The smaller potatoes are called Red fir and are lovely steamed, and served with a little butter and chopped parsley.
And the big ones, what a suprise i got when i unearthed them!!!!
Oh a little bit of Italy(seeds) grown here : Red Torpedo
Great in Salads .
Pop over and visit Daphne's Dandelions and see what others are harvesting.
Yummo...but your profile is out of season...frost...I'm melting today!
ReplyDeleteHi Hazel,Italian onions grown by seed in my own garden. How i wish i was in Italy now were melting here too!! trying not to look at the wilting garden.
ReplyDeleteI have some Red Bottle onions too, but they won't be ready till June; Where are you?
ReplyDeleteHi Mary,our farm is in Central Victoria,Australia, the area we live in is Zoned 8, lows of -7C and highs of up to 42C.We are now in the middle of our summer and enjoying some of our Summer harvest.Corn and tomatoes on their way!
ReplyDeleteThose red fir look like they are similar to Pink Fir Apple which I will hopefully be harvesting oodles of soon. I like your onions, when did you sow those?
ReplyDeletesuch a beautiful harvest,plenty of glee I imagine. You've done well to brave the heat and go digging.
ReplyDeleteHi Liz,I have had good success with all my seeds from The Italian Gardener, these particular onions were planted in July.
ReplyDeleteNice looking potatoes. I wonder if the Red Fir are the same as the Pink Fir we have here. They certainly look similar.
ReplyDeleteHi, they are probably the same just named differently. Taste pretty good.
DeleteLoving the Italian shallots!!
ReplyDeleteA lovely new year harvest.
Those potatoes look great Andrea what a lovely harvest to start the new year. I had a lot of fun growing some potatoes just recently but the weren't the greatest inside, not rotten but with a circle of brown colour I think I wasn't very good at regularly watering. I need to start a planting calendar I think my garden is not very productive at the moment.
ReplyDeleteLooks like a great harvest!
ReplyDeleteLynn