Happy chives growing in my kitchen garden.
A single clump of chives, happily soaking up sun in the ground or in a pot, is adequate for home culinary use, but why stop there? Orderly rows of chive plants add grace and charm to any garden, be it a sprawling vegetable patch or formal herb bed.
Pests virtually ignore them (as they do all members of the allium family), and they're even said to discourage harmful insects, including aphids and mites, from attacking nearby plants. Chives are a welcome addition to the organic garden.
In early spring, while most perennials are still shaking off their winter sleep, your already verdant chive rows will be busy transforming themselves into cheerful masses of showy, lavender-pink globes that will delight your color-starved eyes and draw scores of grateful bees to your otherwise lackluster garden.
Extending the chive border in one of my (falling apart) raised beds with both divided and purchased plants.
When the seedlings are several inches high, they're transplanted into the garden. I've been told that it can take a few years for chive plants to mature and bloom, but this has not been my experience. Seedlings planted in late spring were covered with flowers the following year.
Replant these smaller clumps 1/2 inch deeper than they were growing before in a spot that will receive at least six hours of sun a day. They should be spaced four inches apart in the garden, or you can plant one or more clumps in a pot. Water them well and watch them grow.
To extend your chive harvest, snip off the flower buds as soon as they appear.
One of my favorite ways to celebrate chives is in these easy to make Savory Chive and Sharp Cheddar Cheese Scones.
Chives even make food look better, too. Like a beautiful strand of pearls, a sprinkle of freshly-snipped chives will add instant sophistication to almost anything: a serving of mashed potatoes, a platter of stir-fried vegetables, even plain old scrambled eggs.
Your meals will begin to look as if they came out of a fashionably chic cafe. For a truly elegant touch, toss some of the edible, peppery blossoms into your salad, or float a few atop bowls of spinach soup.
Yogurt cheese is simply unflavored yogurt that has had most of the whey drained from it. It's a tasty, healthy alternative to cream cheese, sour cream, mayonnaise, or butter, and can even be made with nonfat yogurt. Once you try it, you will probably be hooked. Best of all, it's extremely easy to make.
For many years I used a pair of inexpensive plastic yogurt strainers that look like cone-shaped coffee filters, but a while back I bought a handy dandy yogurt cheese maker and am so glad I did. It's neat and simple and well worth the modest investment, especially if you make yogurt cheese on a regular basis. It's easy to use, easy to clean, and has a nice tight lid for storing in the fridge.
The best yogurt cheese is of course made from organic homemade yogurt, which is also a snap to prepare: You heat some milk, mix in a heaping tablespoon of yogurt, pour it into little glass jars, and plug in the yogurt maker.
I don't use special starters or add powdered milk or do anything fancy when I make yogurt. I simply use a little bit of the last batch as a starter for the next. Every once in a while I buy a container of organic plain yogurt and use some of it for the starter to refresh the cultures.
When you think there will be more herbs than yogurt, that's probably enough. I recently made some of this for a friend who loves it, and on a whim I stirred in a container of cottage cheese. She pronounced the result even more delicious than the original version. The other day I discovered a container of ricotta in the fridge and mixed that in. It was very nice.
It makes a marvelous dip for nearly any fresh vegetable (my favorites are carrots, cucumbers, and sweet red peppers). You can even slip some into an omelette.
It's a wonderful thing to bring to a potluck party or to a friend you're visiting for lunch. Just be sure to pack it in a container you don't mind parting with; I've never had anyone offer to give leftover herbed yogurt cheese back.
© FarmgirlFare.com, freshly snipped and dipped.
only you and your photos and knowing that you tand these green shoots with love and affection could make me like them.
ReplyDeleteThey have been overused in so many kitchens I've worked in as "color" but little else that I have grown to despise them.
but I did find them in a well taken care of garden in the middle of an area of Manhattan that has been ravaged by poverty, (photos will soon appear on eggbeater), and I said to my father, look!, took a tiny bit and put it in his mouth. they are beautiful.
You are right about the hardiness of chives. At our former house, I found some growing in the shady woods. Transplanted them to the garden. I gave little plants to everyone in my office (oregano, too), and brought some with me to our new house, where they felt right at home. We like to snip them into scrambled eggs. I just found your blog, and it's a joy for a food and gardening and writing person like me.
ReplyDeleteFor the 2nd year in a row, the tomato growing in the Boston area seems to be the pits. I hate to give up. Do they hate to grow alongside dill, cilantro, sage and oregano? The dill and cilantro reseed themselves every year. Sage and oregano are huge. Could that be the problem?
Thanks!
I have planted some chives in a pot from seed. The seedlings are coming up and are about 4" tall, however, they seem fragile and skinny. Will they get fatter and more stable?
ReplyDeleteHi Grapeshot,
ReplyDeleteSo glad you found and are enjoying my blog. I love chives in scrambled eggs, too. As for your tomato/herb questions, I covered that in an email to you back in July (though I really should hunt it down and copy it here in case other people have the same questions.) Hope it helped! : )
Hi Mama T,
I'm a wee bit late on the reply here, and I know you've left comments since this one, but I didn't want to just skip right over you. : ) Thanks for all your kind words.
Hi Anonymous,
Two immediate things come to mind: soil quality and light. If the chives aren't getting enough sun (are they indoors?) they (and all other seedlings) will grow tall and spindly in the hopes that they get closer to the sun. If the soil isn't very rich, the chives might just be starving for some nutrients. Compost, compost tea, manure, manure tea, fish emulsion, and kelp are all wonderful organic soil amendments. Of course some of these are quite odorous if your chives are indoors. : )
What you also might try is snipping them off to about 1-inch high. That will force more energy into the root system which will hopefully in turn give you stronger chives above ground. In any case, it won't harm the plants, and you'll get a very early little harvest!
Hope this helps! Best of luck to you.
Funny I made Herbed Yogurt/Cheese few days after you, but used a totally different technique that ended up with different looking product but no special equipment needed other then cheese cloth.
ReplyDeleteCheck it out: http://polwig.com/cooking/herbed-greek-yogurt-cheese-3/
I'm a bit late to the party, but I want you to know that my grandma gave me some chives from her garden when we bought our first house in 1967. After more than forty years and through three moves, I still have chives which are descended from those my grandma gave me. The ones I'm growing now live in a large container with five other varieties of herbs on the balcony of our fourth floor condo (western exposure) here in suburban Minneapolis. The homes of my son and daughter in law as well as my daughter and son in law both have clumps of Grandma's chives growing in their yards. My dear Grandma is long gone, but the chives live on, and my heart is warmed whenever I catch sight of them.
ReplyDelete