Archive for the ‘In The Kitchen’ Category

In The Kitchen – July/August

July 27, 2008

During July and August in Fife we can harvest or buy a huge range of fruit and vegetables. Fife is well known as a producer of quality soft fruits and you can find a great selection at Farmer’s Markets (www.fifefarmersmarket.co.uk), pick-your-own farms and shops and if you look carefully in the supermarket you can find strawberries from Fife. My top tip for July and August is to get out and pick-your-own! It’s good fun, exercise and great value. You can make jam, summer pudding (see below for recipes) eat loads and store some in the freezer for a treat later in the year when local fruit is more scarce.

As a rough guide the following are in season at the moment:

Vegetables

  • Beans – broad, French and runner
  • Peas
  • Globe artichokes
  • Potatoes
  • Salad leaves and rocket
  • Spring onions
  • Shallots
  • Courgettes
  • Carrots
  • Beetroot
  • Calabrese (summer broccoli)
  • Tomatoes (I know it’s a fruit but it fits better with the salad veg)
  • Cucumber

Fruit

  • Strawberries
  • Raspberries
  • Blackcurrants
  • Redcurrants
  • Cherries
  • Tayberries (delicious hybrid of raspberry and blackberry)
  • Blueberries (in August)

Wild harvest

  • Nasturtium flowers and leaves (add to salad for a peppery taste)
  • Chamomile flowers (makes a calming herbal tea, steep a few flower heads in boiling water for 5 minutes then drain and serve with a little honey)
  • Marigold flowers (calendula) also make a good herbal tea. Calendula has anti-viral properties so is good if you feel a cold coming on. Make as for chamomile.

Raspberries from my garden Peas from the garden

In The Kitchen – June

June 17, 2008

June in Fife is the start of the harvest – herbs, vegetables and even some fruit. Many foods are becoming available but remember, in Scotland crops are usually a couple of weeks behind the south of England. In season this month are:

Vegetables

  • Beetroot
  • Peas (later in the month)
  • Globe artichokes
  • Early potatoes
  • Salad leaves
  • Spring onions
  • Herbs – chives, rosemary, thyme, oregano, lemon balm
  • Sorrel
  • Spinach
  • Chard
  • Broad beans
  • Asparagus (finishing off).

Fruit

  • Strawberries (towards the end of the month)
  • Gooseberries (good simmered with a head of elderflower and made into a crumble or fool).

Wild harvest

  • Elderflowers (use the creamy white flowers, pour sparkling water over with a slice of lemon, drain and serve over ice)
  • Dandelion (use the small new leaves sparingly in salads).

Below are images of ruby chard and spinach growing in my garden.

Ruby chard Spinach