blissful
Master Chef
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2008
- Messages
- 7,245
We are overdone on canning beans and corn. Lots of 2 gallon buckets of beans.
Tonight we finished up canning 12 qts of thick tomato sauce w/lemon juice, no salt. That brings us to 72 and 1/2 qts of sauce. We still want to do another 28, plus salsa, and ketchup. Husband wants ketchup first before salsa.
Larry, We are growing the delicata, it is very nice, sweet, the skin is soft and it won't hold over winter well, the skin is edible, so roast it on parchment in slices with skin, to munch on. Maybe a little onion garlic and paprika powder on them.
We collect green bell peppers in a box and ripen them, then I chop and freeze, I just have 10 cups of red diced bell pepper so far.
We are also growing hatch peppers, haven't picked any so far.
We grew orange carrots and an uzbec golden carrot, much milder, less carroty taste, and sweeter. I'll grow these again.
Our downstairs pantry, we vacuumed out, reorganized relabeled everything, is over flowing, so my husband built a shelf outside the pantry for my over flow spices, chemicals, teas, herbs, dried veg, and now that is over filled too.
We put in some very small raised beds, one for spearmint, and we put peppermint in with our asparagus (much of it grown from seed which was cool). I still need to move lemon balm into an area of the yard to have it take over. I put in some medicinal herb mullein.
We grew 200+ garlic, russian red, large cloves, love the stuff. 250 onions, keepers most of them are in mesh bags hung in the basement.
We started our seeds differently this year. We use so much square footage from feb-may, in the house, (we are in WI) but learned winter sown seeds do just as well, so we planted 70 containers of seeds and stuck them in the snow and they were seedling ready to put in the garden when we planted.
This is my indoor onion from seed (keeper long day onions), in trays, and winter sown in a milk carton. You can see they ran head to head.
I will probably not waste my time growing most of our seedlings inside, except green peppers, or hatch peppers. But everything else can be winter sown and save us the time, and square footage in the house for those months.
It's been a super great year and super busy fall, canning and dehydrating and freezing stuff for winter.
Glad to see you all.
Tonight we finished up canning 12 qts of thick tomato sauce w/lemon juice, no salt. That brings us to 72 and 1/2 qts of sauce. We still want to do another 28, plus salsa, and ketchup. Husband wants ketchup first before salsa.
Larry, We are growing the delicata, it is very nice, sweet, the skin is soft and it won't hold over winter well, the skin is edible, so roast it on parchment in slices with skin, to munch on. Maybe a little onion garlic and paprika powder on them.
We collect green bell peppers in a box and ripen them, then I chop and freeze, I just have 10 cups of red diced bell pepper so far.
We are also growing hatch peppers, haven't picked any so far.
We grew orange carrots and an uzbec golden carrot, much milder, less carroty taste, and sweeter. I'll grow these again.
Our downstairs pantry, we vacuumed out, reorganized relabeled everything, is over flowing, so my husband built a shelf outside the pantry for my over flow spices, chemicals, teas, herbs, dried veg, and now that is over filled too.
We put in some very small raised beds, one for spearmint, and we put peppermint in with our asparagus (much of it grown from seed which was cool). I still need to move lemon balm into an area of the yard to have it take over. I put in some medicinal herb mullein.
We grew 200+ garlic, russian red, large cloves, love the stuff. 250 onions, keepers most of them are in mesh bags hung in the basement.
We started our seeds differently this year. We use so much square footage from feb-may, in the house, (we are in WI) but learned winter sown seeds do just as well, so we planted 70 containers of seeds and stuck them in the snow and they were seedling ready to put in the garden when we planted.
This is my indoor onion from seed (keeper long day onions), in trays, and winter sown in a milk carton. You can see they ran head to head.
I will probably not waste my time growing most of our seedlings inside, except green peppers, or hatch peppers. But everything else can be winter sown and save us the time, and square footage in the house for those months.
It's been a super great year and super busy fall, canning and dehydrating and freezing stuff for winter.
Glad to see you all.