Archive for the ‘gardening’ Category

Summer Pizza and Pesto!

August 24th, 2011

I love the bounty of summertime and basil is one of the tops for me. First of all, I think it is such a beautiful plant. The green of the leaves, the delicious aroma and the possibilities in the kitchen that are endless. It is part of the mint family nd in Greek, basil means “King”. It is high in Vitamin A, beta-carotene, magnesium and potassium. It has anti-inflammatory properties and is used for skin ailments as well as cold, headache, reducing fever and digestive aid. Medicinally, not only the leaves but the seed and oil of the plant are used for treating various ailments.

Basil is fairly easy to grow especially in the garden. It will also do well as a potted plant. Since it likes humidity and lots of sunshine, it is easier to grow in the summer than indoors in the colder months but it can be done and is quite worth the efffort. If you pinch back the plant, it will bush out a bit creating more and longer growth. Use the leaves as they are picked. Keep those stems! When mincing up basil for use in sauces or making pesto, use those stems.

Oooooo, speaking of pesto, what a treat it is to have in the summer! It is so fresh and makes you feel incredibly alive. I swear I get a jolt of energy when I eat the stuff. It is so easy to make and I recommend making a lot, I mean a hge batch so you can store the goodness away for the middle of winter as well.

Pesto!

2 cups basil leaves
1/2 cup olive oil
1/3 cup pine nuts
3 medium sized cloves of garlic
salt to taste

Put all the ingredients in the food processor and pulse until well blended.

Now, the great thing about making pesto is it lends itself to a lot of variation. Instead of pine nuts, you can use walnuts or a comination of the two. I like to use a bit less oil while making the pesto when I am going to be storing it. To do this, make the pesto minus a little oil. Fill an ice cube tray wwith eh pesto. Then, here is the little trick, top the pesto cubes with a little more oil. That helps seal in the color and it will brown less. Once the cubes are frozen, pop them out and store in the freezer in a container until you are ready to use it. The otehr reason I like to use less oil is so I have more flexibility withe the cubes. In winter, it is lovely to pull out a pesto cube, add some coconut milk and serve over veggies.

Let’s not rush things though. After all, it is still summer and we have plenty of sunny basil picking days ahead of us. Pesto is a great way to dress up a plate of veggies or add some fresh basil to your homemade salad dressing. A perfect appetizer or main meal for two is summer pizza. Using your favorite raw bread or cracker recipe, make one large or a couple smaller rounds and dehydrate. My new favorite is a cheezy cracker recipe. It is made with cashew and sunflower seeds as the base. Added in are tomatoes and red pepper. It is the loveliest orange color and really tastes like cheezy crackers. It compliments the color of the pesto superbly. Top your pizza with pesto and fresh sliced tomatoes. Rigth now there are a lot of great Heirloom tomatoes available in your garden or at local farmers markets and stands. The pizza takes only five minutes to make if you have preparred pizza flats stored away and is filling, full flavored and a divine treat!

WOW: Staghorn Sumac

August 13th, 2010

In the dog days of the North American summer, you may notice the eye-catching red cones on the staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina) trees on roadsides and forest margins… or your back yard! Did you know that this funky, tropical-looking plant brews up a lovely tart pink “sumacade”?

Our process:

We gather about a half-dozen berry clusters, stuff them into a pitcher, pour a half gallon or so of cold water over them, massage them for a few minutes by hand to release the flavorful coating on the seed, and let the concoction rest in a cool, dark place. The longer you steep the sumac, the stronger the flavor. When the flavor is developed to your taste, strain the mixture using a nut milk bag or cheesecloth to remove any fuzzy seeds or other plant matter.  Try it before adding any sweetener – I prefer it this way, though the kids do like a dollop of raw, local honey in their glasses.

Some tips for working with sumac:

Pouring boiling or hot water over the berries leaches tannins from the stems, causing the drink to become bitter. Once you have done and strained the cold infusion, however, you can heat it for a lovely, tart cup of tea on a cool, fall day. Or add the infusion to smoothies or raw soups to enhance the flavor and nutritional profile of the dish.

