Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Patio Garden Transformation - Before and After

Back in January I took a video of my back patio and talked about cleaning it up and getting it ready for the spring planting. A couple of weeks ago I took another video showing the changes.

Before:



After:




Big difference between the two videos. Lots happening in the garden as tomatoes are now growing and everyday I wake up hoping I will see red poking out from the leaves. So far I've been able to harvest herbs and sugar snap peas.

I've had a lot of ups and downs. I lost my pickling cucumbers to a disease that will stay in the soil in the container for up to two and a half years. I lost my spaghetti squash to powdery mildew that became too invasive. Lost many marigold seedlings after some bug ate the leaves off.

I'm growing everything organically and I'm learning how to nourish and protect my plants through organic means.

My ups, besides the many plants that are doing well, finally sprouted lavender after weeks of soaking the seeds in water, better luck sprouting marigolds, and I learned how to brew vermicompost tea (very exciting)!

I'm learning about when to plant what to have the best harvests and to have veggies year round. Many experiments and growing new things and more than I've ever grown in the past.

Check back on Wednesdays as I update what is going on in my garden and what I'm cooking with my harvests. If you can't wait until then, check out my Instagram feed and see what's happening on a daily basis. 

What's happening in your garden? Do you have a patio space where you could be growing food?



PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a poet, foodie, and urban gardener (zone 7b) using a pen, shovel, and ladle to create a better world.  
You can also find her on Google+

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Monday, April 27, 2015

Gardening Hyper Drive - A to Z Fail


I will definitely have to create my posts for the A to Z Challenge ahead of time next year. My gardening has completely taken up my time so that I haven't had much or any time for the challenge or anything else for that matter.

Here are a few things I've been doing this month.


Sowing seeds and potting up seedlings as I try to keep them from drowning in all the rain we've had lately. Moving all of them back and forth, in and out of the sun and rain.


Digging a trench to help with flooding on the patio although in the end, it didn't help that much. Still trying to figure out how to keep it from flooding.



Fun watching my Sweet Potato slips growing.


Transplanting into their containers.


And so much more gardening that's happened and so much more to go! Trying to get my patio garden beautified by Thursday for a lovely family BBQ.

I'll keep you posted, hopefully more frequently as to how my garden grows!



PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a poet, foodie, and urban gardener (zone 7b) using a pen, shovel, and ladle to create a better world. 
You can also find her on Google+

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Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - G is for Gardening and Grilling

I have dabbled in veggie gardening over the years but I never did more than 4 to 12 plants in a summer. Either I didn't have the space or I didn't have the time or mostly, the thought of doing it wrong kept my projects small. I didn't even start gardening on my own until my 30's and that is when I recognized I had a problem, my anxiety went through the roof.

Lots and lots of seedlings (only half are showing) in my, fast becoming, patio nursery.


Luckily I didn't let it stop me, though it has taken years for me to really explore gardening and see how much I can grow. This year I have probably over done it, I now have over 100 seedlings and I am beginning to wonder if I am going to have enough room for all of them on my patio and in the community garden.

Potatoes, tomatoes, sugar snaps, fava beans, cucumber seedlings

Of course another part of me is so excited by all of the happy seedlings I have (though not all have survived) and that I am now beginning to plant them into their final growing place (containers, raised garden beds, and community garden plot).

I'm looking forward to the future recipes and yummy fresh fruits and veggies.

What's growing in your veggie garden?

Life Lesson: Pushing through the anxiety brings much satisfaction later. Things don't have to be perfect for them to be lovely.


We grilled over a camp fire recently and I was amazed by the deliciously smoky flavor. We grilled squash, bell pepper, hamburgers and hot dogs. If you haven't grilled over camp fire coals I highly recommend it.

Recipe


Potatoes cooked in the campfire coals.

Prep

Peel and slice potatoes and onions. (about one large potato per piece of foil and a few slices of onion)
Place them in a large piece of foil (about 12 to 18 inches long)
add slabs of butter
Add salt and pepper, close up foil around potatoes, add another piece of foil around the whole thing for double protection from tears while in the coals.

I place near the coals but not in them. If the coals are very hot this works perfectly especially if there is a metal fire ring around it which adds to the heat.

