So first I must explain where we've been, which is absolutely nowhere! I just felt the need to take a break from writing, I seemed to be going round in circles, looking back over the previous 624 posts over 6 years each month was becoming a re-write of the previous year albeit with different photos. I got to the point where I thought 'it's been a week/2 weeks.... I really must write something...don't know what to write....look back at last year....
No, it's time for a break'
But I have noticed that because I haven't written, I also haven't been taking as many photos and I've missed getting my thoughts down on paper - well, not on paper obviously but on here. I'll probably make this a monthly thing from now on, unless something really exciting happens.....
Last November we bought a kilo of Jerusalem Artichokes for 1€ in the local market, peeled and roasted a couple of chunks, peeled and mashed another, put 7 into dry compost for the winter and then started to water them in early spring before planting out. They grew wonderfully tall, somewhere on here is a photo of them in full bloom. Now they've died off and I've cut the stems down, and this morning I dug up the roots from the tallest plant and wow! A huge bunch of tubers, 16 big enough to eat, 4 I've put into dry compost to keep, the 16 weigh a kilo so we've got our money's worth already and 6 more plants to dig up yet.
So, out and about taking photos over the last couple of weeks, the trees are the most amazing colours still, although we've had some very heavy showers during the last few days and most of the leaves are now on the ground.
The hugest pomegranates that we've had so far I think, they just about sit in the palm of my hand.
Gorgeous colour leaves on the pear tree.
This fig tree shows up well in front of the yucca which is now in full bloom, not ours but our neighbours.
Rows of grape vines belonging to another neighbour, one of the many Paco's here.
And lastly, some bright colours from our garden.
Sunday, 30 November 2014
Friday, 1 August 2014
C = Colours of summer.
| a very early ready to eat pomegranate.... |
| beautiful blue morning glory... |
| Tradescantia growing in our garden, one of many.... |
| palms and blue sky.... |
| ripening chillis.... |
| from green to yellow to red.... |
| shades of green: olive, pine and mulberry against the sky |
| and glorious pink bougainvillea |
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
B is for berries.
Blackberries - in July?
We normally pick from the middle of August through September and even maybe into October - we remember adding them to a batch of either black fig or black grapes during wine making - and there's certainly neither of them ready yet.
There are quite a lot of them growing along the side of the path and around the fuente, some are still small and hard and red maybe because they are in a shadier and drier place than the others, but the ones closest to the fuente are juicy and ripe. I picked a handful a day or so ago which we have eaten, tomorrow I must remember to take a bag with me on our morning walk, much less messy!
Not too good these photos of the blackberries, they hadn't quite caught the morning sun, they are growing amongst wild honeysuckle and clematis.
We had a bowl of mixed fruits after lunch today, blackberries, our strawberries and pears from next doors tree, only got a dozen or so this year, the rest have dropped onto the ground and rotted.
The strawberry glut is well and truly over, we are getting about 200 grams twice a week at the moment which is enough to eat without thinking 'oh, no not strawberries again!' We started picking April 27th, a kilo that day, but by May 19th we were up to the biggest day - 5.6 kilos. Then back down to a manageable amount.
So far we've picked 39.5 kilos!!
What do we do with them all? Eat lots, we dried a couple of kilos to eat with cereals and maybe to add to this Christmas's boozy mincemeat recipe that I found, gave some away, took some to our Fiesta to share, and made 44 litres of wine.
The other berry that I was going to mention isn't worth a mention really. We were given a raspberry cane a few years back, it produced a handful of berries that autumn, next year there were 13 little canes but only a handful of fruit again, this year only 3 canes have survived and they are just sitting there in the ground looking pathetic. No flowers, no growth - unless you call 3 inches of raspberry cane growth - which we don't. So sad, but thank goodness for the strawberries.
We normally pick from the middle of August through September and even maybe into October - we remember adding them to a batch of either black fig or black grapes during wine making - and there's certainly neither of them ready yet.
There are quite a lot of them growing along the side of the path and around the fuente, some are still small and hard and red maybe because they are in a shadier and drier place than the others, but the ones closest to the fuente are juicy and ripe. I picked a handful a day or so ago which we have eaten, tomorrow I must remember to take a bag with me on our morning walk, much less messy!
Not too good these photos of the blackberries, they hadn't quite caught the morning sun, they are growing amongst wild honeysuckle and clematis.
We had a bowl of mixed fruits after lunch today, blackberries, our strawberries and pears from next doors tree, only got a dozen or so this year, the rest have dropped onto the ground and rotted.
The strawberry glut is well and truly over, we are getting about 200 grams twice a week at the moment which is enough to eat without thinking 'oh, no not strawberries again!' We started picking April 27th, a kilo that day, but by May 19th we were up to the biggest day - 5.6 kilos. Then back down to a manageable amount.
So far we've picked 39.5 kilos!!
What do we do with them all? Eat lots, we dried a couple of kilos to eat with cereals and maybe to add to this Christmas's boozy mincemeat recipe that I found, gave some away, took some to our Fiesta to share, and made 44 litres of wine.
The other berry that I was going to mention isn't worth a mention really. We were given a raspberry cane a few years back, it produced a handful of berries that autumn, next year there were 13 little canes but only a handful of fruit again, this year only 3 canes have survived and they are just sitting there in the ground looking pathetic. No flowers, no growth - unless you call 3 inches of raspberry cane growth - which we don't. So sad, but thank goodness for the strawberries.
Monday, 28 July 2014
A is for Almonds
But in July??