To enjoy this natural source of Vitamin C in the winter, cut and dry seedheads when they turn a deep, rich crimson.  In CT this occurs primarily during August, but ripe drupes can be found in late July through late September. Place them in a dehydrator or hang them out of direct sunlight in a dry, well-ventilated space until dry, then store, whole, in a brown paper bag.

Rain can wash away some of the flavor, so be sure to gather the berries when it hasn’t rained for a few days. Depriving a tree of all its seed clusters can have detrimental effects so harvest lightly – no more than 4 or 5 per tree.   Birds such as cardinals and grosbeaks dine on the dried drupes that remain on the tree throughout the winter, so rest easy that those seeds will be put to good use.

A warning:

As a cousin of cashews and mangoes, sumac is likely unsuitable for those with sensitivity to those foods. Poison sumac is uncommon, grows in wet areas, has smooth leaves and does NOT have the signature red seed head of the staghorn variety. However, poison ivy can share the same habitat as the staghorn, so watch your feet when getting close. As always when harvesting wild edibles, be sure not to clip plants on the side of a busy road to avoid toxins.

So — take a hike! And treat yourself with a refreshing glass of gorgeous pink Rhus-ade!

WOW: Day lilies

July 16th, 2010

You know summer is in full swing when you see drifts of day lilies gently waving to you from roadsides and front yards everywhere. Their short-lived blossoms (each flower lives only for a day, hence the name, tho each stalk has several buds waiting for their turn to shine) serve as a reminder for me to enjoy each long summer day as much as possible.

Did you know that you aren’t limited to enjoying the dancing orange beauties with only sight and smell? The petals taste delicious as well! You can pull them off and toss them in salads whole or sliced. Or you can stuff them with whatever you think is tasty — flavored rice/quinoa/millet, chopped fruit or a slaw-ish salad. The greener end where the flower is attached to the stem is bitter, so you’ll want to leave it on your plate, but YUM! We ate most of the salad (a kale-cabbage-carrot slaw with a lemon tahini dressing) stuffed into all of the lilies in the picture as dinner one night.

Since borage and heartsease were also blooming in the garden, the kids picked them and tossed them into for good floral measure. I think there were some sliced rose petals in there as well. As you can see, the salad bordered on the garish, it was so colorful!  Currently, our gorgeously crimson bee balm is flowering — you can pull the petals off those and toss them into salads for some beautiful color and taste, and our nasturtiums, started from seed a little late, have also started to flower. Both leaves and flowers add a peppery bite to a green salad that needs no other adornment. When I started researching what flowers could be safely consumed a couple of years ago, I was astonished at how many I already had in my yard! I have bookmarked this list of edible flowers and use it to double check plants I’m not sure about.

Back to day lilies. One afternoon Dante announced that he had something special planned for dessert. Since raspberries and wild black raspberries were also in season, he and Lucia collected a basket of berries and some day lily blossoms and disappeared into the kitchen, forbidding me to follow. He chopped up some sorrel and berries, mashing this all together a bit with some finely diced apples and the juice of half a lemon. He stuffed this mixture into the blossoms, and lay them on a plate. He put the rest of the chopped fruit mixture into the Vita-Mix to make a sauce, which he drizzled over the blossoms. We devoured this treat and wished we had more.

One caution — eating too many day lily flowers in one sitting can cause digestive upset in some people. Proceed with care until you know how many you can handle, or plan to stay close to a bathroom the next day!

If you are lucky to have a thick patch of these nearby, you can also harvest and eat the shoots  raw or cooked in the early spring. Once leaves are 8-12 inches high, they will become too fibrous to enjoy. Unopened buds can be prepared much as you would green beans, and spent flowers that bloomed the previous day can be added to soups, stews, or stir-fry. The tubers at the tips of the rhizomes are also edible all year long, but the general consensus in our wild edibles books seems to be that unless you are in a survival situation, they are simply not worth the work.

Be sure to identify stands of them this summer. Otherwise, if you find a likely patch in the spring, dig up a clump and look at the root system. The underground stems (rhizomes) that end in  tubers distinguish them from poisonous lilies. As with all wild edibles, you must be sure that they are free from contamination — roadsides and farms or yards that use chemical pesticides and herbicides can taint nearby wild edibles with toxins.

Happy foraging!

