Today's recipe to try is Apple Fritter from BunsInMyOven
Friday, November 15, 2013
Mixed-Vegetables Stirfry
I still had some fresh bell peppers in my fridge plus other vegetables I bought this week. So, I decided to make a quick and easy stirfry of mixed-veggies.
Ingredients:
1 cup mixed-color paprika/bell pepper, chopped
1 cup sweet baby corn, chopped
2 cups white oyster mushroom, chopped
1 cup shredded purple cabbage
1 cup chopped Chinese cabbage
3 shafts leek, oblique cut
2 cloves minced garlic
1/2 cup prawn
1 cup chicken breast, cubed
2 Tbs oyster sauce
3 Tbs salted soya sauce
3 Tbs vegetable oil
2 cups water
1 Tbs sugar
1 tsp salt
ground pepper(optional)
Sweet Baby Corn, Mixed-Color Paprika, and Leeks |
Mushrooms |
Puple Cabbage & Chinese Cabbage |
Prawns & Chicken Breast |
How to:
1. Sauté garlic until it turn brown and fragrant. Stir in prawns and chicken breast. Add soya sauce and oyster sauce. Stir until the prawns and chicken breasts change color.
3. Add purple and Chinese cabagge.
5. Add water, sugar, salt and pepper(optional). You may need to adjust the salt according to your taste (remember that the salted soya sauce and the oyster sauce will have rendered some saltiness already, so just add a little amount of salt first and try if it's already enough. Feel free to add more). Continue to cook. Let it boils for a couple of minutes until the veggies are tender. Serve with steamed rice.
Handling Leafminers
I've been noticing some squiggly white lines on my tomato leaves since last week. It started with one or two leaves, but then today, I realized it had expanded to more leaves, even to my younger seedlings! At first, I thought it was the watermark caused by careless watering, but I couldn't assuage my curiosity and decided to do some scrupulous research and was quite surprised with my findings. It's not trivial at all!
(The snippets below are taken from Better Homes & Gardens)
Identifying the Pest
Leafminer Control
Host Plants
Leafminers are actually the larval (maggot) stage of many insects such as flies, moths, sawflies and beetles. The female adult flies lay their eggs on the surface or undersides of the leaves.
Life Cycle: Mature larvae overwinter in the soil under host plants. As temperatures warm in the spring larvae pass to the pupal stage and appear as young adults in late April. Mated females use their needle-like ovipositor to lay up to 250 eggs just under the surface of the leaf epidermis. Deposited eggs may appear as small raised spots on the leaf. Within 10 days hatching larvae tunnel through the mid-leaf tissue, feeding as they go and leaving tell-tale wavy lines that are visible on the surface. Larvae mature in 2-3 weeks, and when ready to pupate, leave the leaf and drop to the soil. Once on the ground, they dig 1-2 inches into the soil and pupate. Adults emerge within 15 days as adult flies. (snippet copied from PlanetNatural)
Identifying the Pest
Leafminer larvae are tiny, and somewhat flattened to fit inside a leaf. As the larvae feed, they eat the green tissue inside the leaf, leaving a thin, winding trail covered by a papery sheath. The trail may contain small brownish black pellets of insect excrement, and if you look closely you may be able to see larvae. When numerous larvae are feeding in a single leaf, their tunnels may merge, creating large blotches.
Because they're protected inside the leaf for most of their lives, it's difficult to control leafminers with insecticidal sprays. However, damage caused by the pest is seldom severe enough to justify spraying except to make the plant look better. For ornamental plants, you can spray a systemic insecticide such as acephate to kill tunneling larvae. Carbaryl, neem, or pyrethrin is effective if sprayed just as the larvae are hatching. If you see large, merged tunnels, the larvae may have already completed their life cycles, making insecticidal sprays pointless.
Control is more important for leafy vegetable crops because feeding by the leafminers damages the edible portion of the plant. Protect vegetables from egg-laying adults by covering the plants with a floating row cover. Secure the edges of the row cover to the ground so that no adults can enter. Remove and destroy affected leaves.