Depending on how hot the fire is, it should take about 20 to 30 minutes to cook fully. To check if done... Carefully take one of the foil packs of potatoes out of the coals and open. Check with a fork for tenderness. If not quite done, reseal foil and place back near coals. Enjoy!

What's your favorite campfire recipe?



Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - F is for French Toast

Recently I discovered the BEST, LARGE French bread at Whole Foods. I had to have it! I ate on that bread all week and at the end of the week I decided what better thing to do with the last little bit of the French bread than to make French Toast!

Life Lesson: Don't let any of the good bread go to waste!

As I've said before, I love bread and I love breakfast. This recipe allows me to mix those two things together and I must say, it is quite delicious!

Comfort Food:


Yummy!
Fancy French Toast

Prep: Turn the fire on under the griddle about medium to medium low heat. Rub a little grape seed oil onto the griddle with a paper towel.

Slice thick 2 to 4 pieces of French bread (about 1/2 to one inch thick) and set aside.

In a large bowl (with a big enough bottom for your bread to fit in) add one raw egg out of the shell.
a splash or so of buttermilk (about 1/4 cup)
1/2 teaspoon or so of vanilla
tablespoon or so of sugar
1/2 teaspoon of of cinnamon

Mix well until the egg is all creamy.

Dip one piece of bread on both sides (quickly you don't want the bread to soak up too much of it, you just want it covered) and then place on griddle. Let sit for 2 to 3 minutes, until lightly brown and then turn over. Cook about 2 to 3 minutes on the other side until lightly brown. Do this with all pieces and place on a plate. Add a slice of butter on each piece, sprinkle with powdered sugar and cinnamon and enjoy!

Do you have a special way that you make French Toast?

Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Monday, April 6, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - E is for Eggs

I've always wanted to own my own chickens so that I could have fresh eggs and fertilizer for the garden. So far that hasn't happened for me yet and only very distant relatives have had chickens in the family. Not sure why my great grandparents, that lived on an Orange Ranch, didn't have chickens - they did have gardens and they did eat eggs (and definitely had room for them).

Breakfast is one of my favorite meals to cook. Eggs, biscuits, sausage, potatoes, pancakes and more. My youngest daughter knows how much I love to cook breakfast and whenever she had friends over she would tell them that her mom would get up and cook for all of them. I think it is some of our fondest memories, cooking a big breakfast on Sunday mornings and all of us sitting around eating together.

Life lesson: The first meal of the day really is important. Life isn't always what you expect it will be but it is as good as you make it.

I love eggs cooked many different ways but my most recent favorite is the recipe I am going to share today.

Comfort Food:

Eggs in Bread

I saw this online awhile back and decided to try it for myself. Once I did I now make them quite often. Probably because without the bread to hold the egg in place, it runs too far on the griddle.

Prep:

Turn the fire on under the griddle to medium low to medium and lightly oil the griddle with a paper towel.
Carefully tear a hole in the middle of the bread leaving the crust and a little of the bread. 
Place the bread with a hole in it over the burner part of the griddle and place the cut out piece from the middle on the middle part of the griddle that isn't over the fire.

Carefully break open the egg and pour it into the middle of the bread.

When the whites begin to look white, flip over.



I like to slice cheese and put on my eggs at this time. It is your choice whether you eat your eggs in bread plain or with your favorite topping such as cheese, gravy, hollandaise sauce or another of my favorites, sliced avocado - so good!

When the egg is cooked to your liking (remember uncooked eggs have the possibility of having Salmonella although I like a good and runny yolk myself and have never had a problem.) put it on your plate. Take the bread that you took out from the middle of the bread and put it on top. Enjoy!

Decided on fresh pineapple to go with it this morning.


What is your favorite breakfast?



Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - D is for Dessert

Ah dessert! That wonderfully delightful part that comes after the meal, most of the time. Growing up we almost always had some kind of dessert after dinner, usually cake,  pie, cobbler, ice cream, or pudding. I don't know if it was just a tradition that started way back in my family (great-grandparents and beyond) or if my family just had a major sweet tooth. Of course they probably received that sweet tooth from their family growing up themselves. I know we had plenty of desserts at our family gatherings.

