Zesty Lime Grilled Zucchini

Ortolana di Faenza and Raven ZucchiniThis year we are growing two new (to us) varieties of zucchini compliments of Renee’s Garden. One is a dark green zucchini ‘Raven’ and the other is a pale green heirloom Italian zucchini ‘Ortolana di Faenza’.  Both are delicious in their own way and are extremely tasty when grilled.  Here’s a recipe we tried with great success: Recipe 4 small zucchinis – about 6-7 inches long, sliced in half lengthwise ¼ cup shredded fresh...

Common Weeds in Strawberries

The strawberry harvest is over for this year.  There are still a few small berries in the beds, but the days of having to go out morning and night to keep up, and being able to pick quarts at a time are finished.  This year’s harvest was good.  I’ve done a reasonable job this year of keeping the beds weeded, always a difficult task.  I took some pictures of the six weeds that showed up the most this spring.  Ranked relative to occurrence and...

Baked Sweet Potatoes and Asparagus Stir Fry

We still have asparagus coming up and lots of volunteer salad greens.  While it’s great to have the greens they don’t quite fill you up by themselves.  But wait, there’s more . . . sweet potatoes from the 2012 fall harvest.  We still have half our last year’s harvest left.  They keep for a long, long time, if properly cured and stored. I baked 4 large sweet potatoes at 400 degrees for an hour, until easily pierced with a fork.  For our meal, the two of us only...

Hurray for the Volunteers!

Volunteer Salad Greens We’re getting lots of volunteer lettuces and other salad greens this year.  I’m transplanting some to the pea bed and elsewhere, but most we are just harvesting the whole plant where they are growing. I talked about letting salad greens bolt and go to seed in a post last September: http://blog.cobrahead.com/2012/09/10/simple-seed-saving/ In addition to some lettuce seed which I saved and scattered  throughout the garlic bed, a...

Transplanting Strawberries

I try to keep three beds of strawberries in rotation and moving through the garden.  Bed one contains the newly transplanted plants.  Bed two holds one year old plants, and the third bed, two year old plants.  New plants yield little, but the one and two year old plants yield well.  Fall transplanting might make for better yields, but I prefer to transplant in spring when my clayey beds are very wet.  The strawberries are less susceptible to stress and need very...

Master Rosarian Endorses CobraHead

Dan Keil is the President of the Stephen Decatur Rose Society in Decatur, Illinois.   He has let us know several times that he really likes the Cobrahead Weeder and Cultivator for weeding and maintaining his 460 roses. I’m not a rosarian, but I’ve learned that keeping grass from taking over is a major issue.  That’s not much different than for just about anything that’s cultivated, but grasses really mess up roses and Dan does not want to use...

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