Posts in Herbs
24 Carrot Gold
Carrots Hot Off the Grill

Carrots Hot Off the Grill

I am more of a “recipe seeker” than a recipe developer, maybe that will be change in the future. On the other hand, Tieghan Gerard of Half Baked Harvest is a natural recipe genius with her flavor and ingredient artistry and food styling bordering on culinary masterpieces. A Colorado twenty-something with already two cookbooks under her belt, and 1.9 million Instagram followers and counting, she has the ability to create a new mouth-watering recipe everyday. She is simply amazing and fresh in the culinary world. Check her out!

I seek out certain recipes for my culinary repertoire, hunting them down from cookbooks, friends, the internet, magazines, and saved recipe files. You know the ones, like Alice Waters’ Mulberry Ice Cream, Martha Stewart’s Lemon Bars, Patricia Wells Sorrel Soup, Ina Garten’s Spinach Gratin, Dorie Greenspan’s Gougères, and Sheila Lukin’s (Silver Palate days), Corn and Lobster Chowder, see below.

In the Bon Appétit, June/July 2020 magazine issue there is a terrific recipe I want to share with you, Grilled Carrots with Avocado and Mint. This is a “24 carrot gold” recipe. I had never grilled carrots before, roast them in the oven with a few other root vegetables, olive oil and a little salt and pepper. Yes and yum!

Grilling the carrots in this recipe caramelizes them, and the cumin-forward dressing is a perfect dressing companion. This is such a simple and well-rounded recipe. It has big flavor, acid, heat, spice and texture. The combination of avocado, toasted cumin, fresh ginger, mint, and serrano chile are divine!

In San Diego, California, we are lucky that we can grow carrots all year long, and now there are so many heirloom and rainbow colors to grow besides the beautiful orange through seed companies and buy at our farmer markets.

Bon Appétit, June/July 2020 Issue

Bon Appétit, June/July 2020 Issue

 

Bonus Recipe from My Recipe Archive

Shelia Lukin was at one time a Food Contributor for Parade Magazine, dates unknown. This chowder is special and elegant enough for a Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve Dinner, or a very special occasion. Enjoy!

Shelia Lukin’s Elegant Corn and Lobster Chowder

Shelia Lukin’s Elegant Corn and Lobster Chowder

I enjoy hearing from you all, your kind words, suggestions, and comments. They all come to me, and I try to respond back. If you want to comment on my actual blog you will have to click on the tab, “click on original post” at the bottom of this blog post, which will direct you back to my original post location on my blog and website. Either way I see your comments!

Merci Mille Fois!





Tomato Touché
San Marzano Tomatoes

San Marzano Tomatoes

Last February a dear friend gave me San Marzano tomato seeds from Italian Franchi Seeds to grow. Fast forward to August, and it was time to harvest. San Marzano tomatoes make a beautiful sauce, but I wanted to dehydrate them, a first for me. I have a setting on my oven, and used that method over night.

 
Dehydrated San Marzano Tomatoes

Dehydrated San Marzano Tomatoes

Beautiful crimson color matched with a flavorful tomato intensity, I wished I had grown more of these tomatoes. Remembering a quick recipe from Alice Waters, The Art of Simple Food II, I made her Crostini with Dried Roma Tomatoes, Anchovies, and Capers. This recipe is made with simple but ingredients you most likely have in your pantry, and with the star addition of dried Roma Tomatoes.

 
Anchovies, Capers, Olive Oil and Dried Roma Tomatoes

Anchovies, Capers, Olive Oil and Dried Roma Tomatoes

 
Dried Roma Tomatoes, Anchovies, and Caper Mixture Ready for Crusty Bread

Dried Roma Tomatoes, Anchovies, and Caper Mixture Ready for Crusty Bread

 
Lovingly Adapted from Alice Waters, The Art of Simple Food II

Lovingly Adapted from Alice Waters, The Art of Simple Food II

Waters likes to add fresh chopped parsley or marjoram to each crostini for a touch of green, punch, and texture.

Please share if you dehydrate tomatoes or other foods you grow. Please share if you have a great Roma tomato recipe.

Authentic Italian Pesto
Italian Pesto Basil, Renee’s Garden Seeds

Italian Pesto Basil, Renee’s Garden Seeds

This year I grew basil from seed for the first time, and had resounding success. I used great seeds from Renee’s Garden. She has many types of basil but I chose her Italian Pesto Basil seeds specifically for making my own pesto. This basil was very easy to grow, in two rows in my raised bed. The green color alone is fabulous, and as you pick the leaves or pinch the flowers the fresh basil smell is intoxicating.