By the way, you will hear me talking about my great-grandparents because I was blessed to know mine on my mother's mother's side and my mother's father's side. I was an adult when both of my great-grandmothers passed away and one of them lived until my own daughters were in high school.

If you are like me and have had trouble in the past remembering which is which - desert or dessert - my daughter once said, "The one you want more of has more s's in the word." I've never forgotten which is which ever since.

Lessons learned: Always be open to learning new things especially from those younger than you. Life is better with dessert in it. Everything in moderation and sometimes the sweet can be something healthy.

When I find myself reaching for something sweet, I ask myself (sometimes) do I want it because of a craving or because I'm feeling depressed and I'm trying to "sweeten" my mood. Sometimes I just don't care what the reason is, I just want the sweet.

As a grown woman I crave sweets frequently but I don't have a dessert after every meal anymore. But when I do... sometimes I try to make it at least a little healthy.

Comfort Food:

This is a healthier but oh so good dessert that I often have when it is warmer outside. 

Yogurt Delight

Ingredients:

1 cup organic Greek yogurt - Or yogurt of your choice
1 tablespoon honey (or more to sweeten to your taste)
1/4 cup or more frozen organic blueberries
16 pieces (approximately) dark chocolate chips
1 tablespoon or so chopped almonds, nuts, or cashews (optional)

I use the honey to sweeten the yogurt by dribbling it in, approximately a tablespoon and stirring until mixed. .
Add the blueberries in frozen because it makes it a little like ice cream. I have tried it with fresh blueberries but I prefer it with frozen.
Sprinkle in the dark chocolate chips and nuts. 
Mix well and enjoy!

Did you grow up in a family that had dessert after most meals? What is your favorite sweet to eat?



Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Friday, April 3, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - C is for Cheese

I love cheese, whether it is good for me or not. I would of course like to believe it is good for me because I often think I could live on good bread, cheese, and wine.  Of course that wouldn't make for a balanced diet and I do love my veggies!

I'm originally from California and they used to have a commercial for the lottery where this guy would stand at the end of an aisle filled with cheese in the grocery store and say, "I could buy all this cheese."

One day when my daughters were in high school and this commercial had just played, my youngest turned to me and said, "That's you mom!" and she was right because if I ever won the lottery I would so buy all that cheese!

I have stopped buying the regular brands of cheese in the store. I now worry about GMO that they are feeding to the cows, their ill treatment, and what they actually do to the cheese (it tastes like plastic to me). I now buy specialty cheeses from Whole Foods or BJ's that are either organic or from countries that don't allow GMO's in their country.

You would be amazed at the difference in the flavors, so rich and creamy.

Lessons learned: If I am going to eat something that I enjoy that much, I'm willing to pay a little more for it and get the good stuff because I deserve it.

Comfort Food:

Grilled Cheese Sandwich with Sauteed Mushrooms 

This isn't the grilled cheese sandwich you grew up with, or at least I doubt it is.
  • Begin warming your cast iron skillet on medium to medium low and pour in about a 1/4 cup of white wine or so (covering the bottom of the skillet). 
  • Slice two or three Criminis (baby portobellos) medium thin (about 1/8 inch thickness or so) and throw those into the skillet. 
  • Add a couple of slices of butter to the skillet and a teaspoon or so of Tarragon and either sprinkle in a little granulated garlic or you can slice up a clove of garlic and toss in. (you can choose to add sliced onion or onion powder)
  • Cook until the wine has evaporated and mushrooms have shrunken a bit and darkened. Set aside on a plate or bowl and wipe out the skillet with a paper towel or clean dishrag and then lightly wipe grape seed oil or olive oil over the pan with a paper towel.. 
  • Start out with good, GOOD, French bread (or homemade bread) slice two pieces medium thin (about a half inch or so thick). Butter one side of one piece and place butter side down into skillet on medium low heat.
  • Slice Havarti cheese about 1/8 to 1/4 inch thick (enough pieces to cover bread) and place on the bread in the pan.
  • Scoop out the mushrooms onto the top of the cheese. 
  • Butter one side of the second piece of bread and place butter side up onto the mushrooms. 
  • Put a lid on for two to three minutes and then flip sandwich over carefully. Lightly brown on the other side (two to three minutes) . Enjoy with a tall glass of raspberry iced tea! Or drink of your choice.

