GK wrote:
Strawberries already?
I have four litres of elderflower cordial steeping in a bucket at the moment, will bottle it this evening. I have made wine with elderflowers in the past, wasnt keen on the taste but the cordial is a great mixer and delicious with chilled sparkling water.
My dear Misses use to make the elderflower sparkling drink when we lived on the edge of the Wolds in Lincolnshire. The white vinegar, unbleached cane sugar and natural yeasts produced plenty of sparkle. Not too much sugar, because the yeasts were wild. 30% less than recipe to obtain a demi sec finish. The flowers have to be very fresh, an AM picking was best.
Our stawbs are on very fast land, Cambridge Favourite are early. The raised bed is very sheltered and the old Berkshire (Rose Kiln Lane) wirecut clay bricks holding the soil instead of wooden boards, retain heat and moisture. In April, I sprinkled very liberally wood ashes saved from our diningroom open fire, to aid flowering (potash) and to keep off those pesky slugs.
In terms of labour - these strawbs are very very expensive, but the flavour
The weather has crashed-out, nights are cold and wet, and now we fear botrytus. I might move the agricultural fleece from the runner beans to keep off further drenching - but then they and the climbing french beans are in abundant flower now. Climbing Golden french beans have pink and tangerine blooms - very pretty, never tried these before ! Very attractive indeed.
We are right on the edge of the Thames basin (the ice age basin) the land was far too good for building on, yet that's what the Victorians did ? You can't grow a cauliflower or iceberg lettuce on this land, its far too light, but the beige clay subsoil over 3 feet down, stops it becoming unstable
I'd better stop here.