WOW: Wood Sorrel

June 30th, 2010

One of our favorite garden weeds is wood sorrel, also known as sour grass. With it’s bright green leaves and pert yellow flowers, it lends a cheerful air to shadier areas in garden beds, lawns, woodland margins, etc.

We love it’s lemony tartness in salads, sandwiches, smoothies and soups. Once the tomatoes come in, lunch often consists of tomatoes chopped with wood sorrel, basil, a drizzle of olive oil and a pinch of Herbamare or salt. Simple, quick and oh so satisfying. And literally mouth-watering. Seriously. Try a bite. I defy you not to salivate! This is a handy trick when hiking with thirsty kids.

Leaves are a sunny light green and are divided in three heart-shaped leaflets with a center crease that allows the leaves to fold down at night or under stress. Although sorrel leaves are lighter green, their shape is otherwise quite similar to those of clover. Flowers are a bright golden yellow, with five petals. Other varieties of this weed have pink or white flowers, but in our area, yellow is the dominant color.

Medicinally, wood sorrel is a wonderful source of comfort for several ailments. As with plantain or yarrow, you can crush the leaves and put them on wounds or burns to promote healing. An infusion is helpful for digestive maladies, as well as for reducing fevers.  High in niacin, thiamin, riboflain and Vitamin C, wood sorrel can be a nutritious addition to your diet . A note of caution, however — it does contain oxalic acid  (also found in spinach, rhubarb, parsley, etc) and should be used in moderation. Those with gout and other conditions that are irritated by oxalic acid should probably forgo the pleasures of this mouth-puckering herb.

If you aren’t already familiar with wood sorrel, you will soon discover that it’s lurking about in shady spots all around you. Find a spot that is unlikely to be contaminated by pesticides, auto exhaust, etc and enjoy!

yard salad

June 10th, 2010

Thanks to our chickens, who managed to escape their large run frequently this spring, many of our greens got off to a slow start. Therefore, when I want a salad, I have to meander about the yard grabbing bits here and there to make up a salad. I take up a bushel or the salad spinner and head out into the yard to see what I can find. The flavor and freshness of yard salad bowl me over, and I love adding whatever edible flowers we have for both decoration and flavor, depending.

We just used a light homemade vinaigrette and made a salad bar, so everyone could choose the salad components they liked — yard salad with herbs and flowers, a spicy mix with cress and sliced radishes, and a not-exactly-from-our-yard mix that includes cucumber, romaine, celery and pea shoots. I wasn’t sure if they mesclun would be too spicy for the kids since some of it had bolted in the warm weather but it turned out to be tame enough for their palates.

The kids picked some small not-quite-ready-yet french breakfast radishes while I cut the mesclun mix and cress (cress, tiny radishes and mesclun in spinner acros the top of the picture). I also gathered (going clockwise for rest of picture) parsley (far left), lambs quarters (pick them young — you can eat the stems if they’re young enough, or just the leaves if they’re woodier), some merveille de quatre saisons lettuce and bronze arrowhead lettuce, two varieties of kale and just a pinch of basil.

These pictures are from a couple of weeks ago, and the rest of the radishes have poked their ruddy shoulders out of the ground and were eaten already. Our lambs quarters are at the point that I’m only picking leaves, and our parsley, which had overwintered, is starting to flower. The lettuces are offering up more than just a couple of small leaves, and the chard is also big enough to harvest so we’re still enjoying yard salad in all it’s seasonal variations. The chive flowers have passed, though i’m wondering if I’d chopped them all off and not allowed it to set seeds, if it would keep producing flowers — anyone have any experience with this? We’ve started adding rose petals and wood sorrel which are out now that earlier “weeds” like chickweed are also past their prime.

What do you scrounge from your yard for your salad?

CT Herbfest

June 3rd, 2010

Just a quick post to let you know that this weekend is the CT Herbfest in Somers. Check out the website for a list of workshops (including an edible wild walk and a raw food talk) and activities. Admission is $10, under 12 or over 70 are free.

And if you’re looking for more events, don’t miss the CT NOFA (Northeast Organic Farming Association) website. They’ve got an upcoming tour of an urban community garden on June 21, and save the date for Taste! Organic September 19th, to mention a couple.

