Saturday 18 August 2012

The Urban Kitchen Gardener by Tom Moggach

I'm so tired of the empty ghost-written celebrity/TV driven cookbooks which have no heart or soul. The love and thought is evident in The Urban Kitchen Gardener, for this is a book actually written and lived by the author, Tom Moggach. Suggestions such the 'daily patrol' of your plants, to tune into them, accompanied perhaps by a strong cup of tea, are born of experience and intuition. Tom's book is vital for the city gardener and, at the same time, contains inspiring recipes for the green-fingered cook, so the Secret Garden Club, devoted to growing their own food, is a fan!

A few months ago, on a dusty but eye-opening trip through Georgia, the former Soviet republic, I met Tom Moggach. He was reporting for The Food Programme on Radio 4, exploring the markets in particular. I tailed behind him as he fearlessly bought mysterious seeds wrapped in wriggly writing newspaper cones from a market stall. I grew some of these seeds myself, unsure what would emerge from the soil a few weeks later.
I also led Tom astray from the path of legality when I found tiny purple Parma violet plants, sweet and sickly like confectionary, growing wild at a central Georgian vineyard. We used our water bottles to make mini protective greenhouses for these plants and smuggled them home in our pockets. My Parma violets* are doing very well in my London garden, despite the sodden British weather this summer.

I've always struggled with growing coriander, which is a shame because it is probably my favourite herb. Tom has useful tips, telling you to sow it every couple of weeks to retain a regular source of leaves for use in cooking, to only use seed less than two years old, to choose the brown unpolished seed to germinate. He also uses fresh green home-grown coriander seeds in his cooking which sounds deliciously intriguing.
The book is divided into vegetables, herbs, leaves (for salads), fruit, edible flowers; each section has enticing recipes such as chilli cornbread, fresh coriander and coconut chutney, home-cured mackerel (makes a change from the usual gravad lax), tomato and lemongrass rasam (a kind of South Indian soup).
Tom's growing stuff that we've not tried: I've never eaten mouse melons, small and crunchy like cucumbers, nor have we grown shisho leaves, a Japanese ingredient with a distinctive flavour. Yet.
It is equally good as a cookbook, offering genuinely innovative recipes, as a gardening manual for small urban spaces. Tom Moggach teaches school children to garden, therefore his style is approachable as well as informative. This is a great book to inspire and instruct beginner gardeners.

Buy Tom's book here or here on Amazon. Highly recommended. Makes you feel good, that real authors are still writing heart-felt personally researched books rather than the empty soulless drivel that passes for publishing nowadays.


*must make sure I split these after spring flowering, to propagate some more. I'm not sure of the exact cultivar. 

Wednesday 1 August 2012

Salad days

A rose-like radicchio plant in the sunshine.
Once you have raised your first homegrown crop of salad leaves it will be very difficult to go back to bagged salad at the supermarket. Those cellophane pillows are highly convenient, but your homegrown leaves will will be juicier, spicier, tastier. You’ll know your own leaves haven’t been sprayed with anything or washed in chlorine. You’ll also be surprised to find out how long your homegrown leaves stay fresh in the fridge compared to bagged salads which start to sag and look mushy the minute you open the bag.

The Secret Garden Club looked at the very wide variety of leaves available to grow yourself, and why you might want to do that.

First, some advantages of growing your own salad leaves:
  • Choice – raise the tastiest varieties
  • Versatility – you’re not limited to what the supermarket wants you to buy (which will be stuff that looks good and keeps well, rather than the most delicious tasting)
  • Peace of mind – you’ll know the exact provenance of every leaf
  • Convenience – a pot of leaves just outside the back door, or on a windowsill, means you’re only ever two minutes away from a salad
  • Value for money – I’m always hesitant to say you’ll save money because once you add up the money for seed, pots, compost, and so on, I’m not sure it’s cheaper. It probably is. But if you get into it and start treating it as a hobby then the temptation is to spend money on it.
You don't have to restrict yourself to pulling leaves from a lettuce - there are plenty of other types of salad leaves available.

