Posted this compost-dyed scarf on etsy today! A few more will be coming soon.
In other news- WELL. it's finally harvest-time here. Last summer, I filled our freezer (a big upright one) with all manner of garden goodies: tomatoes, carrots, peppers, peaches, raspberries, corn. We ate from it all winter long - it was fantastic. Hearty winter soups, cobblers, berries for breakfast. This summer the weather was so horrid... I was beginning to wonder if I'd have anything to freezer. Well this past week, all hell broke loose (so to speak) in the garden area. All of a sudden I have LOADS of fruit to deal with - a bumper crop of crabapples, regular apples, wild plums, elderberries, and wild grapes....with pears and peaches still to ripen. A friend of mine has been bringing me tomatoes, 20+ lbs at a time, and I've been making pizza sauce, and freezing tomatoes. Today, I've got jam on the stove, huge pans of roasted root veggies in the stove (garlic, potatoes, carrots, turnips and beets generously seasoned with rosemary and sage...) to be frozen for winter soups. 2 huge bags of basil to turn into pesto, and another 20 lbs of tomatoes to be made into soup or sauce.
It's alot of work, but, frankly, I'm relieved. I'll get to eat local/organic/wildcrafted produce all winter long. Now that I'm used to it, it's really the only way to live.
In other news- WELL. it's finally harvest-time here. Last summer, I filled our freezer (a big upright one) with all manner of garden goodies: tomatoes, carrots, peppers, peaches, raspberries, corn. We ate from it all winter long - it was fantastic. Hearty winter soups, cobblers, berries for breakfast. This summer the weather was so horrid... I was beginning to wonder if I'd have anything to freezer. Well this past week, all hell broke loose (so to speak) in the garden area. All of a sudden I have LOADS of fruit to deal with - a bumper crop of crabapples, regular apples, wild plums, elderberries, and wild grapes....with pears and peaches still to ripen. A friend of mine has been bringing me tomatoes, 20+ lbs at a time, and I've been making pizza sauce, and freezing tomatoes. Today, I've got jam on the stove, huge pans of roasted root veggies in the stove (garlic, potatoes, carrots, turnips and beets generously seasoned with rosemary and sage...) to be frozen for winter soups. 2 huge bags of basil to turn into pesto, and another 20 lbs of tomatoes to be made into soup or sauce.
It's alot of work, but, frankly, I'm relieved. I'll get to eat local/organic/wildcrafted produce all winter long. Now that I'm used to it, it's really the only way to live.
Labels: etsy, harvest, natural dyeing
2 Comments:
I'm right with you there! It almost seems overwhelming at first when everything seems to ripen at the same time. I've got buckets of grapes to harvest and juice , then can. The flavor is beyond compare though, and as you say, organic and local. Plus I just love to look at all my pretty colored jars lining the pantry shelves. lol
it's a great feeling isn't it? Oh, i love the picture of your tomatoes and handspun yarn. I have GOT to reember to send your drop spindle tomorrow!! bad me!
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