If you’re on facebook, you can do a search for The Essence of Being at Johnnycake Mountain. They lead wild weed walks, herbal talks and more, but their website doesn’t appear to be functioning yet. The Ansonia Nature and Recreation Center offers many interesting programs, including a wild edible feast this Saturday from 9-4, as well as a FREE Beekeeping for Beginners class at 2, also this Saturday.Other events at ANRC include Joseph Firecrow, Native American Flute Man, night hikes, solstice drumming circle and tunes from trash.

No time to post more, life calls.  Let us know about a cool event in your area!

WOW: nettles

May 23rd, 2010

Grab those garden gloves — it’s time for a new feature on crunchybits! Welcome to our first Weed of the Week — Nettles!

We’ve already talked about the health benefits of nettle infusions. This humble herb helps with respiratory troubles, allergic reactions, arthritis, skin problems, kidney stones and bladder infections. but the uses of nettles don’t stop there. You can steep nettle stalks in a bucket of water for a few weeks until fermentation stops (once there are no more bubbles when you stir) and use a dilution of this pungent “tea” as a foliar feed or soil fertilizer for your plants.

In addition to the feeding and healing people and their vegetable patches, nettles have been used for more than 2000 years to make things like rope, paper or cloth. And they can dye the fabric too!  The leaves will give a green color, while the roots boiled with salt or alum yield a lovely yellow.

Nettles attract a number of butterflies, who lay their eggs on the plant so their caterpillars have a tasty, nutritious start on life.  Once the plants go to seed, the birds will visit your patch to dine. So it has a place in your wildlife garden too!

Here in CT, nettles been out for a few months, and the patches we’ve expanded in the garden are producing nicely.  Although today Dante asked me not to do that again because getting around the garden in shorts and with bare feet isn’t as pleasant as before where the nettles were primarily outside the fence and just inside at one corner.

We’ve been using them primarily in our smoothies, but last week I found a nettle soup recipe in a library cookbook Love Soup by Anna Thomas. I adapted it a bit, and am posting the resulting recipe below. It was delicious, and Dante and Luke ate a couple of bowls. Lucia didn’t care for it, but said she will try it again next time.Something about it reminds me of homemade chicken and rice soup from my childhood.

Nettle Soup

  • 2 large onions, diced
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 4 carrots, diced
  • 4 stalks celery, diced
  • 4 yukon gold potatoes, diced
  • 1 cup lentils
  • 1 cup millet
  • 6-8 leaves kale, chopped
  • 4 cups chopped nettles
  • water or broth
  • salt to taste
  1. Saute onions on medium low heat until they start to brown.
  2. Meanwhile chop and measure out everything but the greens.
  3. Once the onions turn translucent, add the carrots, celery and potato and stir occasionally for about 5 minutes.
  4. Add the garlic and stir, cooking for one minute.
  5. Add water and/or broth to cover and bring to a boil.
  6. Add lentils and millet, stir and reduce to a simmer.
  7. After about 20 minutes, add chopped greens and remove from heat.

I didn’t want to add any spices so I could taste the subtle flavor of the nettles, but I think next time round I would add some fresh herbs. And possibly more nettles.

Happy harvesting — don’t forget to wear thick gloves or proceed with caution!

satisfying sprouts

April 28th, 2010

We have been enjoying the process (and taste!) of growing sprouts at our house. We are all amazed at how quickly changes happen with our plant babies, and my babies love to devour our tender greens. We have been growing 4 trays, and find that it just about gives us a week’s worth of yum until our next trays come on board. We’re still refining the process, as the peas grow faster at first, though the buckwheat catches up pretty quickly, and sunflowers lag behind. Next week I’ll try staggering their starts, but for now I’m still starting the soak at the same time.

I snapped a shot of all four of the trays that we showed the planting process so that you can see what they looked like when we took the covers off. In retrospect, I would have left the covers on the sunflower a little longer, as these sleepy sprouts took a long time to cast off their little black caps and come out to play in the sunshine. But even so, they managed nicely and are now ready for the table.

First up, we have the buckwheat.

