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10/28/2012

Gourmet Heirloom Garlic

The gourmet garlic we ordered from Salt River Garlic in Kentucky arrived today. Never tried gourmet heirloom garlic before, so looking forward to giving this stuff a try.

Our Purchase:
2 lb Chesnok Red
1 lb Sampler: Inchilium Red, Red Toch, Simonetti, Mother of Pearl, Purple Glazer, and Martin Heirloom.

The sampler came with 6 varieties, each with 1-3 full garlic bulbs (various sizes and clove counts). The 2 lb bag had about 20 bulbs. A little pricey at $18/lb, but that seems to be the going rate just about everywhere, online. Hopefully we can turn around and sell it ourselves, down the road.

See below for a description of each type garlic we bought:
  • Chesnok Red: Purple stripe hardneck, medium to extra large bulb, large cloves with reddish color on outer husk, wheat-sized bulbils, become sweet when baked, great for roasting, 9-10 cloves / bulb, good disease resistance, Salt River Garlic's favorite, rare
  • Inchelium Red: Softneck artichoke, originally found on a Colville, Washington reservation, won the best tasting softneck garlic award from the Rodale Institute, produces a range of bulb sizes, flat-shaped bulbs with splashes of purple on the wrappers, contains 9-16 cloves per bulb, stores about 7 months
  • Red Toch/Tochliavri: German softneck artichoke. Not too hot nor too mild but with a spicy bite. 12–18 cloves per bulb.
  • Simonetti: Mild softneck artichoke originating from the Repulic of Georgia. Large bulb size, and flavor is very nice, even raw. 12-20 cloves.
  • Mother of Pearl: Softneck culinary silverskin garlic. Tend to be smaller but stronger flavored than store bought.
  • Purple Glazer: Similar to red toch, in flavor. Wheat-sized bulbils. Good for roasting or eating raw. Very sweet.
  • Martin Heirloom: Hardneck culinary garlic. Tends to be smaller but stronger flavored than store bought. A very large topsetter with large bulbils. Here's the story on Martin's Heirloom as listed on forums.gardenweb.com:
I first bought it in 1982 or 1983 from Jung's Seed Co. It was the first and last time that I saw it. It was simply listed as "Topset Garlic", or something similar, and sold only as bulbils. Upon getting them home and reading the planting instructions, they were to be planted 4 to 5 inches deep. Whoops, that can't be right! I contacted Jung's to point out the error and it was due to failure to convert metric to English. It was supposed to be 4cm to 5cm! Therefore, anyone who bought a packet, and planted according to instructions, got nothing in return.

Now forward 20+ years and I've been growing it ever since. Thus far, nobody can find out what it originally was named or if it were merely a local landrace from somewhere. Information on where Jung's obtained it went up in smoke several years ago. Thus it's sort of a mystery as well.
It's a hardneck variety, possibly a German porcelain type, and with rather large bulbils. An old Bavarian friend told me that they used to use those large bulbils in cooking and making stock. Those bulbils will produce normal divided bulbs in a single season, and that's how we planted them for many years. Some years, we got a lot of small bulbs and other years had larger ones and always from bulbils. In recent years, we began planting back cloves instead and got really big bulbs. (Go back and read other threads about growing and harvest results for it.)

Overall, it's unlike any other garlic that I've grown. 

Martin

Good garlic webiste: http://www.filareefarm.com/
 

10/14/2012

Apple Berry Turnover

 
Came across an elderberry apple turnover recipe on All That I'm Eating that looked delicious and gave it a spin with a few modifications. Very yummy.

1.5 sticks of frozen butter
1.5 cups of flour
2-3 apples (depending on size, I used Mutsu Crispin)
Spices (cloves, nutmeg, and/or cinnamon)
Handful of berries (I used a mix of blueberries and blackberries)
1 beaten egg
Powdered sugar (optional)
Salt (optional)
Lemon Juice (optional)

Shred your frozen butter like cheese and add to flour. Mix together until it looks like bread crumbs, then start adding water and mixing until you end up with a pie dough consistency. If it gets too sticky, just dust it with more flour. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.

Cut skinned apples into 1/2" cubes and cook on low with some water and a sprinkle of sugar and spice (to taste). When apples start to get soft, add berries and cook until they burst and apples turn red. I added some lemon juice for additional tartness, but if your apples are already tart, you can skip this step. Next time I might try using cranberries (or elderberries).

Divide dough into 4 pieces and roll out, adding flour if needed. Pile in your apple mix, fold over, and seal. Cut slits in top. Brush with egg mix. Salt lightly. Line cookie sheet with parchment paper and cook at 375F for 30 minutes.

Once done, dust with sugar.