Interplanting Garlic with Greens

Here are two videos about garlic and inter-planting garlic with salad greens. I plant garlic here in southern Wisconsin in late October.  I plant the cloves along the top of ridges of a raised bed that has been shaped into three ridges (or two troughs).  After I plant the garlic I mulch it deeply with straw. I plant the garlic on the tops of ridges in my dense clay soil because garlic likes to be well drained. I’m minimizing the chance of the garlic getting...

Asparagus Spring Onion Cheddar Cheese Scones

My favorite scone recipe is from the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board – “Wisconsin Colby Cheese Scones”. I think sharply flavored cheeses stand out more in this recipe so I usually use an aged cheddar or an aged Swiss cheese.  A little feta is good too, as is pictured above.  Sometimes I add herbs such as sage or rosemary.  Now during asparagus season cooked chopped asparagus and minced spring onions add a little extra ‘spring’ to the mix. Substituting half of the...

Potting Off to a Hoop Tunnel

There are normally three steps to growing vegetables that require indoor seeding.  First you plant the seeds in a growing medium into a flat or a small container.  Second, you transplant the sprouted seedlings after they have established themselves into a second, larger container.  This is called potting off and it gives the seedlings room to expand both their root system and their leaf growth.  Then, when the weather is right these transplanted and firmly...

Quick and Easy Spring Meal

Judy and I enjoyed a great light meal last night that was mostly from the garden – a salad with a side of roasted asparagus. The roasted asparagus recipe: Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Wash & dry asparagus spears after removing woody ends.  In a large bowl pour in 1-2 T. olive oil,  mash in 1-2 crushed cloves garlic, 1/2 tsp. seasoned salt & freshly ground pepper.  Toss in asparagus spears & gently mix until well coated.  Place on a greased...

Getting Down in the Trenches for More Spuds

I tried something new (for me) this year in planting my potatoes.  Geoff mentioned this method to me years ago and I never got around to trying it.  I kind of forgot that it was he who told me, but he was quick to remind me when I showed him what I did.   The logic is simple.  Plant your potatoes at the bottom of a trench, then hill up the dirt from the ridges of the troughs around the plants as they grow. Potatoes only grow up, that is, their tubers won’t...

Seed Giveaway

Our friends at Botanical Interests have given us two of their seed collections to give away.  The Basic Bounty Veggie Garden Seed Collection includes Bean-Bush Blue Lake 274, Corn-Bodacious, Leaf Lettuce-Salad Bowl Blend Organic, Sweet Pepper-Sweet California Wonder Organic, Radish-Cherry Belle, Summer Squash-Black Beauty Zucchini, Tomato-Better Bush. The Heirloom Tomato Seed Collection includes Cherry Red & Yellow Pear Organic, Aunt Ruby’s German Green...

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