Potatoes "Ratte" |
I have continued to harvest more turnips, which are still perfect specimens, with no bug damage at all, which I find amazing in view of my previous attempts with this vegetable.
Turnips "Golden Ball" and "Purple Top Milan" |
I have harvested three cucumbers. One was a very nice one, and came from the strongest plant in the batch - the only one of the original six to have performed well.
The other two were not ones to be proud of. They were a very strange shape. They came from one of the plants that so nearly died:
As some of you may remember, I re-sowed my Cucumbers and I am now back up to six plants, but four of them are still very small and not producing fruits yet. I live in hope though...
On Saturday I picked this vegetable medley:
Broad Beans, Carrots, French Beans and Broccoli |
The second half of the Shallots have been lifted now. Not as many as in the first lot, but still enough to be worthwhile growing them.
Shallots "Longor" |
Shallots "Longor" |
Jane used some of the shallots from the first batch (harvested 2 weeks ago) a couple of days ago in a Navarin of Lamb, along with some of the "Golden Ball" turnips. The carrots in this picture are bought ones I'm afraid.
Those really fresh shallots were SO tasty! Much more strongly-flavoured than ones that have been stored for a long time.
Finally for this week, I picked the first of my Blueberries, and a few more Scotch Bonnet chillis. Don't worry, we didn't eat them together!
Blueberries "Earliblue" and chillis "Scotch Bonnet" |
I wasn't going to mention Lettuce because I have been harvesting it for weeks, but I think I really do need to show off this fine (and enormous) specimen:
I'm entering this post for "Harvest Monday", hosted as ever by Daphne on her blog Daphne's Dandelions. If your are not familiar with this hugely popular weekly "hook-up" why not have a look? There should be lots of lovely harvests on display at this time of year!
Your harvest looks really good. I like the look of the golden ball turnip - I'm a big fan of turnip. Looks like you can have stir fry any time you want from the garden!
ReplyDeleteWe've started digging potatoes as some of the tops are dying down already. Our beans though are well behind yours.
ReplyDeleteNice harvest Mark! I esp love the potatoes (pretty!) and the turnips! YUM!
ReplyDeleteYour harvest looks really good! Love how huge that lettuce head is!
ReplyDeleteThe Ratte potatoes are absolutely beautiful. For a while one of my cucumber plants was producing gourd shaped cucumbers. I wonder if it is a microbial disease that makes for the odd shapes. It seems to happen to okra quite often.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful potatoes and that lettuce plant is wonderful!! Oh I miss our shallots. We didn't get any in this year and we are really missing them!!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you don't eat the scotch bonnets and the blueberries together, ha-ha, but they do make a great color combination! Everything looks beautiful and that lettuce really is something to be proud of!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful harvest. I get some mis-shapen cucumbers from time to time too. That is a nice lettuce and you should show it off.
ReplyDeleteNice shallot harvest. All of mine rotted over the winter with the continual snow cover we had. I'm also trying Golden Ball turnip this year but mine are not nearly as "golden" as yours.
ReplyDeleteYour turnips are lovely and uniform. I bet they are tender and delicious - but unfortunately I don't like them! I love swedes which here 'up north' we perversely call turnips!
ReplyDeleteI'm from Cornwall and my wife is from Lancashire, so to avoid confusion we often refer to Swedes as "Swede Turnips". My Dad used to call them "Rudy Bakers" (i.e. Rutabagas).
DeleteA lovely harvest Mark, this year has been great hasn't it?
ReplyDeleteThat lettuce is beautiful. I haven't had lettuce from my garden in a long time. It has been way too hot here. I did seed some for the fall though.
ReplyDelete