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Category Archives: Blog
Mar Vista’s Bounty Hunter: Satisfy Your Sugar Jones

The latest post on Mar Vista Patch is up and ready to make your taste buds tingle. Read all about the most decadent treats in town:
Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth with Help from Sugar Jones
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Making Kale Chips – Solar vs. Oven

Sunny days mean that it’s time for a little solar food drying. Add an overabundance of kale and you’ve got a formula for a tasty snack: Kale Chips
We pulled out the solar food dryer that we built last year and started warming it in the
sun. Before long it was up to 110º inside and ready for a batch of kale chip. Here’s the recipe we used:
Zucchini Overload Solution: Zucchini Bread Cookies

There are some years that I don’t plant zucchini because I’m still sick of it from the year before. This was not one of those years. Admittedly, summer squash doesn’t hold my interest as long as
winter squash is around, but I wanted to try a new variety of summer squash. But wait…
First let’s clarify something. Summer squash grows in the summer. Winter squash… grows in the summer. The difference is in the storage. Summer squash has to be consumed during the summer,
but winter squash stores through the winter (think pumpkins, …
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New Video: Transplanting Tomato Sprouts

Check out the newest instructional video on the Gardenerd YouTube channel. We show you how we transplant tomato sprouts into bigger pots and nurture them to planting size. Cool tips for you
from Gardenerd!
Posted in Sage Advice
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Gardening Joys – Harvesting Corn

There’s an old adage that advises corn growers to have the water boiling before you pick the corn. So as I write this there is a pot of water coming to a boil on the stove. It’s harvest time
for sweet corn here in our test garden, and here’s the blow-by-blow:
We grew Stowell’s Sweet Corn, an heirloom variety, for the first time this year. We planted 20 plants in a 4×4 square foot bed (using Grow BioIntensive hexagonal spacing. Confession: the bed should
only have fit 16 plants, but we …
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Posted in What's Growin' On
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An Olive Oil Education – Mar Vista’s Bounty Hunter

The latest post on Mar Vista Patch.com is available – learn the truth about that bottle of olive oil in your pantry:
Posted in What's Growin' On
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After-Vacation Harvesting

There’s a point at which every garden hits autopilot. With a little planning and adequate irrigation it can happen while you’re on vacation. During my trip to Italy my garden took off, and when I got
back it was time to harvest the first fruits of the season. (My apologies to those still covered in snow out there. Your time is coming )
Some may recall that our community garden plot was going through some hard times last year – excessive zinc in the soil, nematodes – things were just …
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Posted in What's Growin' On
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Trials and Tribulations of Making Yogurt

It happens every once in a while, probably every few months. Some people go on a bender. I go on a cooking jag.
The latest cooking jag involved making bread from a new book (more on this later), finding new ways to use a mountain of freshly harvested kale, and making the seemingly simple recipe for home made
yogurt in a Thermos. It seems like every newsletter and magazine I opened in May featured home made yogurt, so the time had come to try it out.
Posted in What's Growin' On
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Apricots are in Season at the Farmers’ Market

This week Mar Vista’s Bounty Hunter found apricots and fava beans to delight customers at the Mar Vista Farmer’s Market. Find out what you can do with both of these in your kitchen:
Do Me a Fava and Eat an Apricot This Memorial Day
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Italy Travelogue: Farmers’ Markets Abroad

In the last few years, Los Angeles has seen an abundance of Farmers’ Markets popping up all over town. People are longing to get back to the way things used to be, by buying fresh local produce
straight from the farmer. Well, in Italy it still is the way it used to be, and nothing proves it more than a visit to a Farmers’ Market.
There are many towns, even cities, in Italy where supermarkets do not exist. Instead the locals get their food needs met by stopping at the baker on the …
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