- Author: Dustin Blakey
Page, Karen and Dornenburg, Andrew. The Flavor Bible. Little, Brown and Co., 2008.
Sercarz, Lior Lev. The Spice Companion: A Guide to the World of Spices. Clarkson Potter, 2016.
One of the best things* about working in Cooperative Extension is that there always seems to be plenty of interesting food to try at the office. Between staff and volunteers, we get to try all sorts of flavors on a daily basis. I'm not sure we're at “arms race” status yet, but our office's nutrition educator, Amy Weurdig, just shared her newest tools to up her cooking game with us: two books about flavors and seasoning foods.
Along with working here at our office, Amy is a Master Gardener and a Master Food Preserver. She definitely gardens with food or drink in mind. Her latest plan is to grow saffron here in the Owens Valley. But what can you do with all that saffron, especially when you have a garden full of produce? After all, one zucchini plant, assuming you can keep squash bugs at bay, can feed a small army. Some creativity is needed to get it all used. And that's where seasonings and flavor pairings can come to play.
In her research Amy came across two interesting resources: The Flavor Bible by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenberg, and The Spice Companion by Lior Lev Sarcarz. These two books provide invaluable information about some key flavors we use in cooking, but they take a very different approach to the topic.
The Spice Companion is a beautiful book. (It covers many herbs, too, so don't worry if you're a spice-o-phobe.) Thomas Schauer's photographs and Nadine Bernard Westcott's illustrations, to me, are the highlight of this work. This is a book you will want on display, not jammed into the kitchen bookshelf next to the spiral-bound church cookbook you bought in 1983.
The book is organized as an encyclopedia of the world's spices. Each spice has a lovely illustration or photo, and possibly a food based on it as a key ingredient. Along with this artwork, there is text explaining its use, harvesting and botany. As an easy-to-use feature, each flavor has recommended food pairings, complementary spices, and recipe ideas. Reading through this book may inspire you to try a few new things since it contains some fairly obscure ingredients, but to me the best use would work like this: Let's say you planted a dozen pepperoncini plants in Spring and you're inundated with these peppers. What can you do with them besides make pickles or give them away? It turns out they're fairly versatile! I like its idea of using them to flavor an Italian-style bean dip. I see it as a fine book to browse while you're munching on a scone in the sunroom on Sunday morning.
The Flavor Bible takes a different approach to the topic of taste. Instead of an array of herbs and spices from A to Z, this book gets to business right away. While it is peppered with pictures of food, it is mostly text and is much more information dense. After 36 pages of how the book works (if you're impatient just read pages 35 and 36 get on with it) you are presented with over 350 pages of concepts, foods, flavors, and cuisines. Each entry will tell you when it is available, good ways to prepare, and recommended flavor pairings. The authors don't mince words here. This is a book you should look over to get familiar with, then keep nearby for reference. If you like to cook and eat more than read about and look at food then this no-nonsense book is for you. I see this as a book that will end up with stains and stuck together pages after a few years because you'll thumb through it with dirty fingers or a dripping spoon.
Some of the entries in The Food Bible are mundane, much like when the dictionary includes words like “smile” that you would never look up. For example there is an entry on sour cream that, naturally, suggests putting it on baked potatoes. However, most entries are more useful. The last entry “Zucchini Blossoms” should be of special interest to any gardeners who didn't realize all the fun things you can do there. I'm especially intrigued by its recommended pairing with lobster!
I probably gained 5 pounds just looking over these two books. (Reviewer's note: I was eating a giant burrito. Your experience may vary.) They are both full of ideas for the gardener with too much bounty, or one who is just bored and needs inspiration.
Either book will set you back about $40. If you are a passionate, but inexperienced or highly experimental cook—the kind who tends to wing it in the kitchen, you will probably appreciate The Flavor Bible. Those of you more set in your ways and just need some inspiration or would like to learn more about new ingredients will enjoy The Spice Companion. Both are good references, but they have very different approaches that may not appeal to everyone. I'm glad Amy bought both and let me review them both side by side.
Mmmm. Some butternut squash bisque with saffron sounds really good right now, Amy.
___________________
*Well it's good for my taste buds but not so much for my waistline.
- Author: Sarah Sheehan
Set in the middle of an elder community in Bishop, the Sunrise Garden has flourished for seven years providing information to Inyo-Mono Counties Master Gardeners and delectable bounty for its residents.
So far this season, the six varieties of tomatoes grown both in sun and shade are yielding impressive numbers. The tomatoes are counted and weighed as well as notated for their size, color, shape, flaws and flavors twice a week. The varieties this year are: Better Boy, Big Beef, Carmello, Champion II, Early Girl and Jetsetter. On August 29th we picked more than 44 lbs of tomatoes which we donated to the residents.
While tending the garden a careful watch is made for any evidence of pests or decline. To this end, the watering system is regularly checked, plants are water sprayed from below to dislodge pests and their cages shaken to rid them of excess water.
Green bell peppers are also grown in sun and shade and they too are thriving with 18 inch plants having as many as 24 peppers. So our task is to thin and cheer these green jewels on. The only issue we have had thus far is a little sunburn as it has been an unusually warm summer in the Eastern Sierra.
