It is time
to gather together in the warm sunshine,
taking great care
to gently pick all of the fruit ripened there.
to gather together in the warm sunshine,
taking great care
to gently pick all of the fruit ripened there.
Today was quite a day! Shortly after waking from my deep delightful slumber, my feet hit the floor and the fun began. The garden is in full force production at this stage. We are picking cucumbers, yellow squash, zuchinni squash, tomatoes, butter beans, peppers, cherry tomatoes, potatoes, snap beans and okra from the garden now. Today momma picked a bushel of butter beans and we "put up" 7 quart bags of those babies! We also cut, battered and froze okra and squash for frying at a later date. Momma canned some peppers this morning and shortly after that I took my turn with the canning pot and made some pickles! I must admit it was pretty exciting to do some canning. Tomorrow will look much like today and for that I am grateful, so grateful that our garden is producing at the rate it is.
Momma's pickled banana peppers and hot peppers. |
Never mind my dirty kitchen window! Look at these tasty tomatoes. |
OKRA! A very dear friend of mine gave these awesome Pampered Chef Stainless Steel bowls and they too have been a must have in our country kitchen. So handy. |
As I said before, each time Momma is back here it seems we have an adjustment period to go through. I suppose that is normal?! Sometimes I feel that certain boundaries have to be laid and protected for our family unit and while I still strongly feel this way, there have been some areas I could have possibly handled a bit more gently but didn't. God in His mercy has helped Momma and I to begin to work together like a well oiled machine. We truly are having a good time together, today was an amazing day all the way around. Our day began together in the garden and ended together on a walk to the garden to turn the sprinkler off. Our walk back home held a moment of prayer and thanksgiving to God for the abundant harvest He has blessed us with!
so incredibly grateful for ALL that the Lord is and has blessed you with. You really are a very special gal.
ReplyDeleteTrina
I LOVE reading these posts of yours, Lynnie. It is SO exciting for me to see someone else as excited about the preservation of food for the family as you are! I am the same way. I've also gotten some wonderful ideas from you through reading today's post. I now have new ideas for those summer squash that seem to always produce in such abundance...the okra also. Have you ever pickled okra? DELICIOUS! I especially love your enthusiasm over making pickles! I love doing those things that take a bit of extra time!
ReplyDeleteGlad to see your momma pictured in your posts. Please tell her I said hello. I'm loving the fact that you have her there to help you out in this endeavor! :-)
Hugs to you, my friend.
You GROW girl! You are are knocking that garden out. What fun to have someone beside you that appreciates all the garden has to offer. I love that your blog has turned into a farm blog with all it abundant stories. I am learning and I like that you include exactly what you are doing, so others can learn from you at the same time. Funny how your blog name turned from "lame in both feet" to "invited to the king's table" He would certainly show up at your bountiful harvest to sup:)
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm jealous over your garden and your mother. You are a blessed woman. I think an adjustment period would be normal; you are probably both very strong women. I can appreciate that you are honest that your relationship isn't perfect ~ it's real.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother pickled green beans and it was one of my favorite things. I've never had pickled banana peppers! Looking forward to seeing what else comes out of that garden! :)
Thanks to each of you for stopping by! Dianna, we have had an abundance of summer squash too and we have put up the limit for stewed squash and had to find other ways to preserve. So.. we decided to dredge some in that mixture. It works well if you dredge them then put in a BUNCH of extra mix so they dont stick together while they are going through their freezing process. We simply go back and then pick out the frozen and covered slices, put them in a freezer storage bag and set the flour/cornmeal mixture in the freezer by it self to use with the next batch. Momma has sifted some every once in a while too, to remove any clumps.
ReplyDeleteJulie- pickled green beans!! YUM! The pickled banana peppers are something we eat along with certain meals. Like a condiment. They are quite tasty on neckbones and rice, or mustard greens, etc. My southern roots are starting to show again!
I LOVE your southern roots and love hearing about the things you are doing on your farm. I'll have to try pickled banana peppers! :)
ReplyDelete