marrows

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We’ve been living on the land all week and it has been amazing.  Our day starts at around 8.00 am.  We anticipated the heat forcing us out of our beds earlier but it has stayed surprisingly cool and we are truly knackered so we manage to sleep through.  We have a nice gentle wake up – pottering around doing the washing up from the previous night’s dinner, sipping fresh coffee and swapping stories of the wild life we heard in the night!  Our ‘Camping Chef Plus’ has a grill so we manage to make toast for breakfast but it’s quite a mission moving the bread around under the flame to get an even browning.  My morning entertainment is watching Nik blow the flames out from his singed bread!

Having breakfast

Around 9.00am we put the solar panels for the lights in the sun to charge up all day & are ready to start work.  We troop down to the shower block with our cold drink & sun tan lotion, scaring off the snakes basking in the sun as we go.  We work until we get hungry, which is usually around 1.00pm.  I pick fresh lettuce from the garden and start lunch – a fresh salad and sandwiches.  We are ready for the afternoon stint at about 2.30pm.  We save the hard physical jobs (digging out, barrowing sand, strimming) for the end of the day when it starts to get a little cooler.  From 5.00pm I start watering the garden – shoving the hose in the irrigation pipes in the beds and moving it along every half hour in between my painting jobs or whatever else I’m doing. When the sun is finally off the beds, I water all the newly planted seeds and seedlings (rocket, lettuce, radish, herbs) by hand as their roots aren’t deep enough to get the moisture from below yet and do a bit of weeding as I go.  Just before ‘finishing work’ for the day I pick all the produce that’s ready to eat, collect meat from the cool boxes in the stream and make the trek up top to take a shower & start cooking.  Depending on how grubby we are we sometimes stop for a shower around 4.30pm when the water is still nice and warm but most nights we run out of time and suffice with a more refreshing one just before dinner.

Menu planning, refridgeration and cooking has been quite a challenge especially since we try to take everything with us we need for the week to minimise the cost to us in time and fuel of constant trips into town.  By filling cool boxes with ice and frozen food and putting them in the cool of the stream I can keep things easily for 3-4 days and when we get the new gas fridge  working properly we’ll be sorted.  Last week’s culinary delights included: spicy chicken wings; poached salmon (with fresh dill from the garden); pork and apple stew (with fresh sage from the land); chicken liver & bacon casserole and smoked sausage and lentil stew  – and of course most meals had marrow stuffed somewhere into them!  While we wait for the food to cook, we crack open a cold beer (chilled in the cold water in the stream all day) or a bottle of wine  and watch the day slip into night.  This is the time that the huge stag beetle does it’s fly by over the tent to wherever it goes, the odd tortoise shuffles about, a local cat wanders along and watches us from a distance, the owl starts hooting and the real evening’s entertainment turns up… the farting, coughing donkey!  We are a windy threesome because we are eating loads of fruit and veg but the donkey outdoes us all – a truly amazing trumpeter!  But we are a bit worried about it’s cough and hope it gives the fags up soon…

By 9.00pm we are usually stuffing our faces and staring at the fire.  Suitably sated, we polish off the wine, talk about the day’s triumphs and the work schedule for the next day and star gaze.  The evenings are stunning – cool and peaceful but we can’t keep our eyes open much after 11.00pm so we brush our teeth under the stars and crawl into bed.

We work hard, we don’t see another soul, we have no internet connection or TV but we feel like we’re the luckiest people alive.

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Our marrows are great.  Big, fat, succulent and so versatile.  Which is lucky really because we have loads of them…  So far I have:

  • shredded them and added them to stir fry
  • used them as ‘padding’ in Thai Green curry – paste was too hot and marrow helped to create more bulk to lessen the spicyness
  • made a sweet & sour veggie thingy
  • had them cubed as a veg, with a little butter and seasoning
  • stuffed them proper English style with minced beef topped with cheese and…
  • stuffed them (some other style?) with spicy sausage, bacon and tomatoes

Going to try pickling them in a piccalilli thingy – any views people??  Any fav marrow recipes would be appreciated right now or else we’ll get bored of them!

Field kitchen - with some of our freshly picked, home grown produce

The mice, or something started to munch on our sweetcorn.  I’d just forgotten to check if the cobs were ready but this was a timely reminder…  They looked small (dwarf variety, apparently) and even a little over ripe and worse still having picked them I left them outside for a day accidentally and they started to dry out.  We cooked them last night and I was very prepared for them to be pretty manky.  Not so! Most of the corn swelled back up again when immersed in water and after around 6 minutes of boiling we tossed the chunks of corn into butter and salt & pepper.  The moment of truth… Oh my God!  They were seriously delicious – I mean really sweet and totally yummy.  It was a very, very proud moment.  We’ll be doing loads more of those next year – growing them in a grid helped the fertilization process but next year we’ll pack loads more in, put them closer together and not get a dwarf variety!

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