Sunday was Terra Madre Day, a global event organized by Slow Food
International, now in its third year of promoting good, clean, and fair food
for all. We celebrated
group. Dishes highlighted seasonal and local fare.
We brought a salad with a riot of greens, leaf lettuce,
spinach, kale, tatsoi and arugula. China rose radishes, and carrots. We added yacon
for color and texture. This year was our first time growing yacon, a crisp
sweet root vegetable from the Andes. Our yacon is storing well after harvest in
October, and so far the sweetness is intensifying. A few people at the potluck,
not being familiar with yacon, asked which type of pear was in our salad.
It’s easy to grow and enjoy yacon and still save have enough
to plant for next year because each plant has two kinds of roots: the larger
edible roots that look similar to white fleshed sweet potatoes and a smaller
crown that can be stored to grow next year’s plants. We store both kinds of
roots in the root cellar, the same as potatoes.
We are excited with the harvest from our five yacon plants this year – 5-10 pounds off each
three-ft. tall plant – and are planning
to plant a hundred foot row in our 2012 garden. We hope to offer yacon starts in
our 2013 catalog.
Food historian William Woys Weaver of Roughwood Gardens gave us our yacon crowns
last spring. They were already
sprouting, so we planted them right away in our new high tunnel, on three foot
centers along then center of four foot wide raised beds. For fun, we under-sowed between and around
the plants with old fashioned vining petunias (every six inches). This made the beds very pretty and got us a
good petunia seed crop!
The last few mornings have
been really frosty so we are finally starting to cover even our frost tolerant
greens that we want to continue to harvest all winter and bring in late carrots, cabbage and beets for storage. One simple tip for better winter vegetable
is to wait until the vegetables are thoroughly thawed before harvesting to
avoid damage to the plants and have nice crisp vegggies for the table. This means harvesting roots before heavy
frosts come and freeze everything till next spring.
December and January are the months for the reaping the
harvest of our summer and fall planting. Planning ahead is the secret to having
garden fresh produce. For folks in the Mid-Atlantic we have a number of planting guides for helping you plan for a year
round harvest online. There are a number of great tools for garden planning
available these days like Cindy Conner’s DVD/CD set Develop a Sustainable
Garden Plan and the great online Mother Earth News Garden Planner. If you have a gardener on your gift
list consider giving one of these great planning tools or a gift certificate.
Thanks for stopping
by and we hope you’ll come back often to see what we’re growing and cooking.
Ira
Wallace lives and gardens at Acorn Community Farm home of Southern Exposure Seed Exchange where she coordinates
variety selection and seed growers. Southern Exposure offers 700+varieties of
Non-GMO, open pollinated and organic seeds. Ira is also a co-organizer of the Heritage Harvest Festival at Monticello. She serves on the board
of the Organic Seed Alliance and is a frequent presenter at the Mother Earth
News Fairs and many other events throughout the
Southeast.