Monday 30 December 2013

LONDON ALLOTMENT GARDENING IN 2013 - WAS IT DIFFICULT? NAH....

ALLOTMENTS IN LONDON ARE DIFFICULT TO GET

SO THEY SAY, BUT ALLOTMENT PLOTS ARE AVAILABLE WHERE MY PLOT IS SITED, IN SOUTH WEST LONDON

MAGA


We have a good Gardening Group to belong to;  it is called MAGA for short.

All plot holders and also gardeners without plots, can join for about £3 a year annual sub. You can buy seeds, garden tools, seed potatoes and onion sets, fertilisers, string, netting and a lot more.  Also you can come along to the Summer Party and the Pumpkin Fest.

DO YOU WISH YOU HAD A KITCHEN GARDEN?

Then try out a little allotment, the small plots are just right to start off with. Spring is a good time to start, when everybody is feeling optimistic.

Link to Local Government site to apply for an allotment

VEGETABLE GARDENING IN LONDON IS GREAT

One of the best things about growing vegetables in London, is the chance to get to know other gardeners, most of them are pretty nice people.  Some are a bit odd........

You can enjoy a bit of wild life too!  Birds, butterflies, bees, and the muted roar of urban traffic.
Garlic planted September now growing in November

BOXING DAY ALLOTMENT PARTY

Parties are good to have on your allotment.  You can ask all your friends and not have to worry about the washing up, just have disposable cups and plates, and a small barbecue if possible.  There is usually nowhere much to sit and you are forced to talk to each other because there is no music or dancing, of course.  Gossiping is compulsory (only joking!)

On Boxing Day we went to our friends' party on their plot, where they have a wonderful wooden chalet complete with a patio and a covered area to keep off the rain, and a mini kitchen.

We had delicious parsnip and apple soup, piping hot - thanks to Philippa!

Also on the menu were hot dogs in buns, and a raised pork pie - home made. Plus wine and beer and fruit juice.  Mulled wine was heated up, using home made wine, made by Paul.

An allotment party is a very good way to end the gardening year.  I strongly recommend it!

Tuesday 24 December 2013

GARDENERS GET READY - ITS THE BIG COOK TIME

CHRISTMAS EVE AND THE LIVING IS EASY - OR NOT, AS THE CASE MAY BE


I spent yesterday doing the prep for Christmas cooking, as today, Christmas Eve, I planned to get away from the kitchen and do a bit of culture.  I planned to visit the Dulwich Picture Gallery and see the Whistler exhibition ....

Alas it is closed today, Tuesday 24th December, and so are all the other galleries and museums, as far as I can tell.


COOKING TO GO

I am lucky to have some home grown veg for our lunch tomorrow.  In order of importance:

Potatoes,  Sarpo Miro - bought from Thompson and Morgan last spring, and very good

Parsnips, Gladiator - much better this year, or 100% better in fact, as I got none last winter

Brussel sprouts (can't remember the variety) - ditto, 2012 wet summer and autumn killed them off, this year was great, and so I have quite a few - straight off the plant they taste so sweet!  My favourite green vegetable.

TURKEY - MASS PRODUCED

Do not grow these myself, so have to use Sainsbury's offering.

Last year the lovely butcher's shop was still with us for top quality turkeys, pork, beef, duck, but alas it closed down in the summer of 2013.  

It was called Hartshorn, and is sadly missed by me and lots of other people.  Its demise was mainly due to the arrival of Waitrose and a mini Sainsbury and the imposition of swingeing parking restrictions in the roads, imposed by the local council.  I still feel sad about its absence.  Oh, the lovely butchers, Ray, Trevor etc.


TURKEY PREPARATION

As I did last year, I bought a whole turkey and have cut off the legs and thighs, and a small part of the turkey breast.  These have gone into the freezer for later on.  I will cook the rest of it, breast,  wings, carcass in butter with a pretty trim of streaky bacon.  

The turkey costs more this year, I notice.  I have a cooking notebook and noted the price of last year's bird, it was £33.87 for 6 Kg, this year it was £35.36 for 4 Kg.

