Archive for June, 2019


Late to Ripen But Oh, So Yummy!

Author: Meera, June 30, 2019

Following the historic long seasonal deluge of rain, our fruit trees are loaded with peaches, apricots, plums (the cherries are gone now). While there is plenty of stone fruit, it’s all ripening late this year.

 

Apricots are plentiful this time of year and easy to dry for snacking when the season is over

Apricots are plentiful this time of year and easy to dry or make into jam

 

Our Blenheim apricots were ready to pick, dry, and make into jam in late May of 2018. On this last day in June,  I plucked an apricot that was ripe on the side facing the sun but the opposite side was green and hard.

 

The cherries, too, ripened late this year. We picked about 8 gallons of cherries from our two Bing and Stella trees. I dried some and we gave away a lot.

 

 

The Black Tartarian cherries didn’t produce as heavily this year as last. By the time we discovered the ripe cherries, the birds had already beaten us to the super-sweet fruit. I don’t mind sharing with the local wildlife, but would have loved a bowl of these for snacking.

 

I made a test batch of the wild plum jam to make sure it tasted great before canning a lot of jars

Wild plums make a delicious sweet-tart jam

 

 

The yellow and red plums are finally ripe now. Today, I’m making plum jam. Nothing beats hot toast with spreadable summer jams and marmalade for breakfast on a winter’s day. In a normal year, most of my jam-making of stone fruits would be finished by now.

 

 

The early Desert Gold peaches are gone now, a tasty memory, from a month ago. However, we still have summer peaches clinging to the tree. I check them daily. Fresh peach pie for the fourth of July is a favorite at my house.

 

Desert Gold early peaches

Desert Gold early peaches

 

 

 

While the fruits and berries seem to ripen more slowly this year, my vegetable garden is blowing my mind. I have several raised beds in a fenced-off area so wild animals won’t bother it. Most of the raised beds were used for composting (think, tons of chicken manure, yard clippings, and cardboard). Still, I added other organic amendments. Boy, is that soil paying off.

 

 

 

It’s a banner year for vegetables on the farmette. Most will be eaten fresh but the sugar pumpkins won’t ripen until autumn. Love them in pie.

Our pumpkin pies feature leaves made from pie dough, brushed with egg, and sprinkled with sugar before baking

 

 

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I’ve been told I’m living a “charmed life” on my Henny Penny Farmette. And so it is. But this chapter of my life didn’t happen by accident. I once lived in Silicon Valley and was part of life in the fast lane, which I enjoyed. But I grew up on a farm. I missed time in nature, eating foods that I knew were healthy and wholesome and pesticide-free, and the slower pace of life. I set an intention to manifest the life I have now. You can, too.

 

FIND ME ALSO at Meera-lester.com (don’t forget that hyphen…very important.)

 

Packed full of ideas for creating the life you want

Packed full of ideas for creating the life you want

 

 

 

If you enjoy reading about gardening, keeping chicken and bees, and other farm topics, pick up copies of my Henny Penny Farmette series of cozy mysteries. The books are chocked full of farm and craft trivia as well as delicious recipes and, of course, intriguing mysteries.

 

Coming Sept. 2017

Novel #3

The second book in the Henny Penny Farmette series

Novel #2

My debut novel Sept. 2015

Novel #1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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