flowerbug
Sustainability Master
yesterday i had to have something fresh from the garden, after this winter and all.
this being early spring one thing i really like to have is some fresh green garlic. it is dug up while the plant is still green and looks pretty much like a green onion, but if you chop it up and eat it fresh it tastes like garlic and if you cook it the flavor will get less like garlic and more like any green onion. i put some in with some ham and cheese in the microwave for a few seconds to melt the cheese and heat it through. turned out exactly like what i wanted. a reminder of things to come.
this is a good use of any extra garlic you might have in the fall, just plant it deeper than you would normally plant the cloves and since you are going to eat it the next spring you can plant it closer together too.
my favorite early spring food. and it always puzzles me that more people don't grow it because to me it is easier than any of the onions i've grown and it survives our winters here without issue and the animals leave it alone so it can be grown anywhere including outside the fences.
this isn't what i picked yesterday, but an image from a previous year when i had more larger cloves planted. if you plant it deeper you get more blanched/white stem to use.
this being early spring one thing i really like to have is some fresh green garlic. it is dug up while the plant is still green and looks pretty much like a green onion, but if you chop it up and eat it fresh it tastes like garlic and if you cook it the flavor will get less like garlic and more like any green onion. i put some in with some ham and cheese in the microwave for a few seconds to melt the cheese and heat it through. turned out exactly like what i wanted. a reminder of things to come.
this is a good use of any extra garlic you might have in the fall, just plant it deeper than you would normally plant the cloves and since you are going to eat it the next spring you can plant it closer together too.
my favorite early spring food. and it always puzzles me that more people don't grow it because to me it is easier than any of the onions i've grown and it survives our winters here without issue and the animals leave it alone so it can be grown anywhere including outside the fences.
this isn't what i picked yesterday, but an image from a previous year when i had more larger cloves planted. if you plant it deeper you get more blanched/white stem to use.
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