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Showing posts with label SEA FENNEL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEA FENNEL. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 December 2014

Herbs by the Sea with Nigella

REAL WORLD GARDENER Wed. 5pm 2RRR 88.5fm Sydney, streaming live at www.2rrr.org.au and Across Australia on the Community Radio Network. www.realworldgardener.com
REALWORLD GARDENER NOW ON FACEBOOK
The complete CRN edition of RWG is available on http://www.cpod.org.au/ , just click on 2RRR to find this week’s edition. The new theme is sung by Harry Hughes from his album Songs of the Garden. You can hear samples of the album from the website www.songsofthegarden.com

SPICE IT UP

with Ian Hemphill from www.herbies.com

Have you ever grown a blue flowering annual called Love in the Mist?
In fact this cottage garden plant (Nigella damascenea flowers in blue pink or white.

It’s very pretty and makes just as pretty seed heads after the flowers finish. It’s one of these plants that you don’t have to keep cutting of the flowers because it looks great through all stages of growth.

But there's something else,   a very closely related cousin, has seeds that you can use in cooking.
So can you use the seeds of the cottage garden plant in your cooking as well?
Let’s find out more about this spice.  


Sometimes also called Devil in the bush and Black cumin, the last name  we now know, is completely incorrect.
If you bit into Nigella seed you'll find it's extremely hard with a metallic taste and a back note of mint.
Ian says seed spices have an affiliation with carbohydrates.
They can be used in a wide range of dishes, and are most popular in Indian cuisine.
Nigella seeds are dry roasted in India and used on flatbreads like naan and are particularly good with potatoes and root vegetables.
why not try a light sprinkling of Nigella seeds over steamed rice for an instant flavour enhancer.

They are also one of the five spices that make up panch pora, a spice mixture from Bengal.
Some people use oil from nigella seeds as an antioxidant and for upset stomach.
If you’re wanting to use the seeds from the annual Nigella for cooking, the seeds can be harvested by placing the pods in a paper bag; allow them to dry out completely, then rub the paper bag in your hands to release the black Nigella seeds.
Next cut the corner of the bag and retrieve the seeds with use of a sieve. Make sure that the black nigella seeds are completely dry then store in an airtight container.

VEGETABLE HEROES

This weeks Vegetable Hero is Sea Fennel or CRITHMUM maritimum.
Did you know that this sea fennel is in the same family as carrots?  Apiaceae-that is.
It’s called sea fennel because it can grow in saline soil.
It was Shakespeare, in the Tragedy of King Lear. London. (Act IV, scene VI,) who referred to the collecting of this herb “Half-way down, Hangs one that gathers samphire; dreadful trade!" Meaning that people often lost their lives trying to collect Rock Samphire halfway down cliff faces.
Being a rare herb I was originally not going to mention this however, of late, Australian native herbs are making a resurgence in various retail outlets, from seed, to dried herbs and pickles.
In fact an Australia seed does sell seeds of Sea Fennel, although they call it Rock Samphire in their catalogue. www.diggers.com.au
The word Crithmum: comes from the Greek krithe: barley, because the fruit looks a bit like barleycorn.
Of course maritimum means of the sea.
This plant also goes by the name of SAMPHIRE or Rock Samphire : a corruption of French St. Pieere, (St.Peter) the patron   saint of fishermen, also known as the rock.
Sea Fennel is still common round the coasts of Southern Europe and South and South-West England, Wales and Southern Ireland, but less common in the North and rare in Scotland.
In Australia it is very rare to find Rock Samphire in a (Herb) nursery until recently.

How to Grow Sea Fennel
Sea Fennel or Rock Samphire has been used in different ways for centuries, from the time of Greeks and Romans, as a food - raw, steamed, boiled or pickled, but it was also used as an medicament due to it's therapeutics and aromatic contents. Even today it is widely used in modern cosmetics perfumery and medicine.
Sea Fennel, or Rock Samphire is a perennial, frost hardy and easy to grow.
It grows in its native environment from rocks and shingle and on cliffs to rocky shores, and is the last dry-land plant exposed to strong wind, salt, sea waves, drying sun... it survives extreme weather conditions.

From where it originates you can assume that it likes to grow on sea cliffs, rocks, or sandy well drained soil.
Grow it in full sun in a warm sheltered position.

If you also thought that it likes sandy gritty soil that’s always moist,  you’d be right.

