Who doesn’t love vegetable soup or a great salad? It’s even better when the ingredients are harvested from a garden of your own design, one that’s beautiful as well as productive. Join Jennifer in learning how to nurture, prepare and consume fresh produce. It may positively impact your whole life!

This is Not the Year of the Tomato



The summer of 2009 is not the year of the tomato. It’s not the year of basil, peppers, okra or eggplant either. I am declaring it the summer of the sweet pea. Unfortunately, I can’t eat the pretty poisonous plants.

My local newspaper says this is the second coldest July ever for Columbus, Ohio. The coldest was in 1891. The National Weather Service says that parts of Indiana, Michigan and northern Ohio are having the coldest July since they began keeping records. So, it’s not you. It’s not your weak gardening skills. It’s the weather. Blame it on the cool July weather.

Sweet peas thrive in areas with cool summers and usually languish in the heat. This year they love my garden and are filling the willow trellises with red and lavender, fragrant blossoms. I am really glad I planted them last spring. Who knew they would be the focal point of the garden in July. I do find the flopping vines need a little help. The tendrils are short and not strong enough to hold up the entire plant. I secure them to the tee pee with a little biodegradable twine. Be careful when tying up the brittle stems; they snap easily.

To prolong the bloom time of sweet peas deadhead the spent blossoms so the plant continues to focus its energy on bloom production and not seed production. This is a pleasant, easy chore. When you cut blooms for an indoor arrangement you are deadheading- so keep filling an assortment of pretty glass containers to put in every room of your house.

Summer 2009 might also be the year of the onion. The Walla Walla onions I planted in the spring are ready for harvest now. The sweet, mild bulbs are fat and sitting on the surface of the ground. The green stems have flopped over telling me it’s time to dig up them up. Yesterday I stuffed zucchini blossoms with goat cheese, dipped them in batter and fried them up. Today I’ll thinly slice the sweet onions dip them in the same batter and sizzle until crisp. My tempura batter is easy to make: mix equal parts of flour and beer. Just make sure the oil is hot enough when you cook the vegetables. Wander through your garden you may find a variety of treats to slice, batter and fry.

Don’t give up on the heat lovers. They are patiently waiting to burst forth. My basil seems to be in a suspended state. It’s just kind of sitting there. Keep the hovering vegetables happy and when August arrives with its heat and humidity the tomatoes, peppers and okra will explode with a bounty of delectable fruit. The gardener always hopes.



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Jennifer Bartley

Jennifer Bartley is a registered landscape architect and founder of the design firm, American Potager. She creates gardens that feed the soul as well as the stomach, convinced that borrowing the design and seasonal philosophy of the French potager can transform our properties into productive havens- harvest some flat leaf parsley, pick a few tomatoes and then spend the rest of the afternoon in the garden watching the bees pollinate the lavender and the hummingbirds flutter above the scarlet runner beans. She is working on her second book for Timber Press entitled, Seasonal Harvest.


Growing Soil
Harvesting Garlic
Chives: Pretty in the Border
Why I plant poisonous plants in the kitchen garden
Basil: Use it now, freeze for later or preserve by drying
What grows in chilly weather?
Window Boxes in Brooklyn
Evergreens for winter color
What is a potager?
Time to order seeds: vegetables, herbs and flowers
Plant the Kitchen Garden Near the Kitchen
Make Room for Asparagus, Rhubarb, Blueberries and Currants
Flowers That Attract Beneficial Insects
Plant Peas When the Daffodils Bloom
I Just Planted Dandelions
I Think My Lavender is Dead
What About Tomato Cages?
Oh, Green Garlic...
Slow Food. Slow Garden.
Time to Plant Warm Season Vegetables... Almost.
Purple, Orange and Green Cauliflower
My Broccoli is Blooming!
A Peek at my Brother's Garden
Heirlooms Tell a Story
Let Some Things Go To Seed
It's An Outdoor Room Alright...
An Alaskan Kitchen Garden
Cold Climate Kitchen Garden
Zucchini Heaven
Pickle Insecurity
Or, We Could Just Eat In...
Edible Shrubs at the Brine Garden
Sustainable Edible Garden Design
Keep the Good and Rip Out the Bad
Real Tex-Mex Pico de Gallo
Voracious Praying Mantis
Green Tomatoes, Asters and Goldenrod
Ohio was Warm and Sunny so I Went South for Cold and Rain
To Do: Plant Garlic. Make Pumpkin Soup
Craft an Easy Container for Artichokes
Starting Seeds Indoors
Take Stock then Prepare Beds
Grow Citrus Trees in Pots
Sow Spring Salad Greens Now
Planting the Spring Garden
Delectable Cherimoya
Dinner? Something With Spinach
Designing with Herbs
Edible, Evergreen and Ornamental
Container of Culinary Herbs
Those Cute White Butterflies
Enclose the Garden
Squishing Bugs While I Hand Water
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