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Our largest harvest yet. 53 ears of sweet corn, 2 eggplant, carrots, zucchini, summer squash, soybeans, beets, and more.
Our largest harvest yet. 53 ears of sweet corn, 2 eggplant, carrots, zucchini, summer squash, soybeans, beets, and more.
One of the best ways to celebrate the fall garden harvest is pizza from scratch. Fresh toppings, fresh sauce, and fresh dough all make for a pizza that blows any delivery place’s pies out the water.
We’ve found the key ingredient to the best pizza – the bbq. With the help of a pizza stone, a small electric fan, and plenty of hardwood charcoal, the hot hot temperatures needed for a wonderfully crispy, slightly smoky crust can be achieved. Cooking outdoors certainly adds to the excitement of it.
Yields 3 single serving pizzas
Make the dough the night before and store in the fridge. The extra time offers the yeast a chance to further ferment and the flour to autolyse which develops more complex flavor and texture.
Don’t buy jarred sauce. Really, don’t. It is horrible stuff. Corn syrup does not belong in tomato sauce. Besides, it is extremely easy to make.
We harvested our first ears of corn (9!) today in celebration of Oliver’s birthday. The first ear we ate raw right on the spot. The kernals were still a little small but tasted sweet and tender. We also had beet greens, beets, and collard greens from the farm with some smokey potato salad with Applefield’s potatoes. What a fantastic dinner!
Today’s harvest: Sweet 100 Tomatoes, French beans, broccoli, soy beans, 2 zucchini, eggplant, 2 beets, 2 carrots, 9 ears corn, collards, cilantro, basil, nasturtium flowers, onion greens
Determining the best time to pick corn has always been a bit of a mystery to us. Squeezing the ears, it is easy to imagine feeling plump kernels through the layers of husk. Pulling back the husk at the tip is a supposed no-no as it inhibits growth if the ear isn’t ready and invites insect. Not only is it hard to wait for the most exciting crop of the year, there is such a small window (less than a week) when the corn is ripe before it turns starchy.
The common consensus from our research on the internet seems to be 20 days from the first silks. Looking back at our photos, the first occurrence of a silk was around July 31st. That would mean we have another 8 or 9 more days before our first ear.
For now we have given in and have been buying corn from the farm next door.
Because of the Mexican Bean Beetle attack we had to harvest our first planting of Jacob’s Cattle Beans earlier than we had planned. Turned out it was probably just the right time.
We shucked them a few days after and this is what we found within the green pods. White beans with dark red splotches that look like someone has splattered paint on them. Absolutely gorgeous. We’ve since kept them in a ceramic bowl on the kitchen counter and they are drying out nicely. I hope to make baked beans in the next day or so with them.
8 foot row of Jacob’s Cattle Beans yielded about 1/2 a pound of dried beans.
Right after identifying the Mexican Bean Beetles, we were introduced to their larvae who decimated half of our Jacob Cattle Beans plants in a day.
To protect our other bean plantings, we immediately harvested all of the beans, cut off all of the plants at the root, and composted them.
This what our plants looked like before we cut them down…
More information on these pests can be found here…
We purposely set aside an section of cilantro that we would allow to go to seed for the purpose of harvesting the seeds for cooking and hopefully sowing next year. Today, we made our first seed harvest. Separating the seeds can be a bit of a pain, however, I found that rolling them around in a mesh colander seems to get rid of the plant bits quite nicely.
Today two new beetles showed up on our beans. They look a lot like lady beetles (beneficial), however their arrival coincides to some significant leaf damage. Are they here to save the plants from some unseen threat or are they themselves the ones to blame?
According to Avant-Gardening they are most likely the culprits:
MEXICAN BEAN BEETLE
These are related to ladybugs but are not beneficial. The adults have sixteen black spots on their back and the Larvae are fat, spiny yellow grubs 1/3 inch long. Both feed on foliage, leaving plant leaves a skeleton of veins. Adults overwinter on plant leaves, in late spring or early summer lay clusters of yellow eggs on the undersides of leaves, and there can be one to four generations a year depending on different climates.
More information from North Carolina Integrated Pest Management Information.
For now, it seems we will have to settle for picking them off and destroying their eggs.