Showing posts with label broccoli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label broccoli. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2025

Garden Popping with Produce, Blanche and Freezing Veggies!

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Hi, All...well you are probably sick of my painting, but the other half of my life is gardening. Honestly, we have had a ton of rain here, so you have to run out and do something whenever it is not pouring. 

But, HOT...our humidity actually has been in the 90%, the bugs love it, I don't.

oldnewgreenredo

We've had two meals of Beans, the Broccoli is starting- 4 nice heads this week. The first heads are always the best 

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Yellow summer squash are starting. Lots of blossoms, but with the rain the blossoms have limped up and fallen off before polination.  I have flowers here and there to encourage flowering, and the sunflowers are everywhere.

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We've had one small Zucchini, and a small Cucumber is waiting for salad tonight.

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The Snow Peas are done, I'm leaving them to dry for seed. And, I will replant in August. We can always pop them in the greenhouse if it ever turns COLD.

 Meanwhile we have had multiple meals, and now a bag that needs to be frozen.

Monday is clean the fridge day...hubby and I both shop when we are out and we both bought a bag of those small peppers that keep so well and are sweet and tasty.  So, long as I'm going to clean the fridge, I decided to blanch and freeze all our miscellaneous produce and some of the fresh from the garden.

A simple HOW TO:

BLANCHING AND FREEZING VEGETABLES

Equipment:

Knives, cutting board, compost container, large covered pot, Sieves or colander, medium metal bowl for icing, drainboard, pot holders, draining or straining spoon, timer, freezer bags, hot pad holders.


oldnewgreenredo

Today I'm using my 1968 REVERE WARE WORKHORSE Dutch Oven. 

Specs online say this is 6 quarts, which is perfect for small batches of veggie blanching. This is the last of my Revere ware pots and pans from our wedding to survive all these years, it's from when they were still well made. I like using it because the lid rattles when it comes to a boil.

oldnewgreenredo

The first veggie I did, was cleaned and de-stringed Snow Peapods. This was the last picking and there are a few mature peas in here, but they are still so tender.
 I  blanched them in boiling water for maybe 2 minutes, and then tossed into ice water until chilled. Scoop them onto the drain board and on to the next Veggies.

oldnewgreenredo

I did roughly three cups of beans....very young and tender, these were blanched in the same kettle of water for 3 minutes and then sieve drained and tossed into fresh cold water and ice...completely chill and drain.

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The time in-between was just enough to prep the next veggie and let the water recover to boiling. I use a metal bowl because of the ability to chill fast and is also heat tolerant.

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My last batch for this kettle of water were three medium (@ 4-5") heads of fresh Broccoli, loosely chopped.
All were blanched for maybe 4-5 minutes.
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(or until the boil returned) and then chilled in ice water and put on the drainboard. Here, I dumped them in the hot water.

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After blanching and in the ice water, the Broccoli is still crunchy, but remember you are going to cook it one more time, so less time is better. Broccoli will break down if you pre-cook for too long, so I just cook it until it starts to boil.

Well about the rest, I was going to do the Summer Squash, too, but we will have that tonight for our Carb with Turkey burgers and Asparagus (purchased).

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So that leaves the 1/2 bag of peppers, a purchased Yellow Pepper and

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these homegrown garden onions. I have had lots of onions through the Spring and early summer. and the ones in the raised planters should be ready next week. Then I will plant some more for Fall.

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So chop, chop, chop...loosely and these I did a bit large, and the onions and other pepper a bit smaller.
These were tossed into boiling water and less than 2 minutes then into the a fresh ice bath.

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Perfect assortment for any cooked dish. Now into the freezer bags.

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The Pepper mix is still draining..but, these I just label the date..you can see what everything is.

I use GOOD quality freezer bags. I Reuse them by washing the bags out and drying them and then using for leftovers. 

oldnewgreenredo

The fresh on sale Asparagus...pre-cooked in the microwave for 5 minutes so it can keep a day or two more. We will still have fresh for our omelets in the morning besides. Again, hubby bought extra because of the sale.

Cleaning up is always the REDO or REUSE  by Composting. We add some paper products, paper towels and coffee filters. Everything else is vegetable waste or green, egg shells, from the kitchen except for any meat or dairy products, NO Banana peels, and we are trying to eliminate seeds goes into the compost. (Bread products are toasted and fed to the birds)

All this gets layered with grass cuttings, bush clippings and any non-weed greenery we have from the yard. Hubby layers in Peat Moss and this year, Vermiculite to loosen our clay laden soil. We have been amending the soil here since the early 80's and well, it's still clay...blacker clay, but clay, lol.

oldnewgreenredo

While cleaning the kitchen the full bowl of compost went out, and I started a new bowl. Mornings coffee grounds and an egg shell.


I was careful not to throw any pepper seeds into here, 

 Honestly we have more plants growing in our compost pile then the garden. 

oldnewgreenredo

I wonder what all those Squash/Pumpkin looking plants are?? 
Tomatoes, peppers, maybe Watermelon? We had Watermelon on Memorial Day...LOL.
All those in the back I think are Tomato plants?


