Sunday, April 28, 2013

Vegetable Adventures: Broccoli Rabe, Rapini or Raab - how to harvest and cook


A month ago I planted four seedlings of broccoli raab, rapini or rabe.  

Now my four plants look ready to harvest the first pickings. One plant is about to flower - and if it flowers I know the plant will put too much energy into seed production.  So I need to harvest the florets fairly soon.  Today's the day!


How to harvest broccoli rabe
Click for a youtube that shows how to harvest:

Cut the leaders two leaves below the central flower buds - and also cut off a few big side leaves.  The rest of the plant keeps growing to produce more floret buds and leaves.  I look forward to a few more harvests over the next weeks.

How to prepare and cook
Broccoli Rabe in Olive Oil with Garlic

Click for a youtube that shows Chef Andy Fass preparing and sauting the broccoli rabe:

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Cool Tools: Talking About Trowels

"What's that?" kids ask me.  "Is it a "small shovel?"
We're talking about a "trowel", and yes, it looks like a small shovel.  I prefer to use a narrow-bladed trowel for digging weeds or digging small holes for planting bulbs or setting out bedding plants in our compacted clay soil here.  There's less drag and effort.  This is a trowel I've had for several years....



Choose a wide-bladed trowel for scooping up loose potting soil or sand - it won't deal with heavy compacted earth.


For a more a precise cutting-action when weeding or planting try a Japanese gardening knife,  a "hori-hori" or literally a "dig-dig".  This one has a serrated blade and comes with a scabbard.  The hori-hori cuts easily through heavy soil and roots.  It is my go-to favorite.


Also when you're using a trowel make sure to crouch down or squat close to the earth: bending over may strain your back.  An expert gardener told me that she held the trowel away from her body and drew it towards her in the earth - and that was more efficient than the more usual opposite motion that of digging away from you.  She said that when you are older and have arthritis that digging towards you can really help lessen the strain on your wrist and hand.  So even with a simple hand tool like a trowel experiment to find ways to optimize for both efficiency and your own well-being.

Trowels take a fair amount of load leveraging the soil - and with compacted heavy soil the handle can break or the trowel blade bend. So, when buying a trowel or two, look for ones in quality metal.  Note that carbon steel is stronger than stainless steel.  Trowels can be cast in one piece with the handle shaft - or at least should have handle firmly attached.  Kids of all ages - whether or not they know the tool's name -  usually enjoy using an adult-size trowel.

Next week: I'll look at scoops...


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

A farm takes root in the city



Walker-Jones Education Campus - Sometimes, it’s okay to play with your food! These young sprouts are kindergarten students at Walker-Jones. The school farm’s produce is used in the classroom and goes home with the kids or is shared in the neighborhood.



‘Going green” isn’t just talk at Walker-Jones Education Campus. The D.C. school, which opened in 2009, was designed to save energy and provide a healthful environment for preschoolers through eighth-graders. But in the past three years, students, teachers and lots of volunteers have taken the school’s green commitment much further. They transformed a weedy lot across the street into a thriving farm.
“It’s a farm and not a garden,” said David Hilmy, Walker-Jones’s P.E. teacher and a trained biologist, who oversees the farm. “Our aim is to produce food.”

Link to rest of this article - Washington Post Kids Post online April 8
(Walker-Jones Education Campus) - At Walker-Jones Education Campus, students learn what it takes to make food, tending a one-acre garden that last year produced 4,200 pounds of food.


Monday, April 8, 2013

Got Weeds?


1) If you garden in this region - then check out the blog entry below from Joyce Hylton from the Master Gardeners of Northern Virginia. You can access this from your cell phone while in the garden.

2) To teach yourself and others about these and other common weeds: download, color print and laminate this GARDEN WEED ID document designed for gardeners at community gardens and schoolyards: http://www.slideshare.net/MaryVanDyke/weed-identification-for-schools-2014

3) Another idea is to make a "WEED PATCH".
Make a display bed with labelled weeds for people to refer to.
Here's sample sign that you are welcome to use:
http://goo.gl/FQJej for an 11 x 7 sign.

Resources:
VT Weed Identification website http://www.ppws.vt.edu/weedindex.htm
and the book: Weeds of the Northeast by R. Uva, J, Neal and J. DiTomaso, Cornell, 1997.
Mary Van Dyke: Weed Identification for Schools

It's Spring and Everything's Blooming ... including the Weeds!


