I spent a good part of yesterday editing copy for the November/December issue of Northern Gardener. (It’s going to be a good one!) And, one of the columnists wrote about care of common houseplants, including Hoya carnosa or wax plant. I have a wax plant that came from a cutting from a plant my grandmother kept for many years. She…
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Decadence in a Jelly Jar: Raspberry Jelly
It has come to this: I have so many raspberries ready to harvest in my backyard that I made raspberry jelly — the gardener’s equivalent of blowing a wad in Vegas, buying a fur coat, and drinking a $5 latte all in one day. Jelly is decadence, but when you are harvesting 16 cups of raspberries almost every day, when…
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Bruschetta with Goat Cheese and Garlic
With the tomatoes starting to come in, I made bruschetta and eggs for dinner last night. Bruschetta is toasted Italian bread with a topping, often including tomatoes and olive oil, that is typically served as an appetizer. Last year, I made Bruschetta a la Julie and Julia after watching a movie about Julia Child and the blogger who cooked every…
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Cucumber Recipes: Dealing with Abundance
This sign — spotted while riding my bike around town — made me laugh. Faced with an abundant cucumber harvest, who hasn’t wanted to give it all away? Cucumbers are the crop du jour, and I know I’m not the only gardener with more cucumbers than they know what to do with. I’ve already made a big batch of bread-and-butter…
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Three Lessons from Garden Tours
This past month, I have been really lucky to attend several garden tours. I started with tours around the Quad Cities in Iowa as part of a Garden Writers Association event, then hit the Northfield Garden Club tour, followed by my trip to Buffalo, N.Y. for three days of nonstop garden visits. In the past two weeks, I’ve been to…
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