I often have a bowl of tomato soup with my grilled cheese, it makes a nice pairing.

Sorry, I don't have photos for this one.


Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Thursday, April 2, 2015

Life Lessons and Recipes - B is for Buttermilk Biscuits

Biscuits are the topic for the second day of the Blogging A to Z Challenge. Yesterday I had a great time exploring and hopping from blog to blog discovering everything from Adoptions to Apple Fritters, it was a wonderful day. I hope you are enjoying this A to Z journey!

When I think of biscuits the first thing that comes to mind is the time my grandfather came over early one morning and my mother making breakfast for all of us. She made her delicious buttermilk biscuits, eggs and bacon. My mother's biscuits were the bomb that were light, fluffy and buttery.

Now you have to understand, we were not a well off family and everything was always doled out equally between my siblings and I. We knew exactly how many biscuits there were and how many each of us would be able to have. They were so yummy that we each wanted to make sure that we received our share.

When I reached to get my second and final biscuit, the basket was empty. Empty. I looked at grandpa, "Grandpa how many biscuits did you eat?"

He looked at me blankly and said, "I have know idea, I didn't know there was a limit." He smiled uncomfortably and later, as an adult, he told me that he felt bad that he had eaten my biscuit.

From that moment on, whenever we had biscuits at grandma and grandpa's house, grandpa would turn to me and jokingly ask if I had counted the biscuits and how many biscuits he was allowed to have. It became a family joke which I actually didn't mind, most of the time.

Lessons Learned: Make sure you grab both your biscuits first thing, Hah! Make sure everyone knows the rules, especially the unspoken ones that may only be known in your family. Make sure everyone gets their fair share whenever possible. Remember when something uncomfortable happens, there is a good chance you will laugh about it later.

Comfort food:

As much as we loved mom's biscuits it was often what we put on them that we loved even more. My mother would make chocolate and biscuits, in fact, we often had our choice between that or Butter horns, which is something else in our family that isn't like traditional butter horns.

Unfortunately my mother never taught me how to make her buttermilk biscuits, anytime I asked, she would say, "You've seen me make them a million times, just do it the way I do." That pretty much sums up how my mother taught me to cook, well not completely but it seems like it. She almost never used measuring utensils and that made it even harder.

Photo by Elizabeth Famellos

Chocolate and Biscuits


Use your favorite biscuit recipe, I used the recipe Southern Buttermilk Biscuits this time. It wasn't as good as my mother's but it was good.

After you put them in the oven begin the chocolate syrup.

In a small to medium sauce pan:

1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cocoa
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon flour (optional)

Mix really well.

Turn on burner to medium and add 1/2 cup milk (yes only a half cup) and stir until all is mixed together.

Stir frequently (or constantly) until it comes to a boil. Stir in 1/2 teaspoon Vanilla, boil for one minute more and then turn it off or to very low. Stir occasionally until you are ready to serve..

Open up your biscuits, add a slice of butter, and spoon hot chocolate syrup over them and enjoy! Pour a tall glass of milk and you have a decadent and delicious breakfast.

What special breakfast did your mom make when you were growing up?



Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Wednesday, April 1, 2015

A is for Ancestry, Artichokes and Acorn Squash

I come from a large extended family that would gather for the most wonderful potlucks you can possibly imagine. Always lots of homemade food, recipes mostly originating from the Oklahoma and Missouri areas (though we all lived in or around the San Joaquin Valley in California at that time).

The food was the center of our gatherings (and the best part). All of it delicious to this (then) growing child with a hollow leg, as my family used to say, as I would regularly go back for thirds and I was as thin as a rail (I grew faster than I could eat). Green salads, fruit salads, creamy mashed potatoes, stuffing, biscuits, rolls, hams, turkeys, roasts, vegetable medleys, and oh the desserts! All would vary depending on the time of the year but mostly old fashioned, wholesome, fresh foods that were prepared just right with the most important ingredient, love.

I am a hodgepodge that my mother often called a Heinz 57, my ancestors came from all over the place but mostly all over Europe with about 50 percent German on my father's side.

We, my mother, father, and siblings, moved to Heidelberg, Germany when I was 8-years-old for four years and my palette expanded exponentially. I tasted rich and fatty flavors of the German food that filled my soul as well as my tummy.