What to grow, where and how

Traditional lettuce – the type which you grow as single plants, spaced out, in order to mature and develop multiple leaves. You then harvest the whole plant at any one time.
Little Gem lettuce: succulent green leaves around
a nutty tasting heart
This is a crop for the vegetable patch – lettuces need time and space. The best way to sow lettuce seeds is indoors in modules. Each plant can be planted out in the vegetable bed when the seedlings are big enough to handle. From the seed germinating to you eating a full-grown lettuce will take about 13 weeks.

Lettuce works best as a summer crop although they will appreciate some shade in high summer. For winter salads, I grow radicchio (see the picture at the top) and chicory. As with summer lettuce we sow the seeds in modules indoors in May-June and transplant the seedlings outside when they've outgrown the plastic pods. Both radicchio ad chicory have a robust, slightly bitter flavour, and can be cooked as well as eaten raw.

Chicory can be forced in the dark to make the leaves grow whiter, more tightly packed, more tender and less bitter. Grow your plants in pots, and in autumn, cut back any growth to leave a short stub above ground. Bring the plants indoors, somewhere unheated but frost-free - a garage, or cellar, perhaps. Place a bucket over each pot to ensure all light is excluded. It takes a few weeks, but the plants will send out white chicons, which can be cut and eaten as white chicory.

Cut and come again lettuce, also known as CCA, or Mesclun, or mixed leaves. This is a much quicker and more space-efficient way to grow lettuce: instead of thinning the seedlings and letting each plant grow to maturity, you snip leaves from the plants on demand - whenever you fancy a bit of salad.  This is a quick way to raise salad – you can be eating your leaves 4-6 weeks after the seeds germinate.

Sow the seed thickly in a container or in the kitchen garden and let the seedlings grow without any thinning. Once the leaves are a reasonable size, snip them off at the base with scissors. Don’t pull whole plants up – you want the seedlings to continue to produce new leaves after each harvest.

You can also grow different varieties in the same container so that you always have a mixed salad on tap.

What you won’t get is that lovely firm, nutty heart that you get in a Little Gem lettuce or similar. If you like lettuce hearts, like I do, it’s always worth growing a few for this alone. But my main salad crops are these, mixed leaves.

Lamb's lettuce growing in an old
fruit crate.
Mixed leaves grow really well in containers (which whole lettuce plants don’t) and so you don’t need a garden at all. You can grow on a windowsill, indoors or outside – see the corn salad trough. You can grow in a reclaimed container – see the fruit crate.

You can mix and match varieties to your heart’s content to get the best taste possible from your salad or so that you can vary your salad flavours. At the Secret Garden Club we’ve got a standard leaf mix here and also an oriental mix here.

This crate was devoted to rocket, which is now well and truly in flower – don't let them go to waste, they're delicious and can be added to your salads too – and can be resown soon.

Micro-leaves
You may have seen these in fancy restaurants: tiny perfect salad leaves that still pack a punchy flavour. I suspect that if you’re trying to feed a family with salads that these may be too dainty but they’re useful to have around for a quick garnish.

All they are is seedlings. There’s no special treatment, it’s not like growing bonsais. You can use a shallow seedtray, or a small pot, because the plants won’t grow big enough to put down deep roots. Fill with seed compost, firm lightly and water. Sprinkle the seeds over evenly so that they rest in a single layer.

Cover v lightly with more compost. Then cover the tray – I’ve got the clear plastic lid but you could use a clear polythene bag – and place somewhere warm.

At this time of year, you’ll see the first seedlings in about 48-72 hours. Remove the lid but keep warm and sunny – a south-facing windowsill is ideal. The microleaves will be ready in about two weeks – again, this is a fast-growing time of year. In spring and autumn it will be more like 4 weeks.

Be brutal when cutting them for salad use, it’s not as though you’re growing them as cut and come again. Then resow – after only 2-3 weeks, you can re-use the soil.

