Salsa in a great snack. It’s healthy and goes with so many different types of food. I made this salsa with what I got from the garden and a bit of lemon and spices. This salsa is refreshing and original. The cucumber flavor brings a light and fresh flavor to any dish. You can alter the amount of chili powder to suit your heat preference, the recipe below is for a very mild salsa. The mixture did very very watery, so if you’d like, you could core the cucumbers to get less juice, or you could just decant some of the liquid from the mixture before adding your spices. This went great with tacos and chips, but be creative and try this with something new!
One pan dinners are starting to grow in popularity in our house. Cook your ingredients, add some broth and pasta, let it cook down, and bam! You’ve got a one pan dinner. This was homemade summer sausage we received as a gift, but it was very similar to Hickory Farms summer sausage just with a bit more pepper. The only real advice for this recipe is to be careful of the yogurt you use. You can use milk instead, but you’ll have to add about 2 Tbsp of flour early on to get the thickening. If you use yogurt, it has to be completely unflavored. A good alternative is Greek yogurt if you like to sour cream like constancy.
In a dutch oven, add diced onion and 1 Tbsp oil. Cook until sweating. Add diced summer sausage. Cook for 2-3 minutes.
Add 4 cups water and bouillon cubes. Stir and add Macaroni. Add diced tomato, and spices (garlic, paprika, curry powder, and chili powder). Stir and cover. Cook til minimum cook time for macaroni is reached according to package.
Remove from heat. Add yogurt, the cheddar sliced, and butter. Stir until all the cheese is melted, you may return to heat if needed.
Ratatouille is a classic french dish that stemmed from poverty. Because they could not afford it, they made do with that they had. I don’t usually make vegetarian dishes because they usually aren’t filling, and I require a lot of protein in my daily regimen. This dish, however was not only incredibly filling, but it was also delicious! I don’t always like the texture of zucchini, but in this dish it has the perfect consistency and the tomato just compliments the squashes so well. For flavoring, I decided to go with thyme, rosemary and basil, and all three spices help unify this dish and add a layer of more flavor. I highly recommend this dish! Finally, though I have not tried freezing this dish, the ingredients are perfect for freezing, so I plan to freeze some the next time I make this giant pot of ratatouille. This recipe makes 6-7 adult sized servings.
Wash, half, and slice 2 large zucchini and 2 medium yellow squash. Dice one medium onion. Add all to a dutch oven.
Place dutch oven over medium high heat. Add 2 Tbsp canola or vegetable oil and 1 Tbsp garlic powder. Cook for 5 minutes stirring occasionally.
Add 16 Oz of diced tomatoes, or 3 large tomatoes diced. Add 2 tsp of each thyme, rosemary, and basil. Cook covered for 10-15 minutes or until tomato is cooked, and zucchini and squash are tender.
Curry is an easy dish to make, but all you really need is the spices. I’ve made curry before, but this time I tried a couple different things. This time I used tomato products, and I added enough spices to get some actual spiciness off of the curry. Curry makes a lot of food, and after eating it for several days, we froze the remainder to enjoy again later. The hot spice on this curry mellowed out over time, but I inevitably froze it due to eating up all the white rice I had cooked with it. And, as long as you don’t mix in the rice, the curry will reheat with the same texture and flavor after it’s been frozen. This curry recipe makes approximately 11 adult sized servings. Finally, for this recipe I used leftover sauce from a stromboli we had gotten about a week prior, and I diced up the leftover grilled zucchini, so I didn’t have to heat it as long as you will if you are starting from raw.
In a medium saucepan, add 1 1/2 cup of rice. Rinse the rice under running water until the runoff is almost completely opaque (4-5 rinses). Add 2 cups of water to the rinsed rice, then add to stove over medium heat. Bring to a boil. Once boiling, cover and reduce heat to low, then cook for 18-20 minutes. Then, remove from heat.
In a large dutch oven, add 1 qt of diced tomatoes and juice, and 1/2 a jar of tomato sauce. Turn heat to medium low and cover.
In a frying pan, brown and breakup 1 pound of ground beef. Dice an onion and add 1/2 to the beef, cook till translucent. Add the beef and onion to your dutch oven. Add 1 Tbsp oil to your pan. Dice and add 2-3 small zucchini to the pan and cook until very tender. Add zucchini to your dutch oven.
Turn your dutch oven heat to medium-high. Bring mixture to a simmer. Once simmering, add 1 Tbsp curry powder, 1/2 Tbsp cumin, 1 Tbsp chili powder, 1/2 Tbsp ground ginger, 2 tsp Cayenne pepper powder, 1 tsp cinnamon, and 2 tsp paprika. Stir. Cook until rice is done, but for at least 4-5 minutes to let the flavor permeate.
Hello, and welcome to another one of my garden updates. My last update was for May, and this one is for June. (Sorry it’s a bit later than the last one.) My garden has grown so fast, it’s shocking! I’ve gotten some radishes and lettuce off my plants, and this weekend I was able to get some cucumbers off my plants too.
This last month I’ve learned some valuable lessons. First, and I mentioned it in my last post, it is so important to space radishes. I tried to get them high density, just it just grew into a mess, and it took about 2 weeks longer to get any. Also, the two pictures below of harvested radishes is all the radishes I was able to harvest out of that mess. I had several radishes break under the soil and begin to rot, and I had many many more that produced no bulb due to overcrowding.
Second, I’ve discovered that cucumbers are a handful! I’ve been trying to grow them vertically, tying them to a tomato cage. And, though that works, They don’t climb naturally well, so I find myself every 1-2 days in the garden directing and tying off my cucumber plants. I also trimmed off some of the lower leaves off my cucumbers. They were turning yellow and dying, and they were also restricting air flow and making it hard to see any low hanging cucumbers.
Third, I learned all spacing needs to be respected more. I planted my green beans and cucumbers about 18 inches apart, and you’d swear they are star-crossed lovers. I go out into my garden everyday, and I always see these two plants reaching for one another, and being less than an inch from becoming a tangled mess I don’t look forward to dealing with. However, my other bed of lettuce, Swiss chard, tomatoes, and onions aren’t having any crowding issues. My Swiss chard didn’t come up. I believe I waited too long to plant. I also planted another segment of lettuce, and that also didn’t come up, I’m assuming same problem. My onions in that bed have appeared to stop growing. They are tinier than the other bed despite being planted earlier. They tops have also begun to fall over on several in that bed, leading me to believe pour drainage is likely a problem. I have several tomatoes that are nice and big, however none have begun to turn red yet. I also have one that a bug got into, but that’s not bad.
Fourth, I’ve learned good soil and drainage is important. As I just mentioned, my one bed isn’t holding onions, and I’m positive that if it isn’t holding onto moisture too much, the soil is likely not giving them enough nutrients. This bed was filled with mostly decomposed mulch, so the soil isn’t as good as my other bed. Besides that, the fabric bags we filled using soil from my in-law’s house, and their soil has a very high clay content. Because of this, in the hot June/July weather, I have to go and water them about every other day, when I see the leaves really wilting.
I’ve gotten everything planted and going. Some things aren’t growing as well as others, but I’m learning. We got a peach tree about 2 weeks ago and got that into the ground. I also left a few radishes to go to seed, and I have 2 onion sets going to seed now.
Ive also fertilized my soil about 3 times. I’ve been using Miracle Grow plant food for vegetables. Between that, watering regularly, and all the warm weather, my veggies have grown so fast!