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Showing posts with label raspberries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raspberries. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Book Review- Drink the Harvest

Book review- Drink the Harvest

Drink the Harvest by Nan K. Chase and DeNeice C. Guest is a great primer for people who want to start making drinkables from their own garden produce, and things they can find seasonally in farmer's markets. This photo-rich book is thoughtfully laid out in a way that makes it easy to follow, even for absolute beginners.

It starts with giving the reasons you should be making your own drinks, and offers suggestions for what to grow in your garden for making great juices. Not just fruit juices, it talks about berries, rhubarb, things that can be grown for tea, and vegetables.

The next section discusses equipment, sterilization methods, and how to pick and wash your harvest. This is an essential chapter for beginners because have an overview of the equipment that's going to be necessary, as well as tips for optional equipment that will make it easier.
The recipes:
It starts with the basics, the juice recipes Berry juice, pear juice, non-alcoholic ciders, some vegetable juices and a great spicy bloody mary mix as well as other recipes. These can be modified to fit what you have available and processing times are included if you decide you want to can your juices instead of freezing or refrigerating them.

The next chapter is the one for adults, the ever classic dandelion wine as well as a few mead recipes, hard cider recipes and herbed, fruit and other types of wine. This is the chapter for the patient, and explains how fermentation works, how to ferment, how to rack for flavor and clarity and everything else you need to know about making your own wines, meads and ciders.

After that, the chapter for people who love to make their own sodas, or want specialty syrups for other things, it's the syrups! For this, knowing how to make juice is important, because you'll be using the juices as the base for syrups. Watermelon, herbed fruits and berries, and single flavored syrups are included as well as instructions for bottling.

The last chapter covers teas, tisanes and decoctions. This chapter has less recipes, and is more about techniques and a suggestion list for various types of flowers and herbs that can be dried to use as teas. It includes how to dry using the paper bag method, or using a dehydrator, and storage instructions. Then there are instructions for drying citrus peels which are popular in teas, how to make a rose hip decoction which can be kept in the freezer to add for a vit. C boost to other drinks and full, photo instructions for making kombucha, how to troubleshoot a SCOBY and how to bottle for carbonation.

I do recommend this book.
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The part above is what I'm posting on Amazon, so here's the rest of the story...
 For me, canning and other preservation methods are about putting away a bit of summer to taste in the cold dark winter, luckily within walking distance I have wild chamomile and wild roses, in my own yard, I have clover, chickweed and dandelions for "weeds" and of course, my thicket of raspberries which look to give up even more than they did last year.
So I'll be making a raspberry syrup to use on a dessert on Winter solstice. I think that's a grand tradition to start, putting up some of my favorite of summer to have on the longest night as things start to turn back around.

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

So you want to grow raspberries?


So in the last few weeks, I've been showing off my raspberries frequently on Facebook at all sorts of stages. This has inspired several people to decide they are planting them next year. In order to avoid a lot of people saying "It's all your fault!" to me in 3 years, here are some observations I've made growing raspberries.

Getting your initial canes-

It's tempting to look at the canes, and look at the area you plan to plant them in, and decide "Oh, I need lots of plants to fill in that area." DON'T. Really. Trust me, once your canes are established, they will fill in the area. Figure 1 cane per 12-18 inches at least. Maybe less, and not more. Raspberries are very invasive. They like lots of room to spread, and don't take long to spread. This year, that patch maybe fairly barren with only 2-6 canes, but next year it will fill in some, and in 4 years, you'll be completely filled in. 

If you don't care about type- you can frequently get canes very low cost or even free. Post a note on Craigslist, a local supermarket bulletin board or a local gardening forum on FB that you are looking. I know that around spring I saw lots of ads on Craigslist offering raspberries to people if they were willing to come dig them up. My own berry thicket started as 3 canes bought at a local farmer's market for 1.00 each. Yeah, 3 whole dollars. They weren't pretty, they were pretty much sticks with a couple leaves stuck in a fast food cup with some dirt. If you have friends who grow raspberries, you can also ask them. I know that I'm willing to share!

If you care about type and want more than one kind, you may have to pay a bit more. Here, golden raspberries are very popular and can cost 15-25 dollars even at farmer's markets, but friends who grow, or getting in contact with local gardeners can get you a better price. Did I mention that raspberries LIKE to spread? They really, really do. If you want specific strains, talk to local gardeners, and only if that doesn't work, go to a nursery either online or in person. 

