Sunday, May 15th, 2011
Did you ever eat Colcannon, made from lovely pickled cream?
With the greens and scallions mingled like a picture in a dream.
Did you ever make a hole on top to hold the melting flake
Of the creamy, flavoured butter that your mother used to make?
Yes you did, so you did, so did he and so did I.
And the more I think about it, sure, the nearer I’m to cry.
Oh, wasn’t it the happy days when troubles we had not,
And our mothers made Colcannon in the little skillet pot.
Colcannon (The Skillet Pot) Traditional Irish song
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Tags: ailment of cabbage, baby leaves, black cabbage, Black Rot, Black Tuscany, boil, borecole, Boron deficiency, Brassica oleracea acephala, brassicas, breadcrumbs, butter, cabbage, cabbage family, cabbage root fly, caraway seeds, cattle food, cauliflower, Chafer grubs, Clubroot, Colcannon, cold ham, collards, compact plants, cream, crinkly, crushed garlic, curly kale, Cutworms, Diamond-back, Downy mildew, Dwarf Green Curled, Europe, farmer’s cabbage, flavoured butter, Flea beetle, frilled, frost, frost proof cabbage, Gall weevil, German greens, green cabbage, Greens, harvest kale, Harvesting kale, heavy-bottomed pan, Italian kale, Kale, kale bitter, kale Cooking, kale Storage, Leaf Spot, Magnesium deficiency, Manganese deficiency, mashed potatoes, Mealy aphid, meats, melted butter, moth, Nero de Toscana, new growers, oil and vinegar dressing, olive oil, Parmesan cheese, pepper, peppery flavour, pickled cream, poorly drained soils, rape kale, Red Russian, resistant to disease, resistant to frost, resistant to pests, ring spot, salads, salt, sautéed, scallions, Scarlet kale, Scotch kale, shallow fried, Skillet Pot, Slugs & snails, smooth, sow kale, steam, steam kale, stir-fry kale, strips, Swede Midge White blister, tolerates wind, traditional Irish dish, Traditional Irish song, transplant kale, very hardy, White rust, Whitefly, wild cabbage, Wire stem, wrinkled leaves, Yellows virus
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, July 23rd, 2009
Beetroots…round, cylindrical or tapered swollen roots that are way more versatile than many give them credit for. Fairly pest free, they are also a good crop for the organic gardener. Find out for yourself as we detail amongst other things the varieties suitable to grow in Ireland, and how to plant or sow them.
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Tags: acid soil, Albina Vereduna, alkaline soils, autumn, beet, Beetroots, best varieties, Beta vulgaris, Black bean aphid, Black Leg, bleed, boil, bolt-resistant, Boltardy, Bolting, boron, Boron deficiency, Burpee’s Golden, chutney, cloches, cooking, copper, Crimson beetroot, cut, Cylindra, cylindrical, Detroit, disease resistance, dries, drill, dry peat, early March, early winter, easy, end of July, Fanging, farmyard animal manure, feeding, fertiliser, fertilizer, fish blood and bone, flavour, fortnight, frames, freeze, garden centres, germination, golf ball, Greens, ground lime, Grow beetroot, Growmore, harvesting, hasten germination, hay, Heart Rot, home soil test, how to, Ireland, iron, label, Leaf Miner, Leaf Spot, leaf yellowing, leaves, life expectancy, manganese, Mangold Fly, Mediterranean, metre, Mid-March, neutral, nitrogen, orange skin, organic gardener, origin, paper, pest free, Pests and Diseases, pH, phosphorus, plant, plant ills, plastic bag, potassium, preservation, raked, red, refrigerator, roots, rosettes, salads, scorching, seedlings, shelter, slatted boxes, slices, smooth skin, Snowhite, soil, soil conditions, soil nutrients, soups, Southern Europe, sow, sow seeds, spades depth, Speckled Yellows, spinach, sprout, stones, storage, successional harvesting, suitable to grow in Ireland, sunny spot, supermarket, swollen, tapered, tennis ball, thinnings, tips, tolerate shade, trench, trowel, vegetable, vegetables, vigour, waterlogs, weed free, wheelbarrow, When to grow, Where to grow, white, White beet, yellow, Yellow beet, zinc
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Thursday, February 12th, 2009
Tags: allotment, Cappagh Road, City Council, funding, Galway, Greens, Knocknacarra, Niall Ó Brolcháin, pilot scheme
Posted in Allotment news from Ireland. | 1 Comment »