One never knows how big the carrot is until it's pulled from the earth. All in our household were instantly smitten by this one. 10.6 ounces, in all its glory. Went well with garden eggplant and tofu with toasted sesame oil and ginger.
13 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Wow, that must have been a shocker! I meant to plant carrots this year and forgot. The mystery of what's under those greens seems like it must be so fun for the kids.
Good grief! You obviously did something right with that one. It would make it's own carrot cake!
I thought you'd appreciate my blogger identity :o) I got fed up of being anonymous, and some blogs wouldn't let me comment anonymously, so I took the plunge. (Not sure a blog of my own is any closer though!)
OK, Kate....totally random question: did you make and share how you made apple cider vinegar last year? I can't remember how that turned out. Can you direct me to your posts about ACV? Apple season is almost upon us and I would like to try a homemade version.
Thanks and sorry about the peculiar direction of this post.
wow, that is huge. we have trouble growing carrots here in the ozarks. we try every year and get a modest harvest but i love carrots and could use a harvest of carrots like that one.
Hi all, this was not a typical specimen among my carrots. Most of the others were smaller, bifurcated, or both. This is the one that merited the picture, so don't take this as my average.
Bev, thanks. I appreciate the vote of confidence. I'm quite behind on my posting at the moment, but I'll try to do something about passing along the award at some point.
Elizabeth, yes, I did at some point. Either last year or the year before. There's really nothing to it - put the spent pomace in a clean jar and top it off with water. You can't cover the pomace with water exactly, since it sort of floats. Cover the mouth of the jar very tightly with twine and several layers of cheese cloth, to keep the flies out, but allow airflow. Put it somewhere dark and coolish. Wait several weeks to a couple of months, depending on temperature. Decant the vinegar. That's it.
I live on a 2/3 acre homestead in a residential neighborhood. A major goal is to demonstrate how much food a non-expert can produce in my particular climate and hardiness zone, with the soils native to my immediate area. We have gardens of annual and perennial plants, keep laying hens and honey bees, and regularly bite off more than we can chew. Another major goal is to pay off our mortgage as fast as possible. Here I blog about frugality, self-reliance, gardening, cooking and baking, food preservation, practical skills, half-baked experiments, and preparing to thrive in a lower-energy future.
13 comments:
Wow, that must have been a shocker! I meant to plant carrots this year and forgot. The mystery of what's under those greens seems like it must be so fun for the kids.
Good grief! You obviously did something right with that one. It would make it's own carrot cake!
I thought you'd appreciate my blogger identity :o)
I got fed up of being anonymous, and some blogs wouldn't let me comment anonymously, so I took the plunge. (Not sure a blog of my own is any closer though!)
Nice carrot aside, cute kitty! How has no one caught that yet?
Amazing.:)
I just laughed out loud! Wowsers!
That is big. I had one that got so big it morphed and started growing a second leg. :-)
-Brenda
Thats a big carrot!
Your blog is a great inspiration to me. Especially your records and lists, not to mention pictures of mutant veggies.
I've nominated you for the Versatile Blogger meme award. Just like an Oscar - only different.
Bev
OK, Kate....totally random question: did you make and share how you made apple cider vinegar last year? I can't remember how that turned out. Can you direct me to your posts about ACV? Apple season is almost upon us and I would like to try a homemade version.
Thanks and sorry about the peculiar direction of this post.
Elizabeth
wow, that is huge. we have trouble growing carrots here in the ozarks. we try every year and get a modest harvest but i love carrots and could use a harvest of carrots like that one.
It certainly is enormous.
Wow! Now that's a carrot!
-Staci
Hi all, this was not a typical specimen among my carrots. Most of the others were smaller, bifurcated, or both. This is the one that merited the picture, so don't take this as my average.
Bev, thanks. I appreciate the vote of confidence. I'm quite behind on my posting at the moment, but I'll try to do something about passing along the award at some point.
Elizabeth, yes, I did at some point. Either last year or the year before. There's really nothing to it - put the spent pomace in a clean jar and top it off with water. You can't cover the pomace with water exactly, since it sort of floats. Cover the mouth of the jar very tightly with twine and several layers of cheese cloth, to keep the flies out, but allow airflow. Put it somewhere dark and coolish. Wait several weeks to a couple of months, depending on temperature. Decant the vinegar. That's it.
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