Thursday, October 2, 2014

You can EAT THESE????


YES!! 

And that would be a yes in size 36 font if I was on the computer writing this post. Only something equally as massive as this vegetable is can be used to describe it.

It is called CARDONE. 

To describe it to someone who hasn't seen it,  knows it, or seen pictures of it,  I like to describe it as looking like a celery stalk on steroids.  You don't eat the leaves you just eat the stalks. And these stalks, besides having the same stringy the texture as celery, they uniquely have a scary jagged edge to them which also adds to their odd appearance and why one would ask: you eat these things?

Yes, my friend you do!  CARDONE are In the same family as an artichoke. In fact they deliciously taste like the heart of the artichoke. If you are European: Italian French etc. these are no mystery vegetables to you. This is my artichoke plant; see how similar they look:


And if you are an artichoke lover like I am & many others are, you know that the best part is the heart. So you can see why I and thousands of others are like kids in a candy store when we see the cardone. 

In addition to similar leaves both plants will grow a lovely purple thistle flower at the top if you allow it to go to flower, something you may never see in my garden.

Traditionally they are found in the markets around Christmas and are a Christmas must-have on Italian tables. Of course they're hard to come by in these parts.  Usually for one week in supermarkets that cater to Italians around me, we may be able to find a bunch or two. They are either stared at with fear from afar in the vegetable aisle OR and in my family's case, you grab as many as you can possibly get at one time, throw them all in your cart and run out of the store screaming YES!!!! We got them!!!! And calling, texting multiple family & friends as if you won the sweepstakes. Seriously! I kid you not. FYI: this behavior is very common with a "Psycho Phoodie" as I affectionately like to call us.  I have friends who make a trip to Brooklyn around Christmas to the Italian section where they can buy a whole crate of them to bring home. A Foodie Pilgrimage. They freeze well so you can prolong the joy. But more on cooking later.

For the first time ever, I found the seeds this year in my early spring seed buying (from Seeds of Italy of course) and almost screamed when I saw & grabbed the  packet in the store. My exuberance was quickly deflated when I found out that like the artichoke, seeds need to be started before January, as they take a long time to grow. Ok, I now have a project for my 2015 vegetable garden.


You can relax your wrinkled in confusion farhead. You are seeing correctly; they are growing in one of my flower beds. I have three plants growing that I found as vegetable starts not long after my disappointment, at my favorite garden center, Wolff's. But I found them in with the perennial flower section  NOT in the vegetable section! You can imagine my surprise and outburst when I grabbed three plants which was all they had. One of their friendly staff came up to me to inform me how they're called cardone, are in the artichoke family. And with their massive leaves & lovely purple flower, they make stunning addition to your perennial flower beds. A showstopper one could say. Again I was gushing about this vegetable and had a nice discussion informing her all about the vegetable as she only thought of it as a flower.

I had to plant mine in the flower bed, NOT because it was the new trend but because I had no room in my vegetable garden plot.  I already had planted six artichoke plants which can get as large and now I had three more space gobblers, so I decided instead of lavender plants, this summer I would add the CARDONE instead.

Speaking of garden trends,  I have been planting vegetables in my flowerbeds since day one of my vegetable garden life. Because of my need to increase my vegetable growing space. I created this new flower bed two years ago and I'm even considering taking out another chunk of a grass area in the sun for more vegetable growing area.


What imakes cardone so sweetly delicious is the fact that before it is eaten it must be blanched or it is beyond bitter!! Unedible in fact and won't even cook if boiled for two hours!  Crazy veg, right?


So if you want to grow to eat one, you have  to tie up the plant & and wrap to blanch it for six weeks or more. And not harvest till after the frost has hit it. I started wrapping my three plants last week; who knew what a project it be. 



Thick twine to wrap tightly and hoping there's no bugs on leaves while you're doing this, as you have to get up close and personal with the plant. Then instead of cardboard like some people suggest to block out the sun, I found it easier to wrap black landscaping fabric around next. And lastly, finishing with brown paper. I got all my supplies from my garden shed and the Dollar Store. Then they must be secured to a pole. Pretty large, bulky & wobbly at this point, so I secured the three plants to my fence also.




"What is she doing now?"  is what I hear a lot, so once again neighbors & friends all came out to see what was going. When I was all finished yesterday I realized it looks like I have palm trees in my garden now! So that's a happy thought that will keep me smiling as the temperature drops in the garden. I won't be cutting them to harvest till very close to Christmas. 


A big shout-out to the first person who discovered YES, you CAN EAT THESE THINGS! 

**more later on how I cut down, prepare before cooking, and how to eat these "creatures" of course, in a few months. 

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Italian Seeds

started using Italian seeds 2 years ago. They are imported from Italy & distributed from company in FLA called: SEEDS OF ITALY. We saw them at PHS Flower Show 3 years ago as they had a booth in the Marketplace. Then we found them online & at a localish garden center in Glenside, Primex.


These seeds are UNBELIEVABLY AMAZING! They ALL grow, you get hundreds more of seeds for same price as other companies ( Burpees, Botanical Interests, Seed Savers, Landreth, Hudson Valley, etc etc). They surpass all these and more!!

 

You pay the same amount as those listsed BUT the seed pack is triple the amount you get PLUS seeds NOT treated so they all grow & last 3 years to plant.

Yes they are a niche seed company but not all their seeds are only Italian vegetables & flowers. They are so worth checking out!

