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Busy as a Bee in Spring

May 5, 2016 @ 22:40 By Gavin Webber 6 Comments

I know that everyone leads busy lives, and we are no exception.  One would think that because we lead a simpler lifestyle that things would be a little less hectic, but not so.  We’ve been busy as a bee in spring or to put it in Australian,  we’ve been flat out like a lizard drinking.

Since my last post we’ve got a few things achieved;

  • Taught a Beginner’s Soapmaking Workshop,
  • Harvested the last of the summer crops due to the warmer than usual April,
  • Cooked every dinnertime meal,
  • Added four new cheeses to my cheese making repertoire, and
  • Attended a Content Creator’s lab hosted by YouTube.

Of course there were the regular things we do around here like clean out the chook house, water the fruit trees, try to grow winter veg seedlings (not much luck there).

So let’s have a look at a few photos that I took over the last couple of weeks.

Content Creators Lab YouTube

Content Creators Lab YouTube at Docklands Studios

I was invited to Docklands Studios here in Melbourne by YouTube to learn how to produce engaging content for my YouTube channel cheeseman.tv.  They contacted me just before my channel reached 10,000 subscribers, so I was chuffed with the invitation and learnt a lot at the lab.  I have been creating regular cheese making content each week and I am pleased with the feedback I’ve been getting.

Speaking of cheese, I’ve made the following types in the last couple of weeks; Edam, Havarti, Mysost, and Gouda.

Edam before waxing

Edam before waxing

The Edam was a great cheese to make.  It had some quirky steps that I’d never come across before like washing the curd, so it was good fun.  Here is the Edam video and full recipe so that you can have a try as well.

Then I made a Havarti the next day, which is not quite ready to show you, as it still has some steps remaining before I wax it for maturation.  It should be ready for further aging on Sunday.

Waxed Gouda

Waxed Gouda

The next cheese was Gouda.  It was another attempt at this dutch cheese that was a dismal failure back in 2009.  I just hadn’t got the courage up to try it again, but I found a new recipe to work with, and I believe it turned out well.

The video that I took during the process is not quite ready, so please subscribe to my YouTube channel you will get a notification when it is released using the button below.

After all that cheese making, I had a lot of whey left over, so I decided to try my hand at Norwegian Whey Cheese or Mysost.  Yes, another cheese!

It’s pretty simple to make.  All you do is bring the whey to the boil then simmer for about 6 hours until whats left is thick and gooey.  Then you add a pinch of cinnamon and allow to cool and set.  Essentially it is all the leftover protein and lactose so it’s quite sweet.  Delicious on toast for breakfast.

So much cheese making fun.

On to gardening.  Autumn has been a disaster in some ways.

It’s been hotter than normal so that means that the cabbage moths are still breeding.  So much so that all my Cauliflowers and Broccoli seedlings were decimated, and given to the chooks as a snack.

I’ve needed to water so much, and we’ve also had little rain which is unusual for autumn.

However, on the other side of the coin, we’ve just picked the last of our summer crops which just kept on going.  We have the last cucumber in the fridge crisper, and a small bowl of tommy toe tomatoes still being used for snacks and salads.

We also had a couple of unexpected Australian Butter Pumpkins that grew out of compost.

IMG_1289

Here is the one that I had been keeping the snails and slugs off.  They didn’t like the cedar shingle that I sat it on, which was a surprising deterrent.

IMG_1291

The other one, which was a bit sneaky, grew in the Tahitian lime tree until it got too large and snapped a branch off and fell down.  Naughty pumpkin!

Last of the summer harvest

Last of the summer harvest

We also picked a few eggplants which we gave away because Kim and Ben don’t like them.  I know, criminal because I make a mean Moussaka.

Another thing that happened was that our solar PV system went on the blink for a few days.

State 104

Don’t Panic. It’s just a State 104!

The error on the inverter caused me to call my installer, Energy Matters, who I found out were bought out by Sun Edison.  They were helpful and were about to send out a qualified solar electrician when the system started working again.

It wasn’t the system at all, but a drift in the grid frequency by a few Hertz.  You see, all grid tied inverters check the grid frequency before starting up, expecting about 50 Hz.  Apparently this happened to so many people in our area who had PV that the distributor finally fixed it.  Not much we could do about it except wait until it worked again.