Sea Fennel grows to anywhere between 15 and 45cm in the home garden, depending on local conditions.
Being a halophyte, it can withstand very dry conditions as well, so there’s no reason why it can’t grow anywhere in Australia.
However, Rock Samphire can tolerate being always moist as well as drying out between waterings, but not for long.
It can even tolerate frost.

What it Looks Like?
Rock Samphire is a muted blue or pale aqua- green edible plant which also grows on tidal marshes.
Don’t confuse this plant with Sea Asparagus  or Marsh samphire, also known as glasswort (Salicornia europaea), that grows in coastal areas of Australia during the summer months.

Plants of Rock Samphire, will last you for many years in a pot or in the ground.
For those listeners with clayey soils, I would recommend growing them in pots at first, but seeing as they also grow in marsh land, you may be lucky if you tried it directly in the ground.
Rock Samphire or Sea Fennel is a succulent, smooth or glabrous, multi-branched herb, and woody at the base, naturally growing on rocks on the sea-shore and wettened by the salt spray.
You could say that stems of Sea Fennel are long, fleshy, -green, shining leaflets (being a succulent they’re full of aromatic juice) and lots of clusters or umbles of tiny, yellowish-green flowers, although the flowers aren’t a real feature.
The whole plant is aromatic and has a powerful scent.
Some say it has a strong smell of furniture polish, but I think that’s a bit harsh and think it’s more like aniseed.

When you buy the seeds of Rock Samphire and grow it, you can divide in up into more plants next spring or save the seed and grow more plants that way, to share amongst your friends or gardening group.

When to Sow

Sow seeds in autumn or spring, lightly cover the seed, grow on in pots and plant out in the summer.
Prefers a dry well drained soil in full sun sheltered from cold winds, benefits from a salty soil.
Being a succulent, if you have success with growing Aloe vera, than good, Rock Samphire likes the same growing conditions.
In the 19th century, samphire was being shipped in casks of seawater from the Isle of Wight to market in London at the end of May each year.

Where do you get it? Should you ever be in Sydney, you can buy the plant at the Botanic Gardens nursery, where it’s been available for a couple of years. they're open Mon-Fri 11am to 5pm.

You can also buy it online and I’ll put on link to that nursery on my website. www.diggerseeds.com.au
By the way, you can also buy it on that auction site ebay in Australia and they promise to express ship the plant to you.
Why is it good for you?
Crithmum maritimum  or Rock Samphire, is a strongly aromatic, salty herb; it contains a volatile oil, pectin, is rich in vitamin C and minerals, has diuretic effects, cleanses toxins and improves digestion, and helps weight loss-possibly because of the diuretic part.
It has soothing and anti-inflammatory properties.

Cooking with Sea Fennel or Rock Samphire.

The easiest way to use Samphire, is to steam the stems, minus the leaves, and dress with lemon juice and some extra virgin olive oil. Use it as a side vegetable. It’s saltiness goes well with seafood and eggs.
Pickled Sea Fennel
Pick the young and green rock samphire beginning of March (in Australia) before it flowers. Break into 2 in. lengths, lay on a dish and sprinkle with dry salt. Leave for 24 hours. Drain, then cook gently until tender in enough vinegar to just cover it, but don't allow it to get soft. :
Plain vinegar is best for this as the samphire has its own spicy flavour. Seal down securely in hot jars
Hand pick sea Fennel before it flowers. Pick of the small leaves and use them in a salad.
Wash the stems.
Cook it in mixture of water and vinegar (70:30) for 15 min until tender.
Leave it to cool and store it in jars filled with diluted vinegar (half water, half vinegar).
You can use it for seasoning salads, or as a cold relish to round meat or fish dish!

AND THAT WAS OUR VEGETABLE HERO SEGMENT FOR TODAY!

DESIGN ELEMENTS

with landscape designer Christopher Owen

Show gardens look perfect in every way, but do they last the test of time?
This includes those garden makeovers that you might see on TV.
What are the tricks that garden designers use to make that show garden more immediate?
Can a show garden be directly transposed to your garden or does it need expert advise from the designer.
Let’s find out.
.


PLANT OF THE WEEK

with Hort Journal Magazine editor Karen Smith www.hortjournal.com.au
Sometimes there’s a species or group of plants that have something going for them all year round.
Not necessarily the same plant, but if you pick the right ones from this group, you’ll have something in flower in every season.
The cultivars have names like Black Knight and Purple Majesty, ripe Raspberry and Mulberry Jam, and even Romantic Rose
Is your mouth watering?
Let’s find out about these plant.
PLAY:Salvias_17th December_ 2014


A mix of salvias, roses, and perennials in the cottage garden of Coriole. photo M Cannon

There’s books written about them, societies, clubs and study groups dedicated to Salvias.