Our almonds are always ready for picking in September, and I know I've said before that every year is different and again that is so true. One variety of our almonds are easy to crack - well, comparatively easy as they are bigger than some types, and we have 2 trees close to the house. Yesterday I noticed that the husks were opening and the almonds are already dropping onto the ground. Checked the other tree this morning, same thing happening. But only that type of almond, the others are all green and closed still.
The ones I could reach I picked and they are drying off, the husks too as they burn well in the wood burner, we pack them into cartons or cardboard egg boxes so they don't fall out of the grate at the bottom.
Our almonds are always ready for picking in September, and I know I've said before that every year is different and again that is so true. One variety of our almonds are easy to crack - well, comparatively easy as they are bigger than some types, and we have 2 trees close to the house. Yesterday I noticed that the husks were opening and the almonds are already dropping onto the ground. Checked the other tree this morning, same thing happening. But only that type of almond, the others are all green and closed still.
The ones I could reach I picked and they are drying off, the husks too as they burn well in the wood burner, we pack them into cartons or cardboard egg boxes so they don't fall out of the grate at the bottom.
Sunday, 27 July 2014
Summer days.
We have early starts on these long hot summer days, the sun shines into the bedroom at about 7.30 and that's when the day starts for us. Normally woken up by the dogs who like a walk, preferably before it's too hot. Also starting at this time are the runner bean and tomato pickers.....
On the way up to Yegen from here is a large area planted every year with runner beans and followed on with tomatoes.
Between 7.30 and 8am every day a 4x4 pulling a trailer full of empty crates, followed by a van, both of which have passengers/pickers in, go up to this area. Up till last week they went back down about 6pm, all laden with crates full of runner beans. Last week the van started going down at about 11.30 very slowly and low on its axles, an hour later returning much faster. Another trip about 2pm, and again at 6pm followed by the 4x4 with a trailer and all full of tomatoes.
We were given some tomatoes recently, large misshapen things all knobbly and of different sizes, but they tasted wonderful.
and just recently a van has been passing by, stopping and beeping to see if we need to buy any vegetables. He has had tomates verde, it means green tomatoes but they are large and more like a beef tomato I think, also has pera which I call Italiano, and basic round ones, plus pepinos (short cucumbers) runner beans, and aubergines both purple and striped white/purple. We bought some aubergines and a box of tomatoes (6kg toms/€4)
from him that we cut up and dried for a day
before frying and whizzing and freezing. The frying gives a whole new flavour to the tomatoes, it's not the way tomato frito is really made here, you are supposed to shallow fry sliced fresh tomato but seem to need more oil as a fresh tomato sort of collapses, but after a day in the drier it is easier. Still a juicy slice, in between fresh and dry if that makes any sort of sense!
We are on our twice weekly morning or evening watering cycle for the veg patches. Mostly dwarf beans, chillis, courgettes, strawberries and baby red skinned potatoes at the moment with more beans following on, the kohlrabi are swelling and the Jerusalem artichoke plants are taller than me - waiting for some flowers now - maybe soon - the squash plants and peppers are flowering well so fingers crossed, the sweetcorn have been very disappointing, small plants and not much of a corn - certainly not worth eating but they might do as seeds for next year....
By midday I aim to be done with morning stuff, and by then I'm hot and sticky so it's in the pool for a swim. 20 'acrosses' (can't do widths in a round pool) another 60 in the afternoon and the last 20 in the evening. That makes about 800 metres all together - and a much more pleasant way of taking exercise than anything else in this heat.
On the way up to Yegen from here is a large area planted every year with runner beans and followed on with tomatoes.
| looking to the extreme left, |
| middle.... |
| and to the right side...lots of veg! |
Between 7.30 and 8am every day a 4x4 pulling a trailer full of empty crates, followed by a van, both of which have passengers/pickers in, go up to this area. Up till last week they went back down about 6pm, all laden with crates full of runner beans. Last week the van started going down at about 11.30 very slowly and low on its axles, an hour later returning much faster. Another trip about 2pm, and again at 6pm followed by the 4x4 with a trailer and all full of tomatoes.
We were given some tomatoes recently, large misshapen things all knobbly and of different sizes, but they tasted wonderful.
and just recently a van has been passing by, stopping and beeping to see if we need to buy any vegetables. He has had tomates verde, it means green tomatoes but they are large and more like a beef tomato I think, also has pera which I call Italiano, and basic round ones, plus pepinos (short cucumbers) runner beans, and aubergines both purple and striped white/purple. We bought some aubergines and a box of tomatoes (6kg toms/€4)
from him that we cut up and dried for a day
| 1st batch of sliced tomatoes in the drier... |
before frying and whizzing and freezing. The frying gives a whole new flavour to the tomatoes, it's not the way tomato frito is really made here, you are supposed to shallow fry sliced fresh tomato but seem to need more oil as a fresh tomato sort of collapses, but after a day in the drier it is easier. Still a juicy slice, in between fresh and dry if that makes any sort of sense!
We are on our twice weekly morning or evening watering cycle for the veg patches. Mostly dwarf beans, chillis, courgettes, strawberries and baby red skinned potatoes at the moment with more beans following on, the kohlrabi are swelling and the Jerusalem artichoke plants are taller than me - waiting for some flowers now - maybe soon - the squash plants and peppers are flowering well so fingers crossed, the sweetcorn have been very disappointing, small plants and not much of a corn - certainly not worth eating but they might do as seeds for next year....
By midday I aim to be done with morning stuff, and by then I'm hot and sticky so it's in the pool for a swim. 20 'acrosses' (can't do widths in a round pool) another 60 in the afternoon and the last 20 in the evening. That makes about 800 metres all together - and a much more pleasant way of taking exercise than anything else in this heat.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

