Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Italian Plums and Farm Tour

The Italian Plums are droppingly delicious!  I am picking them as fast as I can and they will be on sale Sept. 30th, Sunday, at the Farm Tour happening here at South Ridge Farm from 10 - 3.

We'll have lots of fruit, dried and fresh, and potatoes and such for sale plus lots of tasty, fresh goodies.

On the hour there will be mini workshops from edible plant i.d. to natural irrigation.

I'm looking for volunteers to help with flow.  Let me know if you can help!

Back to the plums....

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

South Ridge Farm on the Salt Spring Farm Tour

Our farm is on the Sept. 30th Salt Spring Island Farm tour.  We are small but we are big with doings inside the decorated fence here on South Ridge Drive.

We're featuring tours on the hour from 10 a.m. until 3 pm. Sept. 30th -
Learn how to pick your own Wild Salad
The Wonders of Recycled Water Treatment and Rainwater irrigation
Harvesting Nettles and Herbal Tea Tasting
Grind local wheat and other grains and sample cheese scones made with local cheese and South Ridge vegetables.

Hands-on mini workshops will give you a chance to learn some plant identification, harvesting techniques, how to grind flour with a stationary bicycle and much more.

Right now we are starting the Italian Plum crop, finishing the green beans, getting the second round of raspberries and nettles and becoming purple with blackberry juice.  We have a bumper crop of blackberries so spelt pies will be made soon.

For purchase on the Farm Tour will be Seasonal produce, Our famous bicycle-ground Four cheese scones, Mini pizzas with vegan & gluten free options, Pickles, Jams (unsweetened and alternatively sweetened), Bottled juices, Garlic Scape Pesto, Nettle Teas and Happy Heart Tea, Dried foods, Bliss Balls, Gluten-free Cheesecakes and Berry Blast Bars.

We're excited and the farm calls everyone over on Sept. 30th.


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Snap peas, green beans, yellow plums, goji's and blackberries

The blackberries are plump and luscious - the bicycle-ground whole wheat spelt pies are scrumptious.  Julie's plums from the north of the island are cooking down now into homemade jam.  There's straight up unsweetened yellow plum, unsweetened plum-pear-apple-blackberry, and Peace River honey sweetened plum-pear-apple-blackberry.

I use the open kettle evaporation method for my spreads, jams, and preserves as I don't like fiddling with pectin, even Pomona's Pectin which I find doesn't hold well in the long term.  Using minimal sweetening, I can stir ever so often and watch for exactly the right consistency that I like.

My jams, fruit butters and juices are lined up neatly on the shelves of the farm's commercial kitchen so that on farm tour day, Sunday, Sept. 30th, they'll be ready to sell.  The South Ridge Farm  crew will be demonstrating the grinding of our famous bicycle-ground flour and doing tastings of nettle chai, nettle mint, and happy heart tea and showing people how to brew it from picking of the nettle to sitting down with a cup!  Our signature Vegan Nettle Chai Spelt Chocolate Cakes and Cookies will be on sale, along with nettle quiches - yum again.

Off to stir the jams...

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Beans, Raspberries, Salal berries and more

Beans, Raspberries and Salal a Plenty

Luscious French filet green bush beans steamed in salted water eaten fresh out of the pan are the latest offerings from the garden.

The Kamut is standing tall and breezy in it's blue-green splendour while at its feet are mustard greens, so spicy in our wild salad mix.

Nettles are drying on the outdoor racks; wild trailing blackberry and raspberry, too.  The garlic is curing and the raspberries are plump and sweet.  We need to harvest them and the salal berries every day.

We are most thankful that Shane, our New Zealand friend and gardener is back to work on clearing the heavy bush and berming it against the fences.  Touring the garden, the farm manager shared her plans for the continued permaculturing of the property with more goji, blueberry, red and white currants and sea buckthorn being planted.  Shane cleared a whole new pocket garden that will be warmed by the sun between a small rock valley. We are composting and mulching as fast as we can to fill it in with rich soil.

It's very dry here now and the deep mulch means success for the young and old seedlings that are dry farmed.

Late snap peas are tasty and just about ready.

Out I go to harvest more fingerling potatoes.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Summer Fruits

Summer Fruits

Summer fruit has really come: gooseberries, salal berries, wild oregon grape, wild trailing blackberry, plums, raspberries, zucchini, banana fingerling potatoes, garlic, wild  kale, spinach, fava beans, lettuce, wild mustard, parsley, calendula, butterfly bush, They are all ready and we're harvesting every day.

Nettles are continuing well, too; because I've been cutting them all spring and summer and they are getting watered by the grey water system they are vibrant, green, and growing succulent fresh leaves seemingly overnight.  Every three days I can harvest the tops of the cut patches. What has gone to seed I either prune and add to the mulch - for it is excellent soil food - or let it the seeds fully ripen to harvest later on.  Some people like to crush the seeds with a mortar and pestle and use it in pestos and the like.  Others say that pregnant women should stay away from  the seed.

In the drying loft, lemon balm, mints, and lots of nettle continue to dry out to be used immediately in the herb teas that have been selling well at the market.  It's always lovely when a return customer from afar seeks my stand out and is happy to see me still producing the teas and baked goods.

Saturday market here we come!


Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Berries and Garlic

We've begun the garlic harvest and the gooseberries are ready, too.  No, we're not going to mix the two, but we will have them both at the Saturday Market July 28th.

Although our garlic is somewhat smaller than usual this year, it is strong and flavourful.  We have an abundance, too; hence, we are selling it fresh and clean, as well as cured.  I like my garlic fresh, for it's a bit sweeter.

The gooseberries, on the other hand, are huge!  The gooseberry lovers will be pleased on Saturday and there are lots of you out there; I know from previous years.

The wood chips the local tree pruners dropped off a few weeks ago are almost used up in the pathways, and they are fragrant and inviting.  In later years, they will break down and feed the soil and I can move the pathways if I wish or dig them out and lay the soil on top of the beds.  Permaculture on the way...

There's still time to plant onions and leeks for the winter, so I'm off to do that now.  Happy gardening.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Growing Galore

Lots growing on South Ridge Farm right now!  Last week was our main harvest of black currants - some went into nice, tart jam, others to the Saturday Market, and the rest in the  freezer for further creations, possibly in the Berry Blast Bars which sell out quickly each Saturday morning.

The gooseberries are prolific this year and soon will be ready.  The zucchinis are tender and sweet, even the larger ones which I tend to use as veggie dippers.  The oats are up and the kamut is tall and strong.  We've been using the rhubarb in our baked goods and it is still growing well in it's somewhat shaded spot.

Winter crops like carrots, beets and broccoli stand 3 to 4 inches and the fall chard is doing well.  The fall favas are standing up well, too.

I'm off to harvest more mint for the Nettle Mint tea and to pick pie cherries after lunch.  I'll pick wild trailing blackberry, too, for the Berry Blast Bars, which due to lack of heat until recently aren't as sweet as usual.  The Wild Raspberries and Thimble berries are very sweet, though, so it all balances.   Eat well!