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23 Aug 2021 19:44 - 24 Aug 2021 13:32 #392387
by Billy Shatine
Fresh Green beans
Onions and Garlic
Green Onions
Fresh hot Green Pepper
I Whole Fresh Karela/Karile sliced
2 large and Fresh Okra
Fresh Bhagi
Summer Sage
Salmon Sliced longitudinally
Olive Oil
Salt
All save the Garlic, Olive oil and the Salmon grown in my own garden
Heat oil and in with the garlic and sage. Garlic browned add onions sliced. A couple minutes add Karela/karile: Then green beans sliced, along with all the remainder of the greens except the Bhagi which goes in last. add salt to taste. add a bit of water if necessary
when all of those greens are cooked...not long add the Salmon. I roll them up in rounds. The Salmon takes about 3 minutes to be almost done: and now add finally the Bhagi which takes a minute or 2. turn off the heat and let simmer down but not totally cool.
Serve on a plate! with whatever carb that's going on the table. lots of veggies already in there, no need for a salad. I had it with zucchini bread I made myself. I am overflowing with zucchini, making all sorts of things to freeze, preserve etc with zucchini
Wow! Was that ever good
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24 Aug 2021 08:49 #392406
by Billy Shatine
I also tried an old west Indian/Trinidad and Tobago recipe for soup with zucchini: COW HEEL SOUP!
But I added beef Tripe to that soup: and used zucchini and mushrooms for the soup rather than water. it was thick and rich and finished rather quickly as those I offered bowls polished the soup off quickly
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24 Aug 2021 08:54 - 24 Aug 2021 08:54 #392407
by Billy Shatine
.I also made and make and will make all the way until my garden is done:
Beef and Karela/Karile stir fry and stews!
fresh curried cut green beans with chicken and beef
Stewed cut green beans and thinly sliced pork
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24 Aug 2021 10:28 #392408
by VillageBelle
Nice recipe there Billy.
I have been cooking lots of zucchini too......from my daughter's garden.
For whatever reason I didn't get a single zucchini from my garden, and all the plants died
Your zucchini bread is most likely different from the one I make which is more like a carrot cake but with zucchini. Baked 4 batches over this summer.
Also cooked stew/curry zucchini/chicken several times.
Eaten with roti....made with 60/40 wholewheat/unbleached flour
I have to cook roti....all 5 of my grands prefer this to rice!
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24 Aug 2021 11:00 #392416
by ketchim
My zucchini is taking forever to grow !....jeeeezzzz
Tomatoes and peppers growing real nice ~
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24 Aug 2021 14:21 - 24 Aug 2021 14:36 #392427
by Billy Shatine
your kids have good taste Village Belle..Roti.
I love white roti more than any other. but I cant eat all regular flour roti anymore. unless I succeed making roti with Quinoa flour, mixed with Qats etc., or with Barley or some such I wont be able to eat roti anymore
I find that zucchini as a plant is very versatile when it comes to soils...growing and producing well enough well on a range of soils, from good to poor every summer. if zucchini does not come well in a season it could be due many possibilities, lots that can be avoided if the zucchini spot planted, is rotated every season.
lots of bacteria, pests and predators love zucchini and the big commercial zucchini producers wash them down with chemicals to get good crops every year. then we eat those zucchini when we shop at the supermarket etc. using such chemicals in the home garden does not make sense. but it makes sense to do a little reading about zucchini and what ails it and may attack those you plant in the summer
I find spot rotation to be critical. if you plant zucchini in the same spot each summer that wont help. but it is also helpful to know which plants may be useful to follow zucchini with in a rotation...plants which feed off, or neutralize what harms zucchini and 'cleans' up the spot. I like legumes to follow zucchini.
but to be even more specific it is best to rotate everything in the garden by spot every summer. and what is even more crucial than rotations is soil health. we have to build up the soil all the time and that should be fairly easy the way I do it.
in the fall when the garden is done, mulch it and put the mulch into the soil! mix it in well but make sure the mulch is as fine as you can get it.
all year long the vegetable and carb leavings off the table and in the preparation of meals in the kitchen can also be added to the garden, but not the meat...unless you can render meat right down before you put it into the garden. any kind of meat, even ground or blended meat in a paste, attracts bigger animals which stop at little to get to that spot where they smell the meat, dig-up all the land around where it is buried to get at it. they can do a lot of destruction
but all the plant leavings, roti, rice, bread, veggies etc., can be blended right down and added to the soil. such does not attract animals to dig up the soli and damage the garden. and these rot much easier, faster into the soil when blended, and become nutrient ready for plants next season.
but the more you get that soil nutrient rich the better for your plants. there will be balance all around...the plants would have their best chance to be strong and capable of fighting-off the pest and diseases.
so spot rotation and soil nutrient is key! crucial to garden success.
and remember the soil that people buy every season to add to their garden could also be the problem why zucchini plants for example do not grow well, do not produce food...that and spot rotation are my 2 key factors of failure. the people who sell soils are without scruples. most of those soils are murder on gardeners...no good at all!.
so several times during the summer, let your lawn grow high so you can harvest the clippings for the garden soil. Mulch the garden in the fall and add that too...as well as constant scraps off the table and kitchen meal preparation. depend on that much more than on any soil you may buy for the garden.
if you can go get soil in the country somewhere they actually dig it out or are making it right there you can see that would be good. but that seems a real big undertaking that!
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24 Aug 2021 14:54 - 24 Aug 2021 15:07 #392430
by Billy Shatine
Also for Belle save that this is not early in the season: the question of male and female flowers, pollination by insects etc.
zucchni produces lots of male flowers in relation to female flowers and the availability of pollinators in the garden to do the job. but that is an early season problem not late like end of august. so something long term is wrong...or there are no pollinators in both gardens
For ketchim: bwoy! zucchini is a crow that attracts tons of diseases. if by late august you are no well grown its not going to happen this year. there is diseases in your soil that's killing your growth. In fact I don't know when you planted your zucchini but if you don't have growth you expected by now they have been in at least 6 weeks. you aint going to get much if anything out of that.
next year for you but you have to change spots and make sue you have a good rich soil available where you spot them. Zucchini grows on anything but to max out get the soil rich so they can fend for themselves. I never use chemicals on my garden. never! if they get sick I do the best I cane and they usually get over. but if they die so be it. I am not going to poison myself.
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