Monday, July 28, 2008

Daffadowndilly



Daffadowndilly
Has come into town,
In a yellow petticoat
And a green gown.
~~Mother Goose


Poetry and gardening seem to go hand in hand. Any gardener given enough time will compose a little prose about their patch eventually. Now to get them to admit this and perhaps recite one or two of these little ditties may take a lot of time, trust, and/or wine.

I have found that my heart and mind combine in the garden is calm though. And after a long day slog in the garden, a little poetry after dinner lightens my heart even more. I don't have a recipe for this, except I do slip little poem cards into my recipe box here and there, and they amuse the heck out of me or whomever I have looked through my recipe box.
A.A. Milne,* of Winnie the Pooh fame, wrote about daffodils in his poem "Daffadowndilly" and this reminded me of poems and how important like gardening and cooking, an appreciation of poetry is important to pass along to children. Most children's books are poetical in some way, and it is best to encourage them. I have found most people that pooh-pooh something do it out of lack of understanding, or they are just parroting something they have heard. Poetry like music as structure and takes an active mind to perform. I found an interesting book on teaching poetry to children, and if I can get it I will, its called "Poems Please: Sharing Poetry",* it looks quite interesting.

Strow me the ground with daffadowndillies,
And cowslips, and kingcups, and loved lilies. ~~Spenser.

*Many of the links above are paid links and pay a commission if you buy something.  I make enough so that I have a regular 9-5 job.  I own most if not all of the items recommended or have borrowed them.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Dinner Reconciled

Strange to see how a good dinner and feasting reconciles everybody.
~~Samuel Pepys

S is for Sunflower

Sunflowers have always been one of my favorite garden plants. Lets just say it brings the 5 year old out in me. Especially, I adore the “giant sunflower” and what child doesn’t marvel at a plant that wasn’t and now looms 12 or more feet off the ground.

Besides its beauty, cheeriness, and presence; what has it done for us lately. The sunflower (Helianthus annuus or Mapi'-na'ka) is a native North American plant and has been farmed for at least 5000 years. Archaeologists have found evidence that the Indians of Arizona & New Mexico have cultivated the plant since 3000 B.C. Now-a-days we feed wild birds and critters with it mainly, and some health conscious folk include it in bread and on their salads. In the 1880’s a process for extracting the oil from the seeds was patented and we got sunflower oil for cooking. So what else can we do with the plant?

Well, have you heard of the “Three Sisters” in gardening, well IMHO the “Sunflower” the cousin that hangs out in the garden too. Let me explain corn, beans, and squash are the three sisters in Native American farming. Basically you plant the corn, then the beans so they can climb up the corn as it grows, and finally plant squash at the base to acts a mulch. There is a lot more to this marriage of sisters, but that is for a later post. Anyway, Native Americans also grew a lot of sunflowers. Why?

The seeds are actually very useful just raw, roaster, braised, as flour, and as a portable food. But let’s start at the beginning, when to sow the sunflower seeds. When the ice breaks up in the rivers, start trying to work the ground once you can plant your sunflower seeds. You might also want your planting to correspond with the first full moon of the April; some tribes refer to this month as “Sunflower-planting-moon”. Clever. Plant the seeds 3-4 inches deeps in friable soil, or as shallow as 1 inch in heavy soil.

Sunflowers are a very hearty plant and will do their best to grow anywhere you put them. This said they prefer full sun and growing in well drained moist fertile soil. They are very tolerant of sandy or clay soil but help them by adding lots of organic compost. Sunflowers are hardy and car little about the day length. Just remember doing plant the seeds in “wet” soil they will suffocate & rot. I use sunflower as trellises for morning glories, red runner beans, and for beans. The seedlings germinate in about 7 days or longer depending on temperature.

Sunflowers respond positively to liquid fertilize either chemical, organic, or fish. You might want to support your sunflower tops if you use them as a trellis; summer thunder storms tend to topple the tops. To jump ahead a little once the seeds start developing you might want to protect you flowers from birds if they start harvesting them before you do. But I have found this to be rare unless you leave the heads up to long.

Then the only thing you need to figure out is what you want to do with the sunflowers bounty. Some recipes to follow, but you can finds recipes for parching, making salted seeds (good for hot climates), and meal-cakes with fat as an energy pick me up.

References:
Buffalo Bird Woman's Garden: Agriculture of the Hidatsa Indians (Borealis) This is excellent book on finding out how Native Americans farmed. If you like archeology, sociology, food history, or just knowing how other folks garden this is the book for you. I have read this book twice, and it is a quick easy enjoyable read.