Written by Joyce Hylton, Certified Master Gardener
Spring is here, bringing smiles, flowers, a sense of hope and … weeds.  Interspersed among the vibrant flowers are the delicate lacy leaves of bittercress, the rich green tufts of annual bluegrass, colorful expanses of henbit and deadnettle, and cheerful clumps of chickweed … In case you’re wondering, remember, a weed is merely a wildflower in the wrong place.
These weeds are winter annuals and distinct opportunists, filling voids in your lawn and garden at almost dizzying speed. With great stealth they germinate in the fall; then at the first hint of longer days and warmth they begin to flower and fruit. It is too late for prevention, now the most effective control is pulling or digging. On the bright side the effort can provide a little exercise and be a stress reliever at the same time. Here are five of your nearest “neighbors.”

Hairy Bittercress (Cardamine hirsute)

Seed-bearing siliques
One of the most aggressive and annoying weeds of this group is hairy bittercress(Cardamine hirsute), a winter (sometimes summer) annual. The basal rosette has pinnate leaves with two to four pairs of round to kidney-shaped leaflets arranged alternately along the central leaf stem. Small white flowers eventually yield long thin capsules (siliques) at the end of each branch.  At maturity the siliques “explode” sending seeds up to 10 feet away.  Somewhat frighteningly, this weed is capable of producing several generations in a single growing season; it is most prolific in mid to late spring.

Annual Bluegrass (Poa annua)
Another headache is annual bluegrass (Poa annua). An attractive light-green, upright, clumping grass, it grows by aggressive tillering (new blades of grass always come from the base of the plant).  It is important to note that reproduction is by seed in late summerearly autumn, AND spring, making control difficult. While it is easy to identify and pull in your garden, it is not so easy in your lawn.  However, its presence can be noted either by the appearance of numerous seed heads on short stems or in hot, dry conditions, when it dies leaving an area of dead grass.
Chickweed (Stellaria media)
Chickweed (Stellaria media)
A very well known but equally unwelcome denizen of the landscape is chickweed(Stellaria media).  It reproduces by seed and if it’s happy, it can produce two generations each year, eventually crowding out or overrunning more desirable plants. Nevertheless, it is easily pulled and if you do so before the plant blooms, control is improved.
Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule)
Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule)
Purple Deadnettle (Lamium purpureum)
Purple Deadnettle (Lamium purpureum)
Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule) and purple deadnettle (Lamium purpureum) are less aggressive than the preceding weeds but they, too, are currently making their presence known. Nuisance factor aside, when the reddish-purple to pink blooms of the plants appear in mass, they are striking.  Both plants have square stems but their leaves are different.  The leaves of mature henbit are deeply lobed and, at the top of the stem, are sessile (lack a petiole).  Also, the leaves cluster about the stem with small gaps between each cluster.  On the other hand, at the top of mature deadnettle, the leaves are more triangular and less deeply lobed than those of henbit. Also, the upper leaves of this plant have petioles and a hint of reddish color.
For additional information, use the following weed identification sites.
Or, contact the VCE Master Gardener Help Desk at 703-228-6414 or mgaralex@gmail.com
Have fun learning about your plants - whether or not they are weeds - and why to take action to remove some and leave others be.


Thursday, April 4, 2013

Cool Tools: Pruners Felco #2 - and other options

Over the next weeks I will blog a few "cool tools" for basic gardening at schools and elsewhere - and consider what works and why.

Pruners are for trimming back small growth - under half inch diameter usually.  Where the blades are scissor-action or "bypass" they are designed for cutting green growth - while "anvil" type blades are better for dead heading and cutting dry twigs.  

If you need bypass pruners, try a Felco #2.  Felco #2's  are "the most recommended pruners in the world" for good reasons: the blades cut well, the pruners are very well-balanced for adult hands, a left-hand version is available.  Bottom line: worth the money if you look after them!
If you haven't tried them - do.  These tools are engineered to last and you can buy spare parts.

Invest in Felco's at http://www.felcostore.com/pruners - and elsewhere such as Amazon for - $50- 60.



If you need lighter-weight tools for working with children - then try a half-inch anvil pruner such as the Gilmour or Green Thumb - both available at Amazon - or at local hardware stores.  These small and lightweight pruners work well for small hands and small snippings, and have useful thumb safety clips.  These are much cheaper at $5 - 12 each and so are useful for stocking outdoor learning labs.

Check these pruners out at http://www.amazon.com/Gilmour-18TGT-Green-Pruner-2-Inch/dp/B000GIO2IM



Next Cool Tools will look at trowels...