Sunday, December 14, 2014

Top 13 Songs of 2014



Ass Drop- Wiz Khalifa
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ninXCvzZlTw



Seasons- Future Islands

The Worst- Trina





Backflip- Casey Veggies (feat IAMSU! & YG)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEZ8gszlnyc



Unforgiven- Beck




Back To You- ATB

Cadillac Girl- Only Real

Loyal- Chris Brown (ft Lil Wayne & Tyga)
Queen- Perfume Genius


Wanderlust- Wild Beasts


Oh Yeah- Webbie


Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Persimmon Heartbreak

It sounds like the name of a really bad jazz funk album but it's also what I am living with right now. The persimmon tree was doing so great, it's limbs were bending to the ground with supple, bright orange delights .. and then we had an unusually early cold snap. I didn't realize they'd be so susceptible to it but I need to remember I am from the Bay Area, that's where this persimmon passion comes from, and it's warmer there.

In a nutshell, I lost the majority of my persimmons. Serendipitously,  I had harvested a dozen or so just before the big freeze for no other reason than to prevent a branch from snapping off due to so much fruit. Those ones were gorgeous and about 15% of the post freeze fruits were fine, but we took a big hit. If we were farmers and this was the corn harvest for the year that we depended on to keep body and soul together we'd be screwed. Maybe this is nature's way of saying I shouldn't bake so much this holiday season. (that said, if you'd like my family recipe it's at the bottom of this post!

There is another huge silver lining as well, and that's that I learned an important lesson consisting of these points about Fushiya persimmons:
-let the fruit stay on the tree as long as you can, the leaves will fall off but that's normal
-Fushiyas are ripe when you can stick your thumb through the skin if you wanted to (but don't do that because it's gross).
-pick the fruits as soon as the weather calls for extreme cold (close to freezing) just do it, even if they are still hard, as long as they are bright orange.
-put them in a box with a banana or apple and let them ripen in a cool dry place (that the puppies can't access)
This was right before the cold snap did her in...leaves have fallen, fruits look just lovely.

I was holding out hope they'd be ok but even as pulp many did not past muster or live to see a new dawn. So so SO sad.

I have a couple of jars in the freezer and this was the last sad remains of the day, squished just moments before typing this.
first batch of persimmon pudding...note to self, egg whites work just as well if not better than whole eggs. More pudding-like.






Persimmon Pudding 

(from my via my dad circa1969, also thanks to the large persimmon tree behind our house in Oakland that a surly lady let us pick persimmons from every year)

1 cup persimmon pulp (Fushiya VERY ripe big mushy persimmons, not the ones that look like tomatoes)
3/4 cup sugar +more for dried fruits
1 tsp baking soda
 1 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup milk (or sub buttermilk, my pref)
1/4 cup oil
1 cup raisins (or get experimental here with other dried fruits candied in bourbon, sugar etc...hence the extra sugar suggested above)
1 cup nuts optional...i leave the nuts out (hee hee)

Preheat oven to 325...bake in a loaf pan for 1 hour ** set a pan of water on the lower oven shelf whilst baking*** no idea why but it has something to do with the pudding effect.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Planting a pear tree in honor of Rick Rosay

http://news.hiphopearly.com/americas-pear-growers-officially-thanked-rick-ross-endorsement/


Monday, November 17, 2014

The first cold snap....


It's so cold today as I write this blog. A sunny Fall day, but so bitter cold that parts of the front yard that get mid-day shade are still covered in ice. We are entering the last bits of Fall...Winter is saying "What up, let's get it crackin'!". I just pulled all of the dead Nasturtium from the front yard, it looked lovely on Friday and now it's totes dead. That's what all day freezing temps will do. I hope the rest of the yard (particularly the fruit trees) don't pay the ultimate price. It's going to be a cold season, I can tell already. I've got the crock pot fired up and I'm ready to plan for next year. 

Anton and I were talking about blogs the other day and he asked "why do you blog about your garden, mommy...what's the point?" and I said "well in addition to the millions of fans that I can't let down...it's a great way to remember all of things that went right and went disastrously wrong so that you can improve a little bit more each year."I have found it to be incredibly helpful for someone as absentminded as me, and it also is a nice way to recount visually the progress made. When you see something every day you don't recognize the changes nearly as easily

! And now, let's get to it. Here is what happened between end of summer and beginning of the great freeze:


The last tomato of the year, picked on my bday: Nov. 8th, did not disappoint in terms of showmanship.

After pulling up the summer veggies I planted fava beans, shallots and garlic which sprouted almost instantly. Can't wait to pick 'em in about 5 months.

Colin added a new fence to enclose the raspberry/blueberry patch. It's also a great barrier for the puppies who now get further access to the front yard so that they can annoy passersby. Sorry about that!


