Tag Archives: dallas gardens

Have A Blast With Basil

 

One of the stars of summer surely is the well-loved herb – basil.  But did you know how many ways this fragrant little plant could be incorporated into cooking, healing and pleasure? 

Tomato Tart Basil Pesto; Corn, Orzo, Basil Salad; Watermelon, Peach, Tomato, Basil In Cup

Starting in May then continuing on until October the possibilities for allowing Basil to grace both table,  home, and garden are endless.  Here are some of our favorites: 

Basil Lunch Medley 

Tomato Tarts with Basil Pesto 

Corn, Orzo, and Basil Salad 

Peach, Watermelon and Tomato Salad With Mint and Basil 

Italian Bread with Basil Butter 

Basil Lime Shortbread 

Citrus Basil Punch

Linda

Dallas Garden Buzz would like to know if you would like some of these recipes!

Basil Tips For Dallas Gardens

Basil Growing in Raised Beds at the Demonstration Garden

Some of Paula’s growing tips for basil are:

            Wait until May to plant basil whether from seeds or transplants.  Though it is tempting to plant basil in March as soon as the plants are available in nurseries, basil loves hot weather and will often be stunted if planted too early.

            Basils and tomatoes are consider “companion” plants and seem to do well planted near each other.  Of course, everyone knows that a basil, tomato and mozzarella sandwich is a culinary delight.

            In general, basil does not like to be pampered.  However a light application of a synthetic or organic fertilizer can be used to give the plants a boost as the growing season progresses.

Paula the  Basil Queen Showing Where to Cut Basil for Harvest

            Never prune off more than 1/3 of the plant at a time.  Paula also does not recommend letting the plant go to bloom as this seems to change the flavor of the leaves. 

            It is best to pick basil early in the morning when there is the highest concentration of oils in the leaves.  Paula either keeps the stems in water on her counter top or she washes the leaves, rolls them in paper towels and places them in the refrigerator.  They will keep this way for a few days.  Basil can also be frozen as ice cubes (Paula freezes the leaves in broth.)

            It is best to add basil to recipes at the end of the cooking cycle to preserve more flavor.

     In general, basil is a fairly hardy plant that is not attacked by many insects.  However caterpillars, grasshoppers, slugs and snails, white flies and aphids can be a problem.  Many of these can be controlled by organic means such as the use of Bt, Sluggo, or a strong stream of water.

      Basil is also able to be used as both an aromatherapy and medicinal agent.  It is said to relieve aches and pains.  Essential oil of basil can be added to bath water.  Paula also uses a poultice of basil on ant and bee stings.  She says this helps bring down the swelling.

     Some of Paula’s favorite places to find unusual varieties of basil are:  Round Top’s Herb Festival which takes place the third weekend in March, NorthHaven Gardens, Central Market, Southwest Nursery, and Plants and Planters in Richardson, TX.

Carolyn

All About Basil

  Paula With 6 Varieties of Basil for Class  

The delightful smell of fresh basil greeted over 30 Dallas County Master Gardners as they feasted on a delicious basil based light lunch (recipes will be forthcoming) and learned all about basil from our own Basil Queen, Paula.   The first topic in her talk was: just how do you pronounce “basil.”  Is it “basil” with a long “a” (bay-sil) or with a short “a” (baa-sil)?  According to Paula, either pronunciation is correct—- and however you pronounce it, fresh basil is delicious.

     Basil has a long and varied history.  It is mentioned in literature pre 206 BCE.  The Greeks and Romans used it as a symbol of hatred.  They said that the gardener had to rant, rave and cuss when planting it.  As the centuries passed, basil became the symbol for love in Italy.  Young women would put a sprig of basil on their clothes to proclaim their chastity.   However, centuries’ later, in a complete symbolic reversal, women would put a pot of basil on their window sill when they were “entertaining” their lovers.  Voodoo priestesses used basil in their rituals as a symbol of love and devotion; while in Victorian times basil symbolized “best wishes” when given to a friend.   In Europe, basil was said to keep evil spirits away and, if a man carried basil in his pocket, it was supposed to bring him wealth.  (Paula tried this with her husband.)

