Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Welcome dear friends,
Herbs are such a delight to grow and I love using herbal remedies for my family and their health prevention as well as for illness.
Again here is an old post for you about Herbs.....

As we look forward to the coming of Spring, my thoughts turn to gardening and what we may be able to  do.
As it looks like we may be  living in a much smaller area, especially garden area I have been giving thought to container gardening and as herbs are so easy to grow I thought we might start with these.

For a starting place here are some ideas I have had on file for years to share with you also~

You can easily grow herbs on the kitchen windowsill and enjoy the fragrance and flavors of herbs in your country cooking!

Starting herb seeds - plant your seeds in potting soil and keep moist until they sprout. The top of the refrigerator is a nice warm spot to sprout seedlings. Once they have sprouted, place on a sunny windowsill and water as needed. Once they are well established, you can cut back a bit on the water. Herbs tend to like their soil a little dry.
(tip - you can use many cute containers for your herbs - a cracked teapot or cup, pretty jars, an old gravy boat, etc..)

Choosing Savory Herbs for your windowsill garden:
Dill - One of the all time most popular herbs. Both seeds and leaves of dill have have sharp, slightly bitter taste. The aromatic young branches are used to flavor salads, pickles, vinegar, sauces, soups, stews, and chicken, lamb and fish dishes.
Cooking: Use dried or fresh leaves, known as dill weed, to make dill butter, flavor broiled fish, soups, salads, meats, poultry, omelets, and potatoes.

Coriander - (Also called Cilantro) This easy to grow herb is similar in appearance to parsley. Young leaves taste like dried orange peel. Coriander is rich in vitamins A & B, calcium, riboflavin, and niacin. Used frequently in Latin American cooking.
Cooking: Use fresh or dried leaves in salads and soups, serve chopped with avocados. Great for spicy meat dishes. As seeds ripen, gather them and use them whole or crushed on pastry, French dressing, beans, stew, sausage, and fish.

Sweet Basil - Basil's aromatic leaves have a warm and spicy flavor. A must have for Italian cooking and Thai Cuisine. Basil is known to fight toxins and aids the digestion.
Cooking: Use sparingly in tomato dishes and sauces, green salads, omelets, cucumbers, and with meat, poultry, fish and Stir Fry dishes.

Parsley - Everyone knows parsley as a garnish, but it also has a wonderful flavor. Great for almost everything from sauces to gourmet fish dishes. It'll make an attractive, deep green, frilly plant on your windowsill, but if you set some of the root outside, you'll have it every year.
Cooking: Mix parsley leaves into salads, soups, stews, casseroles, and omelets. Serve fresh as garnish with meat, fish and onion dishes.

Chives - An all-time favorite, this relative of the onion is great for flavoring any dish that needs a "zing." They improve almost any dish. The plants also reward you with lovely purplish flowers, which are also edible!
Cooking: Chop chives and add to salads, egg and cheese dishes, cream cheese, mashed potatoes, hamburgers, sandwich spreads, and sauces.

What are some of your favourite herbs?


God Bless,

Gae

Friday, 1 January 2016

Welcome !!

Hello there friends,
This is a new (blog) adventure for us, both Stephen and I will be contributing to this blog, as we share here our journey as a newbie homesteading family.
We have been a country family all our lives and originally  dreamed of living on a 1000 acre property.
Those dreams have become ,um, let us say more realistic for us over the years, as in reality we are never going to be able to have that dream, but we still do dream of owning our own moderate acres to live and grow on that will allow us to live a life of self sufficiency and sustainability.

We hope to share here various information about our journey and other interesting bits an pieces of our small (at the moment) backyard homestead.

Won't you join us and come along for the journey? We truly will be blessed to have you with us!

To start us off we will be sharing old posts from my blog Cherished Hearts At Home

God Bless,
Stephen and Gae

Square Foot Gardening

Welcome dear friends,
As we get used to our new space here we are sharing some old posts from my other blog Cherished hearts at Home to start with.
This one is an old one that talks not only about books but some gardening ideas too.
I hope you enjoy :)

As part of my birthday book list I that I was fortunate enough to have received this year I had to wait for a couple of books to arrive.
Square foot Gardening was one of them. I had been really keen to get this book based on what I had read about it.

You see I have wanted a vegetable garden for so long. One that would grow our own vegetables and keep us supplied on a year round basis. Not too big a request I thought, that is our goal. It costs a lot to keep us fed in fruit and veg and so why can't we grow that much.

Well we have a water situation here. We don't have enough water usually, especially in the Summer and have to buy in water. So watering a large area has always been a challenge for us.
Did I mention that when we have tried in the past to grow vegies we have ummm.....failed. Yes failed miserable. I guess it was too much work, all that watering and weeding of endless yard space.
Did I also mention that we tend never to do things on a small scale basis, after all my motto is " in for at least 110%". So we have NEVER had a great, or good, or even a fairly OK garden.

The book really is a great buy with information on how much to grow for each family, how to set up your garden and is very, very easy to read and digest the information.

The big promise for using this type of gardening is in these figures:
100% harvest for
50% costs
20% space
10% water
5% seeds
2% work
compared to traditional single row gardening.

So what is so unique about this book that you will have success with it?
I think Mel can answer that for in in this small youtube presentation!

And this is the home website for Square Foot Gardening it has all the answers you may need to ask!
Happy Gardening!

God Bless,
Stephen and Gae