Monday, September 29, 2014

Last Minute Wedding Food Garden

Last Fall some of our first house projects were tree trimming.  The trees here hadn't been maintained for a long time and all needed quite a bit of trimming.  In particular the tree on the south side was growing into the house and so it lost a significant number of Big Branches.  As we trimmed (Corey's family helped so much with this!) we put everything into a big pile in the backyard and I had visions of having a giant bonfire towards the end of Fall.  This never happened and the big pile of branches sat all winter and spring.  As you might imagine, all the grass underneath died and we were left with an ugly patch of dirt amongst our grassy yard.

I figured we had two choices, sod or a garden.  Since we had the wedding coming up and the dirt patch was in prime view from the wedding tent I didn't want to wait for seed to grow.  Now buying sod is expensive and a hassle.  So I figured we should turn it into a garden and have this whole thing look intentional instead of accidental.  So Corey made the patch into a nice square and stopped by Home Depot on his way home from work and bought a bunch of started seedlings and two bags of compost.  And on one of my many trips to buy flowers I bought more started seedlings and spent way too much money on a cute little picket fence.

Corey did all of this because I had too many projects on my plate to add anymore.  I was thrilled to walk outside and find this cute little garden a week before the wedding:

6/14:

Corey broke up the dirt some and spread out two bags of compost to help the dirt along.  Then he spread everything out and planted.  He planted (I think) 5 tomato plants of varying sizes, 2 zucchini plants, 1 acorn squash, 1 butternut squash, 1 cucumber, 1 brussel sprout, 1 onion, and 1 pepper.  

It looked nice for the wedding and I figured whatever food we got was a bonus.  We left for our almost 2 week long honeymoon and came back to an explosion.  Our parents came and watered a few times for us and that's about it.  No one even weeded!  And almost exactly one month later we had this:

7/17:

Can you believe that?  Way to go, dirt!  Almost everything took off.  The onion was kind of a flump, but that's it.

7/29:
Big heirloom tomatoes
Grape tomatoes
Butternut squash takeover
Baby butternut!
First zucchini! It was hidden and got big fast!
Baby cucumbers

8/6:
Cucumbers
Acorn squash
Adorable baby butternuts



8/16:
Turning red!
They grew fast!
Starting to ripen!
Getting real excited for these to ripen
Brussel sprouts!

9/29:

The garden is dying down
The peppers, cucumbers, zucchini, acorn squash, & heirloom tomatoes are done.  The grape & medium sized tomatoes are still producing.  The brussel sprouts haven't been harvested yet and there's a couple of butternut squashes left that I hope will ripen before the first frost.


Brussel sprouts are sprouting!

Please ripen so I can turn you into pizza sauce!
Hoping the last few turn tan before the first frost

And here are some harvest pictures:


I was wondering why the zucchini wasn't producing.  It was secretly putting all its energy to this hidden one that got huuuge
That's the first time I've gotten a green pepper to turn red!



You would not believe how often I go out to check the garden and forget a harvest basket


They don't always look picture perfect #buttpenis

Oops it happened again #knifeforscale

Forgot to start the squash harvest before sunset

Here are some things we ate with our homegrown bounty: 

Most of the big heirloom tomatoes went to fresh tomato sandwiches.  I would toast french bread, spread some mayo, sprinkle salt and grind on some pepper, and then put on fresh tomato slices.  Heaven:

The grape tomatoes went to caprese salads with homegrown basil (grown in the front yard not the food garden):

And to delicious tomato tarts (recipe here):

And most got roasted in the oven and tossed into many a pasta dish:

Almost all the medium sized tomatoes are going towards homemade pizza sauce that I haven't made yet.  I am planning to can the batch that I make!  I've got the last few heirloom tomatoes going to that recipe as well to help deepen the flavor.  They are hulled, halved, and frozen waiting to be sauced.  I am going to use this recipe, but I only have 6lbs so far so I'll have the third-it.  I am hoping a few more tomatoes will ripen before the first frost so I can have 7lbs.

Almost all the cucumbers got sliced up and eaten with just some salt.

And the squashes just got harvested last week.  So far I have used 2 butternuts.  One got turned into heavenly soup and the other into pumpkin pie, but I used butternut instead of pumpkin.  The soup recipe will be its own post coming up soon!  Zucchini recipes will also be coming up as a separate post.

2 comments:

  1. Jealous!
    Exactly the best way to kill grass and put something better in the soil that proved to be good, well drained and with lots of sun.
    From this link, it seems the extra compost Corey added assured the butternut squash success. Writer seems to be in Virginia, climate not like ours, but many useful remarks anyway.
    http://tendingmygarden.com/butternut-squash-after-33-years/
    Another site said butternut squash is in the cucumber family, now there is a surprise.
    Here is the Illinois extension service article, but maybe you found this already, with butternuts in the middle of the article.
    http://urbanext.illinois.edu/gardenerscorner/issue_01/fall_04_04.cfm
    My original question (to google) was if the squash would ripen after frost. Never got a perfect answer to that one -- hard frost, where you see other effects of hard frost, pick it right away. Those light ephemeral frosts, where it is warm the next day or next hour, you might get more time for full sweetness as this link describes the flavor.
    Nor did I find a discussion about putting a cover over the squash in a light frost, as I used to do with my tomatoes, to stretch the season. Have to take the cover off once the sun is shining, and the light frost gone. Fall in the Midwest is not steady as to temperature.

    Well done!

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