The Produce Parade

Today the sun slept in.

Summerā€™s on its way out at last. But OH! what a gloriously warm one it has been.Ā  We have never seen so much sun for so many weeks on end in our ten+ year history here.Ā  So I canā€™t begrudge the bit of spitting rain that hurried me in my garden tasks today.

I dug the last potatoes. Theyā€™re not much to look at, but always a marvel to unearth.

I pulled out most of the tomato plants and gathered up the green ones to ripen indoors.

I urged on the happy yellow zucchini that is suddenly proliferating young ones now that the season is all but spentā€¦.

And then I came in and took stock of summerā€™s remains, smiling all the while with the delight that comes of growing things in oneā€™s own gardenā€¦

 

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P1160217Most of the apples have been turned into applesauce alreadyā€”a delicious cinnamon/brown sugar kind that smacks of apple pie.Ā  We enjoy it on Sunday mornings on French Toast and then the leftover bit on Monday mornings in our Cream of Wheat.

But today I discoveredĀ  a pale gem of an apple on a little wild sapling that came up a few years back.Ā  We didnā€™t expect much from it though the deer certainly made much of it this season.Ā  But today I realized there were three apples left for me. And wonder of wonders they were the juiciest, crispest, sweetest apples of any we have grown.Ā  No wonder they were such a hit with Bambi and friends.Ā  We will definitely be paying more attention to that tree!Ā  Any idea what kind of apple that pale one would be?

 

P1160219 Not far off is the little scruffy hazelnut tree.Ā  I planted it from a little sapling I picked up cheap at our local Seedy Saturday eventā€¦Itā€™s had a rough go of it. The bears CRAVE protein at this time of year when theyā€™ve had their fill of berries and apples and are ready for a long nap.Ā  They pillage our little hazelnut predictably.Ā  So I beat them to it this year and picked the nuts while still green.Ā  Theyā€™ve ripened now and we shall have nuts for chocolate chip cookies!

P1160223 I grew my own Mr.Lunt (of Veggie Tales fame) this year for the first time.Ā  We ate him shortly after the photo shoot, baked with brown sugar and apple slices. I thought it was yummy, though my opinion was not shared by all. Itā€™s probably a good thing there was no Lunt family in the squash patch this year, just a pair of Lunts.

P1160224 Well, the zucchini tide is ebbing now.Ā  Weā€™ve had a bumper crop to use in cakes and loaves and fritters and fried ā€˜Italian wonderā€™ and relish andā€¦we still wonder if it has any nutritive value at all, or is it just great moist filler for everything?Ā  We tried and loved a new recipe this year:Ā  Double Chocolate Zucchini Bread.Ā  Wow!

P1160226And this orange thingā€¦well, itā€™s hard to say what it actually is.Ā  Unlike pumpkins, it was orange from the start, and such a brilliant orange.Ā  Shall we try eating it or not?

 

P1160242Tomatoes.Ā  Weā€™ve had them in all sizes on the table every day for weeks now. These tiny marble-sized ones I call ā€œMini Mariesā€. They are sweet and tangy at the same time and oh so prolific.Ā  Good thing, because we tend to eat them by the handful.

P1160230Have you grown these?Ā  Theyā€™re tomatillos with a twist; these are a purple variety.Ā  Tell me, does this mean I canā€™t make Salsa Verde with them?

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And thatā€™s all for the produce parade today, except to mention the ubiquitous Kale.Ā  It is everywhere in the garden thanks to its incredible ability to reseed itself. (And its knack for surviving the compost pile.)Ā  We mostly ignore it but have been known to try kale chips and the occasional pot of steamed greens, though we prefer swiss chard.

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–LS

You crown the year with your bounty, and your carts overflow with abundance.
Ps.65:11

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Where do Sesame Seeds come from?

I know where poppy seeds come from,

and sunflower seeds too.Ā  These flourish in my garden:

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In past years Iā€™ve planted flax seeds and seen them flower both blue and redā€¦

but as I was falling asleep one night I wonderedā€¦

Where do Sesame Seeds come from?

