Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Mom Genes


I am a gardener.  Actually, my mom’s maiden name is Gardner and I always thought that was pretty cool and appropriate.  I get, at least partially, my love of plants and garden and flowers from her.  I can spend hours wandering through her field guides and poking through her garden.  My green thumb comes to me honestly.  Plants and flowers and green populated our world from before I can remember, and as a kid, as if by osmosis, I think I learned what makes green things happy… it is second nature to me to be in a garden or planting something or planning something for a future garden.  I got this planning gene from my Mom, too…  She is one of the most organized people I know and is always at the ready with a ‘Kit’ for what-have-you.  I am sure her camping kit, for example, is all ready to go right now including kitchen ware, spices, field guides, and plenty of tent pegs for those who may not have enough.  She is a girl scout extraordinaire at the ready for just about everything.   In this vein, I am much more cluttered and I am ok with a bit more of a mess but that gene is there in its own ramshackle sort of way and has manifested itself, for example, in my garden notebook .  I catalog what plants work, what doesn’t work, what blooms when, maps of where things are planted and when, time-lines for germination and so on ad nauseum.  This cataloging gene is definitely from my mom and I thank her for what bits of it made it to me. 

And, like the gardening thing, we both feel very much at home in the kitchen.  Unlike me, though, my Mom is an excellent baker.  She can whip up pies, for example, that completely stymie me.  I am afraid of pie crusts.  I am fairly confident they have something against me. I can whip up a crumb crust, but beyond that, I have limits....       What comes out of my oven are often lumps not even half as good as the delights that come out of hers.  As I scientist with a creative side, you would think I would be better at it than I am, but in general, I am solidly dismal.  As one example of many I could share, my bread-making resolution this year has yielded not one great loaf of bread yet….   It is a mystery to me.  I am sure, if my mom decided to bake a battard, it would come out perfectly.   She is organized and methodical and I’m sure this helps.  I have lovely memories of cookies and cakes my mom has made over the years, and every time something comes out of the oven halfway decent in my kitchen I think I may be one step closer to that, but know I will never quite get there.  That magical sort of sweet hot aura surrounding a fresh baked cake doesn't happen very often in my kitchen.  I am more often looking at recipes as simply a guide or inspiration and then go my own way -- this works so much better when I am not baking.  Savory dishes are more my cup of tea.  My off-roading mentality lends itself nicely to creative meals and so it all works out well when we get together and cook.  I look forward to her pies and cookies, and I think she enjoys sharing my creative meals.
 
And so, Mom…   I look forward to the next time we cook and to seeing your garden and showing you mine.  Happy Mother’s Day a few days late for the Blog world, but I feel so very happy and lucky to have you in my life for not just the above-mentioned traits you so deftly passed along to me.  You are a source of unending support and love and I appreciate and love you whole-heartedly.  May your kitchen and garden be filled with delights.  I hope to share them both with you very soon.

Saturday, May 07, 2011

Pepper Prep Day

With Steve Martin and The Steep Canyon Rangers keeping me company, it's a beautiful day to be here in the garden.  My irises began blooming today (my tree peony is on its way out) and I'm prepping the garden to receive some peppers.   After hardening my plants this past week, it is finally about the right temp for planting (over 55 F at night) and gives me just enough time to make sure they are happy and stable pre Canada fun.  

It is a beautiful day, and with music blaring, dirt under the nails, and plenty of green potentials:  what could be better??  I can tell you....  a bigger garden, I think, and maybe some friends and a beer!  I'll have to work on the friends and beer part.   

If you get a chance, check out Cross Country Nurseries in Rosemont, NJ (http://www.chileplants.com/).  They are a hop, skip, and jump from me, and also cater to the mail order crowd.  They have a fantastic selection of every kind of pepper you can dream of.  According to their website, they have 500 types of peppers, 175 types of tomatoes and 50 types of eggplant. I ended up with 13 pepper plants and 8 kinds of basil.  One lonely tomato (Coyote Tomato) made it into my flat along with an eggplant.  We shall see how my garden grows and if they will all fit in it.  Every year my eyes are bigger than my garden, but believe it or not, I actually scaled back this year.   I look forward to several types of bell peppers, a few types of jalapeno, a few Thai standbys, an Ammazzo, a Limon, and a Sheepnose pimento.   I have no idea what some of these are going to be like, but what's the fun of knowing exactly what you're going to end up with?  Bring on the Capsicum. 


Saturday, October 02, 2010

A Preponderance of Peppers


For those of you who may not be in the know about my idiosyncrasies, let me just expose one of them right here and right now.   I think vinegar sucks.  Acetic acid in any form – cider, balsamic, white, what have you   –    it is all anathema.   Yuck to the nth degree.  I am guessing you haven't put much thought into this, but there are times when I feel that vinegar is in everything.  It isn't, I know, and other folks with much more serious aversions (read here actual allergies) have it much worse than I do, but let me say this:   vinegar is in pretty much every condiment out there and they all make me want to vomit.


      Happily for me, and before I lose you entirely with my talk of throwing up, I also am pleased to share that this year I have a GLUT of peppers from my garden.  I am not sure what exactly happened, but the peppers have run amok.  I suspect the incredibly high heat this summer (55 days of 90 degrees or above) may have had something to do with it.  My garden is a jungle of 15-20 types of peppers and most of them have done well.  Every year new peppers pop up as volunteers; and this year, I seem to have at least 5 volunteer new crosses between Thai peppers and several of my other last-year peppers growing in places where I did not expect peppers at all.   Perhaps I'll pull a Mendel and save some seeds from the most interesting ones and see what the next generation yields.   It is an odd thing to have what looks like a typical Thai chili pepper that is normally damn hot (50,000-100,000 on the Scoville scale:  Habenero is just above it) and to take a bite only to find it has no heat at all -- Zippo on the Scoville.  A boring bland thing all dressed to kill.     Inappropriate pepper friskiness has yielded some losers among the winners, but that could be an entirely different post.   Thankfully, most of my peppers are fabulously varied in excellent ways and most of them are hot hot hot.

      
I have digressed.   My point with all of this is that I made my first hot sauce today --  I am so excited!   In general, commercial hot sauces (read here condiment) are vinegar-laden and very Kim-unfriendly.  There are the occasional sauces that you can buy from websites or specialty stores, but in general, I'm out of luck.   And so, here I am with a fresh batch of incredibly hot hot sauce made from fresh chilis and I'm really not sure what to do with it, but I am sure I will find lots and lots of new and delicious opportunities.  Grilled chicken, for example, was awesome with a bit of the magic condiment drizzled about.  It also complimented the fresh garden green beans which were nestled on a bed of spinach on the side.  Doors have been unlocked and eyes have been opened today.  
          Bring on the sauce!    Bring on the Sauce!  Bring On The Sauce!