Summer’s gone…

I really do have my sad face on today. Summer’s gone. Today is the start of autumn.

Yesterday I was sitting in my grandad’s armchair, under a knitted blanket, next to the roaring fire, drinking my first glass of mulled wine of the year. Picture it.

And all of my lovely vegetable plants are coming to the end of their life… So I’m going to pull them up today. It feels a bit like the last day of holiday, or the day before you go back to school so I’m going to have a little moment of reflection…

My courgettes were brilliant I have to say, although I am sure one of the plants was a marrow. They all need to come out now although I have two of the ten plants still holding on and squeezing out the last of their gifts. Will have to choose how I use those carefully. I always think the first and last courgettes of the year need some kind of ceremony. I have so much courgette chutney in the cupboard and soup in the freezer I don’t think we’ll go hungry this winter. And I shall plant my seeds (again) in March and be so excited (again) when the first one appears in July. Then hubby will get sick of them (again) by August and I’ll make chutney (again) in September.

Tomatoes were plentiful but mostly green so have had to ripen indoors on the windowsill. The taste is absolutely fantastic. There are still a few left on the plants so I might have a go at fried green tomatoes (at the Whistlestop Cafe) before the first frost comes to bite us on the bum. Onions are long gone, I wish I’d done more to be honest. Leeks are still doing their thing and so is the garlic. Butternut squash are taking over the whole place like triffids and have also invaded my next door neighbour’s plot. She has claimed squatter’s rights to any squash on her side.

Potatoes were fantastic, I’ve got some maris piper’s in now – I was hoping to make them last until Christmas but they are starting to yellow so I think they may get blanched and frozen for the big day. The carrots were a big surprise – I’d heard how hard they are to grow but they’ve been plentiful, although next year I will not use a whole packet in two rows as they’ve been far too close packed. We’ve been eating the thinnings each week but there are still loads. The parsnips also look fantastic still, I will confess to digging up a cheeky one with our last roast a few weeks ago and it was glorious. So hopefully we will have snippers, carrots and spuds for crimble.

On the not so positive front, my beetroots are still very small, the perpetual spinach leaves never got any bigger than the size of my little finger and the cucumbers flatly refused to do anything. Even the plants from the garden centre shrivelled up and died and I have no idea why, I’ve grown them perfectly well before in grow bags. I think perhaps my plot is too exposed for them. There is a lady at the end of my road with a huge polytunnel that grows ‘cukes’ (I’ve learnt from the allotmenteers that this is the term I should use) and then sells them from a little wooden cart outside her house for 25p so I am not going to get too upset, I shall just cheat and buy hers with the money from my piggybank.

I think now I need to dig in some muck and get some onions in to ‘over winter’ – am learning all these new words and terms lol.

But overall, great success I think especially for our first year properly at it. What with all my veg, top ups from the wooden cart down the road, and regular generous donations of eggs from the chooks next door, I’ve barely needed to buy anything except meat and staples like flour and butter from the local farmshop. I’ve not had to set foot in a supermarket for months now aside from sneaking in to buy bottles of cheap booze to make my sloe gin and my Christmas vodka.

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Happy days indeed. Just call us Tom & Barbara. x

Courgette-tastic! 

Deep breath… Are you in the glut??!!! Funniest thing, I keep on using all of my own, so when my next door neighbour left a carrier bag of stunning courgettes on my doorstep yesterday I was so grateful! What an awesome gift! It means I’ve been busy until 10pm with two of my most favourite recipes, the chocolate courgette cake and the spicy courgette and tomato chutney.

  

As we’re now coming to the end of July, if you are careful about how you ‘jar’ your jams and chutneys, they will keep perfectly for Christmas and make the most amazing gifts for friends and family. I make hampers for my loved ones and they get bigger and better every year!.

Don’t ever think that because a courgette is bigger than you might normally choose, that it’s no good. These make great cake and chutney! This chutney recipe also works well with marrow, just remove the seeds. You only need to peel if it’s not fresh, or the skin is too tough. 

So it’s all about best and effective use of time and a good bit of multi-tasking here… So chutney on first as that takes a good two hours to bubble down, then you can cake bake while that’s on the stove. 

Chutney Ingredients:

1.4kg courgettes

900g onions

900g brown sugar

3 inches of fresh ginger root

6 cloves of garlic, chopped

1tsp chilli flakes

1tsp salt

900ml malt vinegar

900g tomatoes

Chop everything and pop into a preserving pan. Turn up the heat and let the juices start to run. Add your vinegar, sugar and spices all together and mix well.   

