Photo by Mohammed El Damir, Bugwood.org |
Retro Rhonda J…Getting Back to Basics is a place where Rhonda Ferree shares her love of plants & gardening, arts & crafts, healthy living, nature connection, music, travel, and much more. Rhonda's current focus is discovering great plants in her travels. Join her and learn together how to live a hip, healthy, happy, and beautiful life!
Categories
- 1-Travel-Botanical Journeys (32)
- 1-Travel-Motorcycles (7)
- 2-Mindfulness-Yoga (8)
- 3-Recipes (4)
- 4-Birding (7)
- 5-Garden-Edibles (18)
- 5-Garden-Houseplants (24)
- 5-Garden-Landscapes (21)
- 5-Garden-Other (34)
Monday, August 31, 2020
Woolly Bear Caterpillars and Weather Predictions
Plant Garlic This Fall
Garlic drying at Barefoot Gardens near Macomb, IL |
Dry herbs for winter use
Below is a video I made a few years ago that demonstrates how I dry herbs.
Monday, August 24, 2020
It’s Grape Pie Time!
My son Tyler helping make grape pie in 2000. |
My son Derek helping make grape pie in 2000. |
The Incredible Edible Elderberry
10 cups fresh elderberries produced 3 cups syrup and 1 pint dry berries. |
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
Growing Pinto Beans
This year I planted a three-sisters garden, which consist of sweet corn, climbing beans, and squash. I chose pinto and lima beans for my climbing beans, and they are doing very well.
Pinto beans are one of many different types of dry beans, including black, kidney, northern, and more. They are not commonly grown in the home garden but are very easy to grow.
I was able to harvest most of them on August 4th. Since a half-runner-type bean is part bush and part pole bean, it produced pods closer to the ground. The new growth continued to climb upward on the corn plants in my three-sisters garden.
I harvested the bean pods that were completely dry, with dry beans inside. A small dishpan produced about a half pound of shelled beans. Since they were dry the beans came out of the pods very easily.
I was so excited about my first pinto bean harvest that I brought them right to the kitchen to cook. After cleaning, I boiled them about 10 minutes and let sit for an hour (in lieu of an overnight soak), then drained them. After adding 2-3” of water above the beans, the beans were boiled with a small white onion (also from my garden) and a bay leaf. After about an hour the beans were soft, but not broken.
They taste wonderful alone, but I plan to add barbecue flavor to make a sort of baked bean. I also really like pinto beans as vegetarian refried beans or as a bean dip that includes tomato, chives, and cilantro.
My first experience growing pinto beans was so successful that I plan to grow them again next year, in an even bigger three-sister garden!