flowerbug
Garden Master
Whoa!
If a 3# tomato was on one of my plants,
.. it would probably scare me!
Steve
this is from a different year, but some of them do look like this...
Whoa!
If a 3# tomato was on one of my plants,
.. it would probably scare me!
Steve
My big project this year is pickling. DW & I have been pickling okra, bitter melon, and yardlong beans.
The yardlong beans are Chinese Red Noodle. It occurred to me that if they keep most of their color when cooked, and turn bright red when the cooked beans are mixed with vinegar... then aren't they a perfect candidate for eye-catching dilly beans??? That, and you can cut them down to fit perfectly into whatever jar you choose. The first test batch looks really beautiful; no telling how they will taste though, won't know until they have cured for several weeks. Should be time yet for at least two more batches, to experiment with different seasonings.
Pickling bitter melon is another experiment. The variety we are growing this year is fairly mild & 10-12" long, so after cleaning, we cut the melon lengthwise into spears. Like the yardlong beans, those long spears can be cut to fit the jars perfectly. Recipes are, as you can imagine, hard to find... we settled on one that uses vinegar, salt, sugar, and ginger. I've been trying to get DW to eat more bitter melon to help with her diabetes, and she liked some pickled bitter melon given to her by a friend; so I hope she finds this recipe to be palatable. It wouldn't hurt me to eat more of it either. Bitter melon is really healthy, but it epitomizes the axiom that anything good for you must taste bad.
This is the first year for pickling okra too, so we are experimenting to find the best method. So far we have tried raw cold pack with hot brine, and pods pierced & lightly blanched prior to hot brine. We will be trying a recipe used for pickling peppers next, which uses a cold brine soak prior to canning.
We won't be able to taste the results for any of these until the growing season is over... I'm preparing for the possibility that at least one of the test batches will be truly horrible. Trial & error, heavy on the error - for the first year. Hopefully at least a few of the test batches turn out well, our initial results with dilly beans & gherkins give us cause for hope.