We were so excited when the twins appeared.  Now they are turning a beautiful red.  They were also joined by some nice neighbors.  Our garden has really struggled with production this year so we are really celebrating the small victories.  We now have at least a few tomatoes on each of our five plants, but it is pretty sparse.  The twins’ plant is showing the greatest potential for bounty.

Last year’s tomato plants ran out of nutrients just as the tomatoes were transitioning to red.  We only got two zucchinis and no peppers.  We did not know there was a problem until it was too late.  This year we have been adding soil amendments on schedule, but the summer squash and peppers are still lagging.  All our hopes are tied to the tomatoes right now.  I am so hoping to have enough tomatoes to make my favorite summer soup from Bryant Terry’s Vegan Soul Kitchen.  I fell in love with it last summer and have been dreaming about it since then.

I hope that you have been enjoying delicious food from your garden or, that you are still holding out hope for what is still to come.

OK, so my previous baby announcement wasn’t really about a baby, but about our first broccoli.  We don’t really have new twins to share, but we are ecstatic about our twin tomatoes.  Other than prolific lettuce production, our garden has been lagging.  The excessive spring rain compacted our soil and our new seeds had some trouble punching through the surface.

Rob replanted, and supplemented with additional nutrients, most of our transplants and new growths a couple weeks ago.  Most everything is happier in the looser soil, but our peppers and eggplants still seem unhappy.  We are watching and hoping.  The twin tomatoes renew our hope that we will eat more than just lettuce and a few heads of broccoli, cauliflower and cabbage from our garden this summer.

The other item that is growing well in the garden is parsley.  It was sort of on a whim that we planted it because I don’t really like it.  I thought I might throw it in here and there.  Well I have basically ignored it and it has flourished.  I needed a picnic food for last Monday night.  We were going to be away from home at dinner time and I wanted an alternative to the tuna fish or peanut butter sandwiches I usually pack for picnics.

I made the Quick Lemon and Garlic Quinoa Salad from Feeding the Whole Family by Cynthia Lair.  I cut the parsley and added the tomato.  It did not include sunflower seeds, but I have in the past.  The recipe is easy to make, can be made in advance, travels well and tastes great.  I had picked up Feeding the Whole Family a few times in the bookstore, but kept putting it down.  I was drawn in by the beautiful cover art by Nikki McClure and Cynthia’s affiliation with Bastyr, but the recipes didn’t quite grab be (and I definitely don’t need another cookbook unless it is going to be well loved.

I took a cooking class through Lost Arts Kitchen and we ate the Quinoa Salad during our snack break.  It was delicious.  I immediately bought the book and we have enjoyed everything I have made so far.  The recipe ingredients tend to be more on the eclectic side and I usually don’t have everything on hand, but if I plan ahead, it is easy enough to gather the necessary items.  I am really looking forward to trying out more of the recipes once we harvest more beauties from our garden.

Tomorrow is the East Portland Sunday Parkways ride.  We can’t wait….

I am finally sitting down in a moment of near peace, which have been scarce since school ended.  Rob and I are trying to catch up on all the neglected projects that have piled up during the school year.  And, he will be spending the summer looking for a new teaching job.  He has decided to leave his private Montessori school and will transition back to public school education with the upcoming school year.  If there are any public elementary/middle school principals out there looking for a teacher with great education, experience and references….

Rob just left to help a friend assemble a backyard play structure for his daughter for her birthday tomorrow.  We will be attending the party tomorrow morning and I just finished a new quilt block tee as a gift.  I will post the photo once it has been gifted.  Henrik is in his room for quiet time listening to A Bear Called Paddington and I have 5 minutes until it will be time to rotate the pound cake.

I have never made an Independence Day feast before, but I felt a little inspired and decided to take the plunge.  We harvested our first green cabbage from the garden yesterday and I made some Coleslaw late last night.  It is mayo based with red onion, black pepper, dried ginger and mustard.  The ginger and mustard are seasonings I use for salmon burgers, which is also on the menu tonight.

I am pretty sure I got the inspiration from Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything, but I had only checked the book out from the library and can’t double check.  I own How to Cook Everything Vegetarian, but salmon is not included in that edition.  The salmon is in the fridge marinating with Worcestershire, tamari, red onion, fresh garlic, fresh ginger and mustard powder.