The giblets are already turned into giblet stock, in my pressure cooker, which has its main moment of glory every December - for the Christmas Pud.  I wonder if the pressure cooker looks forward to Christmas?


STUFFING

I usually make a stuffing from a recipe for chestnut stuffing with prunes, in The Penguin Cookery Book, my old standby, by Bee Nilson first published 1952. But last year the quantity was to too much for us to eat, and ended up being thrown out. A bit of a waste.

This year I am trying a new receipt, from a Sunday Times Magazine, but so far, it has come up with just as much quantity!  Once again I am a bit fooled by the amount.   I just can't think in grammes - I am an ounce girl to my greasy fingertips.


STUFFING INGREDIENTS

They cost a small fortune!  200g best streaky, a pack of chestnuts (vacuum packed), breadcrumbs, 2 onions, garlic, sausagemeat, by the time it is finished I might as well have bought a bigger turkey and just gone with a packet of Paxo!


A SUMMARY OF WHAT I SHOULD BE DOING TODAY

So here I am, wasting time on the computer when I should be:

washing the mud off the potatoes and parsnips
peeling potatoes and par-boiling
scraping the parsnips
trimming the sprouts
chopping the onion and infusing the milk with it, ready for the bread sauce
adding the sausage meat to the stuffing mix, ready to cook it tomorrow
putting bacon round a few chipolata, for pigs in blankets
and .....  oh yes!  


CHAMPAGNE

I won a bottle of champagne about a year ago, and have been waiting for an occasion to open it
Tomorrow is going to be that day
Happy Christmas boozing!

And Happy Cooking, thanks for following me on this blog.



Monday 16 December 2013

GO FOR A DROOL, TO PETERSHAM NURSERIES - TRY TO RESIST TEMPTATION!

PETERSHAM NEAR RICHMOND, A LITTLE PIECE OF PARADISE

I went on the special Foraging event at Petersham Nurseries, Petersham, near Ham on 1 December, a Sunday.  The Petersham Nurseries are delightful and full of interesting and desirable things to buy.... as well as being the home of the famous cafe and tea house.  Petersham are members of the Slow Food Supporters Scheme.

I notice from their website that you can buy a Foraging walking stick! Now why didn't I ask for one for Christmas.....
Petersham Nurseries Shop and Garden

Previous post link here, about the actual walk
Foraging walk with Claudio Bincoletto

The Petersham Nurseries are on the banks of the Thames, and abut onto the flat green Petersham Meadows, which you can see from the beautiful viewpoint of Richmond Hill.

Not having been to Petersham before, I found the locality fascinating, with beautiful old houses, some cottages and the lovely small church of St Peter, where Captain George Vancouver is buried, who discovered Vancouver Island.

Sorry to say,  I did not take any photos of the Church or the meadows. Will have to go back and take a closer look soon.  There are box pews in the church, which is rare this near to London.

ST PETER'S CHURCH, PETERSHAM

The link below give details of the church and other people associated with it, such as Theodora Jane Cowper, cousin of poet William Cowper, and is where the marriage took place of the parents of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, later Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. (Earl of Strathmore and Nina Cavendish-Bentinck, in 1881). The information is from the Local History Notes of the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames website.

St Peter's, Petersham

THE NURSERIES

I particularly liked the display in the first section of the nursery which I entered, after walking through the yard full of small plants and an array of lovely earthenware flowerpots, various sizes.  They are, I think, made in India and might be hand-made.  Not often you see these flowerpots, new, for sale. 

These photos I took with my little old Nikon camera.


Tree ferns, and other tender indoor displays

Wooden plant labels, seed packets

Seeds with the Petersham label, plus some Italian ones

Garlics all ready to plant now, or spring

Hairy pots! Like I saw at Walmer Castle in the summer

Petersham Nursery seeds for kids, fun designs

Claudio introduces the Foraging

Fungi on display at the start of our Forage

Cheese from Italy, this one is very special, we enjoyed it later, with polenta

This may be Chicken of The Wood fungi

Cutting the Italian cheese for our brunch

Petersham Nursery does a good table setting, pretty crab apples


Italian wine from a very special vineyard in the North - it was very good!
The admirable fungi
YES, I WILL DEFINITELY RETURN TO PETERSHAM NURSERIES

It is difficult to park there, by the way.  There are parking spots in the road leading down to the river, a few minutes walk along the main road, towards Ham Common.  "This road is liable to flooding", say the signs.  You can of course get a bus from Richmond Station.