In junior high we moved back to the states to Fresno, Ca. where I enjoyed the true authentic flavors of Mexican, Asian, and more that are so well known in that area. It was the ethnic foods that fed my soul and tummy as the American foods just didn't seem to have the full flavors as they did (although I always loved my families cooking).

As a young woman I married a man that was born and raised in Greece with a mother that was a genius in the kitchen and I was blessed to learn so much from her during that period in my life.

All of this I mention to show where my love of food came from and that I have been introduced, and enjoy, a wide variety of foods both in the kitchen and in restaurants.

I once was asked why I use so many spices in my food, which this older Greek woman didn't think was typical of a born and bread North American. I never really thought about it before that moment but I finally told her it was probably due to living in Germany and being introduced to other ethnic foods and learning how to cook them because I enjoyed them so much. She certainly enjoyed how much I seasoned my food.

My first lesson in the kitchen, always take at least one bite because you never know how tasty it may be unless you try it. That is a lesson that carries over into life - taking risks - try something new, you just might love it!

Comfort foods:


Today you get two recipes for the price of one because they are both simple and easy, just the way I like it! Two vegetables that I never would have thought to try if it wasn't for other people - artichokes and acorn squash. Now you may not think of these two things as typical comfort foods but I love them so much that they bring me much comfort when I eat them.

Roasting Artichokes - my favorite way to eat them, dipping them in garlic butter with hearty French bread on the side and a glass of wine.

*By the way, you will discover that I often have a whole ritual of how I eat my food, pairing them with complimentary sides and very specific ways that I eat each food. One of my many idiosyncrasies.



Prep: Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

Rinse the artichokes, cut off the stems, peel off a few of the smaller leaves and cut them in half.

I normally cook the large artichokes but the only ones available at the store were the baby artichokes. I decided to follow the roasting directions from the book, The Roasted Vegetable by Andrea Chesman. Which by the way is an awesome book!





I did make one change, I coated them with olive oil after steaming them for 15 mins. and before placing them on the baking sheet. They were perfectly done at the end of the 20 minutes in the oven.

While they are in the oven, melt a cube or so of butter in a small sauce pan and add one clove of fresh chopped garlic. Cook on low for only a few minutes, you don't want to burn the butter or over cook the garlic, pour into a small bowl when ready to serve with the artichokes. Enjoy with a hearty piece of French bread and your favorite wine.

Still working on taking better food photos.


Steamed Acorn squash with butter and salt, simple but good. Steaming Acorn squash cooks rather quickly, I think it is why I like cooking it this way. 


Prep: Cut Acorn squash in half and scoop out the seeds and loose flesh with a spoon. If the two halves will fit in your large steamer you don't have to cut them further but you can cut them into quarters if necessary.

Place them in your steamer with the fleshy inside facing down and turn your burner to medium (you can warm up the steamer while you are cutting your squash).

Check your squash after 15-20 minutes of steaming with a fork and every few minutes after that until it easily pushes into the flesh. You don't want to over cook because then it is a watery mushy bland mess.

When finished, put on your plate with a slab of butter and salt to taste. Simple but oh so good!

No I don't put brown sugar on mine, I love it with just the salt and butter. I will often eat this alone and it fills me up. You can eat this with a side of pasta with grated cheese on top if you are needing a little more.

What unusual vegetable do you love as a comfort food?


Check out the other bloggers participating in the Blogging A to Z Challenge.




PageLines- picture20193.jpgMorgan Dragonwillow is a writing rebel, foodie, urban gardener, recovering perfectionist, poet & author that (mostly) doesn't let her fears get in the way of her passion for writing and creating. She is team leader at @StoryDam, creatrix of  #OctPoWriMo You can find her writing and dancing into a wild and juicy life at Playing with Words. She lives in Marietta, Ga. with her loving and patient partner, their dog that thinks she's a princess, and the cat that reminds her that she isn't.
You can also find her on Google+

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Monday, March 23, 2015

A to Z Challenge Theme Reveal


There is a great April blog challenge that has been going around since 2010. I have participated four years in a row on my personal blog but this will be the first year on A Poet's Kitchen.