 
A Partial Glimpse of Beautiful Cinque Terre

A Partial Glimpse of Beautiful Cinque Terre

My incentive for growing basil, and making my own pesto from the garden was Wine Vault & Bistro’s Italian Culinary and Wine Tour, my husband and I, and friends took two years ago. The tasty tour focused mainly around Florence and Tuscany, and paused in Cinque Terre. Cinque Terre is five separate coastal villages perched precariously high above the Mediterranean within Liguria in northwest Italy. These villages because of inaccessibility, were virtually unknown to the world until shortly after World War II. They are all now part of the Cinque Terre National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

In the fifth and furthermost village of Monterosso, our tour had a planned amazing lobster and seafood lunch along with other local delicacies at the sweet Hotel Pasquale. An extra bonus was an optional pesto making class beforehand from the restaurant’s own Nonna. Taking notes as quickly as I could, I share with you her authentic Pesto Recipe. This is the recipe I am using this summer from my garden, and share with you now.

 
Informal Pesto Making Class in Monterosso

Informal Pesto Making Class in Monterosso

 

Italian Basil Pesto (For Two People)

80 small Genoa basil leaves, or fresh basil leaves of your choice. One clove garlic.

One tablespoon pine nuts per person, not roasted but raw.

The best pine nuts are from Pisa, Italy. One heaping tablespoon Parmesan cheese per person.

For more people use 4 tablespoons pine nuts,

3 garlic cloves, but use same amount of Parmesan cheese and garlic proportionally.

Add into ingredients 1/2 cup good olive oil for two people, more olive oil, if making for more people.

With a mortar and pestle crush your basil leaves until they become a paste. Add other ingredients.

Add your olive oil to mixture last. Pesto should be a cream-like consistency.

Don’t normally need salt, because the cheese has salt. Use over warm linguini.

 
Becoming Authentic Italian Basil Pesto

Becoming Authentic Italian Basil Pesto

 

My recipe notes. You can use a food processor as an alternative to a mortar & pestle for your pesto, but know the Italians still prefer a mortar & pestle.

This pesto is made up of a few simple ingredients, so try and find the best of all of these ingredients. I use this fresh pesto over my pasta yes, but also for my

homemade pizza, and tomato tartines. Enjoy, and maybe it will take you to Italy someday, or take you back to Italy once again.


Lavender Love
St. Francis Amongst the Provence Lavender

St. Francis Amongst the Provence Lavender

In a quiet spot in my garden accompanied by St. Francis, patron saint of animals and the environment, I have two rows of Provence lavender growing. For my lavender, it is usually the end of June, beginning of July, when the lavender spikes begin to flower and it is time to harvest for drying. I don’t harvest all the lavender, so as to save some of the lavender for the bees, butterflies, and pollination.

Lavender spikes are ready to harvest when the bottom third of the spike starts to bloom. Make sure lavender spikes are totally dry and not wet from morning dew. Gather your lavender spikes in bundles, tie together with twine, and hang upside down on a wire hanger. I use a simple paperclip to secure my lavender bunch to the hanger. For a small amount of lavender bundles, hang in a dark, dry place with air circulation, like a guest bedroom closet. Place a towel or cloth under your lavender bunches to catch any lavender that drops. Drying in a dark space or closet will preserve the color of the lavender flowers, which will dry in 8 to 10 days. Rub your dried flower heads together over a sieve to separate anything other than your prized lavender buds. Store in an airtight glass jar, either tinted or in a dark pantry. Dried lavender will keep their flavor for culinary use, for many years, but I try and harvest enough lavender buds to last me until next year.

Lavender plants need to be cut back to beautiful mound shapes each year once harvest and their bloom time is over. Cut back your lavender plants by about one half in size and just above their woody stems. This will rejuvenate your lavender plants for the following year.

Hanging Provence Lavender Ready For Drying

Hanging Provence Lavender Ready For Drying

Provence lavender is one of the preferred culinary lavenders due to its very low camphor level, and pleasing lavender flavor. So versatile, it can be used in sweet or savory recipes. Think Lavender Sugar, Honey Lavender Ice Cream, Lavender Lemonade, Raspberry Scones with Lavender Glaze, Herbs de Provence, Lavender Balsamic Vinegar, Grilled Lamb with Lavender, and more!

Harvested Dried Lavender

Harvested Dried Lavender

Provence lavender is also a very good landscape lavender known for it’s beauty and fragrance. Planted in mass, it could be a stunning focal point in your garden. Drip irrigation works best, and water in moderation.

With all of these attributes, why not add Provence lavender to your garden.