Friday 6 December 2013

A WALK IN PETERSHAM, FORAGING WITH CLAUDIO BINCOLETTO

RE YOU KEEN ON FORAGING? OR MAYBE YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT IT IS!

TAKE A LOOK AT THIS LINK TO FIND OUT MORE


OUR FORAGING WALK WAS CONDUCTED BY CLAUDIO BINCOLETTO


IT WAS ON SUNDAY 1 DECEMBER PETERSHAM, NEAR RICHMOND

It was an early start, 9.30, at the Petersham Nurseries, which is, as you might guess, in Petersham between Ham and Richmond on Thames, Surrey.

Petersham Nurseries seemed immediately welcoming and attractive and I spent some time wandering around the area near where Claudio Bincoletto and Alastair Cameron  plus others were busy cutting up bread and getting glasses ready for the 'brunch'.  I will write more about the nursery on a later post.

Round tables were set with cutlery, glasses, cups and napkins.
Claudio Bincoletto introduces our Foraging morning walk


First Claudio and Alistair Cameron gave a brief introduction about Foraging and Slow Food.
SLOW FOOD

From the Slow Food website:
"1986 
Slow Food is created in Italy after a demonstration on the intended site of a McDonald’s at the Spanish Steps in Rome.

Slow Food has now spread worldwide."  
SLOW FOOD.COM

FOODIES

Well, there is so much interest now in food, and half the people you know seem to be 'foodies', cooking, growing, visiting farmers markets, that sort of thing.  If necessary they seem to wear wellies permanently, and anoraks, and look fit enough to take a quick 20 mile walk before breakfast.

Our group included some wellie and anorak wearers, a few carrying those fancy walking sticks with pointed ends. 

I had on my old old leather shoes, and I discovered on setting out, the reason why I had put them on one side  to chuck out a year ago. The soles had completely disintegrated, but I managed to plod along, without heels.  Luckily there was very little mud.

WALKING FROM PETERSHAM NURSERIES TO HAM

We walked from Petersham through a few tiny alleys between houses, cottages and private land, until we came to Ham Common.  
Claudio said that winter is his favourite time of year, and then you can see everything that is growing, including the fungi.
Fungi in season in autumn

He explained that if you want to pick anything, it has to be on common land.

COMMON LAND

You must not take anything from someones garden without permission, or a public garden, or even by the side of the footpath.  That constitutes theft;  (what happened in the 18th century was the poor were denied access to their 'common land',  for grazing their livestock or growing crops,  picking herbs and saladings, thus causing great hardship and starvation.)  We walked on, at a brisk but not unpleasant pace.

IVY AND YEW

Claudio explained that yew and holly are important native trees/

Chestnuts are on their way out now., chestnuts, elms and ash are all afflicted with diseases and will die out very quickly. Ivy is the only winter flowering plant and provides flowers and berries for wildlife. It is one of our basic British plants and he loves it. Research is being done on its use medicinally.  Its role in nature is to take down trees, causing the trees to decay, increasing fungi and giving space for new growth.

He does what he describes as "Sky Foraging", and he is a tall man - he means he collects things on his eye level or higher, if possible, to avoid contamination from animals, humans and petrol fumes.  This higher stuff is cleaner.  He never forages for eating stuff in London, because of pollution from cars and lorries.

We walked down an avenue of trees that included limes, another of our native trees, the tiny buds of which are nourishing and the young leaves in spring can be added to salads.

NETTLES AND ALCANET

Nettles were here and there and he pointed out the very young low shoots can be used added to soups, also alcanet or wood borage (pentaglottis sempervirens), the young leaves of which are sweet, and should first be mixed with spinach if you eat it. Also cow parsley can be added, a very little of it, to salads.  Alcanet is a problem in gardens where I live, as it has long taproots and is very difficult to pull out, and it self-seeds all over the place. Drat it!

