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My Tiny Italian Garden

Author Archives: Teresa

When less is definitely more

06 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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crowded garden, thinning

When I was deciding on which seedlings to buy for my garden I struck up a conversation with the woman standing next to me in the nursery. While she was taking her time selecting a plant here and a plant there, I was greedily filling my trolley with trays. While she picked up a single plant of capsicum, I picked up a tray of 8. She said shrugging ‘how many can you eat’? They’re such good produces anyway.’ Well I should have paid attention because now I have a very crowded garden where the plants are fighting for space and only the biggest and strongest survive.

The capsicum are particularly suffering. Shadowed under the large leaves of the eggplant they have become a twisted tangle, fighting for life. The fruit that appeared in abundance only a few weeks ago, are now stunted and dropping off. Only one plant is growing strong and straight and is producing healthy fruit. When I saw the struggle begin a few weeks ago I knew the thing to do was to brutally thin them out by pulling out half of the eggplant and capsicum. But I was weak and didn’t do it. I left it to them to sort out, and now I fear it’s too late. I remind myself of those pathetic managers who turn a blind eye to bullying because they don’t have the courage to act on it. I’ll try to put things right tomorrow by replanting a couple of capsicum plants in a sunny spot. It’s a bit of an experiment and we’ll see happens. However my instinct tells me it’s too late. Watch out for the photo of the wretched things in the next post.

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Love the Lime

30 Tuesday Mar 2010

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Our little lime tree seems to produce an endless supply of fruit. We were trying to think of ways of using them beyond G & Ts when we came across a TV show on Caribbean cooking. The cool Jamaican host seemed to use them in most of his recipes. One of the things I took away from the show was how to use limes in marinades and dressing. He made a marinade of olive oil, garlic, lime zest and fresh thyme, which he kept inside what he called his sunshine box. He then marinated langoustine in the mixture. I remember having langoustine on the Isle of Skye about 6 years ago and they were divine. As we don’t have langoustine in Australia yabbies or prawns will do just fine or lobster if you’re feeling extravagant. We tried prawns on skewers and then cooked them on the barbeque. We also squeezed lime juice over them while they were cooking. They were so delicious we tried the marinade on skewered chicken as well. I also used lime in a salad dressing I poured over my curly endive and avocado salad. It was a very limy and yummy meal. One thing I love about television is how it revels in the domestic, reworks it and gives it back to us. Cooking shows are the best at this. We watch a lot of them in our household. In fact I can hear my partner watching River Cottage right now.

Poppet has a thing for limes. He just loves them. A few weeks ago we had lime halves on the dinner table which we were squeezing over our fish. He wanted to do the same and got it all over his hands. Soon he started licking his hand and this turned into sucking on the actual limes. Then he rubbed his eyes and well you can guess what happened. Lime in the eyes. Stinging eyes. Screaming, crying and rushing to the bathroom to wash the little face. Two nights ago we squeezing lime halves at the table again. He he started with, ‘I want to do it’ ‘I want to do it too’. So we said okay but just a little squeeze and don’t put it in your mouth. Baba offered Poppet the lime, who carefully took it and immediately put it in his mouth and started sucking on it. Then it was a struggle to get it off him.

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Farfalla

26 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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butterfly, Farfalla

Ever since I started my garden I’ve had a lot of lovely butterflies visiting. Or maybe I just didn’t notice them before. In any case I love them. They are like a visit from my childhood. Before I started school I used to spend what feels like a great deal of time in the garden with my brother, who is only 11 months younger than me. My mother would put a pinafold apron over our clothes and send us out into the garden. We loved looking for insects. We’d get especially excited about grass hoppers and prey mantis, which I no longer see around very much. We also loved chasing butterflies. They just looked magical to us.

I see the same excitement in Poppet’s face when he spots a butterfly in our garden. He runs around chasing the butterfly shouting farfallina, farfallina!

I spotted this lovely creature in the garden this afternoon. She only flew in for a short while but I managed to rush out and take a photo.

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Lettuce Flowers

23 Tuesday Mar 2010

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Corral lettuce, yellow flowers

I’m amazed at how everything eventually flowers. Yesterday morning these little yellow flowers popped out of the top of the Corral Lettuce. By the evening they had disappeared. So brief but so beautiful.

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Poppet Pesto with Chinese noodles in a Bunnykins bowl

21 Sunday Mar 2010

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Okay, so it was time to make to use up some of those abundant basil leaves and make my Pesto, but to be honest I felt like eating sashimi for lunch today. It’s good brain food and I need some of that right now. So I made the pesto for poppet and sent Baba and poppet off to the fish markets to pick up some fresh sashimi. I decided to use Chinese noodles for the pesto as they come in these great little bundles for one. In any case, as they are egg noodles, they aren’t that different to pasta. So poppet was glad to have his pesto, which he mixed with the occasional pickled ginger and salmon sashimi and we had sashimi with the occasional bite of Pesto.

