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My Tiny Italian Garden

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The most beautiful load of rubbish

01 Thursday Jul 2010

Posted by Teresa in Garden

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Tags

beauty, bucket, Camillia, children, cleaning, Family, flowers, gardening, Motherhood, Pink, rubbish, rust, sweeping

Last weekend Poppet and Baba swept up the front yard while I worked in my little garden. They returned with a large bucket of decaying Camellia flowers. They were just beautiful. Loads of pale pink and rust coloured soft petals. I decided to take photos. Poppet got caught up in my excitement and started to hover. First, he started to hang the peg basket on the handle of the bucket while I took close-ups. When Baba took the basket off him he started to lunge toward the bucket giggling and shouting ‘tip them over, tip them over, tip them over’. I admit it was tempting.

When I finished photographing, I dashed inside to put my camera away. I must have taken 30 seconds. When I returned the bucket was on its side, the petals scattered everywhere and Poppet was still excitedly repeating in a sing-song voice ‘tip them over, tip them over’.

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Planting Broad Beans At Last!

21 Monday Jun 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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Broad Beans, cooking, Family, father, gardening, Italian, memories, mother, nostalgia, planting, Scicilian, vegetables

Every winter my husband and I head out to buy the best Broad Beans at ‘Franks’, our favourite little fruit and vegetable shop in Haberfield . The only problem is that all the other Broad Bean lovers in Sydney must also know that Frank sells the tenderest in town. They can run out quickly on a Saturday. We’ve missed out on more than one occasion. You can find them in other shops but the problem is that they are overgrown and tasteless. I have the same problem with fennel. I’ve seen fennel that’s almost the size of a football it so overgrown. Horrible tasteless and fibrous stuff. Now that I have a little garden, this year I finally got to plant my own Broad Beans. I planted them a couple of weeks ago and they are fast growers. They’ve just started to climb and hopefully in a few weeks I’ll be picking my own.

Broad Beans were a staple in my dad’s garden. Although he only planted a few rows every year they seemed to yield a truckload. There was always a time in the season where they were so abundant that we ate them every few days. My dad picked them young when they were still tender and sweet. My mother loved eating them raw with fresh crusty bread, olives and hard cheese. We would get stuck into them at lunch time and by the end of the meal we had a huge pile of empty pods. I still eat them like this when I can get them fresh. She would also saute them with onions in olive oil and a little water. Just before they were cooked she would drop in half a dozen freshly gathered eggs and poach them in the mix. This is still one of my favourite meals. Its a very simple peasant dish but I adore it.  Its not just the flavours and textures that I love, its that it keeps me in touch with my humble peasant Sicilian background in such a basic, everyday way.

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Ravenous Little Caterpillars

08 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by Teresa in Uncategorized

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Tags

caterpillars, cavello nero, gardening, kale, moths, rain

Its been a while since my last post. The heavy rain over the last couple of weeks has kept me out of my lovely little garden. In the mean time my poor Cavello Nero (an Italian dark Kale) has been ravaged by caterpillars. Not using any chemicals in the garden means that sometimes the bugs take over and I lose some plants. It’s mainly green leafy vegetables that I’ve have problems with. I pick the moth eggs off the back of the leaves as often as I can and I squash the little caterpillars when I find them. However, as you can see by the photo below they are very good at camouflaging themselves. It is like a war, and if my efforts wane for just a few days the caterpillars win.

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Things to do with Spring Onions (The Scallion)

23 Sunday May 2010

Posted by Teresa in Cooking

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Tags

cooking, gardening, omeltte, scallion, spring onions, steamed chicken

I love fresh spring onions. I use them in Italian and Chinese cooking. The thing I find frustrating about buying a whole bunch, or even half a bunch, is that I never get through them before the delicate green leaves begin to soften and wilt. (I like them really fresh) This is why I decided I would have them as a staple in my little garden. My dad always had spring onions in his garden and my mother picked them as she used them. Today I headed out in the rain twice to pick some for cooking.

At lunch time I made a very basic omelette my mother would make us when short of time. You simple fry a chopped spring onion and some chopped parsley for a minute add the beaten eggs grate some Romano cheese over the top and cook till ready. You need to use the whole onion because like the Chinese, Italians use the green leaves as well as the white base.

Later in the evening I rushed out again to pick another one to use in the topping for my Chinese Steamed Chicken with Hot Sour Sauce. I’m always happy when I have Italian and Chinese food in the same day.

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