Classic Basil Pesto

Classic Basil Pesto With an abundance of ripe heirloom tomatoes and Italian basil this month, the two flavors are naturals to be enjoyed together. Doesn't this pesto look like green gold? I started my basil from planted rows of basil seed tape. This was a new method, which looking back worked out well. It took a while for the seedlings to rev up, but with our recent heat, all the basil took off.

I had an abundance of vine-ripened Sun Gold and Sweet 100 cherry tomatoes from the garden. The vibrant color alone is so beautiful.  These tomatoes are  ripe, sweet and ready to eat. I halved the cherry tomatoes, and added a little coarse sea salt and pepper. I then set the tomatoes aside, until the pasta was cooked.

I made the Classic Basil Pesto recipe out of the new The Sunset Edible Garden Cookbook: Fresh, Healthy Cooking from the GardenSunset mentions that they originally published this recipe in 1959, and back them suggested serving it over sliced fresh mozzarella slices. When I made this recipe, I doubled it. I would not suggest doubling the garlic amount, when doubling the recipe.

I have really enjoyed this new edible cookbook, and would highly recommend it. It is a great natural step for the gardener, and how to best use one's harvest. I like the recipes, the format, and the photos. There are many more tempting pesto recipes to try, too. Parsley-Mint Pistachio Pesto, Swiss Chard Pesto Pasta, Arugula Pesto Farfalle anyone?

Please share  your favorite pesto recipe from the garden.

 

Herb Garden a la Wine Barrels

Herb Garden a la Wine Barrels This spring I created a small herb garden in a quiet, sunny, protected corner next to my barn using vintage wine barrels. I borrowed this concept, modifying it slightly, from Rosalind Creasy's, Edible Landscaping book. This is a terrific book for incorporating more edibles in your landscaping. Rosalind has a whole chapter on "Designing With Herbs."

An "herb garden a la wine barrels," was multi-dimensional for me. My husband, John, and I make wine, and have access to used wine barrels. We have a functional barn, with a trio of wine barrels already planted with blueberry bushes and strawberries on the right side, why not do something on the left with wine barrels, such as herbs. This particular spot is also close to my kitchen, a must for any herb garden.

I used a trio of half barrels from standard wine barrels, cut in half. You can find these types of barrels for sale at home improvement stores such as Home Depot and Dixieline, nurseries, and garden centers. For my second top row, I used a smaller 15 gallon wine barrel, cut in half and sanded along the edges. All wine barrels need to have spaced holes drilled for adequate drainage. I also placed my bottom wine barrels on top of carefully placed river rocks to save the barrels from rotting in the soil, and allowing further drainage.

Since the barrels are big, it is best to use a sterile filler or upside down one gallon size plastic plant containers. It will save you on filling the entire barrel with soil, mulch, etc. I simply placed my second row, and smaller wine barrels securely on the sides of the base half-barrels, using their weight to stabilize them.

Fill your barrels with clean potting soil, almost to the rim of each barrel. You can add an irrigation system if you like. I chose not to. Select your favorite herbs, and plant. I planted chives, winter savory, curly parsley, Italian parsley, tarragon, sorrel, Italian oregano, sage, cinnamon basil, and Italian basil. Choose herbs that you use frequently in your cooking, and a mixture of annual and perennial herbs. Choose some herbs that have a trailing habit, so as they grow and establish themselves, they will spill over the barrels. As time goes on, you can always switch out herbs for new ones when needed.

Add a layer of mulch on top of your soil, and around your herbs.  Newly planted herbs like to be kept moist initially, and water moderately once established.

Please share if you grow herbs to cook with. Please share how your herb garden is set up and designed.

Pasta with Cherry Tomatoes and Arugula

It seems like the simplest recipes are the best, especially when it comes to tantalizing summer flavors. I recently found in my "recipe archives" a recipe I had saved from The New York Times, July 2008, by Martha Rose Shulman, Recipes for Health, Pasta with Cherry Tomatoes and Arugula. This recipe is easy, simply delicious, and healthy for you.

If you have an abundance of cherry tomatoes in your garden and fresh basil, you must try this recipe. The secret to this recipe, is combining all of these fresh ingredients-- arugula, cherry tomatoes, basil, garlic, sea salt,and olive oil in a bowl, and let them meld and infuse for 15 minutes. Make your pasta, and then toss with your tomato-arugula mixture. Add your cheese. Heaven!

Cherry tomatoes grow well in my kitchen garden, and often times as volunteers out of the compost. One of my favorites is Sun Gold Cherry Tomato, so sweet, it is like candy.

Please share your favorite cherry tomatoes you like to grow. Please comment on how you like to use your fresh tomatoes in your summer cooking.

