And the Harvest continues.....steemCreated with Sketch.

in #gardening7 years ago

When the onion tops start to fall over, it is time to begin the onion harvest. Choose a time when the ground is dry and rain is not expected for a few days. The onions easily come right out of the soil. Most of them will go into winter storage, but some will be used in salsa, sweet pickles, chili sauce, and other canned products. It is important to dry the onions as quickly as possible. We lay them out in the sun for a few days, here under the watchful eye of Candy. Rain was in the forecast one night, so we moved them into the garage, and out again the next morning.

The rest of our early beets were harvested around the same time as the onions. Although beets don't store as well as onions, they can easily last in the refrigerator for a month, and are also very good for pickling and canning.

Using the hose, the dirt is washed off the beets. As soon as the water dries, the tops are removed and the beets are sorted by size. We had a very good crop of beets this year, and also made a second sowing, in the back garden, that will be harvested some time next month. Beet greens are edible, especially when they're young and tender, but the hens don't care how old these are. Nothing goes to waste when you have chickens.

After the onions have dried for several days, the tops and roots are cut off. We put them on racks in the basement for further drying for a month or so, until they are placed in mesh bags for winter storage.

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I just put more onions in the ground yesterday! The benefits of living in Zone 10b ;)

That may be a benefit, however, having lived in Cape Coral Florida until recently I'll take no onion plating now in exchange for no contact with Irma. Stay safe Brother!

Hey, back at you my friend! Best wishes to you and any friends and family that still live there!

Thank you Brother

Excellent harvest. The onion are very nutritive.
How do you prepare the leaves of the beet?
Thanks for sharing, @brimax

We don't prepare the beet greens, we just feed them to the chickens!

Your veggies look so lovely drying in the sunshine.

Thanks for taking a look. Maybe we'll do a pumpkin post when we begin harvesting.....but.....I'm pretty sure we don't have any pink ones like you do....that is really neat!

Amazingly, you get a great harvest keep planting any plant good for health and life. thanks for sharing your great article and video @brimax

best regard from indonesia @azissuloh

Thanks for watching!

Really a nice harvest. So many onions. Good that you know how to conserve them. :-) This means more pleasure during winter.
I just dried my chilis too and made chili powder out of it. Have a look at my profile if you are interested.

Thank you. I took a quick look at your page. Liked what I saw and followed you.
Cheers

I love to see that...

Glad you enjoyed

Do you have any recipes to pickle the beets. I did pretty good on beets and I need to find a different way to cook them. I've roasted them and boiled them so far. And from experience, the older and larger greens are not as good as the smaller ones.

Pickled Beets
Wash and cook beets in boiling water. Drain and reserve cooking water. Peel, cut into chunks and fill jars. Make a brine of 2 cups beet water, 1 cup vinegar, 1 cup sugar. Boil brine until sugar is dissolved. Place a bay leaf in jar and cover with hot brine. Process in boiling water bath 20 minutes for pints, 30 minutes for quarts. Or do not process and keep in fridge for up to a month.
Enjoy!

That will work, thanks for the recipe.

You're welcome

Okay, I off to the store to get some vinegar. I have the sugar and the beets. Thanks. Oh, I need the bay leaf too.

Good luck!

Thanks. Have a good evening.

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