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GIYG: grazing in your garden, end of may edition

ok, in another thread someone suggested something like this. i think it's a great idea -- there are a lot of edible gardeners (mmmmm... gardeners...) out there. most of them are more experienced and more successful than i am.

i'd like to hear from you what you're grazing in your garden! (lisa! tony! floridays! dghays! castorp! pnbrown! saintpfla! treefrog! felix! sumala!)

here goes... lately i've been grazing:

left to right, top to bottom.

okra: nicki gave me a plant at susan's trade. i usually wait until at least july, when nothing else grows, to add okra. i love okra.

blueberries: sharpblue blueberries are ripening. i've eaten a bunch of emeralds, too. in my garden, so far, emerald has been the best blueberry. this is the second year they've been in the ground -- i'm expecting lots more berries for next year. i won't bother with rabbit eyes any longer -- southern highbush are the best for central florida.

herbs: basil, thyme, mint, thyme, parsley, savory. this time of year, mostly shade, in pots, and lots of water.



sea foam chard. the only chard i consider growing. way more heat tolerant than any other; and slugs really can't deal with the savoy-leaf.

pomegranate! -- castorp gave me a seedling sometime last year. i don't think this one's edible, but i have a grenada cultivar that should bear sometime next year.

eggplant little fingers from tgs. second year in the ground (buried pot, actually), still producing heavily.

'jet setter' tomato. blasted thing's only set one fruit. not much of a setter...



michael's crazy squash. i found this last year in my garden, in august. just popped up. no idea where it's from. produced ridiculous (20+ from one plant) winter squashes. totally sneers at diseases. apparently invincible. totally ill behaved. i love it.

malabar spinach i have a bunch of these seedlings. i plan to grow them up ropes. got the seeds from treefrog.

sorrel. it's been going nonstop all winter, and the hot weather doesn't bother it in the least.

goose creek tomato. really vigorous tomato. tasty, too. got a seedling from castorp. i'm also growing tiffany (tgs), sungold (favorite on this forum), matt's wild (friends don't let friends...), pomegranate. several plants of some of those varietals.

tabasco pepper. i've grown this one plant for years in a pot. i dry the peppers. incredibly hot. it's starting to fail this year -- i'll probably get a new one.

mississippi silver cowpea. just starting to yield. grows in sand, no water needed. a handful of plants will provide you with all the delish cowpeas you care to eat... and i eat them with wild abandon in august. some bacon, a pot of cowpeas, and i am in SOUTHERN HEAVEN.

collards. i've been pickin' at these all winter. still going strong. not at all bitter. my wife makes delish green "pies" from these -- a calzone dough, wrapped around a mix of these greens, feta, and olive oil.

goose creek tomato what a vigorous, wonderful, pest-free tomato bush!

lettuce crop appollo arugula and 'summer glory' lettuces from parks. the shade cloth helps a lot. the arugula deals just fine with the heat. this is the first time i've tried salad crops this late. growing in straight-up mushroom compost. full sun plus shade cloth and lots of water. so far, so good.

basils i grow six or seven kinds of basil -- genoa, greek columnar (thanks, tony_k!), african, thai, purpule...

another crazy squash plant

lagos spinach, an edible amaranth from echo. does very well in the heat and humidity. nutty.



sweet potatoes. these are volunteers from last year. a mix of white and orange that i originally got from castorp. my plan is to let the crazy squash and sweet potatoes fight it out for street cred in the sunniest, driest part of the garden.

tromoncino squash. just getting started in my garden, but castorp had a bounty of them in his garden already this year. he complains about the taste, but the ones i stole were incredibly tasty -- only squash i've ever eaten that tastes good raw. dense, sweet, crisp. a single squash has to weight in the 2-3 pound range. great cooked, too.

italian peppers. another plant from castorp. may and june are the best months for peppers in my experience. come june, i'll have so many i can't eat them all. i have eight or nine peppers in my garden.

cassava. looks just like pot, no? felix gave me cuttings. i got six plants from the one branch he gave me, and i've added some variegated ones i found on sale as a foliage plant. first time i've grown them in my garden. i love cassava.

that's it for the pictures... in my garden, i'm also harvesting tons of okinawan spinach and i just planted malanga tubers.

so, guys, i want to know: what are you grazing on in YOUR garden???

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