July in the South Carolina vegetable
garden—particularly if you've been traveling for two weeks—is not
the happiest place. Although our son's girlfriend diligently fed the
animals and watered the gardens, some tasks—like weeding and
cutting out dead foliage—had to wait until I returned.
After petting the pups and checking on
the chickens, the first place I headed when we arrived home was to
the large veggie garden to check on its progress.
Big mistake.
Tomato vines sporting nasty black
spots.
Lettuce, underplanted in the tomato
beds, now bolting and leggy.
Beans trellising up neighboring
raspberry bushes.
And cucumber vines spilling over their
bed, oblivious to the trellises, sprawling throughout the garden and
blanketing the herb beds, the kids' raised bed, and the path through
the garden.
I searched desperately for my inner
Zen.
When that didn't work, Peter turned me
around, and we headed back toward the house. After all, attacking an
unruly garden while in the throes of jet lag isn't a smart strategy.
(Honestly, my tired brain screamed,
“Rip it all out!” I'm glad I waited a bit.)
Truly, though, even with the ugliness
of the garden, the harvest is pretty amazing.
Especially the cucumbers.
We arrived home to a produce-drawer
full of cucumbers harvested by our house-sitter.
Exciting! Honestly, last year, our
cucumbers flopped.
The next day, I harvested these:
And yesterday, as I cut back vines and attempted to whip the garden back into shape, I found these:
Holy cucumbers.
I love cucumbers. The kids actually eat
cucumbers without complaint, too, which is miraculous. And I
especially adore the fact that my calorie counter shows that a cup of
cucumbers equals 16 calories.
I could eat 75 cups of cucumbers to reach my daily calorie intake!
That's a LOT of cucumbers.
Hoping to add a little variety to my diet, I enlisted my friends over at the
Garden Delights Facebook page for recipe ideas.
“Pickles,” of course, topped the
list of recommendations.
I've promised Mikey that we'd attempt
to make pickles, since he is a pickle fiend. I've never canned, but
2012 will be the year I learn to can.
Thankfully, our local farmers' market
received a grant this year to teach canning. I'm planning to head
there Saturday for my introduction to canning.
I'm ridiculously excited!
Until then, though, my friend Janet at
The Queen of Seaford sent me the following recipe that I'm excited to
try. Shrimp and cucumbers? How can you go wrong? What a perfect,
light, cool summer dish. I believe this will be lunch today...
Cucumber and Shrimp Salad
One can (4.5 oz) shrimp, drained
2 medium cucumbers, thinly sliced
1/4 vinegar (can substitute rice or
white wine vinegar)
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon toasted sesame seeds
(Heat sesame seed in ungreased skillet over medium heat for
about 2 minutes until golden.)
Place shrimp and cucumbers in a bowl.
Mix vinegar, sugar, soy sauce, and salt.... pour over cucumbers and
shrimp. Cover and refrigerate at least one hour.
Remove to a lettuce lined bowl with
slotted spoon. Sprinkle with sesame seeds and serve.
Tonight, though, I'm planning a
family-favorite: chicken souvlaki with tzatziki sauce. It's so
simple—and everyone likes it. (Well, the kids at least like the
chicken. They'll have to eat their quota of cucumbers sliced instead
of in the sauce.)
Chicken Souvlaki with Tzatziki Sauce
1 lb. chicken breast, cut into 1-inch
cubes
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 tbsp. sea salt
1 tbsp. finely chopped fresh rosemary
In a large bowl, combine olive oil, sea
salt, and rosemary. Add chicken and toss to thoroughly coat.
Refrigerate for at least one hour.
For tzatziki sauce:
½ large cucumber, seeded and diced.
½ cup plain yogurt
1 tbsp. lemon juice
¼ tsp. salt
1 garlic clove, minced
Prepare tzatziki sauce while chicken is
marinating. Combine cucumber, yogurt, lemon juice, salt, and garlic, stirring well. Set aside.
Place marinated chicken cubes on
skewers, grill for approximately 5 minutes per side or until
thoroughly cooked. Serve with the tzatziki sauce and pita bread.
And wine. The wine gives you strength
to face the tasks in the garden.
I'm a little afraid to go back into the
garden today for fear that I'll add to the cucumber
collection—although I do plan to call our local food back to see if
they can use some surplus cucumbers. (Do you know about
ampleharvest.org? It's a great tool to help you find a local
organization that can benefit from your surplus garden goodies.)
Do you have any favorite cucumber
recipes? If you do...PLEASE share!
Otherwise, I might start a national
“sneak-a-cucumber-on-your-neighbors'-porch day,” much like
National
Zucchini Day.
I think it's a good tradition, don't
you?
Happy harvesting!
XO ~
Julie
That's a lot of cucumbers! The shrimp and cuke salad sounds really good.
ReplyDeleteIt's good you had your house sitter harvest your cucumbers. I forgot to ask my dog sitter when I went on vacation for a week and came back to monster zucchinis. I've never made tzatziki sauce. It sounds cool and refreshing.
ReplyDeleteLove Souvlaki and imagine your tzatziki was wunderbar!! Let me know how you like the cukes and shrimp.
ReplyDeleteGrowing cucumber is such a great fun right! big harvest!
ReplyDeleteThat is a lot of cucumbers. Unfortunately with the heat I couldn't get my seeds to grow. :)
ReplyDeleteCher Sunray Gardens
lot of cucumbers!..
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear you didn't rip it all out! The cukes I started from seed this year got eaten by some sort of bug, I fear. I found an eight inch pot of cucumbers at Home Depot. There were probably 10 individual plants. I put them in the garden, but lost a few immediately because the stems were brittle and delicate. I think there are three surviving out there now, each about four to six inches long. I'm hoping to eventually train them up a trellis, and maybe see some cucumbers by late August!
ReplyDeleteMy mother makes a cucumber salad with sour cream and sliced cucumbers.
That's so funny. "Rip It Out" is usually my first response too. Especially if it seems so out of control. Luckily this year I started early enough that my summer garden is done and I am starting new seeds and plants in preparation for my fall garden. Much more fun than slogging water in 100 degree temps! Happy gardening!
ReplyDeleteHooray for cucumbers! Pickles!
ReplyDelete