He pointed out that we should try things like nettles in very small quantities, and add to another green veg such as spinach, until we are sure that we like the taste.  It is an acquired taste as it is bitter, as it sorrel.  

Always try a new leaf mixed with one you know, because the new taste can get some getting used to.  I had previously made notes about leaves which we can add to our diet, when attending a RHS Flower Show in the Autumn.  See the link to my earlier post, here:

HOW TO FORAGE - MY EARLIER POST DONE IN OCTOBER

He said that the basis of most academic research on plant use had to be for the use the benefit of  the pharmaceutical industry, to make money; that  research is what the pharmaceutical industry will support financially. 

He said, very seriously, that our societies are on the brink of collapse, as there were 9 billion of us, and that two thirds of the planet was at risk of deforestation.


He whistled at a bird, possibly a thrush, and it mimicked him;  he said birds will mimic you and also owls will come towards light, in the evening, so to attract them, leave your blinds open.

MORE ABOUT TREES

Oaks;  lots are dying off from oak dieback, possibly because the water level is too low now after draught. Claudio said that fungi are the only organisms that can process wood, 91% of living organism are fungi and they are essential to life, they give nourishment to the soil.


When looking at fungi, have a small magnifying glass, and look at the gills and spores. How the gills join the stalk gives an idea of what kind of mushroom it is.  We saw some very small greyish mushrooms in a clump by the dead oak tree, which he picked and gave us to smell. He said it was not very good to eat, it smelled of acrylic paint!  The Chinese apparently like it and it is farmed in China.  He said do a Google search for Rogersmushrooms - to get a good visual guide, and it certainly looks very good, here is a link:

We walked very near the ground of Ham House, which I have not yet visited, alas.  It had a stillroom there which was where herbs etc were stored to be used in a tradition of healing closely associated with 'witches' in the past.  Claudio mentioned Stevia, which I am growing in a little pot, it is a green leaved herb with very sweet leaves which have no calories and can be used to sweeten food and drink, and used in cake making. You can dry the leaves too or make a herb tea.

ARTISTS MUSHROOM, OR AS A SEARCH ON GOOGLE REVEALED, THE ARTIST'S CONK MUSHROOM


and pictures here:


There was a huge fungi growing on one of the ash trees by the river.  It is called - one of its names - the artists mushroom.  When sliced you can draw on it like a kind of slate, making dark marks on the off-white surface, which is then a permanent message or graphic.  Loved by children, apparently! Claudio said he uses chunks of this fungi as a paperweight.

We passed a clump of very large lime trees by the river. It is apparently rare to see such big healthy trees in London. Likely that the water from the Thames is helping in their growth, this is in the flood plain. 

THE RIVER THAMES AT PETERSHAM
The walkway along the river is the remains of the old drover road from London in the 14th and 15th century.  Loads could be transported by boat down (or up, not sure which is the correct expression!) to London with the current, but loads coming upstream had to be hauled by oxen or horses, thus the ancient grassy roadway along the bank of the River.  It was the original way from Hampton Court up to Whitehall

BIODYNAMICS.

Claudio talked about the influence of the moon, on the appearance of mushrooms, saying when the moon is waning or dark, more mushrooms appear. He found that the moon's cycle also affected when calves and lambs are born, speaking of his experience as a child on the family farm in Italy.
He uses the biodynamic calendar to time when to sow his seeds, and to prepare the soil for sowing.

I notice there are a couple of books for sale on Amazon on biodynamic gardening, and a calendar, Maybe I will give it a go, (make life even more complicated!)

We walked back to the Petersham nurseries along the beautiful Thames and arrived to find the delicious 'brunch' ready for us to eat and drink, and at the same time take the chance to talk to the other people who had taken the walk.  I shall probably sign up for the spring Foraging Walk, it was really great.

There is a lot of information on the internet about foraging, for instance this website

THE ECOLOGIST, TOP TEN FOODS TO FORAGE

Alistair gave us a brief talk about the Slow Food Movement, which I mentioned above.  He also talked about Terra Madre day, on 10 December, see