Feeling Saucy

The end of summer is always crazy and I have been busier than I have every been — mostly covering for people on vacation but I also have a few big projects going on at work. It has also been crazy hot, so on my days off I am usually pretty worn out and if I wasn’t, it has generally been too hot to work in the yard.

Upside of that is that, assuming I can keep them watered, the tomatoes have been great this year. I was pretty bummed out that the plant that was suppose to be a stupice (my favorite slicing tomato) turned out to be a grape tomato. Oh well. Also, once again, the stripy roma keeps getting blossom rot — problem with under watering. But the green zebra, black krum, and yellow boy are awesome and super flavorful, although not very big — think golf ball.

black krums and green zebras

Black krums and green zebras

Lemon boys

Lemon boys. These made awesome sauce!

tomato mix

The full mix, from a different harvest than the other two pix. The yellow boys became the sauce to go with the zucchini, which was transformed into a kick-ass veggie lasagna.

Christmas trees of a different kind

A few days before Christmas I was getting ready for work when someone knocked on my door (and Lily went wild barking). Thinking it would be UPS delivering the crock pot I bought myself as a Christmas present, I was surprised when I opened the door and there was a long skinny package bag there. On opening it I remembered that several months ago I had given a donation to the Arbor Day Foundation and they would send me 10 trees. Well here they were — not 10 but 12 little twigs that were suppose to be trees. The biggest was about 28″ tall and the shortest maybe 8″. 3 Eastern Redbuds, 4 White Flowering Dogwood, 3 Goldenraintree, and 2 Crapemyrtle. Here is a gardening challenge — getting these little sticks to someday become a flowery forest.

I didn’t have time to deal with them then, so I stuck the bunch is a vase of water and proceeded to slog through the next 2 weeks of work. On my second day off after the work marathon (first day was spend entirely in bed being ULTRA lazy), I had to come up with a solution for what to do with all of these twigs.

trees

A bucket of baby trees — but what to do with them?

I found places for 3 of them (dogwood in the front berm, crapemyrtle south of the driveway and goldenraintree in the herb garden southwest corner) but I want the rest to go in beds I haven’t dug yet — along the back fence and near the back of the house. So I had to stick them some where and the only bare patch I could think of was the garden.

trees temp home

Most of my new little trees will have to live in the garden until I can come up better plan.

That will do for now.

And that crock pot I was expecting. It came the following day. Here is the first thing I cooked in it —

Louisiana-style shortribs

First crock pot adventure. Louisiana-style short ribs with spicy cole slaw. YUM!

short ribs with spicy cole slaw. Pretty yum! I think I am going to like this new toy but I am going to rename it the slow torture device — it makes the whole house smell AMAZING while the food is cooking!

Vegetables of My Labor

The garden is hitting its stride! Up to this point things have been trickling in at a reasonable pace — a few zucchini a week, some beans, arugula — enough that I have enough to enjoy but no so much that I am getting tired of things yet. I have been cooking a lot of my old favorites — grilled zucchini, sauteed veggies on coucous and sausage, awesome green bean tarragon potato salad — and adding a few new recipes to the rotation — “Fried” zucchini spears, etc. It is all helping me keep myself feed while I am so busy and stressed out. And cooking has always been another of my destressors — so win, win. But I have been eager for the tomatoes to start pouring in.

Today, a rare day off, I had my first really bumper harvest:

vegetable harvest

Beans, carrots, zucchini, yellow squash, patty pans, cucumber and a pile of tomatoes! (and one random radish)

And I’m looking forward to more.

garden bed 1

Peppers in the front — mostly not ready yet but lots going on there. carrots are still pretty small. 2 tomatoes — getting close to trickling in. zucchini and squash producing a few a week. Look at the big ole weed — gardening fail.

tomatoes

My favorite — the stupice — is pretty small but producing. The green zebra is proving to be the most promising. The black beauty is also doing pretty good.

garden 2

The beans continue to be the top producers. The winter squash isn’t doing much at this stage. The patty pans aren’t as productive as the other summer squash but doing ok. Arugula has bolted and will need to come out soon. Other lettuces are really bitter and will probably end up getting composted. The cucumber in front is doing better than cucumber usually does for me, but that isn’t saying much.

Another Side Project

I actually finished this project a few weeks ago, but I have been so crazy busy and distracted I didn’t take pictures so I could blog about it. My very good friend and Editorial Page Editor John Laird is retiring so The Columbian needed to fill his position. The Sports Editor Greg Jayne ended up getting promoted to the job and then my boss Micah Rice was promoted to Sports Editor. That left the copy desk without a fearless leader. So as assistant news editor, it made sense for me to try for it. And I got it. I am now, or will be at the end of this month when everyone shifts around, the News Editor at The Columbian. So far it is being really stressful and one of the first things on my to-do list is to fill our vacant position. I am excited for the challenge but also nervous. So we’ll see. The next few months are going to be insane!

Anyway, this project was pretty easy to throw together — just laid down some more of that leftover mulch that I removed when redoing the front patio and artfully arrange some of my pots. Planted a few extra things in said pots and done. But I love how it looks. And it is a good place to have some of my more heat-sensitive herbs — parsley, cilantro, sorrel — so they don’t bolt as fast.

herb garden bed

Looks super cute. On the other side of the walk, the blueberries are doing great. And the chamomile and callengula are filling out. I also threw some sunflower seeds that Eric Murray got in a wedding invitation last year in the ground and was surprised, not only that they came up, but that they are doing great.

And now that things are looking so cute back here, I have been trying to take time to enjoy it. So after a long weekend of weeding, I fired up the grill and cooked dinner.

grilling

A rib-eye steak and zucchini from the garden

Dinner

Steak, grilled zucchini and a arugula, blueberry and corn salad. (arugula and some of the blueberries are from my garden.) Holy crap it was delicious!

And as an added bonus, here is one of my more-awesome day lilies, that I snap a pic of today.

orange lily

Super cute orange day lily. Have I mentioned that I love orange?