Working on machine applique. |
Hobo bag commissioned by my niece. |
Quilt finish - made from bonus Christmas fabric HSTs. |
String-X quilt pieces, string pieced on phone book pages. |
One of the many bike rides we've enjoyed. |
Dad has been the master gardener in the family through the years, until the present one. But he's still laid up with his broken ankle from January and some healing complications from that. So with the help of a couple other family members, we got his garden planted (in some pretty boggy soil), but the crops haven't done very well. The radishes and parsnips washed out. About a third of the onions came up, about a dozen beets are still thinking about it, and a handful of green bean plants are struggling to push out some pods. The peppers, nada. The tomatoes? They may be okay eventually, barring an early frost.
Wildflowers (grown by Nature, not me) |
If you can't beat 'em - eat 'em?
After whacking at the thousandth specimen of one weed, in particular, I got curious about it. So I asked Google what the heck it was and ultimately identified it as purslane. That's not what Dad called it, but we won't go there.
Purslane |
And here it was in spades. I won't go so far as to say manna from heaven, but Nature's gift, at any rate, or consolation prize. A veritable and vegetative "participation trophy" for us amateurs.
You think you can grow peppers? Not this year, lady. But have some purslane.
So I ate it. And it was good!
It tastes like baby spinach, only better. Brighter tasting, a little lemony. I chopped some up and sprinkled it in a salad. I added it to soft tacos for a tasty crunch.
I didn't eat a ton of it—you never know when my touchy stomach will decide that everything must go—but I gave it a fair shot and enjoyed it, and it didn't cause me any grief. So there's that.
What kind of adventures have you had this summer—gardening, gastronomic, or otherwise?
Purslane? We always called them "mats". As kids we grew big round mats of them and played with them, stacking them up. Didn't take much to entertain us. We could have been eating well. How much do you want to bet I'll never see any again? Murphy's Law.
ReplyDeleteHugs
Ha, we have that stuff growing in spades around here, and now thanks to you I know what it is! Wonder if I can get hubby to try some on his next taco lol!
ReplyDeleteIt's good to enjoying the fine weather while you have it - I've slowed down a lot this summer too; can't sit inside when the sun is shining. I'm sorry your gardening hasn't been a huge success, but at least there's something you can eat, even if it's not what you planned. :-)
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