You can see the yellowish color, no green since I’d just taken the lid off and they’d been in total darkness until now. You can also see the white fuzzy roots that are often mistaken for mold — I had read about this, so while I watched it carefully, I was not quick to give up on them, and as it turns out, the book was right! These are just the tiny hairs on the roots, and not some nasty fungus that doomed my little crop.

They greened up pretty quickly, but I didn’t snap a picture until a few days later, when most of them had cast off their seed hull of their own accord and peeked out over the sides of the tray.

I love the way this picture shows our buckwheat babies emerging from the sunlight in their sunny southern window. This reminds me of something I read once about plants, about eating plants is like eating sunlight. I still am agog at the fact that plants convert sunlight into tangible energy. Just think what we could do for our energy crisis if we could figure that one out! Anyway, what I’d come across was something to the effect of that:  plants covert sunlight into plant matter, so by eating raw, unadulterated plants we are in a way eating sunlight.  Now back to our regularly scheduled program…

The other two seeds we’d started that day were sunflower and peas — here they are the day I took the cover off:

Sunflowers on the left, probably could have used another day or so in the dark. Peas on the right have 2 inch or so shoots that are ready to green up. Lucia pointed out that the pea shoots grow up out of the pea, which stays on the soil surface. The buckwheat and sunflowers grow different, carrying their seed coats up with them  until the shoot is strong enough to cast them off.

Here’s a shot of the pea shoots one day after the above pic — look how much greener and taller:

I haven’t captured a “final stage” pic of the sprouts yet, guess I’m too busy eating them! But you can get a sense of what the pea and sunflower sprouts look like in our dinner from last night. We’ve talked about incorporating more raw foods into your diet by just adding one meal a day (usually starting with breakfast, choosing a smoothie or fruit instead of bagel or cereal), then two, and then having more raw food as sides at dinner. Last night’s dinner is a good example of this. I was trying out some relatively new dishes, so I defrosted some lentil soup and heated that up, knowing that Dante and Lucia would at the very least eat that.

So I got out some collards, destemmed and cut them in half, and whipped up some tangy carrot salad, or a variation thereof.  This has been a favorite recently — it’s quick to come together and can be made from stuff I usually have on hand, leaving out what I don’t and adding in what I do. I chop the nuts and leave them separate so that they aren’t soggy in the leftovers. I put these out as a little craft project at the dinner table — and Dante at a whole carrot-salad-filled collard wrap as part of his dinner. The first few times I made this salad, he ate a bite and said he didn’t like it. Granted, each time I’ve made it I’ve had different things on hand, but this time he ate it. So there’s something to be said for continuing to serve things and waiting for appreciation to come after many tries.

I’d made the cream sauce for the sprouts before I shredded the carrots in the food processor, and since Lucia wanted to try the sauce I gave her a bowl of carrot shreds with some sauce drizzled on it. I added an extra clove of garlic to the sauce (who’s surprised? anyone? anyone?) so it was packin some heat, but both she and her brother ended up eating a small bowl of this as part of their dinner.

And in addition to carrot wraps and lentil soup, I served a big bed of pea and sunflower sprouts with velvety smooth cream sauce. Oh my. It was delicious! Lucia at first asked for a bowl of plain sprouts, but after finishing her carrots, she asked for cream sauce on them as well. And in fact, I just drizzled some on since I knew she found the sauce to be spicy, and she demanded more — nearly double! I loved the texture and flavor of this dish, but we all agreed that we felt slightly rabbit-like, sucking a forkful of sprouts in as we chewed, so next time I will probably chop the sprouts up a bit before serving, or serve them with a knife so people can chop their own.

Can’t rave enough about the sprouts — and they’re soo kid-friendly too on many levels. Definitely consider giving them a try so that by next winter you’re comfortable with the process and are ready to have fresh, local greens all winter long!

