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If you are a âgardenerâ (of foodstuffs), two things that canât be beatenâ-a fresh tomato off the vine and a fresh ear of corn ! ! ! ! Too bad morel mushrooms should be soaked over night in salt water to emiliorate any unwanted items or âlittle visitorsâ ! ! !
Will be at that stage of gardening in several more months ! Right now tis planning , preparation then planting . I do have several tomatoes growing indoors that have tomatoes on them :-)
We have eight plum trees. Last year only plums from one made it into the house and then only because there were hundreds of them. IIRC, I also got a couple off of the Burbank. My wife likes plums.
Not doing that much as a âpluggerâ but in my âpre-pluggerâ days my friends and I would sometimes raid neighborâs gardens at night for carrots, corn, green beans, tomatoes. Somehow the excitement of the sneaking around made them taste better.
I grew up in fertile ag land in Sacramento, CA. We all had huge gardens and grew our own fruits and veggies. I used to follow my Grandfather along the rows and eat the food right off the vines or out of the groundâso fresh, so delicious!!! My Mother and Grandmother would prep the fruits and veggies for freezing so we were able to eat fresh food all year round.
Good one, James! Yup, we had a 1/4 acre garden behind our old three-story 19th century house in Gorham, Maine. I remember shucking corn, picking peas, & cutting up tomatoes to go with my motherâs freshly baked bread (circa, 1950s)
We used to have a vegetable garden in our back yard. Problem was that the childrenâs mental health facility husband worked in would close for vacation for 2 weeks in August â those would be the 2 weeks everything we planted came in.
His parents lived near by and his dad would stop and take our mail and check the mail while we were away so we told him to help himself to any vegetables which were ripe so they did not go to waste.
Then his dad died and everything we planted would go bad while we were away, so he stopped planting same.
yoey1957 about 1 year ago
Thats the best way!
prongdtt about 1 year ago
When I go out to the garden, I carry restaurants salt packets in the coin pocket of my jeans.
Zykoic about 1 year ago
Love taking peas in the garden.
'IndyMan' about 1 year ago
If you are a âgardenerâ (of foodstuffs), two things that canât be beatenâ-a fresh tomato off the vine and a fresh ear of corn ! ! ! ! Too bad morel mushrooms should be soaked over night in salt water to emiliorate any unwanted items or âlittle visitorsâ ! ! !
Gandalf about 1 year ago
Especially the tomatoes!!!
Gent about 1 year ago
Eh nothing is beats eating freshest fresh foods.
juicebruce about 1 year ago
Will be at that stage of gardening in several more months ! Right now tis planning , preparation then planting . I do have several tomatoes growing indoors that have tomatoes on them :-)
david_42 about 1 year ago
We have eight plum trees. Last year only plums from one made it into the house and then only because there were hundreds of them. IIRC, I also got a couple off of the Burbank. My wife likes plums.
Showfloor about 1 year ago
As a child picking blackberries about half made it in to the pail
PraiseofFolly about 1 year ago
At least dip the broccoli in boiling water for a few minutes. Those little green caterpillars are too well camouflaged to pick them all out by eye âŠ
ctolson about 1 year ago
Had that problem with the strawberries and buffalo berries in our garden. Choke cherries off our tree werenât an issue.
Just-me about 1 year ago
I do that! Especially with the tomatoes and sweet peppers.
Zen-of-Zinfandel about 1 year ago
Havenât heard of garden-to-mouth before.
ladykat Premium Member about 1 year ago
Best way to eat your home-grown produce.
nsaber about 1 year ago
Imagine whirled peasâŠ
rhpii about 1 year ago
You are killinâ me. I havenât even planted my garden. It was 19° this morning.
whelan_jj about 1 year ago
Not doing that much as a âpluggerâ but in my âpre-pluggerâ days my friends and I would sometimes raid neighborâs gardens at night for carrots, corn, green beans, tomatoes. Somehow the excitement of the sneaking around made them taste better.
anomalous4 about 1 year ago
No salt needed â a freshly picked, fully vine-ripe tomato has all the flavor you could ask for!
PDXCubbie about 1 year ago
Used to love doing that in our vegetable garden when I was littleâŠâŠgreat memories!
Caldonia about 1 year ago
But washing it first is advisable. But what do you expect from a guy like this?
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
Yep, a true plugger has hypertension AND carries salt in his shirt pocket.
g04922 about 1 year ago
Early Summer sweet corn right on the cob is great tooâŠ
Back to Big Mike about 1 year ago
CHURCH! I love raiding the garden for a snack, for as long as it lasts. Green beans, snap peas, tomatoesâŠman, Iâm a bit hungry right nowâŠ
vick53 about 1 year ago
That is exactly what I would do when I was little! Take a salt shaker out to the garden and eat the tomatoes!!
byword84646 about 1 year ago
I grew up in fertile ag land in Sacramento, CA. We all had huge gardens and grew our own fruits and veggies. I used to follow my Grandfather along the rows and eat the food right off the vines or out of the groundâso fresh, so delicious!!! My Mother and Grandmother would prep the fruits and veggies for freezing so we were able to eat fresh food all year round.
exness Premium Member about 1 year ago
Asparagus never makes it into the house.
a sage about 1 year ago
Shouldnât you wash the produce first?
pamela welch Premium Member about 1 year ago
I live in farm country; cannot wait âtil all the local stands open in July! Mmmmm
Karptaz about 1 year ago
the only way to eat your veggies
lanainutahdesert about 1 year ago
Good one, James! Yup, we had a 1/4 acre garden behind our old three-story 19th century house in Gorham, Maine. I remember shucking corn, picking peas, & cutting up tomatoes to go with my motherâs freshly baked bread (circa, 1950s)
DebUSNRet 12 months ago
Miss those Jersey tomatoes!
mafastore 12 months ago
We used to have a vegetable garden in our back yard. Problem was that the childrenâs mental health facility husband worked in would close for vacation for 2 weeks in August â those would be the 2 weeks everything we planted came in.
His parents lived near by and his dad would stop and take our mail and check the mail while we were away so we told him to help himself to any vegetables which were ripe so they did not go to waste.
Then his dad died and everything we planted would go bad while we were away, so he stopped planting same.