So I'm just happy to have discovered a grocery store tomato whose flavor compares to my hopefully one day
harvested garden tomato.
Not exact matches
Anything I make with our
garden harvest is featured here, from pumpkins to strawberries to spinach and of course plenty of
tomato sauce recipes.
freshly picked cherry
tomatoes and basil from the
garden today, spilling out of a
harvest basket
Parrish picked the daily
tomato harvest from our
garden.
I then opted for a salad since I had so many cherry
tomatoes from my late summer
garden harvest (these really cooled down the heat of the dressing which I appreciated).
I am SO jealous that you are able to grow lettuce and
tomatoes all year around... I can only get about one good months of
harvest out of my
garden (UGH).
Posted in Canning and Preserving, Cooking and Food,
Gardening,
Harvesting Tagged canning, preserving, salsa,
tomatoes
This soup cost me next to nothing to make since I
harvested the basil from my
garden and were given some of the
tomatoes used.
There are many considerations affecting
garden design, including site, soil type, rainfall, method of irrigation, mature height of various plants, structural support for plants like pole beans and
tomatoes, and access to the
garden for weeding and
harvesting.
Parrish just
harvested a huge bowl of
tomatoes from the
garden!
My neighbors are going out of town and I'm to «babysit» their
garden and
harvest it's goods for myself this week... the bounty includes summer squash and
tomatoes!
I used whole
garden tomatoes frozen from last fall's
harvest, added a little dried oregano, and chopped fresh basil that I added with the sun dried
tomatoes at the end.
We'll be giving it a try once we
harvest some of the
tomatoes from our
garden.
I'm still
harvesting some greens and even a few frost - escaping
tomatoes from the
garden, but somehow Thanksgiving is right around the corner!
Automating plant cultivation and
harvesting is an active area of robotics today, as this robotic
tomato garden shows.
I then opted for a salad since I had so many cherry
tomatoes from my late summer
garden harvest (these really cooled down the heat of the dressing which I appreciated).
If you don't know which
tomato variety will work well in your climate and
garden soil, and you can't easily predict whether this will be a hot or cold summer, why not plant several different varieties in hopes of a good
harvest from at least a few plants?
I've got my
garden prepped, and am just about to
harvest our winter veggies before I put in some spring berries and
tomatoes.
Generally speaking,
tomatoes are pretty easy to grow and give new gardeners that sense of accomplishment to propels their interest in
gardening because the
harvests can be bountiful for a first - timer.
Gardening can be so idyllic — pruning abundant rose bushes,
harvesting ripe
tomatoes, nestling colorful annuals into window boxes... then there's weeds.
Soon, I am able to start
harvesting tomatoes, peppers and lettuce and the herbs are shoved to the back of my mind, until they rear their green tentacles once again to menace the
garden.