They come in a variety of colours and are generally pretty hardy to all climates around Australia.
Salvias are a large group of garden plants that includes annuals, biennials, perennials, and shrubs.
The perennial salvias brighten up a midsummer garden border. Another common name is sage.

 A relative of the familiar kitchen sage, flowering salvias produce spikes of small, densely packed flowers on sometimes but not always aromatic foliage.
These plants are drought and heat tolerant that can flower from early to late summer in shades of blue, violet, red, pink, salmon and white. The colour variations are endless-the only colour you can't get is yellow.
Plants grow from 30cm to 2 metres tall, depending on the variety.
Use care when choosing salvias, because not all plants are hardy in all regions.
Why not pick a season when you’re garden’s looking a bit bare of colour and pick out from these plants, the colour that you want.

There’s even Salvias that will grow in pots like the orange flowered salvia that Karen mentioned but couldn’t remember. The name is Heatwave Glow, a compact small shrub.

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Herbs by the Sea

SPICE IT UP

Did you know that the ancient Greeks made poultices from the leaves of oregano and used them to treat sores and aching muscles?

What’s more,  traditional Chinese doctors have used oregano for centuries to relieve fever, vomiting, jaundice and itchy skin.

To this day, in Europe, the herb is still used to improve digestion and soothe coughs.

So what else do you do with it other than grow it in the herb garden?
Listen to this….talking with herb expert Ian Hemphill from www.herbies.com.au


So in medieval kitchens they had dried herbs hanging up around the stove, but not for decoration, but to use in their cooking.

A most versatile herb it almost goes with anything.
Instead of garlic breath, spread some oregano, dried or fresh and make herb bread or herb butter instead using oregano.
Oregano of course goes with strong flavoured rich or fatty meats and carbohydrates,

 

VEGETABLE HEROES

This weeks Vegetable Hero is Sea Fennel or CRITHMUM maritimum.
In the Family Apiaceae-that’s the same family as carrots.
Crithmum: because this plant looks a bit like Barleycorn, and the Greek word for that is krithe.
Of course you would’ve guessed that maritimum means from or near the sea.
You may have come across this plant in restaurants and cafĂ©’s where they often use it as a garnish.
You may even have seen in in your local garden centre by it’s other name of SAMPHIRE or Rock Samphire.

How did it get that name?
Supposedly a corruption of French St. Pieere, (St.Peter) the patron   saint of fishermen, also known as the rock.
 Why a fisherman saint? Because it likes to grow on sea-cliffs.

Should you ever travel to Germany, their name for sea-fennel is Meerfenchel,
But let’s not stop there because Sea Fennel also goes by the name of Herba di San Pietra (contracted to Sanpetra) its Italian name.

Sea Fennel is quite common round the coasts of Southern Europe and South and South-West England, Wales and Southern Ireland, but it is less common in the North and rare in Scotland.

In Australia, since I’ve started talking about sea fennel, I’m been seeing it more and more in the herb section of nurseries so although it can be a bit hard to find it’s not that rare.

Would you believe that sea fennel is a herb, and has been used in different ways for centuries, from the time of Greeks and Romans, as a food - raw, steamed, boiled or pickled, but it was also used as an medicament due to it's therapeutics and aromatic contents.
Even today it is widely used in modern cosmetics perfumery and medicine.
So what does it look like after all that?
Sea Fennel is a succulent, smooth or glabrous, much-branched herb, woody at the base.

To me it looks like the  stems of Sea Fennel are long and fleshy.
You could say it’s a decorative upright rather sparse looking succulent with blue green stems and leaves.
The stems are full of aromatic juice and when it flowers they look like umbels of tiny, yellowish-green blossoms. Much like other flowers in the carrot family.
Where it originates, it happily grows on rocks and shingles on rocky Mediterranean shores, on cliffs and on the sea-shore moistened by the salt spray.
Sea fennel is the last dry-land plant exposed to strong wind, salt, sea waves, draying sun... it survives extreme weather conditions.
Sea Fennel, or Rock Samphire is a perennial, it’s frost hardy and easy to grow.