Heirloom Sunflower Seeds - Flash Blend Flower Seed Organic - Get some variety in you garden, these may not be the biggest sunflowers you have ever seen but they will be the most divers.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Peas Epicurean

Spring is almost here in Pilgrim-ville. Time to try an turn the veggie beds and try to start some peas & lettuce early. Here is a little old fashion recipe for PEAS:

Peas Epicurean

2 cups peas
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 table spoons minced onion
1 heart lettuce, shredded
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
Pepper
Water
1 tablespoon minced parsley

Slowly cook peas, oil, onion, lettuce, sugar, salt, & pepper in enough water to cover, until the peas are tender and most of the liquid has boiled away. Add parley.

Note: Obviously, you'll want to update this recipe to modern standards. Can you do it?


---
“People are getting tired of going out to expensive restaurants and spending lots of money for seven pea pods and a two-inch steak.” ~~Anonymous

Friday, March 28, 2008

Saint Green

On Saint Patrick's Day, I planted my spring garden seedlings . Well it has been a week-and-a-half and most of the seedlings are up. I got some heating pads under the trays and it really seems to help. But my lighting is insufficient, so I moved everything the the living-room plant table, the light it better ans although some of the seedlings a little bit leggy, and they are thickening up.

I planted two of every heirloom tomato collected last year. And a bunch of spring veggies, and some summer veggies. I figure I will plant some summer squash and okra early, and if it makes it I will have an early crop. But anyway I will have Swiss chard, chervil (herb), and early tomatoes.


I have the lights on a timer and it comes up 2 hours before the sun hits the window and 2 hours after dark. Just want to give some extra light.

Have a 96watt compact fluorescent lighting system but the bulb is bad and is on order. Got to work with what you have on hand.


---
May the Irish hills caress you.
May her lakes and rivers bless you.
May the luck of the Irish enfold you.
May the blessings of Saint Patrick behold you.
~~Irish Blessing
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Nude Live Plant Show 2008


Gardens and flowers have a way of bringing people together, drawing them from their homes.
~~Clare Ansberry, The Women of Troy Hill

Attended the Boston Flower Show (2008) this month and as always enjoyed my self a great deal. One of the best parts for me is that the houseplant displays. I always see plants that my friends & family have had; plus there are just so many cool plants out there. The show always has a lot of plant vendor that have exotics. Last year I bought a bunch exotics such as Rabbit-foot Fern (Davallia fejeensis), a Rat Tail Cactus (Disocactus flagelliformis), Pregnant Onion (Ornithogalum longibracteatum), Mother-of millions (Bryophyllum spp.), & Orchid Cactus (Epiphyllum). This year I got an Elkhorn Fern (Platycerium bifurcatum), Bird's Nest Fern (Asplenium nidus), and Asparagus Fern ( P. densiflorus cv. Myersii ).

These are all really cool plants that I have always wanted. My pregnant onion is blooming this spring just like the one in the picture. All I have left to get on my want list is some begonias, and a Climbing Onion (Bowiea volubilis).
At these shows there are always so many vendors that seem out of place to me, e.g. cars, motorcycles, & hottubs. Yes, hottubs can be in the garden, but who goes to a garden show to buy a hottub? Perhaps I am limited in my world view.
It seems that the age of the "Dip Mix" vendor s over with though. For that last few years there has been one vendor that sells dips herb mixes and at $4 a bag it seemed quite profitable. Well this year there were 3 vendor doing the smae thing and 2 other venders had this as their side line. Oh, well to bad for them, I do love the sample dips. Yum!
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Monday, January 21, 2008

Got Bar?

Basic drink recipes & a list of the essentials liquors, mixers, ingredients, glasses, & tools need for a bar.

Essentially you only need a nine-bottle bar to meet a myriad of your cocktail needs. This will allow you to make hundreds of various cocktail recipes. Just add some beer and wine and you’ll be cooking with gas folks.

The Liquors

Here is the list of 9 liquors needed to start a basic bar.

  • Bourbon (i.e. whiskey)
  • Cointreau $$$ (or Triple Sec $-$$) - you’re mixing it in, only the highly educated pallet and soberest of people can tell the difference
  • Gin
  • Rum (light)
  • Scotch (blended)
  • Tequila (white)
  • Vermouth (dry)
  • Vermouth (sweet)
  • Vodka

The Mixers

The list that will let you make most common cocktails without to much fuse. And remember if you are featuring a specialty cocktail you need it’s special ingredients.

  • Cola, ginger ale, sprite, club soda, sparkling water, & tonic water,
  • Lemons
  • Limes
  • Cranberry juice
  • Orange juice
  • Angostura bitters
  • Simple syrup - sugar water, see recipe below.
  • Garnishes – other then the fruit already listed have those thins required for special drinks, such as pearl onions, mint, cane-sugar, etc.
  • Green olives (pitted) with or without pementos.
  • Lemons
  • Limes
  • Kosher salt
  • Maraschino cherries

The Hardware

Well folks you will need some things to prepare all the ingredients with, but remember some substitutions are possible. Use your common sense…

  • Bartending handbook, see below for some recommendations
  • Bottle opener
  • Cocktail napkins
  • Cocktail spoon, long
  • Cocktail toothpicks
  • Corkscrew – buy a good one you thank me later.
  • Cutting board, wood or plastic (never ever use glass or stone or tile it dulls the blade in 2 shakes of a labs tail)
  • Jigger – 1 1/2 ounces (jigger-shot) on one side and a 1 ounce (poney-shot) on the other. The jigger lets you quickly measure out this amount of liquor for a recipe, a jigger (1 1/2 oz. is equal to 3 tablespoons)
  • Juice squeezer
  • Paring knife (Watch your fingers!)
  • Peeler
  • Standard shaker - is a metal bottom, metal lid with a built-in strainer. This is great for the beginner. If you don't want to invest in a shaker use any food-safe container that can be sealed a shaken.

