Watch My Food Grow ~ A South Florida Raised Vegetable Garden

Florida Backyard Raised Vegetable Garden

Green Tomato Relish

March 11th, 2014 by Lila Steinhoff
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A Gallon of Green Tomatoes

At the end of February, we cleared the fall plants from the garden, so we could put in the spring plants.

Last weekend, I was asked if I threw out the green tomatoes that were taken off all the spindly tomato vines before we pulled them up.

green tomatoesGreen Tomatoes

Holy cow, no! Green tomatoes, which are spectacular as fried green tomatoes, are equally as spectacular made into relish. Since there were several different kinds of tomatoes at varying stages of greenness, fried green really wasn’t an option. They were destined to be relish.

Vintage Recipe

I am not a fan of cucumber relishes, and I haven’t been able to find green tomato relish made with mustard in any super market. It may be out there, but I haven’t found it. That’s okay, though, because 40 years ago, a friend gave me a recipe for a green tomato relish.

recipeRecipe

She called it ‘Mustard Relish’, and that is what we’ve always called it. Mustard Relish is made with green tomatoes, red and green bell peppers, onions, vinegar, salt, sugar and plain yellow mustard. 

How To …..

To begin, wash all the veggies. I use a sanitized kitchen sink, because it is easy, and  a disposal makes cleanup fast.

veggies in waterVeggies Being Washed

Once the veggies are washed, core the tomatoes and remove the stems and seeds of the peppers. Cut all veggies into large chunks so they can be ground up.

cutting veggiesPreparing Veggies

Kids Can Help

Years ago, when my sons were small, they had the best time grinding up the chunks of veggies in an old fashioned hand-crank grinder. I’d put them out in the backyard with the grinder and the veggies. One of them would turn the crank, and the other would stuff veggies in the top.

Matt & AdamMatt and Adam circa 1983

Both of them had a great time helping to make the relish… so much so, that my older son asked that I let his 9-year old do the grinding for the next batch of relish that I make. I will do it this spring.

New Electrical Work Savers

I no longer have help grinding the veggies, and my shoulders have not aged well.  So, now I use the same process I use for coleslaw… fill a blender with water, add veggies loosely, hit the ‘grind’ button and drain the result in a colander.

veggies in blenderVeggies in Blender

Drain and Cook

Once the water is drained from the ground veggies, they are placed in a deep bowl lined with a piece of cheesecloth or other suitable cloth that will allow drainage.

ground veggiesChopped Veggies

Boiling water is poured over the veggies and allowed to sit for three minutes.

scalding with boiling waterScalding with Boiling Water

After the veggies have been scalded, the cloth is tied opposite corner to opposite corner and is hung to drain for several hours.

tying draining clothTying Cloths

The easiest way for me to drain the relish is to tie the cloths across a sawhorse in the yard.

draining veggiesSqueezing Water Out

I squeeze out as much water as I can when I first hang the relish to drain. Once there is no more liquid leaking from the cloth, it is time to cook it.

From Cooking to Jars

The mixture from the draining cloth is put into a pan with the other ingredients, cooked for an hour and jarred.

relish into jarsJarring Relish

The sealed jars are put into a hot water bath for 20 minutes.

DSC_6686.JPG-cMustard Relish in Hot Water Bath

When the jars come out, place them on the counter and let them cool.

relish in jars jpegSealed Relish Cooling

Now, you may sit back and o-o-o-o and a-a-a-ah at the beautiful and tasty accomplishment.

Recipe

For those of you who would like to make this incredible relish, my much loved and used recipe is below.

Mustard Relish recipeMustard Relish

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Going from Winter to Summer Garden

February 27th, 2014 by Lila Steinhoff
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Pulling Out the Winter Garden

If you live in south Florida, February is the time to plant the summer garden. One hitch, though… the winter plants have to be removed first.

Besides the herbs, which, for the most part, are perennials… in October, my gardening partner Bill and I planted snow peas, poblanos, jalapenos, green beans, tomatoes, eggplant and broccoli.

The poblanos, jalapenos and eggplant are strong and still producing, so they will stay. Everything else has to go.

eggplantEggplant

There were quite a few green tomatoes left, but there was nothing left of the vines. We picked the tomatoes and pulled out the vines.

green tomatoesTomatoes

The broccoli was finished producing, but the leaves cook down to make excellent greens. We cut all the leaves off and pulled up the stems. Green beans and snow peas were pulled up and tossed.

broccoliBroccoli

The result was a pile of garden waste. The fine-leafed plant waste was put into the compost pile. Everything else was put out on the street for collection.

compostCompost

Time to Plant

Earlier in the week, we replaced soil that had receded from the boxes in the past year. It took four bags of Fafard 3B soil from the farm store to bring the boxes up to the usual level.

Once old plants were removed, we planted okra and Blue Lake green bean seeds and four kinds of tomatoes.

tomato plantsTomato Plants

Now we water and wait.

watering garden

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2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

February 24th, 2014 by Lila Steinhoff
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My Sister, the Artist

When my sister Marty, who lives in Missouri, comes to Florida in February, she is looking for sun and beach time to thaw out. In addition, the last few years, she came to be an artist in the annual Lake Worth Street Painting Festival.

Marty at Lake Worth Street Painting FestivalMarty Riley, Street Painting Artist

This year, Marty is recovering from shoulder surgery, and crawling around on the pavement for two days while drawing with chalk is not conducive to healing. Hopefully, she will be back next year.

What She Missed

This morning, I wandered the streets that had been closed to traffic for the festival. Artists began their projects on Saturday and were completing them today. It was sunny and hot, but no matter, the streets were crowded with spectators.

2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

This is the 20th year of the festival, and  the theme was the movies. I am amazed at the talent of the artists. It has to be really difficult to draw flawless portraits on shell rock and asphalt with nothing but chalk.

2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

Artists, Spectators, Kids and Dogs

The festival is spectator, children and dog friendly. There are always lots of dogs, and today they all had something in common. They were panting and would head for the shade at every opportunity. I think doggie drinking fountains under the trees would have been a huge hit.

One city block is set aside for children to have their own area to create chalk paintings.

2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

The special area is laid out with child-sized sections, and chalk is provided so they can create their own street paintings.

A Few ‘Bests’ of the Day

The artwork isn’t the only thing I enjoy when I go to this festival. People watching is always good. People with their animals are even better.

Besides the sunhats on the little girls in the picture, there were a couple of other things that caught my eye for no particular reason except that I liked them. Tattoos were everywhere, but the one that grabbed my attention was the lion on this artist’s shoulder. It was stunning.

2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

There are many places to get good food along Lucerne and Lake Avenue in Lake Worth. Also, there were food and drink vendors of all kinds on the streets during the festival. This ‘soup of the day’ sign definitely knew the mood of the day.

2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival2014 Lake Worth Street Painting Festival

I walked for about an hour before my feet felt the hot, hard pavement. I took  pictures, but couldn’t see all the works of chalk art that were there. Some of what I took are in the gallery below.  In previous years, all the artwork was posted online at the festival site within a couple of days. Check back there in a couple of days.   **(Update… pictures of all the artwork are now online.)**

Click on any picture to make it larger, then click on the right or left side of the image to move through the gallery.

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