Friday, April 16, 2010
Internet is fixed
Hopefully my hubby and I can get a raised bed together this weekend weather permitting, and I can plant things. I am not sure because we were going to go to an arts festival in town, but we'll see, it has to get done sooner rather than later.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Friday Favorite April 16, 2010

Today's Friday Favorite is a blog and web community called You Grow Girl created by Gayla Trail. She is a writer, photographer, and graphic designer with a background in the fine arts, cultural criticism, and ecology. She is the author of several books, and has been on popula radio, and television shows.
I really enjoy her website and read it every week. It is fun, entertaining, informative, and I appreciate the laid back approach to gardening as that is the way that I choose to garden myself.
The community was created in February 2000 and has grown since then. She describes it as
" ...a thriving online community that speaks to a new kind of gardener, seeking to redefine the modern world relationship to plants. This contemporary, laid-back approach to gardening places equal importance on environmentalism, style, affordability, art, and humour."

The topics she write about span from house plants to vegetable gardens and just about anything else you can think of on the topic of gardening of course. There are forums where you can write about your gardening experiences or ask questions. There is also a store which sells super cute items such as accessories, books, buttons, posters, stationary, and tee shirts.
I enjoy reading her features on specific plants, some which are common plants and other that are more rare, and I like looking at the photos in the garden show and tell section as well as reading the forums and blog posts.
Her gardens are very pretty and incorporate recyclable and reusable art in unique ways.

Recipe: Italian Bread with Herb Butter Spread

This recipe is time consuming because you have to wait for the bread to rise, but the payoff is well worth it in the end! My whole family loved this with the herb butter spread, and also with fresh local honey.
Italian Bread (makes 2 loaves)
Ingredients:
- 2 1/2 cups warm water
- 2 tablespoons active dry yeast(or 2 packs)
- 6-8 cups bread flour
- unsalted butter
- all purpose corn meal
- 1 tablespoon water
- 1 egg white
- 1 tablespoon salt
1. Pour the warm water into a large mixing bowl.
2. Add the yeast to the warm water and let it stand for about 10 minutes.
3. Stir in 2 cups of flour, and beat well.
4. Add the salt.
5. Gradually beat or knead in all but about 2 cups of the flour.
6. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and cover with a clean dish towel.
7. Let it rest 10 minutes.
8. Knead by hand until dough is elastic, kneading in as much of the remaining flour as necessary for smooth dough.
9. Butter a large mixing bowl.10. Place the dough in the buttered bowl, turning the dough to get all sides buttered.
11. Cover bowl with a slightly damp dish cloth and let rise undisturbed for about 1 1/2 hours or until doubled in bulk. (I like to use my cold oven or microwave to sit it in so it is undisturbed.)
12. Punch down dough and let rise about 1 hour longer.
13. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface.
14. Divide the dough in half and form each portion into a ball.
15. Cover with a dish cloth and let rest for 10 minutes.
16. Roll each half of the dough into a rectangle about 1/2-inch thick.
17. Roll up tightly, and roll with hands until loaf is 10 to 11 inches long.
18. Place loaves seam side down on buttered bread pans which have been sprinkled with cornmeal.19. Place pans in in a warm place to rise for about 1 hour, until doubled in bulk.
20. Place a shallow pan on bottom rack of oven; fill with boiling water.
21. Bake loaves in center of oven preheated to 375° for 20 minutes.
22. Add 1 tablespoon of water to egg white in a bowl and beat lightly; brush over and along sides of loaves.
23. Continue baking for 20 minutes longer, or until well-browned and done.

Ingredients:
1 stick unsalted butter1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp fresh rosemary cut finely
1 tsp fresh sweet basil cut finely
1 tsp fresh oregano cute finely
Directions:
1. Let the butter sit in a warm area to soften.
2. Once the butter is soft enough to mash easily with a fork, add the salt and herbs
3. Use the fork to mix all of the ingredients together until you get a smooth spread like