Good for microleaves: coriander, most mixed salad leaves, oriental leaves such as mustard and mizuna.

Thinnings
Thinnings or leftovers from the vegetable patch made great additions to the salad bowl. Beetroot, chard, spinach and cabbage are all tender enough and tasty enough in seedling form to be used in salads. So when the time comes to thin or transplant the seedlings, don't throw away or compost the plants you thin out. Take them home, give them a good trim and wash and use in a salad.

This year I potted up the cavolo nero seedlings which didn't get transplanted into the main bed, transferring them instead into a 20cm pot with the seedlings evenly spaced out in it. These pot plants have leaves which are smaller, less fibrous and more tender, ideal for tearing up and using in a robust winter salad.

With beetroot, chard and spinach, I deliberately sow them thickly so that there is plenty of thinning to be done, and the thinnings always make up a nice spring salad. Similarly, when I transplant leeks the seedlings left over are delicious and delicately flavoured in a salad.

And don’t forget pea shoots. You can now buy these at great expense as part of a supermarket bagged salad – instead, why not sprinkle leftover pea seeds over a pot and use the seedlings for salads?

It also feels like food for free, which is always pleasing, as it’s kind of a by-product from another crop.
Salad of Little Gem lettuce leaves and nasturtium flowers (plus a few buffalo mozzarella pieces).

Edible flowers
We covered edible flowers in some detail at the Secret Garden Club in June. These are always good for adding stunning good looks and a delicate contrast in texture and flavour to a salad. Adding flowers to a green salad will immediately lift it out of the ordinary visually. Our post on edible flowers explains how to pick and prepare flowers for culinary use.

Nasturtiums, shown above, are first choice for adding to salads - and the leaves, finely shredded, will give any salad a good peppery kick as well. The flowers are plentiful at this time of year and are easily picked a separately to give salads a shot of hot orange or vibrant red.

Also good in salads are chive flowers, bergamot, violas and marigold petals.

Sprouting seeds
If we can have microleaves, I suppose these must be nano-leaves. Most people are familiar with beansprouts as bought in the supermarket, and possibly – if you’re feeling very healthy – alfalfa sprouts.

These are seeds which you sprout in water just to the stage of producing the first leaves, which can then be eaten raw or stir-fried. They have a delicious flavour and crunchy texture and add variety to salads. They are also highly nutritious - each sprout packing all the nutrients needed to grow the plant from germination to its first true leaves.

The beansprouts you buy most readily in the shops are grown from mung bean seeds, but of course you can experiment and find the ones you like the best.

I think mung bean sprouts can be a bit bland – my favourite for flavour are adzuki beans and also chickpeas – which can be quite large.

Here’s how to grow them. You will need a glass jam jar, with a fine mesh lid or covering. A cut-up square from a very clean pair of tights or stockings stretched over the top and secured with a rubber band is a perfect solution.

Rinse a handful of beans, drain well and put in the jar. Stretch the mesh over the top and secure - with a rubber band or similar. Rest the jar facing down at an angle so that any excess water drains away.

Twice a day, once in the morning, once in the evening, you need to pour water into the sprouts, either through the mesh or with the mesh removed. Then replace the mesh, swirl the water around to rinse the seeds thoroughly, and drain, resting the jar at a downwards angle again. The jar should be kept in the dark - but choose a cupboard you open and use fairly often or it's all too easy to forget about them!

Don't forget to rinse the jar twice daily or the seeds will dry out and not grow. Don’t forget to drain them after each rinse – if they sit in water they’ll rot.

The sprouts should germinate within a week. Use them when they about an inch or two long and before they grow their first leaves.

With a combination of all of these you can have salad on tap 365 days a year.

(Incidentally, do you know the trick to keeping bagged salad fresher? Once you’ve opened the bag and used some of the contents, fold the bag back up very tightly, getting as much air out as you possibly can, then seal the bag – I use Scotch tape. But if you have strong ziplock bags you can transfer to one of these and flatten out as much air as you possibly can before sealing and returning to the fridge.)