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Welcome to No Preservatives Added! Where real food meets real people. This is the story of one family's journey towards better health, sharing experiences to help and encourage other real food lovers.

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Vegetable Garden Update and Report

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We started off with high hopes for our vegetable garden. Visions of a plentiful harvest and canning tomatoes fueled me as I worked, planted, weeded and watered the garden. Here’s where we ended up.

Spring Harvest:

  • Broccoli - The broccoli did surprisingly well. We harvested quite a few good sized heads and numerous side shoots for several weeks. I froze most of it, but the small amount we did eat was delicious.
  • Cauliflower - These took a little longer to harvest, but I’d say they were also pretty successful. Each plant produced a medium sized head. I only had 2 of them, so next time I need to plant much, much more.
  • Radishes - The radishes grew to perfection. My only regret was that I didn’t plant more. They were beautiful! These were the first vegetable we harvested, and it was really encouraging to get such good results.
  • Lettuce - I sorta went overboard here. I planted 8 romaine lettuce plants. That’s way too many for our family of 3! We do enjoy a summer salad, but not everyday and that’s pretty much what we could have done with all the lettuce we grew. We gave quite a bit of it away to my grandparents and then ate what we could. Then the summer heat took over, and it went to seed.
  • Cabbages - These took forever to harvest, but we did manage some small heads. Sadly, we did not eat them since at that point we had abandoned the garden due to our new cat using it as her litterbox (more on that in a bit). I grew the Early Jersey Wakefield and Savvoy Cabbage. Both seemed to do quite well.
  • Onions - Ok, I totally failed on these. It wasn’t that they didn’t grow, they were just very very small. I really had no idea how to grow onions and also had no idea how to know when they were ready for harvesting. They became ready soon after our new cat took over the garden, and I assumed the fallen over stalks meant they were ruined. So I left them there. All summer. Lots of weeds. LOTS and LOTS of weeds. I think the biggest onion I got was 2 inches in diameter. I didn’t know you should cut off the flower stalks to encourage bulb growth either. But now I know! And next year I definitely will be trying these again.

Season notes: We had a very wet spring. The far left bed had trouble with water-logging, so we didn’t plant much there. Hardly any sunlight meant our crops were slow to harvest. But we didn’t need to worry about watering! Oh no- we had that one covered with the rain! This was a blessing since I was in my first trimester of pregnancy and constantly sick throughout the spring though.

Summer Harvest:

  • Tomatoes - I planted 8 plants, but I didn’t get them in until nearly mid-June, so the transplants were a bit pot-bound and wilted by then. Nevertheless, I was determined since I really wanted to do some tomato canning come harvest time. Soon after the first fruits appeared, our cat arrived and we stopped watering the plants. Perhaps this is what did them in. Although they still produced quite a bit of fruit, they had all the signs of blossom end rot. Many of the tomatoes would not ripen either. We did manage to harvest some and cooked a brilliantly flavored tomato soup, but most of the fruits went to waste because of heat related diseases. By the end of the growing season, the fruits had all cracked – even the green ones. It was a very hard summer on tomatoes, and not watering them certainly did not help.
  • Peppers - I think my biggest mistake with the peppers was not realizing how long it takes for them to harvest. I guess I thought that they would be ready with the tomatoes, which is not true at all. Only in the past week, in October, did I manage to harvest some decent sized green ones (the red ones never turned). I think perhaps the lack of watering had something to do with this as well though. The fruits were all misshapen too, which was really weird. I have 4 sitting in my kitchen waiting to be washed and chopped, so it wasn’t a complete loss.
  • Summer Squash - I planted 2 plants, really thinking they would do well. How can you go wrong with summer squash? Well, once again, the horrible heat of the summer likely did them in without additional watering to help them. I harvested ONE squash. Two other fruits appeared and quickly rotted before I tore up the entire bed in preparation for amending the kitty litter soil.

Season notes: It was HOT. The fourth hottest summer on record to be precise. Little to no rain for long periods of time. It seems we got all the rain in the spring this year and none in the summer. Gardens did bad everywhere. Local apple orchards abandoned their crops completely. Farmers are in a bit of a bind from late planting due to the spring rains. So I feel better knowing I wasn’t the only one with troubles this year.

Fall Harvest:

  • Turnips - This was the only fall crop I managed to plant. I even opted for a container rather than planting in the litter-infested vegetable beds. I planted in mid-September, a bit late for this area, but so far the frost has held off and Indian summer has enabled them to thrive. It has been a nice change of pace to grow in a container, and I’ve been sure to water them. In a few days, I will have quite a few turnip leaves ready to harvest, and I’m hoping by harvesting the greens the bulbs will be encouraged to grow. We’ll see!