Happy sprouting!

seeds n sprouts

April 15th, 2010

top down view of buckwheat lettuceIt’s been a while since our field trip to Aiki Farms, but I couldn’t get the sprouts out of my mind. I have been doing jar sprouting of mung beans, peas, lentils, broccoli and alfalfa, but never really gave the process of growing leafy shoots more than a half-hearted try. So I bought some sprouting buckwheat seeds at Garden of Light natural food store in Glastonbury, got out some of the mesclun and spinach containers I’d been saving, and went to town. And ya know what? It was really easy, and the kids LOVED gobbling up the sprouts! We served them atop your standard green salad, by themselves dressed with a dash of balsamic vinegar, in a romaine leaf that was smeared with cashew mayonnaise and rolled up in nori or rice wrappers with shredded carrots, tomato, avocado and EZ Nori Filling or a sweet chili or peanut dipping sauce. I also imagine they’d be a great way to get greens into smoothies without a strong “green” taste!

sprouts on a saladWhy sprout?

  1. Nutrition — sprouts have a greater concentration of vitamins, minerals, protein and phytochemicals than any other period in the plants life — even full grown fruit or vegetables.
  2. Price — pound for pound, sprouts cost less than most other produce (the sproutman calculates them to be on average 26 cents per pound!)
  3. Local and fresh — sprouts stop growing the moment you cut or chew them, and it doesn’t get much more local than that! And nutrients are intact instead of dissipating slowly as produce sits on the store shelves
  4. Organic — no chemicals needed, neither pesticide or fertilizers. Invest in a good organic soil mix (this will pay off in the amount of nutrients your sprouts contain) or mix your own. Aiki Farms uses a mixture of peat moss and composted chicken manure. Find a local organic farmer in your area to see if they can hook you up or know of a good source. What do they use for seed starting?
  5. Easy to digest — The tender cell walls of these baby plants break down more easily than the tougher walls of their mature counterparts, and they contain a higher concentration of enzymes that help break them down, so your system doesn’t have to work as hard.
  6. Easy to grow — growing shoots does require a bit more space, but still not nearly work or space as outdoor gardening. Sprouting lentils, mung beans, etc in a jar takes even less time and space — a minute or two a day to rinse, and whatever space your jar or nut milk bag requires.
  7. Year-round harvest — you can grow sprouts no matter what the temperature is inside or out, ditto the available sunlight. Sprouting may take longer in one season than another, but you can adjust your process and schedule accordingly.  And your jar or nut milk bag is portable, making sprouts an easy travel food — take it with you when visiting family or on camping trips!
  8. Taste — how could I list this last?! Shoots have a very mild taste compared to kale and other dark leafy greens and kids LOVE them! They add a nice, succulent texture to your meals, and the sprouted legumes add a nice crunch to your salads.

Back to technique. I punctured the bottom of the container, placed it on the lid to catch extra water, and spread about 1 inch of soil inside. I watered it with my spray bottle, but that took more time than it was worth and I would probably line them up outside and use the hose with a light spray instead. Once the soil was wet, I sprinkled the seeds on and tried to spread them out evenly.

Not having enough empty cupboard space, I moved them to our laundry room and put them underneath a cardboard box (the tall, awkward shape of the salad container also meant that covering it wasn’t easy. I lifted the box each day to let in a whoosh of fresh air (I was worried about air circulation) and check the progress. After 4 days or so, the shoots were about 2 inches tall, so I brought them into a sunny south window. They greened up really quickly and were ready to harvest a couple of days after exposure to the sun.

Look how green they are! They kept catching my eye as I walked past the room they were in, with their vibrant green glow.  I tried cutting them with scissors, but found it easier to hold the tops of the clump I wanted and cut them free with a short paring knife. I didn’t wash them — they didn’t have any dirt clinging to them or anything, and since you’re leaving the bottom of the stems and the roots in the soil, they’re clean. One thing I’m hoping resolves itself with our new method is the hulls that stay stuck on. My sense is that I hadn’t watered the trays enough or that the covering allowed for them to dry out quicker, so there wasn’t enough moisture and the hulls dried out. Thus hardened, it was more difficult for the plant to shed the hull. We’ll see how it goes in round 2.

The tall sides of the containers made harvesting a bit awkward, so I decided to go out and get some seed-starting tray bottoms at Paul and Sandy’s in East Hampton. They were 1.29 each, and for each tray of sprouts I wanted, I needed 3 of the trays — one on the bottom to catch the water, one punctured and filled with soil and put inside the bottom tray, and one tray to cover the sprouts for the first few days after planting until they are ready for sunlight.

