Last Monday was groundhog day. I think that somewhere that damn giant rodent saw his shadow. That is the only explanation for first, another small blizzard on Thursday, and then the big blast of cold weather. Single digits totally encompass the 9 day forecast on the weather app. On several days 0 will be the high. I try not to think about the consecutive nights getting down into the negative double digits.
Actually if you add up the high temperatures for the next 7 days, the total is 28. (It was 17 when I first wrote this.) If you add the lows you get -65. (It used to be -83) Brr.
Fortunately February is a short month. We will stay warm inside and have grandchildren to keep us from thinking about the weather. I am developing baby-toting backache. It is there particularly when I try to find a comfortable position for sleeping. It also does not go away as the days go on. But Maisie is quite a baby. Yesterday, for example, she decided her brother jumping into the air was the funniest thing she had ever seen. She laughed and laughed. He would jump again and she would laugh once more. This went on for more times than you would have thought.
The outside garden is under quite a white blanket at the moment. Inside, the orchids are carrying the show. The seedlings are growing, except for the ones that take a long time. I should just stop looking at those trays every day. They will all come up one day when I have not looked at them for a week.
Last Week in the contest
There was the tightest contest all season. That is saying something since we had one week there was a tie.
The winner was the pasque flower. Just one vote behind was the hellebore group. The daffodil and double bloodroot were right behind those two.
But the winner was certainly a worth participant.
Here was the full vote tally.
This Week is Week #11
This week the pictures are from from later in the year than last week. There is even one from outside in November.
I wish I had more time for commentary. It just was not there this week. Can you imagine that?
#1 Cactus flower
July 29, 2020
Peonies arrive after the spring bulbs are ending. They need a fair amount of sun. In May some of my big trees have not leafed out. I moved some of them this past fall. We will see how that works.
Bonus Pictures
There are just a few pictures. Let me just say it has been a busy week.
Cactus
I have grown these cactus plants for maybe 10 years. This one is the oldest, and at this point it is certainly the strangest. It started growing additional plants on top, about 5 years ago. It is an absolutely strange plant at this point.
Right Now
Rooting continues. Actually as the New Pioneer coop is carry less bulk spices during the pandemic, my supply of little glass jars is growing. (We have to buy spices in new containers.) This picture is the annual asclepias. It is the root champion of the winter of 2020.When outside closed, I brought it a sage plant, a parsley plant, and a mint plant. The parsley has done the best. The sage plant survives. I decided to see if I could root cuttings. Apparently not, at least with sage. But the sage cuttings have bloomed.
Julia's recipe
Ricotta gnocchi
I was Using Things Up so my batch was bigger than the recipe called for - I made about 1-1/2 times the recipe. Since Katie and Elisabeth and their children have been staying with us and therefore around for dinner for a while, I am cooking for a bigger crowd (including Maggie when her work schedule permits) than usual.
I am going to lay this out as a more normal recipe which will feed 4 people nicely as a side dish.
The ingredients: 1 16 oz. container of whole milk ricotta; 2 eggs; 1 cup grated Parmesan cheese; 1-1/4 (or so) cup of white flour and some salt and pepper (about 1/2 teaspoon each). Plus a pot of water with 1 tablespoon of salt.
For the sauce: 3 tablespoons of butter and some fresh sage leaves (which we had because we are overwintering a sage plant). Instead you could use pesto or some tomato sauce (not too intense) for serving instead of sage in brown butter.
I plopped the ricotta into a big bowl, added the parmesan, eggs, salt and pepper and stirred to combine.
Odds and Ends
In going through pictures I found this picture of a croton leaf. The plant that goes with this leaf was one of several great new additions to the garden this past year. Sometimes leaves are as nice as flowers.
Let me close with the best pictures of the week.
Christopher is actually an experienced person with a laundry basket on his head. But in our house you can easily run laps on the first floor.
2 comments:
It was hard choo
Sing between the cactus flower and the peony. I expect the peony to win but not surprised at the results so far. Loved the kid videos!
The red of the peony demanded my vote at gunpoint. There was no getting away from it.
Is Christopher that active all day long? Congratulations on your vaccinations. Disjointedly yours, Pat
Post a Comment