In the mean time, here's what I brought indoors this past week...
Wednesday... I still have one plant producing a few nasturtiums. The others have all died from the heat.
Did you know you can pickle nasturtium seeds? Me neither! I had a lot that I saved for next season, and stopped gathering them up. Here's another way to pickle them from Old Fashioned Living, with other nasturtium recipes.
I couldn't remember if I'd purchased red or yellow Tumbling Toms, and now I know! The yellow tomatoes are the first Tom's of the season. They were sorta bitter. Par for the variety's coarse? We shall see...
There wasn't time on Wednesday to weigh the harvest, so I ended up combining that day's harvest with yesterday's harvest, shown below.
The beans are separated into two piles to show the difference between production based on where they're growing. The purple and few green beans are from 12 plants (south facing, sunny most of the day) growing in front of my melons, and the spindly pile is from 50ish plants (west facing, 6-8hrs of afternoon sun) in their own bed. Crazy, huh?
Oh, and those red specs next to the tiny orange sweet pepper? They're my first Thai Hot chili's. They were fruits that were on the pods when I brought the plant home. I popped one of those lil guys in my mouth, and they pack quite a punch for being so small! I can't wait to have more! I see a Spicy Thai Shrimp dish in my future...
I decided to remove them so the plant would produce more.
Below are my first cut flowers. Zinnias and "10 week stock" (I think). I thought I'd bring some indoors before they bit the dust. Like the vase? It's a cleaned up tequila bottle, lol.
This week's harvest total...
Bush Beans: 4.8 oz
Basil: ~1 oz
Baby Belle Peppers: . too small to weigh, doh!
Viva Italia tomatoes: 9.3 oz
Tumbling Tom cherry tomatoes: 1.7 oz
I didn't bother weighing the nasturtiums or Thai Hot's.
I used the basil to make this Basil Vinaigrette (I halved the recipe, used white balsamic, and only 1/2 cup oil). It's a very nice dressing that is low in actual vinegar flavor, so both boys are enjoying it too. Today the purple basil had "stained" some of the roasted garlic pink, so it looks a little better than this picture.
Remember that melon plant I'd successfully saved? Yea, well, I ripped it out yesterday in an attempt to allow more sun to reach the Thai pepper plant. Priorities, ya' know?
Last Monday I mentioned a new addition to the melon family--the melon in the upper left of the below photo, and when I was peaking at my plants from the dining room window (the only way I can see their backsides w/o climbing back there), I noticed a second newcomer hiding behind leaves! Now the total is 6 pantyhose-slung melons growing on 4 plants.
I'm feeling the urge to do another video update... The next set will be more detailed, and I'll try to go slower, I promise. It's a lot quicker and easier for me to do right now than take pictures and write about them, so stay tuned!
Please stop by the wonderful blog of our Harvest Monday hostess, Daphne, to see what she and other gardeners are growing and harvesting this season.

I have to say, I don't know if I have the courage to taste flowers! What do they taste like? Chicken? LOL!
ReplyDeleteThose little peppers are so cute and tiny!
Nice harvest! I have some zinnia growing in my cucumber bed and went out to snip a few for the kitchen, put them in a vase and 2 squash bugs came crawling out.... ugh! I think I'll check them a little better next time. I am coming to terms with those buggers out in the garden but I draw the line at being invited into the house!
ReplyDeleteShawn Ann~ You're silly. I'd never tasted a flower before tasting nasturtiums... I've eaten mostly the leaves, which have a peppery kick to them, and are like a soft lettuce in texture. The flowers aren't as peppery, and have a lighter texture.
ReplyDeleteBasil vinaigrette, I just looked at the recipe, and it looks like a salad dressing version of pesto! Ingenious, I will have to try it. I'm desperate to discover new recipes for basil that's not just pesto.
ReplyDeleteI love the rainbow of colors in your second harvest photo!
I can't believe you popped a whole thai chili pepper in your mouth - you're one brave lady! If I ever have to taste a pepper for its hotness, I always take a teeny tiny bite and use just the tip of my tongue. :)
Wow, you popped one of those thai chilis in your mouth? Brave girl. That is spicy.
ReplyDeletethymes2 and meemsnyc~ Oh, it was a tiny little thing. I wouldn't put a regular one in my mouth, although I would take a nibble of one... I love me some spicy food!
ReplyDeleteThose chilis are just the cutest things I've ever seen. I don't think I'd try eating one whole though.
ReplyDelete