     Low in saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium, basil is high in many nutrients such as riboflavin and Vitamins E and A.  However, Paula warned that it is also high in Vitamin K and should not be consumed by people who are on the blood thinner Coumadin.

     With over 150 varieties of basil, ranging from a shrub to compact varieties, with many different flavors, there is a basil variety for every taste and place in the garden.  Paula has found that though basil likes full sun, it will even grow in part shade.  Though most basils are annuals in Dallas, there is one type, a Bell Pepper basil, that can be grown as a perennial if well mulched in the winter.  

Sweet Basil, Lemon Basil, Holy Basil, Green Pepper Basil

    Some of Paula’s favorite basils are:

            Aussie Sweet Basil:  This is a columnar/upright basil that grows about 24 inches tall and is only 8-10 inches wide.  It does not set seed quite as quickly as some other varieties.

            African Blue Basil:  Primarily a landscape rather than culinary variety, this basil is grown by Paula to attract butterflies and bees.

            Holy Basil:  Used in Hindu and Muslim burial rituals, this clove/spicy basil is best used in potpourris and as a mosquito repellent.  Just rub a few leaves on your skin.

            Sweet Basil:  This type of basil is the favored basil of many people for use in cooking and making pesto.  One of Paula’s favorite varieties of sweet basil is Genovese. 

            Lemon Basil:  Leaves of this basil impart a lemony flavor to dishes.

            Thai Basil:  Used in Asian dishes, this basil imparts a licorice/anise flavor to food and drinks.

            Bell Pepper Basil:  A “Paula find” at the Herb Festival at Round Top, TX, this basil grows as a shrub in Houston.  Leaves of this variety can be substituted for bell pepper in salads.  They can also be infused in vodka and, according to Paula, make a great Bloody Mary.

Bell Pepper Basil Sampled by Dallas County Master Gardeners Sheridan and Linda

For basil growing tips and some great basil recipes, keep following Dallas Garden Buzz.

Carolyn

July Blooms

Cut Flower Exhibit of Dallas July Blooms

The Earth-Kind® WaterWise Demonstration Garden is pleased to  jump in on the July Garden Bloggers Bloom Day. Garden Blogs all across America participate monthly, giving us a record of what’s blooming all through the year to study when planning our Dallas-Ft. Worth gardens. 

In 2011, we suffered through record breaking heat, but in 2012 our gardens are blooming again despite our normal highs of 103 degrees and only pop-up showers.  With Dallas heat and clay, we use careful soil preparation.  We add compost and expanded shale, water with drip irrigation, and mulch heavily. (For a more detailed information, read the Texas A&M AgriLife link.)

Our garden is filled with carefully chosen perennials that thrive in Dallas-Fort Worth.  Zexmenia, Knock-out roses, Mexican Petunias, several Sages, bloom all through the summer in our crushing heat and humidity.

Most of the plants can be found easily in Dallas garden stores.  Fall is the best time for planting to give plants a good start through our mild fall and winter seasons although sometimes a  wide variety of perennials is not available until early spring. Print  this  list and keep checking with your favorite nursery.

