27 Oct 2019
What to do with quince? How about spiced?
From the moment I discovered the edible fruits of flowering quince (Chaenomeles japonica), I desperately wanted to try the perfumed real thing - the fruits of the quince tree Cydonia oblonga - without any idea of what to do with them. As ever, I've found out by doing it.
Labels:
edible garden,
plot to plate,
quince,
Recipe
Posted by
Caro
at
16:25
Seasonal recipe - Swedish Pickled Beetroot
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| ~ the first beetroot I grew ~ |
So there I was, glancing through the titles on the bookshelves of the new family I was babysitting for when I spotted an intriguing title. 'Swedish Bakes'. Who doesn't love a cinnamon bun? I prised it off the shelf and settled down for a good read.
There were many very, very tempting recipes to be found but the one that really spoke to me (not literally, that would be too weird) was not a bake but a pickle. For beetroot.
Posted by
Caro
at
16:20
8 Oct 2019
Goji Goji Go!
My plant of the week :) and why you should grow them ...
This is another of my £2 supermarket 'twigs' - the Goji Berry, occasionally known as Wolfberry or Duke of Argyll's tea. Residing in a middle sized pot and parked just inside the shade edge of the lime trees in the Car Park garden, it has (over several years) grown to be a single lengthy arching stem with two straggly branches, a few leaves and no fruit. Pretty pointless, I'm sure you'd agree.
Last autumn however, it wheedled its way back - not so much into my affections as into whatever piques my interest. It bore fruit. Or rather, a fruit. One tiny glowing red berry shining through the autumn gloom. So, naturally, I was expecting greater things from the plant this year.
This is another of my £2 supermarket 'twigs' - the Goji Berry, occasionally known as Wolfberry or Duke of Argyll's tea. Residing in a middle sized pot and parked just inside the shade edge of the lime trees in the Car Park garden, it has (over several years) grown to be a single lengthy arching stem with two straggly branches, a few leaves and no fruit. Pretty pointless, I'm sure you'd agree.
Last autumn however, it wheedled its way back - not so much into my affections as into whatever piques my interest. It bore fruit. Or rather, a fruit. One tiny glowing red berry shining through the autumn gloom. So, naturally, I was expecting greater things from the plant this year.
Labels:
edible shrub,
Fruit,
goji berry,
permaculture
Posted by
Caro
at
22:42
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