Leafminers may attack many ornamental plants. Some of the preferred hosts are:
Arborvitae
Aspen
Azalea
Birch
Bougainvillea
Boxwood
Butterfly weed
Chrysanthemum
Columbine
Cottonwood
Delphinium
Elm
Holly
Impatiens
Juniper
Lantana
Lilac
Locust
Magnolia
Oak
Pine
Verbena
Water lily
Aspen
Azalea
Birch
Bougainvillea
Boxwood
Butterfly weed
Chrysanthemum
Columbine
Cottonwood
Delphinium
Elm
Holly
Impatiens
Juniper
Lantana
Lilac
Locust
Magnolia
Oak
Pine
Verbena
Water lily
Commonly affected food crops are Apple
Beets
Citrus
Garlic
Onion
Spinach
Swiss chard
Tomato
Citrus
Garlic
Onion
Spinach
Swiss chard
Tomato
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Liquid Enzyme from Fruit Rinds
When deciding to start organic gardening, I've been looking for ways to organically fertilize my future plants. My mom kept telling me that those plants wouldn't thrive without (inorganic) fertilizers.
From the beginning I had persisted to only count on good amount of compost and mulch as the fertilizer agents for the soil. Compost tea is also a good fertilizer, especially from those of animals manure like cow, goat or chicken dung. I had planned on making my own compost from kitchen's organic scraps, which will be a good source of compost tea too, but I wan't ready. Then, I ran across a blog article by ThePinkieRabbit with information on how to make DIY liquid enzyme, using fruit rinds. I was ecstatic with how easy it was. Coincidently, I had some dragon fruit rinds, so I gave it a go. Then, at the other occassion I made some more out of the pineapple rinds and today I just made a bottle from some papaya rinds. I can't wait to apply these yummy liquid enzyme to the soil of my plants.
I promise, it's super duper easy! For the recipe and how to make it please refer to the website above with just one click.
From the beginning I had persisted to only count on good amount of compost and mulch as the fertilizer agents for the soil. Compost tea is also a good fertilizer, especially from those of animals manure like cow, goat or chicken dung. I had planned on making my own compost from kitchen's organic scraps, which will be a good source of compost tea too, but I wan't ready. Then, I ran across a blog article by ThePinkieRabbit with information on how to make DIY liquid enzyme, using fruit rinds. I was ecstatic with how easy it was. Coincidently, I had some dragon fruit rinds, so I gave it a go. Then, at the other occassion I made some more out of the pineapple rinds and today I just made a bottle from some papaya rinds. I can't wait to apply these yummy liquid enzyme to the soil of my plants.
I promise, it's super duper easy! For the recipe and how to make it please refer to the website above with just one click.
Dissolved palm sugar in 1 L tap water |
Saturday, November 9, 2013
New updates from my rooftop garden
My rooftop garden has gotten bigger in size as the 50 something tomato seedlings survived after being repotted and I've added a mango tree, several flowers and a citrus tree, as well as 3 pineapple crowns which I replanted from the scraps and some ginger, turmeric, galanggal, garlic, onion, and bell pepper.
Btw, I am so happy to see my tomato seedlings are not only surviving but also growing and branching, though they are not growing into the same size. Some are growing quite fast, but some are slow. I also have given 3 seedlings to my brother's employee for adoption and have also promised to give several others to my tuition student. I am happy if they can thrive and bear fruit in the hands of their new owners.
These 3 seedlings are bell-peppers from the seed I dried myself. Btw, I'm a little perpelexed to see these orange bell-peppers turned out to be different in forms. Maybe it has accidentally mixed with other seeds. |
Garlic started to sprout |
The Citrus Tree which I bought from the market |
This is the watermelon radish I replanted from the scraps. |
The Cilantro I replanted from the scraps started to grow but then were deterorating and several plants eventually died of rotting roots. Probably the cause was soggy soil because it's been raining a lot lately. I should have planted them indoor though... |
I planted some ginger heads from the scraps and the young shoot of this one has grown. |
Can anyone of you recognize this seedling? Is it really an orange bell pepper? |
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