1. Stick Verbena, Verbena bonariensis

2. Knock- Out Rose, Rosa ‘Radrazz’ sp.

3.  Abelia, /Abelia x grandiflora ‘Francis Mason’

4. Transylvania Sage, Salvia transsilvanica

5. Hummingbird Bush, Anisacanthus quadrifidus var. wrightii

6. Periwinkle-Cora Vinca Series, Catharanthus roseus

7.  Trailing Lantana, Lantana montevidensis

8. Orange Cosmos, Cosmos sulphureus

9. Pink Turk’s Cap, Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummonii ‘Pam’s Pink Puryear

10. Mexican Petunia-Pink, Ruellia britonia

11. Phlox, Phlox paniculata ‘John Fanick’

12. Mexican Petunia-Lavendar, Ruellia brittonia

13. Red Yucca, Hesperaloe parviflora

14. Tropical Milkweed,  Asclepias curassavica

15. Jewels of  Opar, Talinum paniculatum

16. Autumn Sage , Salvia gregii ‘Navajo Rose’

17. Mealy Cup Sage, Salvia farinacea ‘Victoria’

17. Zexmenia, Wedelia texana

18. Butterfly Rose, Rosa chinensis ‘Mutablis’

19. Desert Willow, Chilopsis linearis

20. Rock Rose, Pavonia lasiopetala

21. Black and Blue Salvia, Salvia guaranitica ‘Sapphire Blue’

Ann

Cheesy Hot Quiche Squares With Fresh Jalepenos

Cheesy Quiche with Fresh Jalepenos on metal tray  

8 eggs

½ cup all-purpose flour

 1 teaspoon baking powder

¾ teaspoon salt

4 cups (1 pound) shredded Monterey Jack cheese

1 ½ cups cottage cheese

¼ cup chopped jalapeño peppers from the garden

Beat eggs 3 minutes.  Combine flour, baking powder, and salt; add to eggs, and mix well.  Stir in cheese and chopped peppers.

Pour into a greased 13-x-9-x2-inch baking pan; bake at

350 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes.  Let cool 10 minutes; cut into squares.  Yield:  about 12 servings.

Linda

Dragonfly Sugar Cookies

Dragonfly Iced Sugar Cookies

 Shortbread:

2 cups (4 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature

1 ½ cups powdered sugar

2 T vanilla extract

4 cups all purpose flour

2 tsp baking powder

Powdered Sugar Icing: 

2 cups powdered sugar, sifted

¼ cup milk

1 tsp vanilla or almond extract (optional)

To make the shortbread:  Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone mats, or grease generously with butter or cooking spray.  Using a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter and sugar in a large bowl on medium-high speed until fluffy.  Add the vanilla and beat until combined.  In a separate bowl, stir together the flour and baking powder.  Add the flour mixture slowly to the butter mixture, stirring on low speed.  Stop beating as soon as the flour mixture is completely incorporated.  (Overbeating will produce a tough cookie)

Form the dough into a ball, cover in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 30 minutes before rolling out.  On a flat, smooth floured surface, roll the chilled dough out to ¼ inch thickness.  Cut out the cookies  Use a spatula to transfer the cookies to the prepared baking sheets, placing them ½ inch apart.  Combine the dough scraps and reroll the dough to cut out more cookies.  Roll any subsequent scraps into a thick log, wrap in plastic wrap and freeze for 10 minutes. Cut ¼ inch thick rounds of the log to make round cookies.

Bake the cookies for 10-12 minutes, until light brown around the edges. Cool the cookies for 10 minutes on the baking sheet. Remove with a spatula and cool completely on racks about 5 minutes before icing.

To make icing:  Whisk together the powdered sugar, milk and extract.  Divide the icing into parts for different colors.  Use food coloring to tint. Can brush on or dip cookies face down into icing, being sure to cover the whole cookie.

Store the cookies in an airtight container at room temp up to 1 week or tightly wrapped in aluminum foil or plastic wrap for 1 month in the freezer.

Iced Sugar Cookies from Rebecca Rather’s “The Pastry Queen”

Karan

 

A Profusion of Cucumbers

Maybe it’s something to do with the submarine shape: cucumbers and zucchini over run our gardens this time of year. ‘Fess up, Ann. Was that you close to midnight last week frantically turning a bunch of cucumbers into pickles?  Or looking up cucumber dip recipes?

One of the most prolific cucumbers in Ann’s garden wasn’t even invited. The cucumber’s home garden was across the alley and down the street, and this summer it appeared in Ann’s yard.  Didn’t yo’ mama teach you any manners, cucumber?