The whole plant is aromatic and has a powerful scent.
Some say it has a strong smell of furniture polish, but I like it’s-sort of aniseed like.
Because of where it grows, the best way to grow it at home is on sandy well drained soil, or in a pot.
Grow it in full sun in a warm sheltered position.
If you manage to get one of these plants you can divide in up into more plants next spring or save the seed and grow plants that way.

How can you use this unusual herb here in Australia?
Traditionally in Cornwall, Rock Samphire (or Sea Asparagus) is served simply, with a squeeze of lemon and a knob of butter, lightly steamed.
It's also pretty good with some cracked black pepper and vinegar.
Rock Samphire is naturally salty, so doesn't need any salt!
You can also eat it raw, but it loses its slightly bitter taste after cooking, becoming softly aromatic and delicious.
Rock Samphire makes a great accompaniment or garnish for steamed fish scallops, oysters, and Mackerel. Well, it makes an interesting and appropriate partner for most seafood really! :) 

Where do you get it? The Royal Botanic gardens nursery have this plant-which is where I got mine from. You can also buy it online and I’ll put on link to that nursery on my website.
Why is it good for you?
Crithmum maritimum is a vibrant green edible plant which grows mainly on tidal marshes.
It has soothing and anti-inflammatory properties. is a strongly aromatic, salty herb; it contains a volatile oil, pectin, is rich in vitamin C and minerals, has diuretic effects, cleanses toxins and improves digestion.
Sea Fennel as high levels of vitamin C, it’s a diuretic, cleanses toxins, improves digestion and helps weight loss-possibly because of the diuretic part.
I have a recipe for Sea Fennel that I’ll post on the web, or you can write in or email for a fact sheet.
You can use Pickled sea fennel in seasoning for salads, or as a cold relish to round meat or fish dish
Pickled Sea Fennel (Rock Samphire, Motar...)
Gather the young and green samphire beginning of March (in Australia) before it flowers. Break into 2 in. lengths, lay on a dish and sprinkle with dry salt. Leave for 24 hours. Drain, then cook gently until tender in enough vinegar to just cover it, but don't allow it to get soft. :plain vinegar is best for this as the samphire has its own spicy flavor. Seal down securely in hot jars
Hand pick sea Fennel before it flowers. Pick of the small leaves.
Wash them in sea water (fresh pipe water will do).
Cook it in mixture of water and vinegar (70:30) for 15 min until tender.
Leave it to cool and store it in jars filled with diluted vinegar (half water, half vinegar).

If you have any questions about growing sea fennel or any other vegetable, JUST EMAIL ME

DESIGN ELEMENTS

with Landscape Designer and Gardening Australia editor, Louise McDaid

GARDEN DESIGN WITH GREEN IN MIND

This new series came about when Louise and I were talking about the colour green in gardens, and that mostly gardeners overlooked how effective the green in your garden really is.
A one-colour strategy frees you to master the brushstrokes of form and texture. It also allows enough elbow room to for you to explore a single-color palette's potential in pale and deep shades, in fine leaf or large leaf, variegated or not.
The colour green doesn't fatigue the eye.
Let’s find out what this new series is all about.

Single-color gardens show as much boldness and flair as the most elaborately matched schemes.
These types of gardens have an endless varying palette, from true green, gray-green, and blue-green to purple-green and yellow-green. Each has a different impact.
It’ s only limited by your imagination.

PLANT OF THE WEEK

Citrus Gems

Did you know that all the citrus that most gardens grow in their gardens came from overseas and it all started with the first fleet?
Yes, they carried oranges and lemons, complete with all the bugs that affect citrus in Australia now.
Some of you might know from various gardening shows on TV, that Australia has always had it’s own unique citrus. But are these citrus up to the mark?

Australian citrus has smaller leaves and even though they are supposed to get the same bugs –orange stink bug and citrus leaf miner, I’ve yet to see it on my Australian citrus, where my two navel oranges have been plagued by both.

Citrus Gems are a group of adaptable, quirky trees, uniquely Australian and tolerant of a wide range of conditions. They are suited to both pot and garden cultivation. All Citrus Gems are grafted onto citrus rootstock. Which ensures plant health, vigour and increases the plants ability to produce abundant crops of fruit from an early age.
Citrus Gems respond well to pruning. Citrus Gems are extremely hardy and tolerant of frost and dry conditions.
There seems to be a citrus for every district in Australia, so why not give it a go?
For more information and where to buy
http://www.citrustogrow.com.au/citrus-range/citrus-gems/