EATING IN SEASON | pumpkin, carrots & courgette in october


MOROCCAN VEGETABLE TAGINE

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 The tagine (or tajine) is similar to a large clay pot with a conical lid. I am not a scientist, but as far as I understand the moist and flavors that evaporates from the food stays within the lid and – thanks to its shape – drips down back into the food. So the food is steamed in it’s own vapors and cooked/baked at the same time, isn’t that just groovy!? The result is incredibly tender vegetables filled with flavors.
A few simple secrets to a successful tagine.
1. Always balance the sweet (apricots, raisins and cinnamon) with the spicy (harissa or chili).
2. Think big. No need for fine chopping, use large chunks of vegetables. Looks better, tastes better.
3. Don’t stress it. Let the vegetables sweat for a long time on low heat under a lid.
4. No peeking. If you lift the lid the steam will vanish. If you however have to lift the lid, make sure that the vapor under it drips back into the pot.
5. Stir carefully. After a while the vegetables will be very tender and you don’t want to crush them.
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//Serves 4 
You can use almost any kind of vegetables in this stew, it’s perfect for emptying the fridge.
3 tbsp olive oil
1 large onion, roughly chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 inch fresh ginger, minced (or 1 tsp grounded)

1-2 tbsp grounded cinnamon 
1 tsp cumin
salt

2-3 tsp harissa paste (or dried harissa)
2 cups canned chopped tomatoes
1 lemon, juice and zest

a handful fresh cilantro1 small pumpkin, peeled and cut into 2-inch pieces1 sweet potato, peeled and cut into 2-inch pieces
3 carrots, peeled and cut into 2-inch pieces
1 zucchini, cut into 2-inch pieces10 dried apricots1/2 cup chickpeas/garbanzo beans, pre boileda handful raisins
Serve with: white quinoa or couscous, roasted almonds, fresh cilantro and fresh mint
In a clay pot: Heat olive oil in a large clay pot and sauté the onion for a few minutes until it softens. Add garlic, ginger and the spices and stir around before adding harissa, tomatoes, lemon juice and fresh cilantro, Bring the tomato sauce to a boil and then lower the heat.
Add pumpkin, carrots, sweet potato, zucchini and apricots. Stir around, make sure that all vegetables are somewhat covered in tomato sauce. Put the lid on and simmer for about an hour. Stir carefully once or twice, otherwise leave the lid on.
In a tagine: Prepare the tomato sauce according to the instructions above. Transfer it to the tagine. Add the vegetables, attach the lid and put in the oven on low temperature for at least an hour. When the vegetables feel tender, add chickpeas and raisins and let everything simmer for 5 minutes before removing it from the oven.
Serve the tagine in bowls together with cooked quinoa. Sprinkle with almonds, lemon zest and fresh spices. ::

UPCYCLE | wine cork plant marker

{ Shine your Light }

1 | Save the corks.
2 | Write the names of your herbs on them with a permanent marker.
3 | Push wooden skewers into them.

REVIEW | open day #2

green gym.














finger food potluck - chatting - willowbank squirrel.

What a great success!

Even weather wasn't looking promising by 2pm, rain really took a break from 3 to 5pm and drew students, Willowbank residents and garden enthusiasts into the garden.

What a great pleasure to see you all gathering, enjoying food and hot tea, working out in the green gym, the children romping around and planting bulbs.

Please apologise that workshops for the kids were cancelled and no contact list was provided.

Many thanks to everyone who contributed to make this community event happening!

Many thanks to all Willowbank residents coming down on Sunday afternoon,
you gave us a cheering feedback!

Willowbank, we can do it! ::

INSPIRATION | keimzelle, hamburg




And again the city of Hamburg shares some more inspiration on urban gardening with us. The Keimzelle {germ cell/ nucleus/ seedbed} is operating since May 2011 and calls itself  a "wee social urban garden".

    
Another inspirational take on turning wooden pallets into raised beds.   