I already squeezed the lemon and grated some more fresh ginger for lemonade.  It is also chilling in the fridge.  We will also have fresh corn with the burgers and slaw.  I had initially thought I would make biscuits for a shortcake style dessert.  We had breakfast yesterday Sweetness Bakery.  I bought a Groupon a while ago.  I saw their brunch menu online on Friday night thought it sounded great.  We had scrambled eggs with caramelized onions and roasted mushrooms, house roasted potatoes and a patriotic biscuit with strawberries, whip cream and blueberries.  It was so good I thought I would repeat the biscuit combo at home for dessert tonight.

We rode to Sweetness, had breakfast and then rode on to Mt. Tabor.  Rob and Henrik played on the big toys and I schlepped myself up and down three times on my road bike.  I am on a mission to return to my pre Henrik fitness and I keep encountering my arch nemeses, hills, on my journey.  I used to ride a lot.  We are trying to figure out a better way for me to ride with Henrik right now so that we can decrease our car use even more.  We have a trail-a-bike, but I don’t have that much seat post real estate for the attachment and it chafes my inner thigh.  I would like to get an Xtracycle, but that isn’t in the budget now.  It is a situation that lacks resolution currently.

I also have too many craft projects going right now that lack resolution.  I have quilted the baby quilt.  I got a little too intricate and it took hours.  The binding is the last thing to do and I hope to finish it soon.  I had taken a break from the quilt to start the washcloths for Craft Hope.  But, my serger needles started protesting at the thickness of the fabric so I decided to change them.  That was a huge mistake.  Something happened when I clipped my needle threads and the stitch is completely off now.

This is the first time I have used the serger since we moved to Portland and I couldn’t find my manual to recheck the threading sequence.  I had to take a break from that project so I decided to go back to the quilt.  I eventually located the serger manual, but I wanted to finish quilting the baby quilt.  I also squeezed work on the birthday tee in there somewhere.  I keep hitting roadblocks and keep getting bounced from project to project.

I think that since I have so many unresolved projects in the works right now that making a good dinner seemed like a creative project that I could actually complete and enjoy in a timely manner.  I still have strawberries and blueberries to wash and cream to whip.  New Seasons will be switching from Straus to a local dairy next week.  This may be our last round of Straus whip cream.  Sigh….I hope the new dairy’s milk is just as delicious.

I used a Lemon Pound Cake recipe from The Grand Central Baking Book.  It is excellent.  I thought that I would make biscuits like we had had at Sweetness, but I didn’t have any buttermilk.  I came up with the idea of the pound cake and, even though I ended up needing buttermilk anyway, the idea stuck.  I think the combo of the Lemon Pound Cake with the berries and the whip cream will taste great.  Well, the cake is done and I am going to tackle my serger.

Enjoy your Independence Day!  I hope you are able to celebrate our national freedom and your personal freedom to pursue whatever inspires you today and in the future.

Rob and Henrik drove around the block to see a Tesla Roadster while I ran into Pastaworks.  1 pound of egg pasta (linguine cut), a bunch of basil from Groundwork Organics and garlic rosemary focaccia for under $10.  We had the olive oil, Parmesan and pine nuts for the pesto and the salad greens from the garden.  $10 & 10 minutes–yum!  The sun shone on us today and we tasted summer!

Our broccoli baby grew up and became dinner tonight.  It is the first thing we have harvested from our garden other than lettuce and other greens.  I made some fresh pesto (with basil from New Seasons—our basil is not ready yet), sautéed the broccoli and mixed everything together with farfalle pasta.

The ripe (California) nectarines reached out, grabbed my nose and lured my to their display at New Seasons this afternoon.  I could not resist.  I made half ice cream.  Half ice cream is the result of selecting half & half instead of whip cream.  I grabbed the wrong Straus bottle (should have been the green top instead of yellow) and we got half ice cream instead.  It melted more quickly, but still tasted great.  The sliced nectarines added just enough flavor and hinted of summer to come.

I really hope we get to feel the sun again soon.  It has been grey, wet and dreary here for way too long.  Just over two weeks until the solstice.  I am counting the days….

It’s a broccoli baby.  I had no idea this is how broccoli grows!  Henrik isn’t the only one learning a lot in the garden.  We also got to harvest and eat our own lettuce tonight.  I have never had a garden (except for our amateurish attempt last year) and I can barely keep houseplants alive.  This is such a great adventure.  We are participating in the consulting program with Your Backyard Farmer (YBF).

So far, we have had our dirt delivered.  Henrik would be thrilled if we did this every year.

