Bonus Post: Brothers and Sisters …

Lettuce rejoice!

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The Juliet Jungle

You have seen a lot of photos of my gardens. I grow flowers and herbs which are lovely. The flowers are pretty and the fresh herbs are nice all summer. But there is another gardener, and another, more serious, garden around these parts. Yesterday, after the monsoons passed by, I went down to take some pictures. Later on in the summer things will look pretty gnarly down there, but for now, with all the rain we have had, it is lush and gorgeous. I will be back over the next couple days to add more veggie garden posts, but we will start out with one of my personal, all time, top of the pops, favorite things that Larry grows in his garden.

Here is it – the Juliet Jungle.Juliets are grape tomatoes. You can buy grape tomatoes in the store just about all year and in the winter, my pathetic little grape tomato loving heart does prompt me to buy them. They aren’t bad really and compared to the tomatoes you could get in the store in the winter just 10 years ago, they are amazing. Those are usually a variety called “Santa Sweets”. Santas are fast growers and the tomatoes hold up well under shipping, which why commercial growers use them. But Santas are to Juliets as Dom Perignon is to Mumm’s – there is just no comparison. Not that I have ever had any Dom Perignon, but I hear tell it is really good. I have had a fair amount of Mumm’s though and it has a nice reliable decent flavor, just like the Santas. But if I ever win the Nobel Peace Prize or a Pulitzer, I am definitely having some Dom Perignon to celebrate. And some Juliet grape tomatoes.The plants on which Juliets grow are enormous and this year, Larry decided to not even try to contain them with cages or stakes. He just let them run riot all over a big space in the middle of the garden.In August, when you come to visit, we will fill the trunk of your car with Juliets [after the filling the back seat with zucchini] because once they start coming, they don’t stop. We eat and give away, literally, bushels of them. I make tomato sauce out of buckets more. Riley even eats them if we don’t keep an eye on him, stealing them any time he thinks no one is watching.

It won’t be long now. These little beauties will start turning into jewels worthy of adoration. Brief adoration, right before I pop them in my mouth.And, as Mark, the World’s Most Fabulous Grandson will tell you, Grandpa’s grape tomatoes make you very very strong.

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Wednesday again – with a word or two

All from the garden this week. The hummingbirds love monarda, which is the main reason I grow. Monarda is a bully, trying to take over area it can. But I just keep yanking it out and leaving enough so that we get to enjoy the hummingbirds. This variety is call “Jacob Kline” which is disease resistant. They remind me of fireworks.monarda_07_07A just opening bud on a coneflower “Magnus”.coneflowerbud1 I hate spiders. Really really really. But this is pretty. Except for the part about a spider having made it. I didn’t see the spider, but I know it is out there.spider_webThese are “volunteers” – which means that they came up all on their own. Some kind of coneflower – I love the jungle-like profusion. They are everywhere and if I like them, I will move most of them to a better spot.coneflowerbud2The rock star of the shade garden right now – “Golden Queen” Trolius.trolius07_06

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Pasta La Vista

I can hear you now: “What the…?” Well you can blame Lauren because she named the dish Pasta La Vista when I first made it up. She will protest calling this Pasta La Vista because of the blasphemy of using zucchini in it. The original recipe had spinach and more recently, she made it with kale for all of us at Christmas time and it was really good that way.Lauren would rather eat dirt than zucchini I think, so I can see her point, but I made up the recipe and she won’t be here for supper tonight, and I’ll use use zukes if I like. And I do like to use them. Once the garden starts producing really well, I am going to blog a zucchini recipe every night for a whole week. We eat it every night, so why not share? Don’t leave your car parked in my driveway without locking the door if the zucchini is doing well – I will fill your back seat when you aren’t looking. Then in October, I will cry because they are all gone.

It helps to get your ingredients prepped before you start cooking. The prep takes about 10 minutes and cooking about twice that, so it’s a pretty fast meal.

