It's very tender and delicious. I'll use market cabbage in fall in cooked dishes. In fact, while we have fresh produce from the garden, I prefer to use most of it, raw, in salads, as is, or lightly steamed. Fresh produce has enzymes, which are mostly destroyed by cooking. These enzymes help with digestion, in breaking down what's eaten. Plus, there's the vitamin C content in fresh, uncooked produce. This time of year, I don't buy traditional vitamin C foods, like oranges. But uncooked blackberries,  tomatoes,  cabbage and watercress are all good sources of vitamin C.

The peppers, eggplant and pumpkins/squash have still not produced anything pickable. One more month, so we'll see if I can get much of those veggies out of our garden.

I am making my plans for next spring's garden. Do you have any suggestions for other veggies I could plant, that have done especially well for you?


Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Cheap & Cheerful suppers for late August

Sunday's dinner -- no bun for me, but we had burgers (free) with lettuce, tomato,
sauteed summer squash and shallots,
blackberry-rhubarb sauce

Tuesday
*ham and kale quiche
*brown rice with herbs
*blackberry-rhubarb sauce
*marinated cucumbers

Wednesday
spaghetti and meatballs
*garden veggies -- Romano beans, waxed beans, yellow crookneck squash, fresh tomatoes, garlic
garlic bread

Thursday
rice and beans
corn tortillas and cheese, toasted
*tomato wedges
*cole slaw

Friday
homemade pizza
*tossed salad with lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, black olives and toasted sunflower seeds

Saturday (a busy day for me, out of the house all afternoon, not retuning until 6:30PM, but still needing to make dinner --so as quick and easy as I could muster)
*fried corn tortillas, topped with refried beans, cheese and chopped tomato
*fresh pears
leftover cake

Sunday
hamburgers on buns (both given to us, as leftovers from an event my 2 daughters and I served at)
*with homegrown lettuce, tomato and dill green tomato relish
*sauteed garden yellow crookneck squash and shallots
*blackberry-rhubarb sauce

Monday
pork in tomato sauce over
brown rice
*cole slaw

Tuesday
burritos filled with homemade refried beans, leftover rice, leftover pork, cheese
*tomato wedges
*rhubarb jello with pear slices
*blackberry-plum pie

*indicates this part of the meal was made with produce from our garden

A lot of simple meals this past week. Vegetables were treated very simply, either sauteed or in a salad. Main dishes were quick and easy, with the exception of the spaghetti and meatballs.

The super cheap supper was on Sunday night. My family and I calculated that it cost about 20 cents for 5 of us. It will be hard to do a repeat of that though. But most of our suppers were in the $2 to $3 range, feeding 5 of us.

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