Season Notes: It’s been a good season for fall crops, but unfortunately, I wasn’t able to grow any more than the turnips. We’ve be working hard to construct actual raised beds in place of the vegetable garden beds and will be filling and cooking the soil over winter for a hopefully successful spring. We’re also trying to fix the cat problem by putting chicken wire over the soil for now.

How did your vegetable fare this year? Were there any challenges you weren’t aware of before? What was the biggest success?

Oct 12, 2011

Vegetable Garden Journal: Week 1

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This past week, our vegetable garden has gotten tons of rain. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing, though, considering the amount we were blessed with. April showers have been more like April downpours. However, the plants seem to be holding up fairly well. The cloudy days have pretty much inhibited any major growth, but I expect they will start taking off soon in the next couple weeks.

The radishes I planted from seed are also sprouting seedlings, though just the beginnings of them. I can’t wait to see what they look like a week from now after more sun!

I am thinking about planting a few other spring vegetables since we have the space for them (after reading up more on the correct spacing of the ones I did plant, I ended up filling up an entire extra bed and a half, leaving just one half of a bed! If we keep this up, we’re going to have to build another one in the not so distant future!).

So, readers, help a gal out. What spring vegetable would you plant? Let me know in the comments section below!

Apr 15, 2011

My Vegetable Garden Journal

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I’ve decided to log my notes and thoughts on our vegetable garden here at No Preservatives Added. This way, those of you who have never had a garden before can see what we’re doing, and maybe get some ideas and inspiration for starting one. And those of you who have gardened for years can kindly alert me to the many things (I’m sure) I’m doing horribly wrong!

Today we added topsoil and composted manure to our garden beds. We have three beds inside a roughly 10 by 15 garden. It looked so pretty once we had tilled it all! We also added 2 walkways to divide the beds, filling them with mulch and stepping stones. I’ve decided to work with some seeds as well as transplants since this is my first time attempting a vegetable garden. Today I planted…

  • Early Jersey Wakefield Cabbage
  • 45-Day Cabbage
  • Packman Broccoli
  • White Cloud Cauliflower
  • Romaine Lettuce
  • Purple Plum Radishes
  • Texas Sweet White Onions
  • Marigolds
  • Rosemary

This was enough to fill 2 of the beds. But after some more research, I think I may need to go back and space them apart some more, so the 3rd bed might be partially filled as well. I will post a picture sometime soon! It was wonderful to spend the day out in the garden, working on growing our own food. I can’t wait to see what this harvest will bring!

Apr 7, 2011

Eat Healthy and Spend Less!

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Ever wondered if it’s possible to spend less but eat more whole, real foods? Although you probably won’t be able to get your grocery bill down as far as those who eat more processed foods (because, let’s face it, eating whole foods is generally more expensive than buying a box of something!), you can still save money and not bust your budget!

Katie, from Kitchen Stewardship, is currently hosting a new series called Eat Well, Spend Less. 8 different blogs will be posting on how they manage to keep the budget in check while still providing nourishing, healthy food for their families. This is just the first week, and I am so impressed with all the different ideas out there for saving money!

Here are some of my own tips for keeping food costs down in our family:

  • Buy cheaper cuts of meat. This means whole chickens, not boneless breasts; ground beef and stew meat instead of steaks and ground pork in lieu of sausage patties.
  • Do the chopping yourself. We buy whole, 5lb bags of carrots and chop them up for carrot sticks or slices for meals. Same for celery and other veggies. I often will chop a lot all at once and freeze individual portions of them so that it’s just grab and go for a quick dinner. When you do more work yourself, like chopping vegetables, you can save quite a bit of money.
  • Shop the farmers. At our local farmer’s market, there are always farmers competing for business. This means prices are not always the same. They may flunctuate by 50 cents or even a dollar, so I always check out the prices of items I need (pastured eggs) and try to go with whoever is cheapest that week.
  • Menu plan. This is the single most important aspect of saving money while eating real food. You can easily spend hundreds over your allotted budget if you’re not careful with your planning. I really don’t enjoy menu planning, but when I do it, I am always grateful I have. I’ve found that one-week menu plans just don’t work for my family, so we recently started month long menu plans. I can strategically plan leftovers and help maximize our budget better when we do this.

The other ladies in the Eat Well, Spend Less blog series have so many other excellent ideas (which I didn’t feel needed repeating), so I encourage you to poke around and see for yourself!

What about you? How do you manange to keep your budget in check while eating real food?

Apr 6, 2011