We covered the grass with cardboard.  The slice of dirt in the middle is from our planter box from last year.  We definitely biggered our garden space.

Lots of trips with the wheelbarrow

We formed the beds

And tucked them in with straw

We uncovered the beds for planting.  I did a lot of research on hoses.  We picked soaker hoses from Mr. Soaker Hose and we bought them from mr.drip.com.  The hose is lead free.

Our seeds and transplants from YBF.

Henrik planted the peas.

Our happy lettuce

Hope you are having fun in your garden this year!

Henrik and I decorated eggs inside this morning while Rob finished up forming our garden beds outside.  I had received this link for DIY natural egg dying and decided to try it out with Henrik.  I strayed a bit from the directions and just bought grape and cranberry frozen juice concentrates.  I mixed ½ C of the defrosted juice concentrate with 1 tsp. vinegar in a mug.

Henrik was able to spoon the eggs from the starting bowl, into and out of the dye mug and into the finish bowl all on his own.

Two eggs cracked during the boiling process so we had ten to work with.  We started with four in the grape juice.  The colors were great.  Henrik decorated two of the eggs with crayon as I switched to the cranberry juice.

The cranberry was very subtle so I poured the leftover grape back into the dye mug.  I now wish I had had Henrik color more of the eggs.  The juice dyes lacked vibrancy and the crayon artwork helped liven up the bunch.

The eggs ended up very sticky.  It came down to a choice between sticky and a little more colorful or very pale and matte.  I left them a little tacky and as bright as possible.  It started to rain right as I hid the eggs in the backyard.

Henrik found all the eggs and we headed back inside.

I made deviled eggs with four of the eggs and egg salad with the rest.  I picked up a copy Natalie Chanin’s new book Alabama Studio Style at Powell’s this afternoon (she is coming to Powell’s on 04/13/10).  There is a recipe for deviled eggs in the book.  What a perfect way to use up a few extra eggs!  I didn’t have all the ingredients, so I strayed a little from the recipe, but I appreciate the inspiration.  I went to my “go to book”, Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything Vegetarian, for directions on how to cook a hardboiled egg and also for some guidance on the egg salad.

We are all glad we don’t have that many extra eggs to consume on a regular basis.  Henrik and I had fun decorating and dyeing and Rob finished prepping all five of our garden beds.  We are looking forward to planting this week.  More garden updates to come…..

The eggs are resting in their nest

and in a tree…..

Henrik holds his eggs.

The nest was Henrik’s idea.  He now thinks the nest needs a hen…..I don’t anticipate the arrival of a hen.  I did try to create a mouse at Kata Golda’s Etsy Lab workshop today.  I had never participated in one of the Etsy Labs so I was fairly unsuccessfully trying to watch Kata and read the text other people were simultaneously posting.  Kata is so proficient at creating her cute little creatures and Henrik was having a not so cute meltdown at the lunch table.  I ended up with a rectangular piece of felt with one eye.  My rectangle will have to dream a little longer about growing up into a mouse puppet.

We welcomed spring this weekend with eggs and cardboard.  Henrik and I laid eggs at his art table and Rob laid cardboard down in our backyard.  We were all welcoming spring.  Our felted eggs emerged from the working of water and soap into felt with our hands.  The eggs are drying and I will post their photos tomorrow.

If you have free time and are looking for something crafty to do tomorrow afternoon, Etsy will be hosting Kata Golda.  She will be demonstrating how to make her finger puppets.  I wrote about her Powell’s event here.  I am looking forward to an excuse to sit down and make more finger puppets tomorrow.

Today’s project was wet and soapy and rolly polly.

Can’t wait to get started

Rolling one ball

Rolling a second ball

While we were getting our hands, and other parts of us as well, wet inside, Rob was outside in the rain preparing our new garden space.  He started the process of spreading out cardboard on the grass in our backyard.  We had a small planter box for last summer’s garden.  This summer we are participating in the consulting program with Your Backyard Farmer (YBF).

We will be increasing our garden’s footprint from 30 to 250 sq. ft. this summer.  We are having five yards of dirt delivered on Tuesday.  We meet with our garden consultant once each month.  My project for this month is to draw up our garden map based on the vegetables we have chosen to grow and the schematic from YBF.  We are all very excited to be starting the process to grow more of our own food.  I will have many more posts and photos to share as we transform our yard from grass to food!

Happy Spring Equinox and remember to mark the season’s change in your own life.

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