The lollipop kale (see previous entries for all the details) is still going strong even in this weather, clearly the Buick of veggies, they are solid. I am making some stew with some of them right now.

Volunteer moss and ornamental cabbages.Great year round color for a garden.

I hoped this guy makes it through the cold season...not the hardiest of the succulents but we'll see what happens.

Lacinto kale...the stalwart, never moving, unbending.

This was the last pic of the Dahlias before I hacked them away for the season. Always a sad yet somewhat fulfilling process. Out with the old!
Here are the final troopers that stuck around to the bitter end, see you next year!

This year I finally got around to digging up and seperating tubers for one of my massive Dahlia plants. It was HUGE and splitting in every direction and needed a fresh start. It's hard to tell from the picture but some of them were as big as a mini watermelon. I'm not sure if I can replant all of them or that I even want to, I'll definitely be giving some away...and will be curious to see if they regrow! Right now they are sitting in a bag of peat moss in the garage until April.

The scene of the dahlia excavasion after I tried to repatch the hole with soil.

Until next year!

The persimmon tree on Wednesday.
The persimmon tree on Monday. HELLO WINTER! And hello persimmon pudding!

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Summer 2014~a good one!

The summer is basically over...it went by so fast! But looking at my pix from the garden there really were lots of different stages. I think that is something that makes gardening so relaxing...you are able to remember exact moments in the year when the tomatoes were this way or "wow, we got a lemon cucumber each day!"  Little progressions and changes in the food supply help mark the weeks, otherwise they just fly by and you don't even notice what is going on around you. The succulents getting freestyle, the crazy Oregon perennials that just do what they do, moss, volunteer cabbages, European Monster Kale, etc. We got so many tomatoes this year (thanks to starting early and doing a mix of starts in the igloos and seeds indoors) that we are giving them (also peppers and squash) away to passersby. A really nice neighbor lady I had never met before stopped to talk to me today while I was clipping deadheads (dahlias, not hippies) to thank me for the tomatoes and peppers she grabbed the week before. We had a nice chat and then I told her to please take some more! She left with a bounty and gave me some great ideas for tomato recipes. This is what gardens are for. Summer may be over soon but I think I can keep the garden going at least a couple of more months. And then onward to next year! 



these orange cherry tomatoes were sweet as sugar, do these next year! 

afterthought to plant lemon cukes but as always they put out like a boss. Anton has had fresh cucumbers for months...mourning the impending loss of these, they are SO. GOOD.



#marthastewart








making/freezing sauce

Anton grew this sunflower from a seed, it has the biggest stalk I've ever seen!



Easy Tomato Soup! Tomatoes, butter, olive oil, salt & pep. DONE!

Indigo Rose orange tomatoes, these were volunteers in the veggie garden...thanks guys!

These giant slicers were volunteers...I have never seen this before, volunteer tomatoes?

Late summer in the veggie garden

Raspberries are still going strong...need to figure out a better layout for next year....need better staking for easier picking, feel me?

tomatoes rescued from the rain.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Mid-July Garden update

This morning I bounced out of bed and threw on my overalls and gloves, marched out of the door and started WEEDING. I can't believe how out of control the front yard gets if you don't stay on top of it. I'm an after work and weekend gardener, not having the luxury of fussing over it day and night...so given my heavy workload recently, the weeds were really outta hand. In the end the entire yard debris bin and another giant tarp were filled with the results of my weeding frenzy. Also installed a new dripper hose. On that exciting note, here are the photos!

Those things hanging there are plums (get your mind out of the gutter). And in the distance is the new dripper and lots of weeding results.

Shallots curing in the sun.

We transplanted these strawberries from an old location that now houses succulents, they were dying due to too much heat and not enough water. But now they are in full effect...Anton ate them off the vine for breakfast. Killing two birds with one stone, rad!
These succulents live where the strawberries used to. Even they are struggling with the heat but I gave them a good soaking and weeding today. I think they will be fine.

These weeds I kept, they look kinda cool...and look at the cute cabbages that volunteered next to them!


Anton holding the first cucumber of the year! I don't have photo evidence but he also ate the first ripe tomato of the year a few days ago!

Elephant garlic curing. More where that came from...which I still need to pull.

Rhubarb explosion. I ended up freezing a bunch. There is still more out there but I gave it a big haircut to make room for the zucchini and cukes.


I think these are my favorites of the dahlias this year. BTW I will have tons of tubers when the season is over...need to split them up, they are going way too nutz.

The cucumbers are doing great this year...keep 'em comin!

Pleased to report my experiment in having the cukes and zuchs grow on a trellis is working...now they aren't laying in the dirt, they hang!

We are about to experience tomato overload.

We are already experiencing pepper overload. I have a recipe for pepper hummus that sounds promising but am starting to get worried. I don't want them to go to waste!

HAPPY SUMMER Y'ALL!