Posts Tagged ‘tomatoes’

Southern Hospitality, Fancy Fowl & Eye-Candy Edibles

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Meander Inn - Modern Plantation Desination

Meander Inn - Modern Plantation Desination

Recently, I had the pleasure of staying at the Inn at Meander Plantation. Back in the day — that would be the early 1700s — the plantation consisted of around 3000 acres. Today the beautiful buildings are intact on 80 of the original acres. Horses graze the pastures. Tall trees provide shade. Boxwoods, reaching second story heights, line weathered cobblestone paths. Once you’re on this property, time travels backwards rapidly, and you wonder why you didn’t pack a hoop skirt and bonnet.

Mint Julips - The Perfect Southern Afternoon Cocktail

Mint Julips - The Perfect Southern Afternoon Cocktail

The Inn exceeded all of my expectations. I booked a room with two beds to share with my mom. When we arrived, our room became an enormous suite with access onto the upstairs veranda where we sat and sipped plantation-appropriate mint julips from sweating silver goblets in the late afternoon. (I’m going to try to get their recipe; it was beyond perfection!) The bedroom itself was filled with gorgeous antique furniture including two very comfortable queen sized four poster beds, a set of wing back chairs (mom’s favorite) and a few dressers, antique clocks (that didn’t tick) and desks. Nope, it didn’t feel crowded. Actually, I think that room alone was larger than my entire Seattle dining room and living room put together! Mom laughed that the suite was larger than her entire house, and I think she’s right!

Eye-Catching Okra Flowers & Pods

Eye-Catching Okra Flowers & Pods

In the evening we sat down to a five course prix fixe dinner, much of which was harvested from local, sustainable farms — from heirloom tomatoes to sweet corn soup to quail and rack of lamb. And, yes, like the three course breakfast the next morning, dinner was enough to feed me for a week. Plus, the service left me feeling like I owned the place. Everyone from the innkeepers to the housekeeper waited on us hand and foot — it was almost too much, but I think that’s the point.

In the morning, after gorging on a week’s worth of breakfast at one sitting, I wandered the grounds a bit. At dinner, one of the courses included okra from the plantation gardens. I don’t particularly like to eat okra, but I do find the plants simply stunning so I sought out the veggie gardens only to find okra plants towering over head. The innkeepers had told me it was a bumper crop okra year, and she wasn’t kidding. Spying all those ripe pods left me wishing I liked to eat them. Instead, I enjoyed snapping photos of the beautiful plants, planning to attempt growing them in my Seattle garden in 2011. (I’ll get to enjoy the eye-candy; if it actually produces pods in our cooler climate, the food bank can have the harvest!)

Guinea Hen on the Run

Guinea Hen on the Run

Then, as I was enjoying the veggie garden, from the field and nearby barn came fowl noises. It wasn’t quite a chicken noise, nor a duck, goose or turkey. A flash of red with black and white caught my eye from the weedy field behind me.

“Mom, is that a turkey?”

Mom, laughing: “Nope. Its a guinea.”

For years Mom has sung the praises of guinea fowl. I’m kind of surprised we didn’t raise them on the farm. We did have chickens that started from a pair my sister and I caught after their cage fell and broke off a truck near our farm. But no other domestic fowl lived on our farm. Mom’s love of guineas has grown over the years, especially after she contracted Lyme Disease and later found that guineas are one of the best fowl for cleaning up ticks (as well as Japanese Beetles and other insect pests in the garden.) If Mom didn’t live in a forest, she would keep guineas now to keep her garden clean. Alas, the hawks, eagles and other predators of her woods would eat the guineas right up. So, we packed ourselves back into the car and drove away — relaxed, sated, guinea and okra-free, but chatting away about how we can’t wait for another chance to meander in to the Inn at Meander Plantation again in the future.

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Greater Seattle Area Plant Sales in Spring 2010

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

(May 3, 2010 update): The sale announcements keep rolling in. Need a plan for mother’s day? How about a rare and native plant sale at a very special garden? Read on for details about the Kruckeberg sale and open house!

Plants for Sale!

Plants for Sale!

(April 24, 2010 update) Even more sale updates are being submitted! Read on for locations offering up sips of strawberry lemonade while you shop for your locally grown tomato starts.

(March 25, 2010 update) Plant sale updates keep rolling in, so it’s time to remind you to mark your calenders. Today, late breaking foodie plant news– it isn’t too late to get cool season crops from Seattle Tilth! If you missed the sale on March 20th, take heart! They’re doing it again on March 27th. Plus, we’ve been adding in other upcoming specialty sales coming up throughout the spring. Readers have contributed their submissions; if you have one to share, please send it in! Now, read on to find the hot horty sale spots for spring 2010!