  

Make sure you stir regularly with a wooden spoon to ensure it doesn’t catch to the bottom of the pan. Simmer. Then you can get on with your cake(s). I had enough courgettes to make two batches, one for home and one for hubby to take to work (he won’t tell them it’s a courgette cake until there’s only crumbs left in the tin teeheeeee) and for ease went with my loaf tins with pre-made liners which are an absolute revelation in life. This recipe is enough for a good full loaf tin and 3-4 muffins (for the chef!) or a flat tin approximately 20cm square. 

Cake Ingredients:

250g plain flour

350g grated courgette

375g caster sugar

75g good quality cocoa powder – I use Green & Black’s

2tsp bicarbonate of soda

1tsp baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

2 tsp mixed spice

4 free range eggs

250ml vegetable oil

Remember to stir your chutney! 

    

Back to the cake… Put your dry ingredients into a mixing bowl, then measure your oil into a jug and add the eggs. Whip the oil and eggs together to form an emulsion and add these to the dry ingredients in the bowl. Mix well for a minute or so. Fold in your grated courgette with a metal spoon. Pour into your cake tin! Bake at the centre of a pre heated oven 180 degrees for an hour or so. Test with a skewer to ensure it comes out clean, if not, pop it back for another five minutes.

Remove from the oven when baked, allow to cool and dust over some icing sugar. Then wait for it to be devoured!!!

    
Back to your chutney! 

It’s ready to jar up when most of the liquid is gone and you can drag your wooden spoon through and just see it’s path. I’ve tried to photograph that below.

   
Warm your jars through with their lids in the oven at 100 degrees then jar up using a jam funnel if you can to keep the mouth of the jar nice and clean. Pop on your lids and you’re done! This one I’ve found gets better and better like a good wine so if you can leave it till Christmas you’ll be grateful for it at Boxing Day lunch when you’ve got all your cold turkey and gammon and cheeseboard in front of you.

   
Enjoy peeps. I’m off to make some scones x

Oh no, not another bloody courgette! 

I feel that today needs a little fanfare really. It’s the day of my first courgette of the year. First of many I hope. As a longstanding vegetablearian I truly love these versatile veggies.

But my poor hubby, a caveman-esque manly meat eater with a great love of all things steak, did get fed up of the things last year.

The glut. Ah yes, you know it? The London bus syndrome of the vegetable world. You plant your seeds in March, then mother them daily until BOOM they become unruly teenagers one weekend when your back’s turned and the first fruits appear. Then they all arrive at once and grow at an unrivalled rate of knots.

So over the years, I have devised many many ways of using these little babies in all sorts of recipes… I’m not saying I sneak them in as such… Well yes, you’ve got me, sometimes I do. Don’t tell the hubster.

He suggested that I write a book. Oh no, not another bloody courgette! was born, in my mind at least. Basically this is what he would say to me every night when he got in from work from the onset of July’s first harvest.

Last night we enjoyed our first one of the year, it was sensational and in the form of one of my very favourite things, Zuchinni Fritti. I’m eagerly awaiting the next one and as supply becomes more plentiful, I shall stuff and batter up some flowers too. Prosecco chilling in the fridge? Check.

I’m going to list my recipes here as you’ll be needing them as we hit the season of plentiful harvest and I’ll write them all up as soon as I can with links to each one… So please sign up to my blog and keep checking back here for more recipes!!!

*Courgette and feta fritters

*Roasted courgettes with onions, halloumi and herbs

*Courgette and goats cheese quiche

*Courgette and pepper frittata

*Stuffed baked courgette boats

*Courgette soup

*Chocolate courgette cake

*Lemon courgette cake

*Zucchini fritti (healthy)

*Zucchini fritti (less healthy!)

*Courgette flowers

*Courgette and pesto tagliatelle

*Courgette lasagne

*Paneer & vegetable tikka kebabs – great for a BBQ

*Courgette & broad bean summer salad

*Courgette & goats cheese crostini

*Sweet courgette & apple chutney

*Spiced courgette chutney

*Spicy summer BBQ relish

I’d love to know if anyone has any more genius ways to use them… Please do share.

And one day I really will write that book I swear…

Bon appetit! X