I've had a veggie garden of some kind since I moved out of my parent's place when I was 19, but it's never been a very big garden. We were always temporary. We moved a LOT. Except when we lived at the housing co-op while Abby was young. My community garden plot there was larger and much more productive. I gave away a LOT of tomatoes. I never supported myself from it.
I've been reading these how-to market gardening books, and dreaming, and thinking, and planning... but never doing. This year my plan is to grow as many veggies as I can and try to grow all of our produce for the months of July and August. Fruit isn't possible yet, so that can be a plan for next year. Herbs are completely possible. I'm going to be able to grow all of my mint tea for the year, and hopefully a good portion of my chamomile.
In Anglo-Saxon- the place where the people grow plants
This is my blog where I'll post gardening ideas, recipes for things you can (mostly) grow in your own garden, and the results of my experiments. There will probably be a few posts on medieval herbalism as well.
Showing posts with label chamomile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chamomile. Show all posts
Friday, 19 April 2019
Friday, 23 November 2018
Easy homemade gifts
1. Homemade peppermint extract
Take clean, fresh mint leaves, fill a mason jar, crush with the handle of a wooden spoon to release the oils, fill to the top with a clear liquor of your choice, and put on the lid. Let it sit for a month or two (two is better). Strain into gift jars. Give to your favourite baker.
Labels:
butter,
chamomile,
culinary herbs,
diy,
every little bit helps,
gifts,
herbs,
honey,
lavender,
local,
mint,
peppermint,
recipe,
reduce,
reuse,
wool
Friday, 9 November 2018
Planning a dye garden for myself
Labels:
apple,
chamomile,
culinary herbs,
fruit,
madder,
plans,
vegetables,
weld,
woad,
yarrow
Friday, 2 November 2018
Medieval plant dyes (and modern)
As long as you have red, yellow and blue you can mix and match to make almost any colour. Some of these dye plants are more resistant to fading in sunlight or getting washed out of the fibre than others.
Any plant name that is in bold is a perennial (or biennial).
Red -
Medieval European- Madder (Rubia tinctoria), Lady's Bedstraw/Cleavers (Galium verum)
Other- Amaranth (Hopi red dye), Dyer's Alkanet, Henna (Lawsonia inermis) (shrub), Joe Pye Weed, Dyer's Woodruff (Asperula tinctoria), Brazilwood (tree)
Orange -
Medieval European- any yellow + Madder, or just Madder itself
Other- Dyer's Coreopsis (Coreopsis tinctoria), Orange Cosmos, Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia fulgida 'Goldstrum') (edges into dull yellow)
Friday, 19 October 2018
Dye, you fool!
Madder and dyer's chamomile. Dyer's chamomile smells just like chamomile tea, so my daughter didn't hate this as much as weld. Thank goodness she wasn't around for the woad.
I always used to get orange out of madder, but I've got the hang of it now. This is the madder with dyer's chamomile. The picture doesn't do the colour any justice. It's a quite nice tangerine.
Labels:
Anglo Saxon,
chamomile,
crafts,
every little bit helps,
experiment,
fall,
fibre processing,
history,
local,
madder,
natural dye,
Norse,
Old English,
reduce,
SCA,
woad,
wool
Saturday, 2 April 2016
How to grow and store your own herbal tea
Some herbs to try-
Mint, Lavender, Lemon verbena, Lemon balm, Thyme, Chamomile, Rosemary, Fennel, Sage, Lemon grass (will grow in a pot and can be over-wintered that way), Rose hips (I've mentioned this before, but they have an amazing amount of vitamin C), Linden tree flowers (harvest before the flower bud opens, and they taste like honey), Hyssop (lovely, fragrant leaves and the bees love the flowers), Clover blossoms,Organic citrus peels (eat the fruit and save the peels from the outside. Trim off the sour, white rind to improve the flavour), Blackberry and raspberry leaves, and Borage (the flowers are sweet and the leaves a bit cucumber-y). If you want to get some nutrition into yourself in early spring try gathering some nettles. They are surprisingly healthy, with vitamin C, B1, K, carotenoids, and a lot of calcium and magnesium and a few other minerals. Use gloves to gather them because of the stinging, but after being immersed in hot water they are safe to handle. Young nettles were commonly chopped up and added to pottages in the spring to help people recover after a winter of less food (and vitamins and minerals). Later in the summer they get too woody and fibrous. In fact, nettles are another source of spinnable fibres and are processed like flax.
How to dry and store herbs and plant material-
Labels:
blackberry,
borage,
chamomile,
citrus,
culinary herbs,
diy,
hyssop,
lavender,
lemon balm,
lemon grass,
lemon verbena,
linden flowers,
local food,
mint,
nettle,
raspberry,
rosehips,
rosemary,
thyme,
wildcrafting
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