Thursday 28 January 2010

And so it begins

The first onion seed peeping through. This is from one of the self harvested red baron seeds :)

Whoop







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Saturday 23 January 2010

Starting Over Again

This weekend was the first time in about 3 months that we were able to spend any decent length of time in the veg patch. The harsh weather for the past month or so has really taken it's toll on the greenhouse, but we're not going to be able to get that fixed up for a fortnight-ish. In the meantime, we've raked up the leaves, cleared the raised beds, planted out garlic, sorted out the herb bed and started off some onion seed/sets.

Here's the photo dump from today;


Toby keeping a close eye on Daddy

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My poor tattered little greenhouse.

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Abi helping clear leaves.

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View of the back bed, and the ton of soggy leaves everywhere.

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Side bed - this is where we'll be container growing this year.

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A closer view of my tatty greenhouse :(

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Inside is not pretty

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The remnants of the chilli bed.

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Garlic growing from last years cloves :) They must have escaped being harvested...and nommed.

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Abi helping clear leaves from the lavender bush. The blackberry runner we planted seems to be still going too :)

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Digging up the secret potatoes. They'd died off ages ago so we hadn't held out much hope.

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We were pleasantly surprised :)

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The old cabbage bed being cleared for garlic.

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The garlic cloves being dug up from their old bed and moved.

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Slide break.

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The new garlic bed.

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Soggy leaves going into the leaf bin.

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Abi helping :)

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Just keep raking raking raking...

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Toby wondering why I'm not raking

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I explain about the blog

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He likes this

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Planting random onion bits. A bit of a trial as to what grows first...or at all...

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A ladybird house discoverd under the hops. We were going to remove all the dead hopvines, but have left them in situ until we put some ladybird houses up and can relocate them.

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Abi playing 'let's poke Mum with a big stick'

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This is apparently lots of fun

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As is the peppermint.

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The hop vines, we chopped them about 6 inches from the base.

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The random onion trial on the kitchen windowsill. The first of many things started off on there this year

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The oregano plant still surviving...just.

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A tiny sprig of rosemary still going.

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A bud on my chive plant already?

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My sage not looking very healthy, will need some TLC this year

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My very healthy olive plant,really glad this did ok with the snow.

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Bay Tree still about the same, I think this might need a bigger pot to get it going.

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A close up of the secret potatoes

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They went very nicely with some butchers faggots, onion gravy and some peas. Nom!


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So that's the catch up, busy weeks ahead of us now. New raised beds to go in, the greenhouse to fix up again and a whole lot of growing to do :)


Tuesday 5 January 2010

Basic Bread Recipe

This recipe is lucky enough to be featured in a recipe book produced by a good friend of mine in aid of SANDS. You can read more about the book here and buy it from here

This is my base bread recipe which I amend to suit my needs. I bake fresh every 2 days, and this quantity makes 1 x 2lb loaf and 8 large soft bread rolls. There is a flickr slideshow at the bottom of the page which shows each step :)

1kg strong bread flour,
1 sachet quick start yeast,
15g salt,
up to 600ml lukewarm water,
1tbsp veg oil
1 yeast starter (more info on this later)

Mix all dry ingredients then add water gradually until the dough comes together without being too wet. The dryer the dough whilst being cohesive , the easier it is to knead. Knead for 10 mins until dough is elasticy. The kneading is the most important part as this develops the gluten which gives a good loaf it's texture. If you skimp on the kneading then you'll end up with a brick ;)

I've started using the slap and fold kneading technique which works a treat and amuses the kids at the same time. Ten minutes of this type of kneading gives you lovely elastic satiny dough.



Before you leave the dough to rise, pinch off a little bit (about a tbspsworth) and put in a sealed pot in the fridge to keep for a starter next time

Roll dough into a rough ball and place in a lightly oiled large bowl, cover tightly with clingfilm and put a tea towel over - or cover with a cloth and then a binbag, leave in a warm draught free spot for approx an hour and a half (may take longer)till doubled in size.

**If you have the time, knock the dough back and place back into oiled bowl and leave to prove again. This helps the gluten to develop and gives a nice texture to the end crumb. I sometimes do this 2 or 3 times before shaping into loaves. It' s not necessary though and a single proving will work lovely**

Knock air out and shape into loaf and rolls. Cover loaf with a cloth and leave for 45 mins while heating oven to 200. If making soft rolls cover with clingfilm (I reuse the clingfilm from the bowl) and then a cloth. This helps to keep the dough moist. They should double in size again.

Remove cloth and clingfilm and cook at 200 for 15 mins. I cook rolls on the bottom shelf and the loaf on the middle. Remove rolls now and place on cooling rack, turn heat down to 150 and give loaf another 20 minutes. Loaf should sound hollow when knocked on the bottom.

Leave to cool for 30 minutes at least before slicing.