How are your 
Garden Veggies Doing?

All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own unless identified, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions, posts or any products shown.  


Friday, May 29, 2020

Midwest Gardening: Putting in Vegetable Garden May 15-29, 2020

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We've been planting our little hearts out...
with a PLAN?

After a hard freezes May 8-10th, we planned on planting the week of the 15th. 
Chicagoland weather forecasts were for lovely weather with reasonable temps in the evenings. We made a basic plan for the vegetable garden and began laying it out. 

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We used this plan as a guideline.  I will make a copy of actual plantings when everything is done. It did help though especially when planning plants that are helpful next to each other. 

New/old redone trellises were placed along the north fence for squash/pumpkins, green beans and sunflowers between.

oldnewgreenredo

Tomato cages were set out a reasonable distance apart and spaced so we can open/close the greenhouse windows.
 We grouped by colored cages for different varieties of tomatoes. We planned on Early Girl, Better Boy, San Marzano, Golden Jubilee in the garden and Cherry Tomatoes in pots on the front porch and along the sand box. (The Grand girl loves to pick them, and that way she can help WHEN she visits.)

Planting Tomatoes! 
oldnewgreenredo

Two posts ago---I explained why we no longer will use peat pots, or starter pods. 
I very early transplanted small seedlings into larger deep pots 2-3 plants per pot.  Here you can see the root formation ---in the larger pots.  Excess weak stems were clipped off early on.


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HERE: We trim all but the top three sets of leaves off our plants when we plant them. A sharp knife or scissors will do a good job. clippings go to the compost pile.


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Here's a planted drink cup and showing the fabulous roots.


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These are then planted as deep in the ground as they can go--up to the first leave branch. YES---12" or more deep! 



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Cages are placed immediately...so the plants roots will not be disturbed. The plants look short because they are planted so deep. All along the buried stems, roots will grow, making your plant even stronger and a higher yield. (Learned this one from my Mom in law!)

oldnewgreenredo

Here we have zucchini plants, green beans along the fence and trellises. Some sunflowers and zinnias planted between the trellises. Flowers will encourage pollinator visits. Pumpkins, squash, were planted along the fences.


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Our pickle/cucumber plants along the bedspring trellis. We planted two varieties Pickler and Burpless. I planted sunflowers, zinnias and coreopsis(?) at the ends to attract pollinators.


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Swiss Chard plants were set in slits of the fabric, as well as some seeded rows.
Sweet peppers (mixed) went in the pots by the mini patio, we've had so much rain, I removed the saucers.


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Pots really work well here in Chicagoland for Peppers. Helps to eliminate pests and munching critters. 


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Here we have Kentucky Blue green beans on the trellises. Bush pickles (something new for us) Eggplant in front, and flowers along the fence.

Move on to May 29, 2020

oldnewgreenredo

Roughly two weeks later. We have had lots of rain and lots of sunshine. Currently the Silver Maple trees are raining wingy-dingys...and they are piling up quickly. ONE of the major reasons for the weed fabric. I will be able to sweep and vacuum up the mess instead of pulling thousands of maple trees out of the garden.  It will be a full time job for a two weeks or so.


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Our Broccoli has been munched on. We will sprinkle some slug control, and spray with soap...and see if we can stop it. 


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The hot peppers are over on the side patio---sequestered to help with no cross pollination. Excuse the messes, we have only been planting and it will be a few posts later when all the 'messes' are removed. 

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Last night the Mesclun lettuce bolted. I will clip that out this morning. We have lettuce on the fence and on the front porch. More on herbs and potted veggies, later.


Rough plan for along this wall and fence shown below.

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South side (shady) of the shed mostly planted with peas, and lettuces. These are doing very well. We added a couple of romaine plants as well as our own seeded varieties. 

We will have salads everyday now until Fall. (We removed three bushes and an old/dead rose from here. I think I want a flower box for color, we will see. I had originally planned on pumpkins in here, but planted those elsewhere.


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In the greenhouse we still have a few plants waiting for my son, coming this weekend. We have all been in shut-down now for over two weeks, so we will be visiting with family ONLY! 

oldnewgreenredo

Our San Marzano plant starts were looking so putrid in the house, I planted this second batch in late April. The originals revived in the greenhouse so this second batch will go to friends and neighbors. I never bothered to put them in large pots, and we had no room in the greenhouse at the time! 

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Our almost EMPTY greenhouse!  It's a mess, but we will clean it up when everything is planted. I still have flowers and transplants to do. 
Plan for back forty...
And I will take photos of the back forty---!

Yesterday Hubby worked on irrigation hoses, and dug my big hole for the roses.
We have been so busy---and really have so much more to do! Off to supervise bush removal for the front of the yard! 

HOW'S YOUR GARDEN GROWING?
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