As an Italian I LOVE Dandelion leaves! As a salad green. Yes most NON Itailans see dandion flowers as a weed. Well very wrong! The flowers are edible. You can make dandelion wine & jam from them. And the green leaves are a powerhouse of nutrients! Medicinal. My grandmother boiled the leaves & drank as a tea. The leaves when not too large are a wonderful salad green, on their own or mixed in with others. They have a bitter taste, which  as an Italian we LOVE!

They can self seed & grow like crazy in a yard & then you can pick. Or you can plant the seeds & grow to harvest.  

The bought seeds are called DENTE DE LEONE, which means: teeth of the lion! Perfect description of how the leaves look. 

Trying FORAGING this wonderful green! You might be surprized at how much you enjoy. If you want to try raw in a salad, I suggest using them first mixed in with other salad greens. A simple dressing of EVO & red wine vinegar, salt &.pepper. 

Hope you try!'kmol

Z






Friday, August 22, 2014

PHS Annual Flower Show


There is a tradition in Philadelphia that saves the city & surrounding suburbs from going Postal on the world. Just when you have lost all patience, crabby is your daily mood, losing interest in even getting up in morning, AND to make it even worse, you have a reality check & decide you can't got some place sunny & warm this winter, THE FLOWER SHOW ARRIVES!!!!

Always late March, for one week. Different theme every year, so it is like a mini VaCa to chase the blues a way. Hawaii, Great Britian, Art in Flowers have been some recent themes. It's an international roster of exhibitors: florists, landscapers, horticulturists, novice & hobby gardeners,colleges & universities, workshops, and vendors for all things GREEN. 


    

    



The Convention Center space is transformed to a magical space. On visit is usually not enough to see everything.

    
 I was part of an exhibition once. Well,my quill   I made was! A college friend was part of a garden club that early exhibited in the show. One year in the 80's their arrangement was tropical so the group used my ocean-themed color quilt as the backdrop to their display. They won!


The show is filled with garden & flower enthusiasts from everywhere also. City is filled with tourists & their is a certain buzz for that week. Remember EVERY HUMAN is SICK OF WINTER! 

So everyone is very bubbly, walking around with huge smiles & prone to talk to anyone. So in this manner we met visitors from Iowa in a steak shop where we had gone for lunch separately. After hours spent over 4 packed days, talking non-stop about all sorts of GREEN topics, comparing each other's gardens, showing photos from our smart phones, discussing what projects we have planned & now want to try after being inspired by the Flower Show, we have become the BESTEST OF FRIENDS! 


Gardening can be solitary. Maybe the actual doing it. But the joy & pleasure we all get from doing it, becomes something to share with other like minded people. Get us started talking about it and we can't shut up!
     

And the Flower Show is the Mecca for all this lovely passion, whether for hobby or for a career.

THEY DIDNT FREEZE!


SUCCESS! The low tunnels & cold frames worked! Yea!

   
 
    Escarole lettuce

    Radicchio 

   Chard  wild arugala

   Russian kale & califlower
   

   Cabbage & Kavolo Nero( black kale)
   

   Lettuce
   

   

    

Call me CHEAP!

Gardening can be done CHEAPLY!

Yes I am declaring my self "Princess of the Do-It- Cheap Gardening"! 


I learned from my father, the "King" of above that method. I used to wonder why he was "bringing home trash all the time", and things from jobs he did. And of course he learned this method from his father. When they came from Italy ( my father was 11), they bought a South Philly row house on one of those super narrow streets more suited to a Fiat than a Ford pick- up truck. Their garden behind home was a small square but with the heat of sun & brick walls, they grew a lot in that small space. 

When I started gardening on a bigger scale than window boxes on a deck, I realized the beauty (ha!), rather,  the smart, wise & inventiveness of doing this. Mostly it's done for why not save some cash? Also, things happen in garden & then you can just reach for something right a way vs having to go to a store.

For the struture to keep the cloths off the vegetables as they GROW, you need hoops. My hoops are made of old election signs repurposed & free. The fabric that raises temps about 10-15 degrees that I bought. Also bought fabric staples to anchor cloth to ground but also use bricks, stones too. And Dollar Store cloths pins to attach fabric to hoops.


I wanted more windows this year so whenever I was out driving, I kept my eyes open for them someone trashed or workers at home that didn't want to take them for scrap metal. Sure enough, last fall I had collected 8 windows! And boy do they work as a quick cold frame.



Thursday, August 21, 2014

2013 Word of the Year

Taking Selfies increased 1700% in 2013!!!

But nothing new! Pictures of ourselves have a long history in photography, starting from the invention of photography in the 1800's.

Andy Warhol could be called the "King" or "Emperor of Selfies".  Or at least their biggest ENABLER. He used to give friends a bag of dimes in Manhathan & they would all go & take pictures of themselves ( selfies) in the 10 cents each photo booth in black & white. No denying that Eddie Sedwidge is the "Queen of Selfies"!

I did that a lot too. A friend & I made it a ritual every time I would go visit her in NYC and even when I lived there, we always made a stop at our favorite store in the East Village to "do a photo". We even had props to use in the booth. Those were black & white too. It wasn't so much about a self-portrait but about capturing the memory. Ours weren't a dime but TOTALY worth it for a dollar!


Now photo booths are every where it seems which is a good thing. They can be rented for any party, wedding, college event or even permenantly in restaurants and these shots are usually free too.

While today's SELFIE taking can get annoying as everyone is doing, some day, as with ANY photograph, no matter how taken, will be a window to the past and special memories.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

A GREEN Selfie

Not really to into this current craze or trend or ephemera, but these I had to take.


2014


2013