These tomatoes are grown in two other sites around Bishop and it has been noted that the same tomato variety has a slightly different taste dependent on which location it was grown. At the end of season we will be posting our results.
The tomato gang: Carolyn Lynch, Joan Nash, Marti Holton, Sarah Sheehan, and Denyse Racine.
- Author: Amy Weurdig
I'm by no means a gardening expert. I did somehow succeed in becoming a Master Gardener for the University of California Cooperative Extension here in Inyo/Mono counties, but I have so much more to learn. I still struggle with plant identification – whether or not it's a native plant, a tree, or a sad looking potato plant that I thought was a sick pepper plant.
Last year we moved into our new house in Mustang Mesa in February; but let me spend a bit describing what living on the “Mesa” means in terms of gardening. It's dry, it's hot, and our house backs up to open land filled with sage brush, oh and let's not forget the complete and utter lack of soil. However, all of that cannot detract from the unobstructed view of Mt. Tom or the White Mountains to the east. I honestly, had no idea what to expect in terms of gardening in this location - a new adventure.
It was a busy time since I had ordered bees that were due to arrive in April, gardening season was starting up, and I had so much nesting to do! Not knowing a whole lot about gardening in this area, I planted “Test Garden A” out in the garden area of the corral out back. It included 27 tomato plants (thanks to my husband), shallots, potatoes, Thai peppers, jalapeños, kale, strawberries, radishes and beets. Figured that would give me some sort of idea of what to expect. Note, this was not in raised beds or with irrigation – did I mention I live out in Mustang Mesa?
The bees get put in their hive in the corner to do what bees do and the tomatoes start their vine-y, bunching, and thicket-ing onto each other. The kales gets off to a great start, the strawberries plants are sputtering along. I finally start to see shoots of radishes and beets – oh my!
Then I start to see little nibbles being taken out of pretty much everything but the Thai chilis and the tomatoes- Like big ol' bites! Varmints have found my garden. Brainstorming ideas. I decide to start bending up bits of chicken wire we had stored away from the previous owner of the house, into cute little chicken wire cloches. I saw success for about a week, when the varmints figured out they could just push my cloches over. In came rocks of all shapes and sizes to weight down the cloches. Again, minor success was gained.
The kale that was doing so well but starts to look moth eaten – overnight. I watch and spray and watch some more. Aphids have arrived, complete with their extended families and set up camp in the Kale. They decide to make their way through whatever was left over after the rabbits, and ground squirrels had done their nocturnal dining. Only the tomatoes seemed to have any traction for survival and a few potato plants. So I surround them in their own varmint excluding netted fence, which is not a graceful thing to circumvent. I do see success in the tomatoes and am able to acquire enough to dehydrate, eat, and freeze for future consumption, but not much else was taken out of the garden.
The challenges of all the pounding sun and wind, varmints and debilitating insects led me to have a plot at the Bishop Community Garden (BCG) this season while I plan my attack on building raised beds out on the Mesa in the formal style known as a potager which I think will address my OCD tendencies and entice my darling husband to help raise some vitals.
My garden this year in the BCG has been so very much fun. I've been mentored by two wonderful friends who happen to be dual sport UCCE volunteers. They've aided me with supreme compost, seedling plants, turning over and weeding, switching out soaker hoses for drip lines, nurturing my plants during my knee repair, and have given so much encouragement! I could not have done it without them! I highly recommend having a plot at BCG. By having the plot at the Community Garden, I've learned a lot, been able to meet many new fellow gardeners and had a much better time gardening overall there rather than at at home, where all my work was spent feeding varmints!
I'm looking forward to gardening more out on the Mesa and exploring ways to enrich the experience and to learn better techniques to produce a garden that is varmint/pest resistant – I'm hopeful!
- Author: Alison Collin
Many people become panicked and reach for insecticidal sprays at the mere glimpse of a black and yellow striped insect without realizing that it may in fact not be a stinging wasp, but rather a harmless syrphid fly, a native bee, some other beneficial insect, or even a harmless wasp mimic. There are said to be 18,000 wasp species in North America, and only a few of these cause problems to humans.
In my garden 2017 could be described as “The Year of the Wasp” with sightings of many different species, some in huge numbers, an event which encouraged me to do some research on the subject. Most wasps are beneficial since they live on a range of other insects, many of which we don't want in our gardens; aphids, caterpillars, grasshoppers and crickets, and spiders and even young cockroaches.
The downside is that they are capable of stinging to various degrees, and the worst species have extremely painful stings. However, there are many which are reluctant to sting, or whose sting is not particularly painful.
Vespid Wasps are social wasps sometimes known as paper wasps since they make nests of a papery material and the two species which occur most frequently in our area are yellow jackets and paper wasps.