At first I thought I would create recipes from A to Z and then as I geared up for spring and began gardening, I thought it would be gardening from A to Z. But, that just didn't quite feel right. Something was niggling at me and it finally hit me what I really wanted to blog about for the challenge.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Happy Red Worms Make Me a Happy Woman

My red worms the day they arrived.
A couple of weeks ago I started my red worm compost bin. Within twenty-four hours I was a little worried that maybe I had made a mistake in getting them because I wasn't sure if they were going to live and/or if I was doing something wrong that was making the whole thing smell.

I read that red worms can put off a smell when they are stressed and of course it has to be stressful traveling through the mail and getting dumped into a new bin.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Seed Swap and the GardenChat group

I attended #GardenChat for the first time on Monday night. Unfortunately I only caught the last few minutes but it was enough for me to know that I want to attend again next week. They seem to be a lovely group of gardeners from various backgrounds that are helpful and generous with their gardening advise.

One of the participants that I met, Amy Hill @MHenryMitchell, was inspired by the chat about tomatoes and has decided to do a Seed Swap. This is something new for me but if you've been following along you know I've been trying to find gardeners that would like to exchange seeds, not because I'm lacking in seed (although there is still a lot that I want), because I went a little overboard on buying seeds from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds and want to share them with others.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Gardening Anxiety - It is Not the End of the World


I am breathing. Mistakes happen, it isn't a big deal, I can fix it or change it or whatever. Then why does it affect me the way it does?

As I mentioned in Red Worms, Seedlings, Oh My, I planted seeds into one gallon water jugs as little greenhouses. One of the things you are suppose to do is put them outside after you plant them. I didn't do it. I couldn't. I kept telling myself that I was going to put them outside but it was so cold out there. I know, they say it is okay, it will make them stronger and then when it gets warmer they will grow. I kept telling myself I was going to do it later.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Beauty and the Bugs - Keeping Your Veggie Garden Happy


Photo by Elizabeth Famellos
I didn't have much interest in growing flowers in my veggie garden. I only wanted veggies because I could and would enjoy eating them. Flowers I thought just took up space that could be better used for my urban gardening efforts for growing tomatoes, basil, sugar snaps, etc.

I then discovered edible flowers. I wasn't sure about eating an edible flower, that just sounds weird. Supposedly they can be quite good. Yes of course I'm going to have to try some.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Red Worms, Seedlings, Oh My!

You never have enough good quality healthy soil when urban gardening. To make matters worse, I live in Georgia and if you know anything about Georgia it is almost all red clay. I had to do something or I was going to be throwing away money every year on soil and soil amendments for my veggie garden. I decided to start a red worm composting bin but it seemed I could only get them through the mail.

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Growing Seedlings and Fear of Gardening

I used to be afraid of gardening, of putting plants in the wrong spot, of just not being able to do it right. Yes I know there are wrong ways of gardening that will give you low yields of fruits and vegetables but it isn't the end of the world, at least it shouldn't be.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Gardening in the Kitchen

I began planting seeds in my kitchen this past week to begin my intensive journey of urban gardening. The whole counter was taken up by seed packets, large clear containers (as my mini greenhouses), and soil just about everywhere because we all know I can't do anything in a tidy fashion. I have heard it is the creative personality type that things tend to explode all over the place.

Using What Is On Hand


I often have to use what I already have for my projects and this time was no different. I had a big bag of unopened potting soil from last year but it wasn't fine enough for my itty bitty baby seedlings to sprout through.

What could I do, what could I do? 


Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Generations of Cooking



When your mother calls you from work and tells you, at 13-years-old, that you need to make spaghetti for the first time in your life, and that you've seen her make it so you should know how to make it, panic sets in. That was me so many years ago, I didn't have a clue. She said throw some spices in (which ones?) you know, a little of this and a little of that. How much is a little? I'm sure that when she got home she had to doctor the sauce to make it palatable.


Saturday, January 24, 2015

To Blog or Not to Blog

Soon after I started this blog I had a session with a blogging coach for my main blog, morgandragonwillow.com, which I mostly blog about writing inspiration, tips and prompts. She told me that I shouldn't have more than one blog and I should just talk about cooking as therapy for writers on my main blog. Well it hasn't happened. I don't think that is what I really wanted to talk about in regards to food and my kitchen.


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