
It is January and time to review 2018 in the garden. The growing season in New England started late because of a very long winter. I did not start planting my peas until April and my potatoes until May, a month later than usual. We had a wet and cool spring followed by a hot and wet summer.

Tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplant, peppers: I had three tomato plants that were heavily producing (one Brandywine and two Momotaros). That was plenty of fresh tomatoes for my family. Next season, I would have the same amount of plants but maybe add one or two early varieties to spread out the harvest period. Also, the Momotaros were not as flavorful as the Brandywine, so I will go back to heirlooms only (and hopefully find out what soil amendments the tomato research bed at City Natives used – tons of huge tomatoes there). I had one set of cucumber plants (I think three or four seedlings together) and could hardly keep up with the amount of fruit it produced. Definitely will not need more next season. The eggplant produced very late in the season. It was one of those smaller variegated type, tasty, but not a great producer. I had a hot pepper plant, which did not thrive, it might have been shaded out by some other plants. I got a handful of tasty very hot peppers though (do not remember the variety, it was a Thai pepper).

Legumes: I did not have as many peas as expected, many of the seeds were not growing into plants. I blame the birds. I should grow more next season and perhaps in succession. I planted the bush beans and the pole beans on the same day (June 1), but since they have different germination/maturation times, the harvests were staggered nicely (bush beans first, pole beans later). This worked very well and I will do the same again next season.

Potatoes: Not a successful year. I think it was the wet summer. Lots of potatoes were rotted once I harvested them. I will do two hills next season, but fingerlings only and remember to be very careful NOT to water them too much. (One of my plot neighbors was gone for the entire month of August and neglected her plot. She dug huge amounts of beautiful and big potatoes out of the ground in September). The ones I harvested though were delicious.

Garlic: Not a great harvest for the softnecks. Could have been the long and cold winter (I read that softnecks do not do well under these conditions). I had a good amount of volunteer hardnecks, even though they were small. Next season, I will do a mix again of softnecks and hardnecks. I planted seed garlic again in late fall (softneck). I also saved a few nice heads of the hard neck (Red Russian) and planted the cloves.

Greens: The Swiss chard did very well despite the leaf miner damage. As usual, I just snipped the affected leaves and discarded them in the trash. Kale had growing pains, I grew it from seed and the first leaves were mangled by woodlice, flea beetles and slugs. But those are fighters. Spring greens were decimated by flea beetles despite the row cover. I should just stop trying. The fall greens did so much better, as usual. I planted fall green mix (lettuces, red kale, mustard greens) from Sand Hill Preservation and also arugula. The mache was a no-show again. I have never had success growing it in the plot. Ever.

Root crops: Radishes did well, but had some chewing damage. Carrots were a mixed bag. The first crop did great, the second not so much, probably because I neglected to water them well in the beginning. I need to take care to become better at grouping vegetables with similar watering needs. I also need to be more diligent thinning the radishes and carrots. Beets did well, I want to plant more interesting varieties and maybe succession plant those, so I can enjoy them all year.

Herbs: I had planted a parsley plant and a sage plant. Both I bought as seedlings. Both died over the course of the season, they just rotted away. I am not sure why, very strange. The dying sage is visible in the first picture of this post, in the right bottom corner. The basil did great as usual.
Plans for next year:
More: flowers, heirloom tomatoes (maybe 3 early and 3 late), rainbow carrots, pickling cucumber, beets (golden and Chiogga), head lettuce, hot peppers (different varieties), eggplant
Same: cucumbers ( 1 plant), pole beans (one tripod), bush beans (two rows), Swiss chard (1 row), basil (3 or 4 plantings), one squash plant (butternut), radishes, greens, leeks, potatoes (fingerlings or specialties only)
Less: kale (2 to 3 plants will be enough, seedlings), Thai basil (did not really use any)
Maybe: melon, tomatillos
Back porch plans: all the herbs, rainbow chard (so pretty), hot peppers, container eggplant, flowers
Also: Find a way to control the woodlice that eat my seedlings and strawberries and low-hanging tomatoes.




This morning, I foraged in my own backyard for materials for this year’s Advent wreath and came back upstairs with grapevine, thuja, yew and spent spirea seed heads.
I soaked the grapevine for about an hour in the bathtub to make it pliable and then tied it into a wreath.


Last night’s dinner was Moroccan meatballs with harrisa, cumin-roasted cauliflower with tahini, Greek salad and rice. The five tomatoes in the salad were the very last ones from my garden. They had been ripening on the kitchen window sill for the past five weeks. They were so very tasty.
We spent Thanksgiving at our friends’ house and I was on appetizer duty. My daughter and I made these

Eating from the garden in November – potato leek soup. Leeks, garlic and parsley are home-grown.
Last two cloves of (volunteer) hardneck garlic. Now onto the softnecks.
Leeks and garlic sauteed in butter.
Add potatoes …
… and water , salt and pepper. Simmer for 20 minutes and puree. To be served with chopped parsley, bacon bits and homemade croutons. Yum!
Today I spent a couple of hours raking our back yard (I had great help by my son) and clearing out the front yard flower bed and then moved on to the community garden. It is supposed to dip down to the 20s tonight so I thought it would be a good time to get the garden ready for winter. I got a bale of field hay from
Still growing are two stalks of Brussels sprouts …
…, two stalks of kale and about a dozen leeks. Ready for winter:
Mums and parsley
Yesterday was the Head of the Charles Regatta here in Boston and my 16 year old-daughter participated with her high school’s girls varsity Eight. They did great and qualified for next year’s event but the conditions were rough. It was very cold (40s), with a light drizzle at the beginning of their race and the wind was fierce. Our family spent most of the day outside and we all felt this weather called for soup for dinner. So, I made the first butternut squash soup of the season. I like to roast the squash at 425 for about 45 minutes depending on the size (I typically add fresh herbs at this step, this time it was sage and rosemary from my porch kitchen garden). In the meantime, I saute an onion in butter in the Dutch oven. I then add the roasted squash and saute for a couple of minutes, add water (or veggie broth) and simmer for 15 minutes. I then puree it and add a cup of milk and more water to make it the desired consistency and season with salt and pepper. I like to serve it with a spoonful of grated Parmesan on top and fried sage leaves (optional) and with fresh crusty bread on the side (yesterday’s sourdough bread was from
Squash is roasted cut side down at 425 F. (The smaller squash on the side was the one from my garden. It was very tasty.)
Post-roasting, nicely caramelized. 