I think I might start looking at battery systems that I can add to my system to store some of the excess to keep our night-time grid usage down and help alleviate this issue should it occur again.

So there you have it.  Pretty hectic hey?

We have more workshops over the next few weeks, so the weekends are pretty full.  I don’t expect that bee to stop being busy anytime soon!

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Filed Under: Cheese, climate change, Gardening, Sustainable Living, vegetables

Winter Vegetable Seeds and Sprouting Kit

April 20, 2016 @ 18:47 By Gavin Webber 4 Comments

Winter.  Time for the garden to slow down and receive respite from all the heat of our warmer months.

In our climate it’s time for growing Brassica, leafy greens, onions, garlic, peas, and Broad beans.

Winter Seeds and Sprouting

Winter seed collection and sprouting kit

So to start off our winter crop, we travelled to Blackwood to visit The Diggers Club (St. Erth).  I’ve been a member since 2007 and it is always a pleasure to visit their shop and gardens to see what is available.  I especially like to browse their expansive seed collection and get carried away sometimes.

As you can see above, we chose quite a selection of seeds including a new pair of gloves for me, and a sprouting kit for Kim.

Winter vegetables

Winter vegetables

So some of the winter veg that we will planting this year is (from top left) Broad Bean crimson flowered, Broccoli Purple Sprouting, Cauliflower Sicily Purple, Broccoli Romanesco, Spring Onions Evergreen, Kale Red Russian, Silverbeet Five Colour mix (aka Rainbow Chard), Loofah (for soap making), Broccoli Green Sprouting, Spring Onion Red, and some Sweet Pea varieties that Kim is going to grow.

Also out of shot is a bag of six bulbs of organic garlic.

Sprouting Kit

Diggers Sprouting Kit

The Sprouting Kit is a fairly simple affair.  For your money you get 4 large packets of seeds and a sprouting jar that has a draining lid and stand attached.  Looks simple enough and I will write a separate post on the process of growing sprouts with lots of photos.  We haven’t been eating them because they are just so expensive at the supermarkets and greengrocers.

So this weekend is renewal time in our veggie patch.  I will spend half a day clearing out the old crops and preparing the beds, and another half day of planting.   I should manage to get everything in the ground including the garlic in the front yard.

Looking forward to sharing my winter garden with you all as it begins to become established.  However before that happens, I will be posting about what remains from the summer crop before I pull it all out on Saturday morning!

Fun times ahead.  I am starting to enjoy winter gardening much more than I used to; mainly due to the killer summer heat and reduced rainfall we’ve received over the last 6 months and the last few summers.

The climate, it is a changing. 🙁

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Filed Under: Gardening, Seed saving, vegetables

Autumn Garden Update 2016

March 17, 2016 @ 21:46 By Gavin Webber 9 Comments

I’ve managed to put some time aside for one of life’s simple pleasures; Food gardening.  I also thought it was about time I gave you an Autumn garden update about the state of my food growing efforts.

Autumn Garden 2016

So here is a series of photos that I took on Monday to show you what is growing and what we are harvesting in the Autumn garden.

We’ve had very hot weather during March, but starting to get a little rain now after a very dry summer.  All three of my rainwater were running low as I had to water every day to keep it all alive.  Thankfully we’ve had about 15mm of rain in the last couple of weeks to fill them half way.

With climate records broken in January and February, who knows what the future will bring?

VegTrug with lettuce

VegTrug with lettuce

The two VegTrug that I fixed with shade cloth are allowing the soil within them to stay moist, which helps the pick-again lettuce to grow strong and not bolt to seed too early.  I find that this method of mostly shade for lettuce really slows down their natural tendency to bolt and turn bitter.  These plants only receive about 3 hours direct sunlight a day, but are doing well.  We pick the leaves every other day.

Tommy Toe Tomatoes

Tommy Toe Tomatoes

One of my favourite varieties of tomato are Tommy Toe, which is an heirloom variety.  Bigger than a cherry tomatoes and more flavoursome.  I planted four seedlings in early January (succession planting) to ensure a continued crop until mid Autumn.

