Is it Sunday already, Rural Sprout Readers?Â
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This week just flew by. Who am I kidding? Most weeks in the summer seem to fly by, especially at this specific time.Â
It seems to happen every year. Around mid-August, my poor garden looks pretty bedraggled from the heat, and I’m about ready to start giving up on a plant or two and just let the bugs have it.
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And then there comes a week where the garden inhabitants seem to rally against whatever pest they’re battling, and the weather finally gets its act together for longer than two days at a time and – BLAMO!Â
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You’re up to your eyeballs in produce that needs to be dealt with.
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The tomatoes look like an encroaching army surrounding the defenseless zucchinis on your countertops. Every time you think you’ve picked all the green beans, you move a few leaves to find another handful hiding in there. And you’d better get those cukes picked before they get too big and seedy for pickles.Â
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I’m sweating just thinking about it.Â
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But for now, I want to forget about the vegetable garden. (No, really, I kind of want to hide from all those veggies!)
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As many of our regular readers know, my entire vegetable garden is on the rooftop at the back of my apartment.Â
However, at the front of my home, I have a balcony where I grow herbs and flowers.
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And it’s my herb garden I want to talk to you about on this beautiful Sunday morning. Or whenever you’re getting around to reading our fine newsletter.
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I wrote in a piece this week that while I love my veggies, my herb garden is where my heart is.
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The rooftop is heat, and mixing up another batch of fish fertilizer, and the storm knocked over my cucamelons, and darn those flea beetles, and the tomatoes need to be watered again.
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Don’t get me wrong, I live for the first eggplant of the season, and I’ve just discovered the amazing wonder that is homemade tomato powder.Â
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But it’s a very different gardening experience when I head to the balcony.Â
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There is something calming about growing and working with herbs. There is peace in running my hands over the fragrant mint and enjoying the fresh scent on my palm. It’s soothing to hold my scissors in my hand and snip long sprigs of thyme from the plant to be dried.Â
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I think of all the teas I’ll be sipping soon, or the ratatouille flavored with fresh basil and thyme that I grew.Â
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Vegetables take a lot of work. Many things have to go right for you to enjoy a pantry full of vegetables at the end of the growing season. In comparison, herbs are more forgiving, usually less prone to pests and disease. And they tend to bounce back pretty easily if they get too dry.Â
And when mid-August rolls around, and the vegetable garden explodes with produce, my herb garden waits patiently. It’s okay; we’re not going anywhere; you just get to us when you can. It’s this softness, this patience, these pots full of green that have me making a few more trips out to the balcony.Â
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Even if it’s only to stop and pinch the peppermint.
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Which I encourage you to do during this busy time of the gardening season, my friend. I’ve got some great articles that I’m excited to share with you this week.Â
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Homemade Tomato Powder & 10 Ways To Use It
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As I mentioned, I’ve been making batches of tomato powder. This stuff is amazing! I may never can a jar of tomato sauce again. Okay, I wouldn’t go that far, but I think you’ll be pretty impressed by everything you can do with this magical tomato dust.
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How to Can Water + 5 Reasons Why You Should
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Cheryl shows us how to can water for emergencies. With hurricane season in full swing, this is probably not a bad skill to have. You’d be amazed at how quickly a situation can go from bad to worse without clean water for drinking and cooking.Â
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You Can Easily Make Herbal-Infused Honey + 3 Recipes
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And since I’ve been spending as much time as possible in the herb garden, I thought I would share one of my favorite things to do with herbs – make herbal-infused honey. It’s easy to do and produces some wonderful flavors!
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How To Dry-Age Ribeye Steaks in Your Fridge
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Matthew spoils us all rotten by showing us how to dry-age ribeye in our fridge—no more paying insane prices for this (surprisingly simple) way of tenderizing and improving meat. Everyone is going to want an invite to your next barbecue.
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7 Surprisingly Brilliant Uses For Rhubarb Leaves
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Finally, we all know you can’t eat rhubarb leaves, but Lindsay has given us seven things we can use them for. I have to say; I was shocked when I read #4! I had no idea rhubarb leaves and my good ol’ Bar Keeper’s Friend had this in common.
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That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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