Sunday, May 31, 2020

New Black Raspberry Beds

A big shout-out to Rouse the Spouse and his helper, Jacob, who built new raised beds and filled them with black raspberry plants. I can't wait for next year's fresh raspberry crop!

Monday, May 25, 2020

Cherry Jam

This season, I managed to make two batches of cherry jam for a total of sixteen 1/2-pint jars. Check out the beautiful red color! And the flavor is as delicious as the color would suggest. I guess the hard work of processing little cherries has been worth it ... although I think I might have sprained my thumb while pitting all that fruit!



Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Monday, May 11, 2020

Nanking Mandarin Cherries

Saturday, we picked approximately 4-1/2 pounds of Nanking cherries.
cherries, along with sugar snap peas, salad turnips, and radishes
The processing of this fruit is labor intensive. I spent 1 hour pitting ~3# to make nearly 4 cups of cherries for eight 1/2-pint jars of jammy preserves. Put the rest through the food mill, then a wire sieve, to get the juice.
Here's a nice document about the Nanking Mandarin Cherry (from Minnasota point of view.)  https://misadocuments.info/nanking_cherries.pdf , with a little summary of interesting points below:

Nanking cherries are best eaten fresh off the shrub.
Nanking cherries ripen shortly after strawberries and are a welcome treat in early summer. Nanking cherries can be processed into pies or jam, but they are too small for most mechanical pitting machines. There are a number of reports of people making good wine out of Nanking cherries, and presumably good fresh juice as well.

Nanking cherries are drought tolerant, and can be grown in a variety of well-drained soils.

Nanking cherries frequently receive little or no care. For reliable fruit production, the canes need to be regularly pruned. Nanking cherries should be pruned before bloom. Dead canes can be removed any time of year. Growers should keep about ten healthy canes per plant to maximize fruit quality.

Nanking cherries have surprisingly few disease or insect problems. Deer appear to avoid Nanking cherries. They acquire few leaf diseases.

Birds love Nanking cherries, and growers should prepare to protect their plants against birds. Birds also spread seeds, and Nanking cherries can become a weed in areas near the patch where birds often perch.




Saturday, May 9, 2020

Ready for Possibility of ... Frost?!?

Who would guess that frost would threaten on May 9??

BEFORE
AFTER




Best Nanking Cherry Crop We've Ever Had!



Spring Gallery of Goodness

Sugar Snap peas
Sugar Snap pea blossoms ... the promise of more to come
loaded with blueberries
healthy potato plants

Saturday, May 2, 2020

Sweet Potato Slips

Today, Betsy surprised me with a share of her sweet potato slips. I promptly slipped them into the ground, 6" deep, 12" apart. Two varieties: Covington and Bayou Belle.