As I promised, I’m sharing my first-year beginner experience growing vegetables and herbs in galvanized steel raised garden beds. Overall, I’m thrilled. I’ve learned so much. I loved the anticipation watching vegetables I planted grow. I will consider this year my starting point. Even if it was the wettest summer in recent history which compromised the growing season, I’m ready for more. I’m already planning to invest in more raised beds next year.
A simple pasta sauce (sometimes with shrimp!) is something I like to whip up for dinner especially when I get a surplus of cherry tomatoes in the heat of summer. Adding in raw shrimp at the end, elevates this dish from simple to sophisticated in no time! This recipe also works well with larger tomatoes cut into chunks. If you have homemade pesto on hand, simply swap it out for the garlic and fresh basil, making this main course even simpler to make.
This is my fourth year making this pesto. What makes this year extra special is the garlic scapes came straight from my raised bed garden! I must thank my brother-in-law Mark who has been growing music garlic and generously sharing his massive haul the past three years. Last fall, I planted cloves from his bulbs to try my luck at growing garlic. It’s been so fun watching them sprout and grow and finally transforming them into my homemade pesto. I have to admit, the pesto came out even better this year. I’m sure I’m biased, but frankly, I don’t care!
In my New England garden, the optimum period to pluck hydrangea blooms to dry indoors is when summer turns to fall and before it frosts. For the best vase drying results, patiently wait until they’ve already started to dry on the plants. From there, the rest of the process is simple. I turn my dining room into a drying station where I’ll collect specimens at the end of the season when I don’t mind cutting the glorious buds from my flower garden.
I look forward to the small window every spring when we wait with bated breath for the world to burst into bloom. Right now, where I live, it’s happening. I love watching the trees transition from buds to fully unfurled leaves. Then one day … just like that … the trees are suddenly lush and the world just seems so much better. It’s during this period that I like to take stock of what’s growing in my yard. While still early, I like to investigate that my faithful perennials have returned while hopeful what I planted the previous year is starting to come up. In this post, I’ll take you on a tour (even before I started sprucing up my beds!) of what’s growing so far to set the stage for this growing season in central New England.
I love pesto shrimp made into a salad or an appetizer and this dish is something in between. It could be eaten on a plate on its own. It’s light and refreshing spooned over some greens and would make an elegant dinner party first course. It’s good with some crusty French bread or even over whole grain toast. More often than not, however; I serve as a dip with tortilla chips, Fritos scoops or endive. It’s perfect for enjoying small bites at a gathering.
When it comes to growing flowers, I wouldn’t say I have a green thumb because not everything I attempt to grow turns out as expected. Instead, I’d say I’m tenacious and patient. Determined to have color in my flower beds throughout the summer, I’m willing to try new plants, move them around and give them a chance if first they don’t succeed. In fact, I always use brown mulch as it helps hide the evidence of moving things around throughout the season.