4. Keep in a sealed container in the refrigerator until ready to use.

Recipes From the Garden!
One of my hobbies is cooking and I really enjoy it and have over the years become a pretty good cook. I cook everything from traditional Southern comfort food, gourmet food, to ethnic food from around the world. My husband and I are very experimental and we like to try a lot of different foods. I love to cook great tasting, healthy food from scratch.
I am sure the first few weeks will be things I have made with my herb garden, and a few things I made last year which probably won't have pictures, but I promise were very tasty. Of course, when the veggies start coming in I will be able to really play around with cooking different things and being creative in the kitchen with my garden veggies.
I would love you to share your experiences with me if you make any of my recipes, good or bad!
Monday, April 12, 2010
Bloopers and Blunders!
Well, I have a doozie of one to share. This is my own oopsie, not one that was sent in and I have to apologize for this one because there will not be any pictures uploaded to my blog for awhile while I do not have phone and internet at the house.
My hubby was preparing the last of the garden spot yesterday while I was baking bread and making dinner. He hit and cut the phone/internet line, and they are supposed to come repair it by Thursday April 15. In the mean time, we have no phone and no DSL.
So I can update from work, but no pics until home internet is fixed!
Friday, April 9, 2010
Exciting Announcement...Friday Favorites!
If you live in Mississippi (or some parts of Alabama and Louisiana), Listen to Mississippi Public Broadcasting (aka MPB), or are from Mississippi State University, then you have probably heard of this guy. I emailed him awhile back to ask if it would be ok to blog about him, after all I don't want to be sued, and I finally heard back from him last night. I have been a fan of him, his radio show, and his garden for awhile now, and I feel honored he gave me permission to write about him on my little blog.
Today's Friday Favorite is non other than the Gestalt Gardener himself,

Felder Rushing. If you live in the MPB listening area, you can hear the Gestalt Gardener Fridays at 9:00 am. with rebroadcast on Saturday at 10:00 am. If you are not where you can listen to his show on MPB, you canonline.
According to the bio on his website,
"Felder Rushing is a 10th-generation American gardener whose pioneer ancestors settled across the Southeast, bringing many plants with them. Rushing's overstuffed, quirky cottage garden has been featured in many TV programs and magazines (including a cover of Southern Living), and includes a huge variety of weather-hardy plants along with a collection of folk art. There is no turfgrass, just plants, yard art, and "people places."".

He has written or or co-written "15 gardening books (including several national award winners) and former Extension Service urban horticulture specialist has written thousands of gardening columns in syndicated newspapers, and has had hundreds of articles and photographs published in regional and national garden magazines, including Garden Design, Horticulture, Landscape Architecture, Better Homes and Gardens, Fine Gardening, Organic Gardening, and the National Geographic."
Felder's gardens are lovely, colorful, whimsical, and unique. There are things in his gardens that will suit just about everyone's taste. The gardens portray a light hearted, playful, whimsical joy, and are decorated with everything from traditional asthetically pleasing objects, to more non-traditional ones that might just make you wonder, "What was he thinking?"."Felder has been featured three times in full-length articles in the New York Times. He has hosted a television program that was shown across the South, and appeared many times on other TV garden programs.
He has served many years as a distinctly non-stuffy board member of the American Horticulture Society, national director of the Garden Writers Association, and member of the National Youth Gardening Committee. Felder gives over a hundred lectures a year, coast to coast and overseas at flower shows, horticultural and plant society meetings, and Master Gardener conferences."
Felder is university educated and specializes in turf grass, but you won't see much if any grass in his cottage garden. Many varieties of plants, statuary, and water featured adorn the garden. Bottle trees shine and glisten in the sun, and the porch roof, is actually a rainwater collector.
Felder also sports a rolling garden in the back of his truck.

Known as his truck garden, he actually drives around with the garden in the back of the pick up truck. Such a great way of always being close to something you love, don't you think?
Felder gives great advice to everyone from the beginner or novice gardener all the way to master gardeners. He believes that you can garden any way you like, there are no rules of gardening, if you like it, it will grow where you live, and you can keep it alive, then it is fine with him to do it. So what if you plant corn in your front yard. As Tim Gunn on Project Runway would say "Make it work!" Be creative, artistic, and go for it, after all, you never know if it works for your garden if you don't try it.
This year I am taking Felder's no rules approach to heart and attempting to grow several plants and vegetables that I have never grown before. A few newcomers to my garden are carrots, eggplant, brussel sprouts, broccoli, corn, and miniature dahlias.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Productive Weekend!


I also finished designing, planting, and mulching the Kitty Memorial garden.

Our pet cat, Mr. Kitty passed away this winter and he was the first pet that my kids have lost (besides fish). They wanted to do something special, and the flower garden with the memorial garden stone looks very pretty. I think it was a sweet idea and really like how it turned out. There is a miniature rose, petunias, miniature dahlias, and pansies.
All of my seeds except the corn and eggplant have sprouted. I need to try and transplant the squash into bigger pots soon, they really took off. I'll probably have monster squash plants again this year. Last year they were nearly as tall as me, and taller then the kids. HUGE!!! My blueberry bushes have tons of buds on them and so do my roses. My lilies have sprouted and my irises have spread like wildfire this year, I was surprised to see so many of them. I hope they bloom this year, they did not bloom last year and the year before, they only had a couple of blooms.

I promise to take a lot more pictures of the garden this year.
I already have some pics of the seedlings, memorial garden, and vegetable garden spot so far, and will post them later tonight.

