Showing posts with label Peas / Beans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peas / Beans. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Growing Asparagus Peas (not quite the same as the Asian Winged Bean)...

Asparagus Pea pod - Grow your own




A bean emerging from its stem is not normally something that one writes home about, but it is the frills on this particular one that makes it rather a unique and peculiar sight.  Unlike ordinary peas or beans, the Asparagus Pea has four sides, and each of these has a delicate and pretty frilled edge.

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Tips for First Time broad beans growers

Homegrown broad beans
Broad beans (a little mature!) harvested from the garden

Broad beans are now ready to be harvested in the garden.  We grew a variety called "Aquadulce Claudia", which we sowed in Autumn (October).

If you are a first-time grower, you might be interested in these top tips for growing broad beans:

Sunday, 7 July 2013

Eating freshly picked Broad Beans (and whether or not to peel them)...

Freshly picked Broad Beans


It is a special moment when you harvest your first broad beans of the summer - these ones were put into the ground months ago, back in November just before the winter set in and when the days were a little chillier than they are now.

Our Snow Pea Harvest!


During these hot summer months, it is such a delight to be able to harvest homegrown MangeTout (Snow Peas) straight from the garden.  This year, I grew six "Oregon Sugar Pod" plants from seed, in our veggie patch.  Now, a few times a week, I can harvest just enough to go into a stir-fry for dinner (along with other vegetables like rainbow chard and occasionally, a few spears of asparagus).

Monday, 1 July 2013

Time to pick homegrown MangeTout (Snow Peas)!

Snow Pea (MangeTout) pod ready to harvest
Don't you just want to pick this Snow Pea (Mange Tout)?

There can be nothing nicer than picking your own home grown Snow Peas from the garden in the warm, summer evenings.  Before the sun sets, I race down to our vegetable patch and seek out the little pods of green that have emerged.

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

A pretty Sweet Pea posy from our garden..

This beautiful posy is made up of flowers from the lovely Sweet Pea plant.  Most people here in the UK seem to have grown up with these pretty little flowers, but my first encounter with the Sweet Pea was just over a year ago, when a neighbour brought us a bouquet from her garden.  It was then that I fell in love with these delicate little flowers with their lovely sweet fragrance.

Sunday, 6 March 2011

Grow Snake Beans (Yard Long Beans) for a tasty fried bean dish!



If there was ever a bean that I could associate with Asia, it would have to be the Snake Bean.  It reminds of walking through markets in Malaysia where bundles of these incredibly long beans, each secured by a rubber band, are piled up onto market stall stands.  These beans are thought to have originated from South China and are also known as Yard Long beans, Chinese Long Beans or Asparagus Beans.

My parents grow these delightfully long beans in their backyard in Sydney, Australia and mid February we had our first harvest, which I turned into a tasty dish of "Deep fried snake beans with garlic".

Chinese style Fried Snake Beans with Garlic Recipe

 
My favourite way to cook green beans is to fry them in oil until their outer skin blisters and they turn impossibly sweet.  Snake beans are no exception and can be fried (almost deep fried) in batches.  Add some slivers of garlic and these beans really come alive.

Keep the beans long as they look lovely "snaked" around a plate, but trim them to a size manageable during the cooking process.

Monday, 23 August 2010

Chinese style Fried Blistered Beans



French beans are in season right now and we are harvesting lots of wonderfully long beans from the garden.  My absolute favourite way of cooking them is to fry them Chinese style until they become blistered and wrinkly.  Done this way, the beans will taste impossibly sweet and develop complex flavours which are remarkably different from steamed or boiled beans.

Friday, 9 July 2010

Harvest Snow Peas & Look out for Fairies!


Picking Snow peas is one of my secret joys in the garden at the moment. There is something about seeking out these delightful little green pods from behind leaves and stems and then reaching out to snap them off that makes me feel childishly nostalgic.

Or perhaps its the soft lilac pink flowers - so delicate and pretty that they conjure up images of little fairies dancing around our garden playing their own little game of hide and seek. Sometime gardening isn't all about hard work and labour and sowing for produce, there are moments, fleeting as they may be, that are simply about awesome beauty and elegance that the wonder of nature brings. Oh all right! I know they are just peas, but up until recently, I didn't even realise that peas came from pretty little flowers. And you might think that as very odd, but probably rings true for a large number of people who didn't grow up in 'pea-growing' nations.

To grow Snow Peas (Mange Tout or 荷兰豆 pronounced hé lán dòu), you will need to get your hands on some Snow Pea seedlings, plant them in with some good compost, and then, make sure you provide some support for them in the form of canes. Water daily, and in turn they will reward you with a mountain of tasty, crisp green pods.

Our seedlings went into the ground mid April, the same time as our Pak Choi. The plants took about two months before they reached about 5 ft in height, with the first flowers arriving on June 16th. A few days later, my little flower fairies' had disapeared and with a stroke of their magic wands left me a wonderful gift of crunchy green pods.

(L) Snow Peas growing behind Pak Choi in the Chinese wing (R) Look carefully for these crunchy pods
It made me smile.

The pods arrived slowly at first, three or four every few days, but just this last week, we are getting peas almost every day. Yesterday I picked twenty pods and this morning, there were already six new ones. And as the saying goes for peas, the more you pick, the more productive the plants will be, so its best to harvest every day.

So what do you do with the Snow Peas?
For Asian style stir-fries, Snow Peas taste best when they are small, not tiny, but whilst the seeds inside are small and immature. Sometimes you miss a pod that is hidden up the back and by the time you notice it, it will have already turned into a monstrous giant. Whilst still edible, they can be a little stringy so its probably wise to de-string them by snapping the top and then stripping the string down each side.
(L) Caramelised Soy Fried Rice with Cavolo Nero and Snow Peas, all from our garden (R) Sauteed Snow Peas with dried shrimp and garlic
The simplest way to cook Snow Peas, is to sautee them with a little oil, garlic and salt to taste. Once they have turned a glossy green (and you will see this as it happens), you can serve them up. Best eaten with a little crunch, so be kind, do not cook them to death.

You won't always pick enough peas to warrant an individual dish, so why not harvest all the bits and bobs you have in your garden and serve up Fried Rice? I am using "Cavolo Nero" which is a Tuscan dark leafy kale as a substitute for Chinese Brocolli (Kai Lan, Gai Lan) and have thrown in some Snow Peas for added crunch to make a delicious Malaysian style Fried Rice.




Seeds: Grown from seedlings bought at our local garden centre
Compost: Vegetable Compost (Organic & Peat Free) from New Horizon
Growing: I planted the seedlings outdoors mid April
Harvest: Mid June (so, approximately 8 weeks)
Pests: I did not encounter any. Slugs occasionally ate the leaves at the bottom of the plant, but I wasn't too bothered by this.

Note: After this post was published, we have had Blackfly.

Friday, 21 May 2010

Easy Pea-sy way to grow the chinese delicacy Pea Sprouts




One of my all-time favourite dishes to order when we dine at a proper authentic Chinese restaurant is "Stir fried Snow Pea Sprouts". Pea Sprouts are also known as Pea Shoots, Pea Tips, Dou Miao or 豆苗, and is somewhat of a delicacy in Chinese cuisine. Now, I have discovered an easy pea-sy way of growing my own Pea Sprouts, thanks to Alys Fowler of the BBC's "Edible Garden" television series. Now, unlike Alys, I did not grow up in the country and thus do not have any green fingers or thumbs for that matter, so I was genuinely doubtful that I would be able to do this.

However, here is a picture capturing my fantastic results (the green stuff, not the Bollinger champagne)...!