Start by cubing about 10 ounces of boneless, skinless chicken breast. Sprinkle liberally with salt, pepper, dried oregano and thyme and a bit of garlic powder. Using a 12 inch skillet, heat about 2 tablespoons of olive oil till very hot. Put the chicken cubes in all at once and spread out in the pan. Leaving the heat on high, do not stir for about 3 minutes. Turn them over and get a little sear on the other side as well – another couple minutes. They don’t have to be cooked through at this point, because they are going to cook more later on. What you want to do is get some good seared color on it because that will deepen the flavor of the finished dish. Color = flavor, except for black which isn’t as tasty – if you get to black, you should throw that out and start over. Remove the chicken from the pan and place in a bowl.These are the vegetables I usually use, plus the zucchini of course. I like to leave them in fairly large pieces so that they don’t over cook. You want both a bit of a sear on them and a little crunch. About 6 ounces of white mushrooms, 1/2 of a big vidalia onion, 1 medium red pepper and 8 little baby zucchinis. The zucchini cooks the fastest, so rather than try to brown it when there are a lot of other veggies in the pan, I sear it off first and then hold it in the same bowl as the chicken. To do this, heat another tablespoon of olive oil in the same pan, salt and pepper the zuke chunks lightly and spread them out in the hot oil, trying to get as many cut sides down as you can. Leave the heat high and in a couple minutes when there is good color on one side, turn them over and do the other side. The idea is to have good color on at least half of them and zucchini overcooks very quickly so don’t leave them in too long.Now, things speed up. Add another tablespoon or so of olive oil. [and really, if you don’t have to worry too much about fat, you can add several tablespoons. Olive oil is good for you. But I am trying to stick to a little lower fat diet these days, so less olive oil for me] When the oil is good and hot, sprinkle the veggies lightly with kosher salt and a few grind of pepper, toss in the pan and spread them out evenly, leaving the heat very high. Stir after a few minutes, lower the heat a bit and add about 1/4 cup of red wine and a 16 ounce can of diced tomatoes in juice, or a can of whole tomatoes that have been cut up, and a 1/4 cup of chicken broth or water. [you can cut them right in the can with a pair of kitchen shears, if you don’t have the diced ones on hand] I got distracted at this point in the process I guess because there is not a photo of all the veggies in the pan. Sorry about that. I used angel hair pasta for this, so I had my water going and put the pasta in at about this point. You would do it at few minutes earlier if you are using a pasta that takes longer to cook. Follow the package directions.

These are the herbs I used today, from left to right: parsley, rosemary, thyme and oregano. And a whole bunch of minced up garlic. I am blessed to have lots of fresh herbs, but you can use dried if that is what you have. [for dried, I would use about 1/2 teaspoon of each, except the parsley which would be a couple tablespoons.] And any combo is fine – what ever suits your taste. I just did a rough chop on them after removing the leaves from the stems [stems are not yummy] and ended up with about a teaspoon of each herb, and a tablespoon of the parsley. And please – use fresh garlic. Not the kind in the jar which tastes just awful. I used about 4 cloves. Throw in all the herbs and about half of the garlic. Stir again and cover with a lid, lowered heat to a simmer. Stir after about 5 minutes and add the rest of the garlic, the chicken and the zucchini. Cook about 5 minutes more or until the onions and peppers are as done as you like. Taste and add more salt if needed.
To serve, ladle sauce generously over the cooked pasta. See that cheese in the photo? That is supposed to freshly grated pecorino romano which I could have sworn I had, but apparently did not, since I can’t find it. I ended up using cheddar which was pretty good and I wasn’t going to trash this whole post over a little grated romano. I am nothing if not adaptable, at least when it comes to cooking. So, there you go – lots of fresh, bright flavors and very little fuss.
Makes 3 big servings.

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I play favorites

I know, I know. A mother is supposed to love all of her children equally and show no favoritism. I do have a favorite though and I just can’t help it.And, as daylilies go, this one is not considered to be anything really amazing. “Bountiful Valley”. It was introduced in 1979 and doesn’t have a fancy edge or a bold eyezone or anything like that.It just sits there, day after day for about 6 weeks, churning out one brilliant yellow bloom after another.Do you blame me?

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