Western
Super Member
I might be blonde, but I'm not dumb!I can figure some things out! :laughing:
Isn't it past your bedtime?? convent has a curfew you know!:rotfl:
I might be blonde, but I'm not dumb!I can figure some things out! :laughing:
I might be blonde, but I'm not dumb!I can figure some things out! :laughing:
Finally getting some tomatoes out of the garden. The vines are in good shape and fairly loaded with fruit. The hot weather has accelerate the ripening. Much better outlook this year than last, which was a total bust. We will be having fresh tomatoes at every meal for a while.
Kyle, I'd bet I've tossed over 50 tomatoes with BER. Luckily, that's a drop in the bucket of what is on the vines. The vines with the most BER are the super fantastic followed by the Bush Big Boy and better boys. I've had just a couple of BER fruits on my early girls and none on my determinate BHN 602 hybrids. I just picked 10 huge tomatoes this morning that were all over 10 oz. The biggest two were Bush big boys at 12.4 and 12.8 oz. I also picked 5 lb of super sweet and sweet 100 cherry tomatoes and a pound of yellow pear cherries. Between the rain and my soaker tapes, I'm keeping them happy. I just added 40% shade cloth above them and the jury is still out on whether that's going to be good or bad. Our recent rains have been a godsend and I feel very lucky. However, all I have to do is stand still and breath to sweat down my clothes after 10:30 AM. I don't have to do a lick of work to be soaked in sweat.![]()
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BTW: Isn't Pesto kinda like guacamole or salsa? It's good over anything.:licking: You're really tempting me with the talk of Jimmie's. There's nothing I like better than those little Italian cheese/vino/sandwich shops. Just the smells inside of one of those places does something to my brain. When I'm in there, I can't even spell 'diet.' :laughing:
That's great news, Charlie. I have so many huge green tomatoes that I can't count them. My window sill in the kitchen is double-decked with ripening tomatoes. I told my wife not to let the cabinet doors slam or we'd have a tomato avalanche.I've found that if I let the tomatoes ripen fully on the vines, they may attract critters. If I get them just a little green and ripen on the window sill, the critters never discover them. I never dispose of any rotten or damaged fruit in the garden. I get it out of there so critters aren't drawn in needlessly.
Kyle, I'd bet I've tossed over 50 tomatoes with BER. Luckily, that's a drop in the bucket of what is on the vines. The vines with the most BER are the super fantastic followed by the Bush Big Boy and better boys. I've had just a couple of BER fruits on my early girls and none on my determinate BHN 602 hybrids. I just picked 10 huge tomatoes this morning that were all over 10 oz. The biggest two were Bush big boys at 12.4 and 12.8 oz. I also picked 5 lb of super sweet and sweet 100 cherry tomatoes and a pound of yellow pear cherries. Between the rain and my soaker tapes, I'm keeping them happy. I just added 40% shade cloth above them and the jury is still out on whether that's going to be good or bad. Our recent rains have been a godsend and I feel very lucky. However, all I have to do is stand still and breath to sweat down my clothes after 10:30 AM. I don't have to do a lick of work to be soaked in sweat.![]()
I amended mine this year with the small pebbles of lime but I'm told I should've put the fine dust ag lime down.
Nice Lou! Do you grow your own jalapenos too? I have 6 pepper plants loaded with jalapenos. I'll never be able to use all my peppers.
Yes sir,, grow all of my peppers here at the house plus tomatoes,, at the land (about ten miles away) I grow every thing under the sun... including cows, horses, sheep, goats and mosquitoes,, this has been one of the worst year for mosquitoes,, to dry I guess.:confused3:. but the rest have been doing well.:thumbsup:. Lou
FG19 called 911 to report a fire ... The operator asks ... How do we get there? FG19 says...dah big red fire truck.
Jim- Here is a basic recipe for Pesto.
Ingredients
2 cups packed fresh basil leaves
2 cloves garlic
2/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil, divided a
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1/2 cup freshly grated Pecorino or Parmesan cheese
Directions
Combine the basil, garlic, in a food processor and pulse until coarsely chopped. Add 1/2 cup of the oil a little at a time and process until fully incorporated and smooth. Season with salt and pepper.
If using immediately, add all the remaining oil and pulse until smooth. Transfer the pesto to a large serving bowl and mix in the cheese.
This recipe calls for a food processor, but my wife and MIL (who was born in Genoa, home of pesto) chop it by hand. They use a knife called a Mezza Luna (half-moon) to chop the basil and the garlic. Italian restaurants in America add pine nuts so they can charge more. It should be a little stiff and not too runny.
. . . this has been one of the worst year for mosquitoes,, to dry I guess.:confused3:. but the rest have been doing well.:thumbsup:. Lou
Lou, I think you sent them up this way. With our recent rains, there is an abundance of mosquitoes around here.
I think pesto would be best with fresh basil.
Thanks for the recipe, Charlie. I've seen pine nuts in most recipes, but didn't know what they added to the taste. I have a huge bed of Basil in my garden and my wife picks and drys it. For Father's Day, my daughter got me a Krups coffee/spice grinder to use to finely cut up dried basil and other herbs. I see your recipe for pesto uses basil that is fresh and chopped rather than dried. Do you ever use any thyme? Thyme and basil are my two favorite Italian herbs. We started thyme in pots this year and croaked when transplanted. Next year, I'll just throw out some seed like I did the basil and see if I have the same good luck.
I sure prefer fresh basil and cilantro too. However, dried basil leaves become very compact and you can get a whole crop of basil in a small jar after drying. It's a convenient and compact way of storing basil for off-season use when fresh is not available in your garden. With cilantro, you just pick the seeds and put them in a bottle as coriander. Drying the basil is the toughest (slowest) part.