Friday, July 18, 2014

Fried Purslane !

One of the most prolific weeds in our garden is Purslane (Portulaca oleracea). It propagates readily and a good amount of our weeding effort is dedicated to Purslane.

But maybe we need to look at purslane differently? Check out this blog posting by Ashley from Lethbridge on Fried Purslane.
https://blog.etsy.com/en/2010/edible-weeds-fried-purslane-with-off-the-hooks/

Ashley's recipe

Fried Purslane
Serves 2

2 cups (500 ml) fresh purslane leaves (and stems, if young), washed
2 Tbsp (30ml) butter or olive oil
1/4 cup (50ml) dry white wine
2 Tbsp (30ml) freshly squeezed lemon juice
Salt and pepper to taste
Freshly grated parmesan cheese to taste

Bring water to a boil, add purslane, reduce heat and simmer for 3-5 min. Drain.

Melt butter or oil in a heavy skillet. Add blanched purslane, wine, and lemon juice — cook until liquid reduces slightly. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper, grate fresh parmesan cheese on each serving.

Serve hot and enjoy!


And here's a recipe for Purslane Salad from Amy Chaplin.

Late spring purslane salad with flax chive dressing

5 baby turnips, cut in ¼’s
5 radishes, cut in ¼’s
5 baby carrots, cut in half lengthways
10 sugar snap peas, trimmed
2 large handfuls purslane

Dressing
2 tablespoons flax oil
Juice of half a lemon
½ teaspoon tamari or shoyu, or more to taste
Black pepper
6 chives chopped

Place turnips and radishes in the basket of a steamer and steam 2 minutes. Add sugar snaps and steam 1 minute more. Remove from heat and spread out on a platter to cool.

http://www.coconutandquinoa.com/2010/06/12/purslane-salad-with-flax-chive-dressing/

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Harvest on July 14

On July 14, we harvested:

Peppers  2.5 lbs
Lettuce  39.5 lbs
Kale  7 lbs
Swiss chard  16 lbs
Beets  63.5 lbs

This brings our total to date - 150.5 lbs valued at $376.25.