Iā€™ve never grown these.

So, I looked it up. On the Internet, of course. (Why do I keep that World Book set anyway?)

And now I know.

According to Wikipedia, they come from a flowering plant in the genus Sesamum! (would you believe!) ā€œNumerous wild relatives occur in Africa and a smaller number in India. It is widely naturalized in tropical regions around the world and is cultivated for its edible seeds, which grow in pods.ā€

I read on to find thatĀ  the sesame seed has been domesticated for at least 3000 years and thereā€™s evidence that it was once a major crop in the Middle East.Ā  Itā€™s drought tolerant and oil-rich, making it a favorite in places where nothing else will grow.Ā  India exports the most sesame seeds and Japan imports the most.Ā  And thatā€™s the bare bones of where sesame seeds come from. Just in case you ever wonderedā€¦

And if you want to know just a little moreā€¦look here.

[Shutterstock photo]

If your curiosity knows no bounds, youā€™ll enjoy this lovely little blog post featuring eleven foods that grow in unexpected ways. The cashew takes the prize for The Surprising-est!

And with that foray into things unknown, I will return to my own familiar garden and the seeds growing there today!

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–LS

And God said, “Let the earth sprout vegetation, plants yielding seed, and fruit trees bearing fruit in which is their seed, each according to its kind, on the earth.”

And it was so.Ā  The earth brought forth vegetation, plants yielding seed according to their own kinds, and trees bearing fruit in which is their seed, each according to its kind.

And God saw that it was good. Gen.1:11,12Ā Ā Ā Ā  Amen! and Amen!

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All creation sings His praise!

Carefree Beesā€¦

My overgrown oregano patch has been just alive with bees this summer!

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Their drone is the sound of summer.

ā€œBusy as a beeā€ seems an apt idiom in view of their incessant buzzing about, so I had to chuckle at a poem that I discovered one morning this week.

Ignoring breakfast dishes I had plunked down on the couch to check out my new library acquisitionā€”a collection of Ogden Nash poems titled I Wouldnā€™t Have Missed It.Ā  Actually, before I even decided to sit down with this book, I had burst out laughing in the middle of the kitchen just sampling Ogdenā€™s word play.Ā  Oh my.Ā  I rarely get my elusive funny bone tickled like that.Ā Ā  Laughter, the perfectĀ  gift for a serious soul; I felt like God had hand-picked the book for me!Ā  So I postponed dishes and read poems for the next happy while!

In this particular poem Nash wryly suggests that only man was created to live by the sweat of his brow.

ā€œSo far as I know, mankind is the only section of creation
That is doomed to either pers- or ex-piration.ā€

He goes on to playfully debunkĀ  beesā€™ apparent industriousness–

ā€œAnd bees donā€™t do anything either, bees just have a reputation for industry because they are sharp enough to buzz,

And people hear a bee buzzing and donā€™t realize that buzzing isnā€™t any trouble for a bee so they think that it is doing more than it actually does.ā€

–and then he proposes the comical idea of a bee laughing.Ā  I love it!

ā€œSo next time you are about to expend some enthusiasm on the beeā€™s wonderful industrial powers.

Just remember that that wonderful bee would die laughing if you asked it to change places with you and get its brow moist while you went around spending the day smelling flowers.ā€

Ha! Now IĀ  must go smell some flowers and watch some laughing bees!Ā  ( :

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Take time to smile today–and find something that makes you laugh.Ā  With God in control of the world, and watching out for our well-being we can afford the luxury!

–LS

What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?Ā  He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things? Rom.8:31-32

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The poem cited is: ā€œGrasshoppers are very Intelligentā€ p.51 of I Wouldnā€™t Have Missed Itā€”selected poems by Ogden Nash, 1972Ā Ā  (Thank God for libraries that donā€™t toss all their old books!!)

To read the poem in its entirety go here.
Or to find a chuckle of your own, check out this website:Ā  http://www.poemhunter.com/ogden-nash/poems/