If you haven’t already, it is time to mark your calender for all the great plant sales coming to the greater Seattle area this spring. Following is a list of some of my favorites. (Originally posted 3-14-2010)

If you have another plant sale you would like to see added to this list, let us know here.

If you aren’t in the greater Seattle area but would like to contribute plant sale information for your part of the world, let us know here.

Kruckeberg Gardens: Kruckeberg gardens is offering natives, spring bulbs, and unusual exotic plants for sale along with a free garden tour on May 8th. Too, expect family activities as well. Be sure to check their website for parking details. Local parking is limited, but satellite locations have been arranged. If you take the shuttle, you’ll get a $5 coupon!

  • May 7th & 8th from 10am-5pm
  • May 9th & 10th from 10am-5pm

Or, thinking of becoming a member? Members get in on the preview sale Thursday, May 6th from 10am-7pm. New members are welcome!

Fred Lind Manor and Jones Creek Farms are teaming up to offer our neighbors some old-fashioned hospitality. Sip on a complimentary glass of strawberry lemonade while you pick out the perfect tomato start from a local selection of organically grown, heirloom tomato plants. Fred Lind Manor, on the corner of 17th and Howell,  is a non-profit retirement community that has been serving Capitol Hill for 22 years. For more information, please call 206-774-5387 or just drop by the sale on Sunday, May 16, 2010

Seattle Tilth Edible Plant Sales: Yes, this year there are several from Seattle to Issaquah!

  • Added in March: March 27, 2010: Second Chance Edible Plant Sale for 40-60% off on cool season crop leftovers from the March 20th sale. Plus bareroot fruiting shrubs, vines and trees!

Lake Washington Technical College Plant Sale: Plants propagated, grown, and sold by students. Proceeds support this fantastic program. And, the plants range from trees to tomatoes.

  • April 24-25 & May 1-2, 2010: In addition to all the fantastic plants grown by students, Wholesale Nursery Northwest Nursery will be offering unbeatable prices on trees, shrubs, perennials and more. Proceeds from Northwest Nursery sales will go toward nursery founder, Jim Colman Memorial Scholarship fund, also helping students in horticulture.

Seattle Arboretum Plant Sales: Specialty plants, bulbs and much, much more.

Seattle Bamboo Festival: Bamboo poles, plants products, seminars, crafts, plus rare plant gallery and attending bamboo experts. Information on the Seattle Chapter of the American Bamboo Society is available here.

  • May 1-2, 2010: At the Graham Visitor Center at the Seattle arboretum.

King County Master Gardener Plant Sale: Buy plants, diagnose issues from your own garden, attend “how-to” seminars all in one location!

Highline Seatac Botanical Garden: From all-round garden reliables to rare botanicals. Meet with various botanical interest groups and more.

Broadview Garden Club Plant Sale: Including Trillium and Galanthus selections from Dunn Gardens!

  • May 1, 2010 (10am-2pm): Broadview Thompson School at 132nd and Greenwood
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April Gardening Check List

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Rare are the weekends that I have both days to myself in my garden. Usually, I’m meeting with clients all day Saturday. This weekend a last minute emergency cancellation meant a Saturday to myself and for myself to just “be” in the garden. That meant I was able to get caught up on numerous tasks that are best completed this time of year, April, in the garden. Perhaps it’s time to start focusing on some of these tasks in your garden as well?

  • Hardening off: If you’ve been buying veggie starts (or even ornamental starts), hopefully you’ve confirmed whether they’ve been hardened off yet or not.
    Brassicas Hardening Off in the Cold Frame

    Brassicas Hardening Off in the Cold Frame

    This refers to acclimating them to cooler outdoor temps from the coddling environment of the heated greenhouse. You can accomplish this at home by keeping starts in a cold frame (learn how to build one here), greenhouse or even hoop house. Or taking them outdoors for longer and longer periods of time over the course of several days, bringing them indoors for shorter and shorter protective periods during the coldest days and chilliest times of night.

  • Weeding: Even if you’ve been weeding all winter long and have a thick layer of mulch on the ground, odds are some wily weeds are popping up. I dug up several dandelion, shotweed and even a few tenacious dockweeds. Keep on top of them now to make life easier later when they’re stronger, have seeded and the ground gets hard as rains begin to wane.
  • Cutting back: Haven’t gotten out in the garden yet and finished cleaning up from last winter? You might want to hurry up. Most perennials have already put on some hefty growth. Ferns are unfurling. As delicate growth takes off, it can be difficult to cut back dead or winter-beaten parts of the plant to show off the beauty of the new spring growth. What makes this difficult is the new, tender, succulent growth can get in the way. When I cut back the last of my sword ferns over the weekend, for instance, I accidentally snipped off at least one tender new frond as it was unfurling – bummer! (more…)
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Ripe Tomatoes by the Fourth of July

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Lately, I’ve focused more time on being in the garden — whether my own or a client’s — than I have on writing about gardening. Today, after many days of hot, sunny weather, I woke to wind and spitting rain inspiring me to take several photos and begin sharing updates of food in the garden.