Cucumbers Growing in a Dallas Vegetable Garden on a Trellis

AgriLife Extension horticulturists Sam Cotner and Jerry Parsons tell us how to create cucumber nirvana in our gardens: work amended soil into rows 4-6” high and at least 36” apart for good drainage.  Plant 3-4 cucumber seeds on top of the row every 12-14 inches.  Thin the cucumbers soon after they emerge.  Cucumber vines can reach 6-8 feet or more. 

In large gardens, cucumbers can trail on the ground, but in small gardens train cucumbers on a fence, trellis or wire cage. (If using a trellis or cage plant 3-4 seeds in hills 4-6” high around the edge of the container.)  Soak the plants weekly if it doesn’t rain; use drip irrigation or water in the morning or early afternoon being careful not to get water on the foliage.

Sliced Cucumbers

Farmers markets often carry the little pickling cucumbers that grow 3-4” long and keep their crunch when pickled.  They can also be used fresh in salads.  Suggested varieties include Carolina, Liberty, Saladin and County Fair 87.  Slicing cucumbers reach 6-8 inches long and are ideal for fresh vegetable trays and salads.  Varieties include Sweet Slice, Burpless, Dasher II, and Slicemaster.  Cucumbers for a fall garden can be planted August 1-15.

Jars of Cucumbers on the kitchen counter

Wait a minute….there’s the doorbell.  Image that, a basket of CUCUMBERS! Could that be from you, Ann?

Elizabeth

Don’t forget our Cucumber Dill Sandwich Rounds Recipe

Strolling Along The Garden Path

  Sunflowers in a glass bottle staked to show the garden path   On Saturday July 14, we welcomed a new class of Master Gardener Interns to a morning of “meeting, greeting and eating” in Linda’s  backyard.   A chorus line of dancing sunflowers (courtesy of the Earth-Kind® Demonstration Garden) turned their perky little “faces” to greet the guests.  Over 120 Mentors and Mentees found each other along the way ready to embark upon the journey ahead.

Dallas Garden Party

 Another “garden feast” had been planned, orchestrated and beautifully prepared by a committee of enthusiastic volunteers, otherwise known as “foodies.”  How we love those garden-themed events that give us the opportunity to think creatively and exercise our culinary skills!

 And so it was decided, this one would highlight the best that our July gardens had to offer, especially those glorious herbs and veggies.  

Our menu included a “little of this,” and a lot of “that.”  Here’s a sampling of what we munched on throughout the morning:

 Strawberry Lemonade Coolers 

 Jalapeno Pimento Cheese Sandwiches

 Cucumber Dill Sandwich Rounds

Cheesy Quiche Squares 

Crudité Tray with Spinach/Herb Dip

 Strawberry Bowl 

 Fresh Peach Pound Cake

Lemon Verbena Thins

Dragonfly Sugar Cookies

Summertime Iced Tea 

 Linda

Keep following Dallas Garden Buzz for these recipes!

 

A Summer’s Day

Take a close up view of these easy flowering plants for a sunny, summer garden.  Our Entry Garden is full of drought tolerant plants that fulfill the goal of being part of the non picky plant’s brigade.  Hooray for the plants that do it all for you and request so little water in return!  

Woolly Stemodia– a dependable, ground hugging stalwart. 

 Wooly Stemodia with a little blue bloom

 

Butterfly Weed– a nectar source for butterflies.

Butterfly Weed

 

Desert Willow-seductive, trumpet-shaped  blooms for hummingbirds.

Desert Willow magenta blooms

 

 Periwinkles-the Cora variety is disease resistant,  loves the heat  and has a more uniform habit  than other periwinkles. It looks great all season and into fall. Many colors to try!

Periwinkles in front of stick verbena, zexmenia, and cosmos

 

Abeilia-foliage with a punch, this is the Frances Mason variety. The leaves turn from several  colors of yellow to a coppery color in the fall.

Abielia foliage with white bloom

 Ann

A Summer Day in The Garden

Salvia, Maximillian Sunflower, Black Eyed Susan,a branch of Yaupon Holly, Mexican Feather Grass

Salvia, Sunflowers, Mexican Feather Grass