Raspberries are sent much like roses. You'll get a root and a cane to plant. Find an area that gets a good amount of sun. Here in Alaska during the summer, pretty much every part of my yard gets at least 8 hours a day. They are in a place that gets 10 hours.
Pick an area that drains well, they don't like to stand in water.
Dig a hole a little deeper than the roots and about twice as wide as necessary, place in the plant, and fill in the dirt. Work in a little good organic fertilizer or  better- compost. What you don't need? Fancy, expensive, specialty garden soils. If you live in an area raspberries grow, they are dead unpicky about soil types. They even like it a little acidic. If you're growing a couple kinds, keep them separated by as much distance as is feasible in your yard or they may cross. That's what my raspberries are, a cross between wild raspberries and a couple strains that the original grower had a little too close together. I love them, they are sweet and tart and really good producers.

Care and feeding-

Raspberries don't need much care. I do give mine a bit of a good organic fertilizer or compost tea every so often. Usually just the little bit leftover from taking care of my more demanding plants. However, if it's dry, you will need to water regularly. This summer has been fairly dry, and on the hottest days, I water them once a day even though the rest of my plants get twice a day. Why less for the raspberries? Because my thicket is very well established, and very dense which provides lots of shade for the ground they are in. Water just doesn't dry out as quickly as it does in my beds and has time to really soak in. 

First year canes are a greenish color, after that, they turn brown which makes it very easy to tell which are the new canes. First year canes don't generally produce fruit, but second and third year canes do. After that, you'll want to prune them back to make room for the new canes that came in that year. This is what my mature canes look like. These will be pruned after they are harvested because there are lots of new canes coming in.
They are nearly horizontal with fruit, and some of them need to be staked because they are literally bending so far they are touching the ground. Some are ripening now and taste fantastic.

Spread

I mentioned that raspberries spread right? While the berries do have small seeds, that's not how they spread for the most part. They spread through the root system which can go deeper than expected and cause the raspberries to jump barriers. What a lot of people do, once they have them established, is just mow the new canes down when they mow the lawn when they get outside their area. What you don't want to do is try to plant anything near them. I had a rhubarb that was a couple feet away from these 2 years ago, and this year it didn't come back at all even after I dug up the crown and replanted it. The raspberry roots killed it. My original plan was a 4x3 foot area for raspberries, now I've decided to let my raspberries grow outside that, and they take a space that's about 15 square feet now, I moved some of the new canes down that wall and plan to let them grow to fit a space about 8x4 feet. But this is where I don't want people yelling it's all my fault in 3 years. They WILL spread. If they are in the kind of soil they like, getting enough water and sunlight, they will spread like crazy and can destroy anything else you have planted in that area. I have seen cases where they didn't spread, but in my non-expert opinion, that was a soil issue. They were planted in a good, alkaline soil which is not the preferred soil for raspberries. The friend had them in the yard when she bought the house. I saw some areas in her backyard that might be better and I'm giving her some of my smaller canes to try planting. 
Plan your planting carefully. Because if you want the raspberries, they will want the entire part of your yard you are planting them in. So don't try putting a few canes by your prize irises. Raspberries can even outspread mint. 

They do have thorns, so if you have a patch as deep as mine, it helps to have two people to harvest. One to hold back the canes while the other gets in and grabs the berries. The best thing about growing your own raspberries is getting them at their absolute peak. They are easy enough for anyone to grow which makes them an awesome choice for kid's gardening. The ones that I planted as a kid grew and produced berries with my indifferent care. Well cared for, like my current thatch, they will give you lots of berries to make all sorts of wonderful treats. 

Friday, August 17, 2012

Fabulous week- with photos!

Mt. Susitna


The photo above was taken earlier this week. We hadn't planned on going to take pictures of Susitna, we actually went the other way for photos of ducks and other wild life. But while we were driving back into town, I was stunned by how pretty the sunset looked, and so we did stop for photos. Click on the photos to see larger versions.

I also saw this piece of graffiti-
Bee the love you seek, I love you all, Forever.
Here are some of the birds we saw at Potter's Marsh that evening.

Seagulls

Bald Eagle in flight



Ducks and a sandpiper

Remember when I said my raspberries had become a nice little thicket?

That started out as 3 canes 3 years ago. Next year should be amazing with all the second and third year canes. We plan to plant some of the smaller canes at my dad's house.

Raspberries and strawberries from my garden. Yum yum! The strawberries started a few years ago as a single hanging basket from Wal*Mart that my husband got me because I really, really wanted strawberries growing in my yard. They needed transplanting fairly quickly, the original plant wasn't in great shape. But it sent off lots of runners. I replanted some of the runners in 2 spaces in my yard. They've been coming back reliably ever since, and sending out more runners. So now I have 2 strawberry patches. Everyone loves to see the strawberries ripen. They are so sweet and big!

In fact, I'm going to go have some soon!
This weekend is our annual Greek Festival, it's always a lot of fun. Baklava and tiny cups of rich, dark coffee, music and dancing. Then Monday Michael has a job interview. My fingers are crossed!

I've been working on a pattern using ruffle yarn. It's a lot of fun.