I scrumped a few windfall quinces at Brogdale the other day! (wouldn't that be a great opening line for a novel?) anyway, came home decided to make quince jelly.
What a terriffic success! HOORAY! Quinces have a high pectin content, but a low acid content. I blitzed them up in a food processor into chunks, and made jelly.
2lbs quinces - chopped roughly
3 pints water
juice of 3 lemons
2lbs sugar
Boil the quinces in the water with the added lemon juice (or citric acid) slowly for about an hour. Drain this through a muslin and allow the juice to drip out for about an hour. Do not squeeze the muslin, you do not want it to go cloudy. Put the quince pieces back in the saucepan, add another pint of water and boil for another 20 minutes. Drip through the muslin as before.
For each pint of quince juice you produce, add 1lb of sugar. Return the juice and sugar to a clean pan and boil rapidly for 10 minutes. After this, either use a thermometer and get the temperature up to the jam temperature of over 220F. Every 10 minutes or so, take a spoonfull out of the saucepan on to a cold plate. Put the plate in the freezer for 10 minutes to get an idea if the jelly is set. When it is - b0ttle it!
Mine was fantastic - it turns a dark peach colour on cooking. Tastes divine!
Apples at Brogdale


Medlars


Visit to the National Fruit Collection

I sneaked several windfall quinces.... as we speak, several pints of quince jelly are cooking gently on my stove. More to follow.

Caterpillars eating my broccoli!
Pesky critters raise their heads again! My lovely purple sprouting broccoli is about 2 foot tall now, and are growing well. I have to search each one by hand each day looking for small green caterpillars that like to hide in the very small leaves in the middle. They are a bit eaten all over the place - but still looking healthy. I left them for about 4 days without checking - bad mistake! Went out today after some hard rain and they were crawling all over the leaves in broad daylight. One solution - SQUISH!
American Brown lettuce


Winter Lettuce


Swiss Chard


Courgette "Defender"


My first Sweet Potato


Veggie Heaven

I made a large batch of ratatouille today. Peppers, courgettes, aubergines and green beans, thyme - cooked together with tomatoes and onions. Veggie Heaven!

Second crop of cucumbers

Another early cucumber was completely spent and finished, so I cut it back to about 2feet tall and two leaf joints - it is already up to the roof as well as having a lovely bunch of cucumbers growing.

Sweet Potatoes


Small Atlantic Giant


Just one more


Ratatouille


Beans and Cucumbers
Three cheers for Bob Flowerdew! or "Saint Bob" as he is known... on Gardeners Question Time, his tip for the week was to extend the productive life of cucumbers by cutting down the main stem to about the 2nd leaf joint, and the plant would grow like new again. It did ! The tired old stem was up to the roof of the greenhouse and had just about exhausted itself. Within a few days of cutting right back to about 18" from the pot, new green growth has sprung forth and a new crop of cucumbers is already developing - the longest is already a healty 5".
I had also planted a 2nd crop of cucumber seeds at the beginning of July, and these replacement plants are also thriving - except for some nasty case of white mould. Apparently "Bob says" cucumbers do not mind the shortening day length at all, they do however appreciate the warmth, so as long as I can keep them warm they should carry on producing cucumbers.
I am also picking my second crop of dwarf French beans. These were also sown at the beginning of July when I got back from holiday - I am picking handfuls every day. Yum!
I had also planted a 2nd crop of cucumber seeds at the beginning of July, and these replacement plants are also thriving - except for some nasty case of white mould. Apparently "Bob says" cucumbers do not mind the shortening day length at all, they do however appreciate the warmth, so as long as I can keep them warm they should carry on producing cucumbers.
I am also picking my second crop of dwarf French beans. These were also sown at the beginning of July when I got back from holiday - I am picking handfuls every day. Yum!
Chili "Numex Twilight"

Today I mixed a big bag of lawn mowings with a big bag of steaming fresh horse manure. Water generously, cover with a few layers of carpet, light the blue touch paper and stand well back!
Have some little hardy lettuce seedlings in the greenhouse - I wonder how hardy they are? trying Valdor, and a variety I recently bought in northern Norway called "Americanische Braun" (American Brown?) they seem to be a cos shaped green and red leaf. Awaits.

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