Vegetable Growing 2024

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by JWK, Jan 1, 2024.

  1. On the Levels

    On the Levels Super Gardener

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    @CarolineL They don't taste of anything until they are bletted or "cooked". When they are bletted they taste like a mix of apple/pear puree but you need a lot to get any "afters". Making medlar jelly is time consuming but produces a very pink jelly with a lovely fragrance. I have also made mebrillo which is a Spanish "cheese". This hardens and can be kept for years in parchment paper/cling film and in a air tight container. It is sliced up and used with cheeses/ham. Again a lovely colour and fragrance.
    When ever we see a medlar tree they are always "falling" over and ours is just the same. Don't know why they lean.
     
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    • CarolineL

      CarolineL Total Gardener

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      Hmm thanks @Loofah and @On the Levels
      The medlar strikes me as a bit of hard work for relatively small reward - particularly as I have apples and figs anyway! I think I'm going to move it and the quince to somewhere else at the bottom of the garden.
      Btw I found another label by the quince and it's "anger" variety - which apparently is nothing special and use as root stock! Hmmm
       
    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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      I've found a medlar tree and a quince tree in the park, there are no quinces left on the quince tree, but nobody touches the medlar.
      Someone obviously likes black mulberries as they all seemed to disappear fast this year.
       
    • CarolineL

      CarolineL Total Gardener

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      @pete your local park seems to have quite a range of trees!
       
    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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      It does, I'd like to see many more unusual or different types of trees, but the the "We must plant only native species," crowd always seems to mostly get their way these days.
      It's a town park not the open countryside after all.
       
    • CarolineL

      CarolineL Total Gardener

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      Yes, along with "rewilding" - brambles anyone?
       
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      • On the Levels

        On the Levels Super Gardener

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        @CarolineL maybe the quince you have is "Vranja" which is often mispelt. It is worth growing but I agree the medlar can be so much more time consuming unless you have neighbours like we do who are so pleased to have them.
         
      • CarolineL

        CarolineL Total Gardener

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        Hi @On the Levels , no it was a printed label, and definitely not Vranja. A non-gardening friend sent me the medlar and quince as a birthday gift from a company that sends "fixed combinations". Their website didn't say the varieties and when I phoned them they hadn't the foggiest. According to another site "angers" is rather vigorous and best considered for hedging
         
      • On the Levels

        On the Levels Super Gardener

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        Picked some Blenheim orange apples yesterday. Great size and smell wonderful.
        IMG_20241021_125703.jpg
         
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        • Hanglow

          Hanglow Super Gardener

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          I've got one of those but it always gets watercore and the apples don't store well as a result.
           
        • infradig

          infradig Total Gardener

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          Symptomatic of calcium deficiency, maybe consider application of lime if appropriate. Commercially, speciallised fertilisers combining phosphates and calcium are used.
           
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          • Adam I

            Adam I Gardener

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            In china they pay more for watercore apples because theyre supposedly sweeter :dunno: export business?
             
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            • Hanglow

              Hanglow Super Gardener

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              I'll be a millionaire!

              IMG_20241024_171754.jpg
               
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              • Hanglow

                Hanglow Super Gardener

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                First leeks of the season and a nice selection of beetroot picked today
                 
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                • On the Levels

                  On the Levels Super Gardener

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                  We "found" 7 more quinces that were hiding in the foliage. Great sizes. Picked some salads from the polytunnel as well as some leeks outdoors.
                   
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