The Glassware

  • Martini glasses — nothing says “cocktail” like this glass.
  • Highball glasses
  • Wineglasses, all-purpose



The Cocktail Recipes


Cape Cod'er:
1 1/2 ounces vodka,
3 ounces cranberry juice
lime wedge garnish
Serve over ice in a highball glass.

Cosmopolitan:
1 ounce vodka
1/2 ounce Cointreau/Triple-sec
1/2 ounce lime juice
1/2 ounce cranberry juice
lime wedge garnish
Shake with ice and server strained in a martini glass.

Gin fizz:
2 ounces gin
juice of 1/2 lemon
1 dash simple syrup
club soda
Serve over ice in a highball glass.

Gin rickey:
2 ounces gin
juice of 1 lime
2 dashes simple syrup
club soda
lime wedge garnish
Serve over ice in a highball glass.

Manhattan:
1 1/4 ounces bourbon
1/2 ounce sweet vermouth
1/2 ounce dry vermouth
1 dash Angostura bitters
maraschino cherry
Stir with ice and server strained in a martini glass.

Martini:
3 ounces gin or vodka
dry vermouth to taste
lemon twist or olive as a garnish
Stir with ice and server strained in a martini glass. Yes you can shake it and say “Bond, James Bond!”

Old-fashioned:
2 to 3 ounces bourbon
1 dash Angostura bitters
1 dash simple syrup
lemon twist & maraschino cherry garnish
Serve over ice in a highball glass.

Tom Collins:
2 ounces gin
juice of 1/2 lemon
1 dash simple syrup
club soda
maraschino cherry garnish
Shake this with ice and the whole thing into a highball glass.

Whiskey Collins:
2 ounces bourbon
juice of 1/2 lemon
1 dash simple syrup
4 ounces club soda
Orange slice & maraschino cherry garnish
Shake this with ice and the whole thing into a highball glass.

Whiskey sour:
1 1/2 ounces bourbon
1/2 ounce lemon juice
1/2 ounce lime juice
1 dash simple syrup.
Orange slice & maraschino cherry garnish
Shake this with ice and the whole thing into a highball glass.

The Other Recipes

Simple Syrup:
Heat 1 part sugar and 1 part water in a saucepan. Simmer, do not boil, until the sugar dissolves. Simple syrup keeps at room temperature for a couple of weeks; eventually it will crystallize. In a pinch, superfine sugar can be substituted. You can simply reheat it to desolve the crystals.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Plants Poisonous to Your Pet

Plants that are poisonous to your pet are a special problem since most people don't know which ones are hazardous to their pet's health.

Being aware of poisons and controlling your pet's environment may save its life.

  • Protect your pet from poisoning by knowing what common household items and plants might be dangerous to it.

  • Close containers securely and dispose of them when empty.

  • Allowing your pet to run freely increases its risk of poisoning.
Below is a list of plants that could be poisonous to your pet:

Amaryllis
Andromeda
Apple-seeds
Arrow-grass
Avocado
Azalea
Bittersweet
Boxwood
Buttercup
Caladium
Castor Bean

Cherry Pits
Chokecherry
Climbing Lily
Crown of Thorns
Daffodil
Daphne
Delphinium
Dieffenbachia
Dumb Cane
Elephant Ear
English Ivy
Elderberry
Foxglove

Hemlock
Holly
Hyacinth
Hydrangea
Iris
Japanese Yew
Jasmine
Jimson Weed
Laburnum
Larkspur
Laurel
Locoweed
Marigold
Marijuana
Mistletoe
Monkshood
Mushrooms
Narcissus
Nightshade
Oleander
Peach
Philodendron
Poinsettia
Poison Ivy
Privet
Rhododendron
Rhubarb
Stinging Nettle
Toadstool
Tobacco

Tulip
Walnut
Wisteria
Yew

Some symptoms of poison are swelling, cramps, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, effects on breathing and circulation, weakness, drooling, and sneezing. If you suspect your pet has been poisoned, keep it warm & dry. Note the symptoms and call your veterinarian as quickly as you can. Take a sample of the plant suspected of poisoning your pet along to the vet if you can.

Info sourced: Nat'l Animal Control Association, Kansas City, MO