Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Lentil Soup with Potatoes


 I ordered some lentils from Rancho Gordo and couldn't wait to put them in a soup. I also was able to use some of the purple carrots I grew this summer in the soup as the lentils were the Black Caviar Lentils (they only look small and black but don't taste or have anything to do with fish!). You can see the color tinge the carrots gave the soup. The soup turned out great! It is very hardy and would lend itself well if you wanted to add some sort of meat to your soup. I used the Rancho Gordo lentils, but you can use any lentils you have. I hope you try it!

 

Lentil and Potato Soup

1 cup Rancho Gordo Black Caviar Lentils (or any lentil you have)

2 tsp. minced garlic

½ cup yellow onion diced

2 large potatoes, peeled & diced

2 large carrots, peeled & chopped

1 large stalk celery, chopped

1 bunch kale, chopped

8 cups of water

3 T. vegetable bullion

¼ tsp ground red pepper

1 bay leaf

¼ tsp ground black pepper

1 tsp. ground cumin

1 tsp. dried cilantro

1 tsp. salt

* Place water, bullion, and bay leaf in large soup pot.

* Add lentils, potatoes, garlic, onion, carrot, celery & kale.

* Bring to a boil, then simmer.

* Add red and black pepper, cumin, cilantro, & salt.

* Simmer 30 to 60 min.

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Quilted Stockings & Tree Skirts


 This project started with a request for quilted stockings that were all different. I quickly found out it was easier to make a pattern design instead of a block design. After the stockings were complete I volunteered to make a tree skirt. I searched around the internet and saw this design that looked like a lot of fun to try. When I read the instructions it turned out you really cut two skirts at the same time so I decided to make one for my son and one for my niece. 


This is the skirt that I made for my son.


This is the opposite cut skirt I made for my niece. 
I loved the way they turned out! 

Thursday, August 27, 2020

In the Organic Garden: 2020 the year of the Borer


 The garden is growing pretty well. This is the second year I have used alfalfa meal as my nitrogen fertilizer. It has done well even though its been the pandemic year of the borers! I have encountered many borers this year. Borers are like a small caterpillar that bores into the stem of a plant and then the borer eats it's way up the inside of the stem basically killing the plant slowly. I first encountered one in a pepper plant. The top of the plant just wilted for no apparent reason.

This plant was actually in the garden and I dug it out and replaced it because I did not think it was savable. If you look partway up the stem you see the tell tale hole where the borer went into the plant.
I watched a youtube video to learn how to slit the stem upwards to find the borer. 

You can see the little caterpillar on the leaf after I pulled it out of the stem and squished it a bit. On the right you see the plant. As I did not think it was going to come back to life, I ended up cutting it off. Since it had a few leaves at the bottom I figured I would just see how it did. 

This is that same banana pepper today. You can see it grew back with a vengeance and has set quite a few fruit. I am truly amazed! After the pepper plant, two of my tomato plants had the same wilt of the top part of the plant, and upon inspection I found the borer hole. 

I cut upwards from the hole, split the stem a little bit with the tweezers, and kept going up until I found it and pulled it out. As the video on YouTube showed, I wrapped the stem using the medical wrap I found in the first aid box. It worked very well as it stuck to itself and would be expandable. The video had said that the plant probably wouldn't do much after the borer extraction, but like the pepper plant I let grow giving it some water every day for about a week to help it re-establish itself. You can also see my grass clippings in the garden for mulch which helps the second problem of blight from splashing back on the plant. 
As you can see, the plant recovered nicely! It even grew another leader from below the wrapped area. Next year I am going to try a yellow container with soap water at the beginning of June per the suggestion of my friend Gosia, because the adult moths are sometimes attracted to it and will drown before they lay their eggs. 

This is what my soil top looked like at the start of the planting season. I am sorry I didn't get it posted at the start of the season, but better late than never I guess. In this picture you see egg shells, potash (hard to see) and then the alfalfa meal on the top of the soil. This all gets raked into the soil and that's all there is to it. Our growing season isn't much longer than 3 months and that is usually how long organic fertilizers last. I did notice that my green beans looked like they had used up the nitrogen in the soil so about the second week of August, so I sprinkled a little bit more alfalfa meal around the plants for a late season boost. 

I leave you with one of my favorite visitors to the garden, the swallowtail butterfly. I always plant some carrot seeds just in case one of them needs to lay their eggs in the garden. As with many other things this year we need to look for the positive or the beauty in life in order to keep our sanity. So get outside and happy gardening!




Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Baby Quilt for Kolby and Cydney

This it the baby quilt I made for Kolby and Cydney (and my first grand baby!) The fabrics overlap with the blanket I made for Laura & Scott because these two babies will be very close in their arrival.

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Baby Quilt for Laura & Scott

This is the baby quilt I made for Laura & Scott's baby to be. It was fun to make and to give!

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Quilt for Johnny & Mary



I thought I had posted this quilt but finally realized I did not. This is the king sized quilt I made for my nephew Johnny and his wife Mary. It took me a while to figure out the color scheme as you can see they wanted colors fading in and out. Turned out quite nice!