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Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Thu May 31, 2018 1:31 pm
by dps51
well just made two meat loaf and also made 2kg of beef and beer (light ale) sausages

Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Thu May 31, 2018 1:38 pm
by dps51
wheels wrote:What's the recipe/method for the cucumbers please?

Phil

this what I do with my extra cucumbers so they don't go on the compost

http://www.allotment-garden.org/recipe/ ... &submit=Go

Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Thu May 31, 2018 2:05 pm
by wheels
Many thanks. I tend to use them in Piccalilli but am interested in making fermented pickles.

Phil

Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2018 8:07 pm
by golfermd
Love growing our own maters, all but one is open pollinated (OP). It's one from Japan and interested in seeing how it does here in MD. I'm a Master Gardener in charge of the tomatoes at a demo garden so I'm always trying new varieties. I've grown F1 (hybrid) tomatoes a few times but have found they are just as susceptible to fungus as OP tomatoes are and really don't produce much better either. Fungus is the biggest problem here in the Mid-Atlantic area. By their nature tomatoes ideally in the mid-80's. However, those temperatures aren't a reality here with the high 80's to high 90's during the summer.

Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2018 11:05 pm
by ComradeQ
golfermd wrote:Love growing our own maters, all but one is open pollinated (OP). It's one from Japan and interested in seeing how it does here in MD. I'm a Master Gardener in charge of the tomatoes at a demo garden so I'm always trying new varieties. I've grown F1 (hybrid) tomatoes a few times but have found they are just as susceptible to fungus as OP tomatoes are and really don't produce much better either. Fungus is the biggest problem here in the Mid-Atlantic area. By their nature tomatoes ideally in the mid-80's. However, those temperatures aren't a reality here with the high 80's to high 90's during the summer.


Sounds interesting! I am growing the following heirloom tomatoes this year, the first two I picked up while in Russia and Ukraine:

Black Krim - A black tomato from Crimea.

Azoychka - Russian yellow tomato.

Purple Bumble Bee - Striped cherry tomato.

Carmello - Red, round fist sized tomatoes from Western Europe.

Camp Joy - Large cherry tomatoes, very prolific.

Spitze - Italian plum/paste style tomato.

Tennessee Britches - Large dark pink beefsteak tomato.

Chocolate Stripes - Striped red and black tomato.

Re: What else are you doing?

PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2018 11:07 pm
by ComradeQ
wheels wrote:Many thanks. I tend to use them in Piccalilli but am interested in making fermented pickles.

Phil


I made a fermented pickled onion last year that blew my socks off. I just pulled some out of the back of the fridge with some homemade pork pie and I can't get enough, these are even better after a year!

This is the recipe I used: http://www.gratefullynourished.com/nour ... nions.html. I fermented a bit longer than the recipe suggested, maybe a week on the counter then into the fridge to slow the fermentation. Once the onions had pickled in the fridge for a bit I added around 100ml of good malt vinegar to the mix (Sarsons being my malt of choice ... the Brit in me insisted that I had to add malt vinegar). After resting for a month it was great, after a year being forgotten in the back of the fridge it was great! I have to admit these are probably the best pickled onions I have ever had.