First Gold Nugget of 2009

First Gold Nugget of 2009

Try not to get too envious of our first, ripe tomato — yes, one is ready. It may be a tiny Gold Nugget, but it is an early start for the Seattle tomato season.  Still, for us it has been a bit of a wait. I seeded these on March 3, 2009!

This little nugget of summery sunshine flavor is simply the first of many to come. And though I did start this indoors and kept it in the greenhouse into early May. Until the wind today, it has been setting fruit and ripening outdoors for several weeks, rather than being coddled (and cooked) in the greenhouse.

Our early Seattle summer heat and our careful selection of plants that set fruit even in cool weather means our tomatoes are loaded with fruit already. From this tiny Gold Nugget to several Saucy Paste, enormous Oregon Springs, uniquely flowered Siberia and ever-faithful Stupice, we have plants laden with green orbs — some kinkled, some perfectly round, some small, some drupish. I must admit, when I felt the cold this morning, I moved a few of the potted plants into the greenhouse where it is still a balmy 65F (she says with her tongue-in-cheek). Others are withstanding the wind and the relative cold unprotected. Even the late-planted Long Keepers are holding up well — some in the weather; some in the greenhouse.

Keep tuned in for updates on cucumbers, watermelons, peppers, sweet peas, stunning gourd blossoms and even passionfruit!

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Can I Eat Tomatoes Sprayed with Bonide Rot Stop?

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

J. Laframboise (what a great name!) writes in from Rhode Island to ask:

“We have tomato blossom end rot and I would like to know if it is safe to eat the tomatoes not affected even though they’ve been sprayed with Bonide rot stop”

I’ll start by saying that this isn’t a problem I end up dealing with very often. Ironically, I tend to find it is a problem here in Seattle when we get a lot of late season rain (after our seasonal summer drought) before the fruiting is finished or when I water at night or when I neglect watering and the plants dry out and then get a heavy dose of water. Basically, it seems to happen when the plants are stressed unnecessarily.  I mulch regularly and have built some great soil that my plants seem to love. If anything I’m low in Nitrogen, which if used heavily on tomatoes, can lead to rot issues.

I’ve done some additional reading on this problem, and found that the problem comes from a calcium deficiency. (Another reader wrote in on this & I accidentally deleted his post. I hope he writes in again, so I can share his knowledge with you.) Now, keep in mind that calcium deficiency can be the result of planting in soils where calcium is lacking or where it is difficult for the plants to take up.  As well, applying calcium, perhaps as bone meal, to the tomatoes can also help them with this problem.

Additonally, reducing your cultivation around the roots of your tomatoes is also a good idea. The feeder roots are tender and easily damaged.

Now, I know that’s a lot of information that doesn’t really answer the question about the safety of plants that have already been sprayed with Bonide Rot Stop, but I feel obligated to discuss the problem and optional solutions for the future. But, here are some thoughts on the existing problem.

I don’t use this product myself, so I went to the Bonide Corporation Website to read up on their “Rot Stop Tomato Blossom End Rot” product. It is a product that is designed to be applied to the fruit, so it sounds like you’re good there. It is a product designed to manage the problem that you have, and it does help correct Calcium deficiencies.

I read the label  and discovered that it is 9.2% Calcium from Calcium chloride. It doesn’t tell me how they create the calcium chloride, so I don’t know how sustainable it is to produce. Since this product is a spray, it makes sense that they would use this form of calcium, which is highly soluable.  I tried to do some reading on the MSDS, but the website link is broken.

So, is it safe to eat the fruit? Well, Bonide sells this product throughout the U.S. No states have banned it. What we know of the product seems relatively safe. We don’t know what the “inert ingredients” are, so no ideas on that.

So, can you eat the tomatoes that have been sprayed? Seems okay. Now, I can’t promise that some study someday won’t prove otherwise, but if you trust the chemical company who makes the product you used and you trust the regulatory companies that determine safety, then you should be good to go. 

If you’re concerned you did the wrong thing this time, maybe try applying some other calcium sources next time. I like to use egg shells in the garden around seedlings to keep slugs out. The added benefit is that they add calcium to the soil. Oyster and other shell products will do the same; they release slowly though, so keep that in mind.  And, as I mentioned earlier, bone meal is another great way to go.

Thanks for writing in & good luck (and good eating). For more on growing tomatoes, look here.

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