Garlic Chives in flower

Garlic Chives in flower

The Garlic chives, which are a perennial here, are going through their yearly flowering.  I’ve had them in this pot for about five years and still growing well.

Bee pollinating a lemon flower

Bee pollinating a Eureka lemon flower

Because the citrus trees are confused by this very warm start to Autumn, they are beginning to flower again.  Luckily there are still lots of bees around willing to pollinate them for me.

Tomatoes

Broad Ripple Yellow Currant Tomatoes

This variety of tomato is a weed around here.  The birds spread the seeds everywhere and each year they grow in the most amazing places.  These should ripen in the next week or two.

Thankfully they are growing in a bed that they were planted in two years ago and these plants are nice and healthy and getting lots of water.  Growing tomatoes in the same soil year after year makes them prone to diseases like blight.

Bed 3

Various Tomatoes, Eggplant, Pumpkins, and Spring Onions

This bed is a bit of a mixed bag.  I planted a few Eggplants (Aubergines), and spring onions bunches in early January, but also got some tomato varieties and massive Australian Butter Pumpkin!  More about the pumpkin later.

Eggplant flower

Eggplant flower

Even if I didn’t like eggplants in Indian cuisine, I would still grow them just for their beautiful flowers.  I love the colour and the little spikes around the top of each one.

Eggplant

Eggplant

Thankfully though, I do get some amazing eggplants growing in the well composted soil that I maintain in each garden bed.  This one is nearly ready for harvest, and there are a few smaller ones on the other two plants.  Might even have enough to make my famous Brinjal Pickle!

Pumpkin Patch

Pumpkin Patch

This bed is a mixed bag as I previously mentioned.  The pumpkin has all but taken over the entire yard, but I have been pinching off the runners so that the laterals grow and produce more pumpkins.  We should be harvesting them in mid April.

Eggplants long

Eggplants long

This is bed #2 in which I have some Long Finger Eggplants.  Hopefully there will be enough warm days for the eggplants to grow to harvest, but not to worry if they don’t.  I have plenty of the larger eggplants, so these were just contingency.

Leeks

Leeks

Next to the Long Finger Eggplants I have Leeks growing.  These are last years leeks that didn’t grow so well during our dry winter last year.  I let them die back and they are now growing strong.  I am very pleased that we may get a crop of Leeks so Kim can make some Anglesey Eggs.

Cauliflower and salad greens

Cauliflower and salad greens

I have started off one of the winter beds early.  I grew some Cauliflower seedlings and took a punt that they would survive the early autumn.  So far so good, and once the lettuce next to them are used up, I will plant a few cabbages in this bed as well.

I also planted some Cherry Belle Radishes in between the rows as they are quick-growing and it would be nice to have a bit of crunch and hotness to accompany our regular salads.

Australian Butter Pumpkin

Australian Butter Pumpkin

This is one of a few pumpkins that set from the single pumpkin plant that is taking over my garden.  The tip for this runner was pinched off weeks ago and the pumpkin is loving the extra nutrients.  I will place a piece of cardboard under the pumpkin soon to prevent the rocks from denting the skin.

Cucumber patch

Cucumber patch

We’ve been harvesting cucumbers for about a month and still not tired of them yet.  There is always a ripe one lurking under the leaves, and you just have to keep an eye on this patch to ensure that no monsters grow.  If they do grow to large, the native birds make good work of disposing of them for me.

Cucumbers

Cucumbers

I planted 8 seedlings this year, which seemed to be just enough to keep up with all the salads we’ve been eating.

 

NZ Spinach

NZ Spinach

And lastly, here is one of the many NZ Spinach (aka Warragul Greens) that are self seeding around here.  Just about every bed has one or two of these growing, and they keep us in leafy spinach greens during most of the warmer months.  You just have to blanch them for a minute or two before eating them like normal English spinach.

So that is the current state of the Autumn garden.  In the next few weeks I will remove the tomato plants and put in some Broad Beans and Garlic.  I will plant some onions in the front garden beds as well as a few more Brassica like Sprouting Broccoli and Cabbages.

How is your food garden growing?  Are you getting enough rain to keep them growing well?

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Filed Under: Gardening, No Dig Garden, vegetables

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About Gavin Webber

About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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