Yellowjackets (Vespula ssp.) are social wasps, but queens overwinter alone, and then find a suitable sheltered nesting site in the spring. The nest begins as a ball-shaped cluster of cells covered in a smooth papery cover. As further generations develop they add to the nest, layer upon layer until it may reach 1 foot across. We are familiar with these black and yellow striped wasps ruining our picnics as they try to carry off scraps of food from our plates, or fall into a glass of beer or a can of soda (where they might not be noticed). They have a painful sting which for some people can be life-threatening, are intimidating at best, and can become quite aggressive. Last autumn there was a huge influx of yellow jackets in the Lake Tahoe region to the point where the coniferous forests were humming with them, and sitting or eating outside became impossible. So, beneficial as these are for their insect eating abilities their nuisance factor outweighs the good that they do, and if they decide to nest around your home or in high traffic areas it is wise to have them professionally exterminated.
For more information on Integrated Pest Management control : http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7450.html Yellow jackets and other social wasps.
https://pestid.msu.edu/insects-and-arthropods/european-paper-wasp/
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20151014-superpowers-of-the-near-invincible-velvet-ant
The Mud Dauber wasps, as the name suggests, make nests out of mud. These may look like clumps of mud stuck on a wall, or occasionally like carefully constructed black organ pipes stuck together in sheltered places such as garages or porches. The wasps provision their nests with spiders so are very definitely my friends! The wasps themselves are about an inch long and appear black overlaid with an electric blue color which is apparent in sunlight. Like many other solitary wasps they don't seem to be aggressive and only chose to sting if threatened.
- Author: Harold McDonald
Of course, one definitely wants to avoid plants that might be invasive—escaping from the garden and spreading outside their native range. Fortunately or not, that's not an issue for me—nothing survives out here without supplemental irrigation!
The definitions can be a bit confusing, but maybe naturalized is the word I'm looking for. The USDA defines a naturalized plant as one “that does not need human help to reproduce and maintain itself over time in an area where it is not native,” but that naturalized plants “do not, over time, become native members of the local plant community.” Now doesn't that sound like a plant that any of us would welcome into our garden?
The key, of course, is that location, exposure, watering and other variables all affect a plant's behavior. Plants that were obnoxious in west Bishop hardly stand a chance out here. I've tried without success to grow those little violets that used to spread everywhere in my yard. No longer do I have to deal with sprouts from the neighbor's cottonwood tree coming up 30 feet inside my yard. And God has finally delivered me from periwinkle!
Now that's not to say that there are no plants that can get out of control in my yard. I fell in love with the graceful sway of Mexican feather grass (Nassella tenuissima) when I first moved out here, but soon found out how prolifically they reseed. I now allow only a few plants in inhospitable sites and relentlessly remove any volunteers. Fortunately, the seedlings are easy to pull out.
I have replaced the feather grass with purple threeawn (Aristida purpurea), a California native that is easy to grow from seed, super tough, drought tolerant and beautiful all year round. It is a prolific seeder, but not nearly the nuisance that Mexican feather grass is. One caveat is that its seed heads are very poky, so it's unfortunately not a good choice for pet owners.
My other go-to grass for tough conditions is silver beardgrass (Bothriochloa laguroides torreyana). This native to the southern half of the US is also easy from seed. One of the prettiest sights in my yard is the setting sun lighting up its white, fluffy seedheads. Like many other grasses, beardgrass has fabulous color during the fall and winter. It's not nearly as drought tolerant as purple threeawn, but it really deserves a place in your garden. It will reseed prolifically if given abundant water, and though it's a bit harder to remove than purple threeawn, its volunteers survive transplanting much more readily. It constantly amazes me that ornamental grasses are so underutilized in most people's gardens. For more on grasses, see my earlier posts on some of my favorites.
I'm always on a quest for yellow daisy-like flowers. Gloriosa daisies and coreopsis were dependable standbys in Bishop, and though I keep trying, they just don't seem to thrive out here. Fortunately, I have found two natives that I can always count on to perform—Mexican hat (Ratibida columnifera) and desert marigold (Baileya multiradiata). Mexican hat comes to us from the prairies, so though it's drought tolerant, it's also fine with regular watering. It comes in two colors: yellow and red, and if you're growing both you'll get beautiful bi-colored offspring that substitute nicely for the similarly-sized gloriosa daisies. Between the previous year's plants and the new volunteers, they will bloom from late June through September.
Desert marigold is found in the desert Southwest, is extremely drought tolerant, and is covered with the cheeriest yellow daisies you could ever hope to find. To keep this little plant (12”) looking neat, I snip off the spent flowers, and Baileya rewards me with a great yellow accent that lasts from May through at least October. Though it's a short-lived perennial, it will readily (but not too readily!) give you seedlings to replace it with. It's happiest with little or no water, so I use it to soften the transitions between watered and unwatered areas. If I have a bare spot in the yard where I want some yellow, I'll transplant in volunteer seedlings of these two plants—Baileya if it's a dry spot, Ratibida if it will get a bit more water.
All four of these plants are aggressive—but in a good way. They are easy to grow from seed, they thrive with little care, they look fabulous, and they will give you plenty of volunteers to leave in place or move where you see fit. That is, they are easy to naturalize. You can order seed of all four online from Plants of the Southwest.