Garden Feasting

It’s the most wonderful time of the year!

No, not Christmas {although this Farm Wife definitely loves the holidays}. Instead, the time has finally come when we can eat from our garden. It’s still early days – but there’s something so, so, so wonderful about those first harvests and tasting the results of your labor. Food just tastes better when you know the “how” and “where” of its journey to your table.

While we’re waiting for the tomatoes to turn {so many beautiful green tomatoes!}, I’ve already traded a bag of early {adorably small} cucumbers to a friend for a jar of her homemade pickles. Now that I’ve finally tried these pickles {she got many, many cucumbers from last year’s ultra-prolific vines}, I’m not sure how they’re not world-famous. So. Delicious.

And now for the real star(s) of this post: the pictures. Feast your eyes on these garden beauties, and know they tasted even more fabulous than they look. {Hard to believe, I know, but somehow true}.

These tiny green cherry tomatoes are so cute!
What’s better than fresh-picked carrots? Nosy cows photo-bombing, of course?
Our potato experiment yielded approx. 1 gallon of potatoes per bag.
We think there may have been too many seed potatoes to start, and they ran out of room and nutrients. Now we know what to tweak for next time, and these are definitely super delicious.
The squash are having a hit-or-miss year: starting beautiful and then petering out. The ones we have been able to eat taste fantastic however.
The green bean vines may not be very expansive, but they are producing delicious beans. And their calendula friends are quite happy.

Before and after, from harvest to the plate. There’s something undeniably special about growing your own food, providing for yourself – and your family – in such a nurturing way.

One comment

  1. […] These summer months are a time of abundance: the green beans and squash are working overtime, maybe even faster than we can eat them. We’ve been digging potatoes and cutting cabbages from Mr.’s parents’ garden, to add to our garden feasts. Cucumbers are finally starting to come in, and I am delighted. I’ve bought many cucumbers out of season, and they just aren’t the same – nor do they keep very well. I’ve been gobbling them up as fast as they ripen. Hopefully I’ll be able to harvest in greater numbers soon, and can cajole a dear friend into making her magic pickles. […]

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