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Ruby Chard

20 Saturday Mar 2010

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Ruby Chard

Yesterday I told my partner that this weekend we had to make Pesto again and cook some Ruby Chard because the Basil and Chard were growing wild. ‘That’s not a bad problem to have’, he grinned. Well today I picked a huge bunch of Ruby Chard and cooked it. I like it quickly stir fried in olive oil and garlic. Then I use a potato peeler and shave some Pecorino cheese over it. Very simple and delicious. Tonight I had to use the wok, as that was the easiest way to fry such a large bunch. It turned out fine even though the stove is frustrating. At our last house we had a powerful European gas stove with a wok burner. Even though this stove is gas, it’s week and doesn’t have a wok burner so stir frying is a problem. Anyway it still turned out fine and was served with organic steak and brown rice with butter.

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Incy, wincy friends in my teeny, tiny garden

15 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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I have a couple of little insect friends in my garden and I see them every day. The first is a fat little spider who lives in my lime tree. I thinks she is just adorable. She builds the most intricate webs and catches lots of flies. Sometimes when I visit her in the morning–cup of tea in hand–there are not one but two flies neatly wrapped and dangling from her web. I’m very grateful to her because this year we have seen an unprecedented amount of flies around the house. I suspect it has something to do with the organic fertiliser I’ve been throwing around in copious amounts. With all these extra flies I feel really bad for the neighbours, so I need all the help I can get to keep them under control. I wish I new what kind of spider she is. So if anyone reading this post has any idea please respond and let me know. 

My other little friends are these two ladybugs. They’re known for eating aphids so I let them run free. During the day they’re usually on separate leaves, but in the mornings they are inseparable.

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Spooky Buddha in the garden

09 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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Buddha, shadows, statue

When we were selling our house last October I did the whole declutter and rearrange the furniture thing that we all have learned from watching reality TV. I also bought a few new generic looking things like scatter cushions, to give the house that ‘display home’ look. One of the objects I bought to decorate the main bedroom with was this mass-produced, south-east Asian looking statue of what I thought was a sleeping child. I had two reactions from the household. My partner said he hoped we could get rid of it once we sold the house and poppet looked admiringly and said Buddha, its Buddha. So I told him he could have it when we moved into our new house. On the day we moved in I handed poppet the statue, and he was overjoyed. Although it was too heavy for him, he managed to lug it into his room and add it to his pile of toys.

One night poppet started screaming. I ran into his room and he looked terrified. I asked him if something scared him. Sobbing he pointed to the wall and cried there, there, it’s there. Shadows, I asked. Yes shadow he replied. I switched on the night-light, calmed him down and went back to bed. Then the screaming started again. I went back to poppet’s room and noticed a great big Buddha shadow on the wall. It was looming down on him and he looked terrified. Oh it’s just Buddha’s shadow I said. And he kept repeating Buddha scare me, Buddha scare me. So I took the statue out of the room and calmed him down again.

The statue then sat in the dining room for the next month and every so often when poppet noticed it he would repeat, Buddha scare me. Last week I asked him if he would like to put Buddha in the garden. Yes he gleamed. And I helped him lug heavy Buddha into the garden. Now poppet smiles when he sees the statue and says it’s Buddha, it’s Buddha. Buddha seems happy too.

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The best of both worlds

06 Saturday Mar 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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bay leaves, capsicum, stuffed capsicum

I made stuffed capsicum the other night. Here they are about to go into the oven. My mum would make them from peppers (the long horn shaped ones) my dad grew in the garden. There was always a point in the season where there would suddenly be an abundance of peppers and the best way to get through them was to stuff them. My mother in law also grows them and she actually makes the best stuffed peppers. Not that my mother’s weren’t delicious, they most certainly were. However, being Italian she mixed the mince with bread crumbs whereas my mother in law uses rice with her mince. This makes them healthier and in my opinion tastier. I base my recipe on my mother in law’s but I add touches from my mum’s. Like my mum I use fresh basil, parsley and bay leaves which I picked from my garden.

I planted peppers a few weeks ago when I started my garden. It’s a bit late in the season but I couldn’t help myself. Hopefully they will come good.

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Thyme and canon

02 Tuesday Mar 2010

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canon 5D, Thyme

A couple of people have emailed me asking about the camera I’m using. It is a Canon EOS 5D with a 24-105mm lens. When I first bought it a few years ago I found it difficult to leave it behind when I went to bed. I love it but it’s as heavy as all hell. Here are a couple of photos of my Thyme. Little poppet saw me taking photos and rushed in to try and pick the tiny flowers. He smelled lovely for hours after.

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