To get ready to put the seeds in soil, I had to soak and then sprout them. I ordered sprouting seeds from sproutman.com, because all I have read on the matter suggests that sprouting seeds are selected for their high germination rate and taste of shoots produced. I measured out what I thought might work (about a cup) and put them on a white kitchen towel to see if there were any stones, twigs, or funky looking seeds. My sprouting bible, The Sprout Garden, says that the Five D’s — Decayed, Diseased, Discolored, Dented and Dwarfed equal DEAD seeds.

After culling (didn’t actually have anything to cull in this batch) and soaked them overnight for about 12 hours. I drained and rinsed the seeds, and then let them sprout for a little over 24 hours, rinsing them 2-3 times a day. The buckwheat and sunflower seeds would start looking dried out before the peas, but I rinsed them all at the same time anyway. Once the seeds were showing evidence of the start of a tail , I gathered my supplies and headed to the deck. The buckwheat was barely showing a tiny sprout, many weren’t but I planted them anyway since I’d read that if you wait too long, it won’t be able to re-orient itself and get a good root into the soil.

punctured seed trayWith a paring knife, I punctured holes in the bottom of 4 of the trays so that water could drain out. I put these inside intact trays, and filled them with about an inch of soil — definitely harder to judge with opaque containers, but I will get to the point that I know how many scoops of dirt are needed per tray so that I don’t waste soil.

Dante presses the soilOnce the soil was in, we put the tops on and used it to press the soil down a bit, again, going on the process we learned at Aiki Farms. We brought the trays onto the lawn and sprayed them with a hose until they were shiny on the surface for a second or two after the hose was pointed elsewhere. We let them sit for a few minutes to drain out an excess water and brought them back up to the deck and added the seeds.

The kids head realized what was going on,  helped with the soil and the watering and were now clamoring once again to do the seeds. So Lucia took the jar of peas and spread them out in one tray. She tried sprinkling them out of the jar evenly, but got frustrated and ended up dumping them all in the middle and spreading them from there.

Lulu plants some peas

We did the same for the sunflower and buckwheat sprouts, filling 3 more trays.

4 trays planted with sprouts!

Now we used our last intact trays as a cover, guarded by a little elf:

covered sprout trays

And brought them into the the house on a table in the playroom:

final resting place of sprout trays

I put a large piece of plastic-ish stuff on the table to protect it in case some water got on it, but will probably figure out a better place for them, since we do like to use that table for crafts and the like.

The whole process took about a half hour, but I had to puncture the trays and take time for kids and pictures, so I expect I will be able to do this in about 10 minutes. Bob from Aiki Farms suggested that 4 trays would make enough sprouts to feed a family of 4 for one week.

I’ll re-post when the covers come off!

compost bins for cheap!

April 14th, 2010

Posting this notice from our local library — one of our very favorite places in town! You don’t have to be a resident of East Hampton to take advantage of this awesome offer, so if you’ve been thinking of getting a composter, here’s a great place to start! There are many ways you can gentle your footprints on the planet, and composting is a major component of that effort. Yard waste and kitchen scraps comprise 30% of landfiill space!So start diverting some of your household’s waste into a valuable product — composted humus!

Compost enriches the soil however you use it — for houseplants, container gardens or full-fledged vegetable gardens. Hummus, the final product of a composting system,  improves the soil structure, increases microorganism populations, helps retain water, provides nutrients that plants need, prevents erosion, help moderate soil temperature… and the list goes on. Start today with a brand spankin new bin designed to prevent animal or insect troubles, and to make harvesting your humus a breeze!

The East Hampton Public Library is collaborating with local agencies and the Northeast Resource Recovery Association (NRRA) to make Earth Machine backyard compost bins available to the public at a competitive and affordable price.

About the Earth Machine
The 80 gallon capacity bin is made of recycled plastic and converts grass, leaves and table scraps into rich garden soil. Other features include easy, snap-together assembly (33″x35″ in finished form) and a 10-year warranty against cracking, deterioration, or warping.

Cost and How to Order
Each Earth Machine may be pre-ordered at a cost of $47; bins usually retail for $80-$100. Price includes CT sales tax and a small fundraiser donation to the library. Head to the library’s blog for more details and to download the order form.

Reduce. Reuse. Recycle!