My winter garden is doing alright this winter. It is missing a few things that did well last year, mainly turnips, but all in all I am happy with what is growing out there.
Parsnips and salsify are the two new things growing out there. Neither are growing in abundance, but they are growing. After reading the seed package, I decided to start the salsify seeds inside. They can take up to 3 weeks to germinate so I wanted to give them all the help I could by starting them inside. The parsnips and the turnips I started outside. With the combination of heat and bugs. and then an early hard freeze the turnips gave up and only a few parsnips survived. I will give them a better chance of survival next fall and start them inside too (and a bit earlier)
I didn’t plant as much lettuce as I did last year. Last year we were rolling in it and I was giving it away, so I cut back this year. Now I don’t have enough so I have new lettuce started. It is growing slow slow slow, but it is growing and we will be eating it before too long.
This year the big producer is spinach. I have struggled to get spinach growing really well the past few years. I have tried starting the seeds indoor, direct sowing them and even transplants. This year, I put in transplants again and they have grown great. So the spinach is filling in were the lettuce left off. Along with the chard and kale, the greens are great.
I am still dealing with limitations since my surgery and I am unable to harvest anything in the garden, so I rely on my husband. A few days ago we headed out there. The spinach was in desperate need of a hair cut and I told him that if he wasn’t going to be home during any daylight hours anytime soon that I would be out there holding the flashlight for him. That spinach really needed to be picked!
The spinach was finally picked. There was a lot of spinach out there. After I had washed it I needed to figure out how I was going to get it all in the refrigerator. I turned to the plastic grocery bags saved from days gone by and collected for friends (we use them when we scoop out the litter boxes.) It took four Target bags in the end – stuffed full of spinach. After a few days of eating spinach I finally took a photo of the refrigerator for my step-dad. He will be planting his greens before long (up in Minnesota) but until then he is drooling over my greens (I do the same when he has a flourishing garden in the summer and I have no greens growing!)
As you can see, spinach has been on my mind (and in our tummies.) It gets chopped and thrown on top of pizza. It goes into every fresh salad. It get steamed. It goes into quiches. Every meal seems to have spinach (or another green) it it one way or another. In fact, I am going to try to extend the harvest by making up some spinach pesto to stash in the freezer for the dead of summer when it won’t be growing here. I will be making Green Linguini – the reversed version. Using spinach pesto and fresh chopped basil instead of the other way around.
Have you made pesto out of green thing other than basil?
Sincerely, Emily
You can see what else I am up to over at Sincerely, Emily. The topics are varied, as I jump around from gardening to sewing to making bread or lotion and many things in between.
I’ve made pestos from water cress and mint – both are delicious! Basil is still my favourite, though.
Hi Sheryl – both water cress pesto and mint pesto sound wonderful. I think basil pest would be hard to beat too. I love that stuff. I increased the number of pots I grew basil in last year from 3 up to 5. I seem to have plenty in the freezer, but I think I will up it again this year.
Comment over on your blog…
Beautiful to us Minnesotans. Spring will soon be here. The pesto is a great idea, Emily
Thanks! I will be sad when our temps heat up to much and the greens all go away.
Our spinach is flourishing, too. Perhaps this is a spinach year? But don’t worry, all that spinach wilts into a tiny bit if you just stir it up a bit with a bit of heart, garlic, and olive oil. Then we add to soups or stews or toasted cheese bread when its still cold outside. On the snow days, it’s hard to get excited about fresh spinach salad! Stevie@ruffledfeathersandspilledmilk.com
Thanks for stopping by Stevie. No worries with my spinach at all. There is plenty to eat fresh I just want to find some great ways to preserve it in the freezer to use throughout the hot summers. I like your ideas of wilting it with garlic and oil. I will do some of that as well. While I can’t imagine pulling it out of the freezer to add to soups in the heat of the summer I can imagine putting it on toast like you mentioned. That is one of my favorite way to eat the basil pesto.
Just popped over to your blog – your new American Guinea Hogs are so cute!!
how about making something like a pasta stuffing mix with it and freezing the mix if one doesn’t want to make the pasta immediately? I am about to embark on pasta stuffing, though as I have only made the noodles a couple of times, it could take me many hours… sometimes I wish I had already done the hours of practise bit instantly 😉
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