Harvest Festival

Harvest Festival

Over the weekend Skycarrots hosted a harvest festival!

A small group of us got together and brought masses of food and drinks that we’d grown, foraged, brewed and baked. All of the salad and vegetables were from Sarah’s allotment, with the addition of my cherry tomatoes. The big square pie is pumpkin and feta, and the quiche at the bottom right is tomato and ground elder. The only cheat was the bacon quiche which Paul baked. He may have made the quiche himself, but he foraged for all the ingredients at the supermarket. šŸ˜‰

If you click on the photo it’ll take you through to Flickr, where you can see some notes about each item.

There were also drinks a-plenty. Mark and Kath had made wine, which they’d nicknamed “wynamite” because of its strength! There was also Sarah’s beech leaf noyau, some cherry-ish brandy, and the remains of our elderflower cordial – now rather fizzy, and probably pretty alcoholic by itself.

Half way through the evening we went on an impromptu foraging trip to a nearby tree, and we all ate raw almonds for the first time. Almonds are related to peaches, so you get a fuzzy fruit with a stone inside it that looks like a peach stone. Crack it open, and inside is an almond! Very exciting.

Our next food mission is to go out sloe-picking, so we can start getting some sloe gin ready for bottling at Christmas. We first made sloe gin two years ago, which was so well-received that people gave us back the bottles asking for a refill! Unfortunately there were virtually no sloes growing locally last year, so we had to disappoint everyone. Thankfully this year there looks to be a bumper crop, so we should be able to make enough for everyone.

Grow your own!

Toy Food

Contrary to the label on the box, this is in fact Real Food, from the MERL vegetable patch!

The Museum of English Rural Life has a huge garden, about an acre, and there are currently two vegetable plots. One is planted in a wartime style, and the other is modern. Both of them are yielding lots and lots of vegetables, thanks to the hard work of the staff and volunteers.

At the moment there’s also a Grow Your Own! exhibition, which runs until September 1st.Ā The exhibition explores how gardening and vegetableĀ growing have become embedded in English culture.

For the children (and young at heart!) there’s a Gnome Trail to follow. There are seventeen garden gnomes dotted around the Museum and in the garden, and some of them are pretty well hidden.

Something I hadn’t anticipated when I started working at the Museum was the necessity of learning the phrase “Garden Gnome” in other languages. In French, they’reĀ Nains de Jardins, and in German, Gartenzwerg.

According to folklore, garden gnomes come alive at night and help out in the garden. If that’s true, they’ve been doing an excellent job!

World’s Smallest Carrot.

World's Smallest Carrot

I haven’t been enjoying a great deal of success with my vegetable growing lately. My peas were frazzled during the heatwave, slugs have reduced my beans to mere sticks, all my courgette flowers have died and my beetroot don’t look too healthy either.

I suddenly noticed that the carrots were all growing very close together, so I thought I’d better thin them out a bit. I could only bring myself to pull out one plant, but I was very excited to discover that there really was a tiny carrot growing at the other end of it!

It is supposed to that shape – I don’t know the exact variety (the seeds were a gift from skycarrots), but it’s a globe carrot, ideal for growing in pots. I’m looking forward to leaving the rest well alone, so they get nice and round.

I’m hoping that this is also going to be a good year for tomatoes. My plants (three different varieties) all have plenty flowers on them, lots of little green tomatoes, and there’s even a couple that are slowly turning red.

Next year I’d really like to get the garden sorted out, and put in some proper vegetable beds. I should probably also pay some attention to what I’m planting and how I’m looking after it – this year I just shoved all the seeds into pots and hoped for the best. Thankfully it seems to be turning out okay – for the tomatoes and carrots at least!

Lollo Rosso.

Lollo Rosso

Home grown lettuce.

I cheated a little bit, and bought these from the garden centre as seedlings, rather than planting my own seeds. But they’ve grown like mad in the past few weeks, and I finally decided they were big enough to eat! I’ve chopped up one of my six little lettuces, and am in the process of scoffing it for my lunch. The great thing about this particular variety of lettuce is that it grows back after you cut it, so these six lettuces will actually feed me for ages.

This is the best part about growing food – eating it!

My peas and beans appear to be doing well, despite a slight run-in with some birds uprooting the seedlings. My courgettes have finally started to appear, and the potatoes are enormous and need burying before they get too big.

I’m definitely going to have some very tasty lunches a bit later on in the year – I only wish I’d remembered to plant tomatoes!