Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Peaches. 8.11.2021
Picked the first crop of the season from this peach tree. It's a seed-grown tree from "Oregon Curl Free", a variety promoted as resistant to the dreaded peach leaf curl disease that, in the maritine Pacific NW, is to peach trees what COVID is to humans. This tree doesn't get peach leaf curl disease at all, which is sort of amazing, and is better than it's parent.
Anyway, there are lots more on the tree.
Saturday, August 07, 2021
Pickled Eggs. 8.7.2021
I made a batch of pickled eggs. The recipe was from "The Delicious Table". The amount of eggs was right for two quart jars (18 eggs), but the vinegar solution is enough that I can use the extra to make some refridgerator dill pickles, soon. The ingredients are cider vinegar, water, peppercorns, pickling spice, salt, JalapeƱos, garlic, eggs.
Kitchen Garden Harvest. 8.7.2021
Pretty good crop I think. It's keeping us out of the grocery store for this round of coronavirus. The sweet corn is "Trinity". The beans are Ning's special NE Chinese beans.
Digging Potatoes. 8.7.2021
I dug some more of the potatoes. They seem to keep better in the ground, so I only dig what I need for a couple of weeks. I should eat less of them. I'm starting to look like a potato. But they ate very good and cook nicely.
Resizing a Vintage Shirt. 8.7.2021
I found a vintage shirt that I liked. Back in the age of the dinosaurs, I owned a shirt with exactly the same fabric, only in green. This looks like batik but is printed cotton. This one was way too big, but the chances of finding one in my size are remote. So I used a shirt that fit well, as a pattern, took this one partly apart, cut it using the other shirt as my guide, and sewed it back together.
I thought about just cutting the body of the shirt narrower, but the sleeves wouldnt look right. So I took off the sleeves, and cut them the same as my better fitting shirt. Then I cut the body of of the shirt narrower too.
Before cutting, I sewed the new seams and tried it on to check the fit.
The hardest part was sewing on the sleeves. I had made the shoulders 1 1/2 inches narrower on both sides, and the body of the shirt about 2 inches narrower. The arm holes are curved. I made multiple tries before getting it right. All in all, I'm pretty happy with the shirt and now I can wear a walk down memory lane. I'm also pretty happy with the seams. The original shirt had flat felled seams, which dont have any rough edges insidecor out. I could have zig zagged the new seams, but they wouldn't look as smooth or as nice. Flat felled edges are not too hard, and my result was OK for a novice.
Before cutting, I sewed the new seams and tried it on to check the fit.
The hardest part was sewing on the sleeves. I had made the shoulders 1 1/2 inches narrower on both sides, and the body of the shirt about 2 inches narrower. The arm holes are curved. I made multiple tries before getting it right. All in all, I'm pretty happy with the shirt and now I can wear a walk down memory lane. I'm also pretty happy with the seams. The original shirt had flat felled seams, which dont have any rough edges insidecor out. I could have zig zagged the new seams, but they wouldn't look as smooth or as nice. Flat felled edges are not too hard, and my result was OK for a novice.
Wednesday, August 04, 2021
Kitchen Garden Harvest. 8.4.2021
This is a good time of year for the kitchen garden. The tomatoes on the right are from the dwarf variety, "Clare Valley Pink". Not a vigorous plant, and not many tomatoes, but they are good flavor. The oblong tomatoes are "Purple Russian". Very good production and very good flavor. The zucchinis are from the Burpee hybrid, I forget the name. The cukes are various types, mostly sneaky ones that evade detection until they are quite large. The apple is "Gravenstein", the only ripe one on the tree.
Zucchini makes a nice meal, cut into fries, sprinkled with garlic salt, pepper, some hot pepper and season salt, and olive oil then air fried for 8 min at 375. I mixed in some green beans too, but the zucchini is better.
Purple Russian tomato.
Clare Valley Pink tomato. I think this plant is off the irrigation line, which might explain why it didnt grow much.
Monday, August 02, 2021
Sunday, August 01, 2021
Flowers. 8.1.21
Four O'clocks and poppies, all volunteer. Daylilies that I grew from my own hybridizing a few years back. And squashes, quite fragrant and honeybees love them.
Dahlias and Nasturtiums. Also more volunteer poppies. The nasturtiums are volunteer too. The dahlias are saved from last year.
Three Types of Slicing Tomato. Goliath, Russian Purple, and BrandyFred Dwarf. 8.1.2021
Today I harvested the first of the big slicing tomatoes.
Dwarf BrandyFred. I can't tell this from Brandywine. Really super delicious.
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