Probably the cheapest planter ever…


REMEMBER | perennial vs. annual

{ via lexicon of sustainability }






































Wes Jackson has been domesticating intermediate wheatgrass at the land institute since the 1970s.
Workers separate seeds form the chaff of intermediate wheatgrass samples using a dehuller. These will be carefully analysed by researchers. Each successive planting brings Wes closer to his goal, that of replacing annual wheat with more sustainable perennials. According to Wes, the domestication of wheatgrass is expected to take ten to twelve years, after which a commercially viable wheatgrass will become available.

PERENNIALS HAVE LARGER ROOT SYSTEMS

1 | Improved soil stability = less need for tillage & reduced erosion
2 | reduced fossil fuel consumption
3 | better managed nitrogen
4 | reduced need for pesticides
5 | less labour intensive
6 | increased soil water storage
7 | better carbon fining
8 | greater biodiversity

::

EATING IN SEASON | parsnips & celery in october


BEAN CHILI WITH WALNUTS & CHOCOLATE
::Soooo tasty that I cook it once a week at the moment. Replacing chocolate by cocoa/cacao powder also works well!::
//Serves 6-8
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil, ghee or coconut oil
1 large yellow onion, peeled and finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
2 tsp cumin seeds
1  fresh chili, minced (more if you like it spicy)
1 tsp ground paprika
1 tsp dried oregano
2 bell pepper, red & yellow, finely chopped
1 carrot, finely chopped
1 parsnip, peeled and finely chopped
2 large stalks of celery with top greens, finely chopped
150 g raw walnuts, very finely chopped
800 g cooked mixed beans (adzuki, kidney, black eye, borlotti)
2 x 400 g cans whole plum tomatoes1 cup (240 ml) water2 tsp salt1/2 cup (120 ml) red wine or balsamic vinegar1/2 cup coffee (optional)70 g 80% dark chocolate, broken in pieces
For serving
1 bunch of fresh cilantro, coarsely chopped
1/2 cup plain yogurt
1 lime, quartered
4 corn tortillas, toasted
Start by preparing all vegetables. Heat oil in a large thick-bottomed saucepan or dutch oven. Add onion, garlic, cumin, chili, paprika and oregano, and let fry for a couple of minutes, stirring occasionally, until the spices smells fragrant. Be careful so they don’t burn. Add bell pepper, carrot, parsnip and celery, let cook for another couple of minutes. Add walnuts, beans, tomatoes, water and salt and let cook for 30 minutes more. Now add red wine, coffee and chocolate, stir around carefully and let cook for 5 more minutes. Taste and season with sea salt and freshly ground pepper. Serve in bowls with a dollop of yogurt, fresh cilantro, lime and toasted corn tortilla. ::

REVIEW | work session #08

compost crew - overview - bird feed.




















Lucky Willowbankers, we were blessed again with sun during this Sunday's work session. Getting the compost ready for the open day - moving, sawing, hammering. Many thanks to the Willowbank compost crew for all the labour they put into the project! Compost is now hungry and cannot wait to be introduced to and fed by the wider Willowbank public on our Open Day. Chalkboards were turned into signs finally, birds will be fed for the next weeks. Chatting to a Willowbank mum who came down to the garden with her two children who are very excited about growing food. Nice day again. Thank you all for coming down. Good job Willowbankers!!! ::

INSPIRATION | neuland, cologne

{ credits to Stefano Chiolo }



Another source of inspiration from Germany, this time from Neuland {uncultivated land} in Cologne.   This mobile urban garden has sprang up on the brownfield site of former Dom brewery in July 2011 in order to turn an underused, decaying inner city site into productive space.



Raised beds from wooden pallets.

I really like the idea of building a wooden construction for the white carrier bags. We could do this for Willowbank, too… given that a carrier bag is sitting on the pavement and that we do know where to source pallets from by now.




Reusing sauce buckets from catering to grow sunflowers. jejeje…

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REMEMBER | urban farmer


{ via lexicon of sustainability }

Novella Carpenter says, "50% of people live in cities. In places like my neighbourhood, they're never going to be able to afford local, organic, sustainably raised food. We live in a society where supposedly you can vote with your fork, and you can change the system just by buying local food, but the thing is, if you look at our society, that's great for people who have money … but there are people who don't have access to ANY food. You look around here, it's a total food desert. It's like malt liquor is all that's available so that's what people are going to buy." ::