Hundreds of Herbs

Pearson's Gardens I want to share with you some of the exceptional places that I come across from time to time. These places are gems and not to be missed if you are in the area, or they could even be a destination. Most have a “garden thread” to them. “Places To Know” can be retail, restaurants, nurseries, and other. Whatever the place, expect the unusual.

Can't find Chocolate Mint, Dark Opal Basil, or Cat Mint at your local nursery. You can find them all at Pearson's Gardens, along with about 800 other herbs. Pearson's Gardens is a specialty nursery who grow potted herbs, potted heirloom vegetables, scented geraniums, unusual edibles, and ethnobotanical herbs. (Ethnobotanical, is an adjective describing the scientific study of traditional knowledge and customs of a people relating to their use of plants for medical, religious, and other uses.)

Tucked away in the hills of Vista, this nursery is a treat to visit. All of Pearson's Gardens plants are naturally grown in rich organic soil, and plain ol' Southern California sun. No chemicals or pesticides are used here. If you are not in the vicinity their herbs may be purchased online, too.

Whether you are new to incorporating herbs into your life, or a veteran in gardening and cooking with them, Pearson's Gardens will still surprise you at their vast selection and "herb niche" they have created. Thank you, Cindy and Mark, always kind and gracious when visiting them on site, were happy to respond to my e-mail interview questions about their business below. Pearson's Gardens, 1150 Beverly Drive, Vista, CA 92084. (tel) (760) 726-0717, Monday through Friday, 9am - 4pm.

1) How did you and Mark get started in the herb nursery business? Was it a hobby that blossomed? Your intention all along to grow herbs? Why herbs in particular?

We began growing herbs out of personal interest and as a sideline to our indoor & exotic plant business. Personally, I didn't think it would ever amount to much because herbs had such low regard in the gardening community. However, with better cultivation techniques herbs broke into the mainstream of both culinary and garden circles. As public demand grew, our herb selection grew from about 50 common varieties to over 800!

Why herbs? Both Mark and I are lifelong health nuts. We have always sought out natural, healthy, homegrown foodstuffs. Herbs were a pursuit waiting to happen....

2) With the popularity today of growing your own edibles, has this trend affected your business in any way?

The recent explosion of interest in growing edibles has encouraged us to expand our offerings to include a significant selection of gourmet vegetables, heirloom tomatoes, and more truly unusual edibles from around the world.

3) Is there anything that you would like to say about herbs, (growing, cooking, in the garden), that people might not know about? You can be general or specific.

In the realm of herbs exists the story of history itself. Herbs have been carried in ships by early explorers, by wind and birds, and in pockets of immigrants seeking a new homeland. In their travels they bring part of the culture from the place the journey began.

4) I think I heard you speak of culinary chefs seeking you out for certain harder to find herbs. Please name some of them, and what they might be used for.

Yerba Santa/Hoja Santa Piper sanctum is used in Mexican and Central American cuisine as a flavor infusing wrap, as well as to flavor sauces and entrees.

Mentuccia/ Nepitella Calamintha nepeta, native to Tuscany, might be thought of as a minty oregano flavor that is paired inseparably with mushrooms.

5) Who are your customers, local and online? Do you have specialty clients for certain herbs?

Since we grow an extensive selection of international culinary and ethnobotanical herbs, people from very continent walk through out gate!

6) You sell over 70 lavender varieties. Which is your favorite and why?

It's hard to narrow it down to just one. We favor Sweet Lavender for its year-round color. For fragrance and culinary use, it's a tie between Provence and Grosso.

7) If someone was new to growing herbs, and wanted to start using culinary herbs, what are your top ten basic recommendations?

The short answer is - the ones you use!

1. Basil 2. Parsley 3. Sage, Berggarten or Sage of Bath 4. Chives 5. Mint, Kentucky Colonel 6. Oregano, Greek 7. Rosemary 8. Tarragon, French 9. Dill 10. Cilantro

You are now growing heirloom vegetables and tomatoes besides herbs. Is this one of your new directions? Are there other directions you are going?

We are definitely continuing to expand our offerings of vegetables, tomatoes, as well as international and exotic edibles.

9) Are there any trends with selling herbs that you have noticed?

We are seeing more men, as well as young adults with a new found interest in herbs and edible gardening

10) Is there anything you would like to add, or mention? There is an exciting trend of edible landscaping and co-mingling herbs and vegetables within ornamental gardens. In doing so, gardeners should always remember to use food-safe products and practices.

Rows and Rows of Healthy Herbs

Please comment if you use herbs in your life now. Please share which herbs are your favorites.