May 31, 2022
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Historical Events
1819 Birth of Walt Whitman, American poet,
essayist, and journalist.
A humanist, Walt is remembered as the father of free verse.
When Whitman was 54 years old, he suffered a stroke that left him
paralyzed. He spent the next two years immersed in nature, and he
believed that nature had helped to heal him. He wrote,
How it all nourishes, lulls me, in the way most needed; the
open air, the rye-fields, the apple orchards.
Walt also appreciated flowers. He wrote,
A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the
metaphysics of books.
In 1892, Walt wrote one of his most celebrated prose about Wild
Flowers in a piece called Specimen Days.
This has been and is yet a great season for wild flowers;
oceans of them line the roads through the woods, border the edges
of the water-runlets, grow all along the old fences, and are
scatter'd in profusion over the fields.
An eight-petal'd blossom of gold-yellow clear and bright,
with a brown tuft in the middle, nearly as large as a silver
half-dollar, is very common; yesterday on a long drive I
noticed it thickly lining the borders of the brooks
everywhere.
Then there is a beautiful weed cover'd with blue flowers, (the
blue of the old Chinese teacups treasur'd by our grand-aunts,)
I am continually stopping to admire [it] - [it's] a little
larger than a dime, and very plentiful.
White, however, is the prevailing color. The wild carrot I
have spoken of; also the fragrant life-everlasting. But there are
all hues and beauties, especially on the frequent tracts of
half-open scrub-oak and dwarf-cedar hereabout - wild asters of all
colors. Notwithstanding the frost-touch the
hardy little chaps maintain themselves in all their
bloom.
1840 Birth of Charles McIlvaine, American
author, and mycologist.
Charles was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania. He served as a
captain in the Pennsylvania Infantry. After the Civil War, he
always went by "Captain."
When he was 40, Charles moved to West Virginia, where he wrote
articles for magazines
like Century and Harpers. After
the war, food was scarce, and Charles started hunting and eating
mushrooms. Charles ate virtually every specimen he encountered and
even dabbled in mushrooms said to be poisonous. If he suffered no
ill effects, Charles deemed a specimen edible. Before Charles's
work, the USDA issued a report in 1885 that claimed there were only
twelve edible species of mushrooms in the United States.
Today Charles is best known for his 1896 book called 1,000
American Fungi. Charles was passionate about mycology,
and he included his experiences with eating almost every species
mentioned in his book.
He wrote,
I take no man's word for the qualities of a toadstool. I go for
it myself.
Charles claimed to have eaten over 1,000 mushrooms and toadstools,
and he said he enjoyed the flavor of most of them.
His daring ingestion of so many species earned Charles the nickname
Old Iron Guts. Charles lived to be 69 and defied the old
saying,
There are old mushroom hunters and there are bold mushroom
hunters, but there are no old bold mushroom hunters.
Charles was indeed an old, bold mycologist.
Charles's experimentation is all the more impressive given the
challenging nature of mushroom identification. If you find plant
identification challenging, mushroom identification is much more
involved and often requires chemical reagents and microscopic
evaluation. In our modern times, DNA sequencing can also
definitively establish species.
Thanks to his excellent writing skills, Charles wrote about
mushrooms in a friendly and conversational manner.
Here's what Charles wrote about the Oyster Mushroom:
The camel is gratefully called the ship of the desert. The
oyster mushroom is the shellfish of the forest. When the tender
parts are dipped in egg, rolled in bread crumbs, and fried as an
oyster, they're not excelled buy any vegetable and are worth of
place on the daintiest menu.
Here's how Charles described the Vomiting Russella:
Most are sweet and nutty to the taste. Some are as hot as the
fiercest cayenne, but this they lose upon cooking. Their caps make
the most palatable dishes when stewed, baked, roasted or
escalloped.
Finally, here's a little-known poem that Charles wrote
called Our Church Fight.
I'm that nigh near disgusted with the fight in our old
church,
Where one halfs 'g'in the t'other, an' the Lord's left in the
lurch,
That I went an' told the parson if he'd jine me in a
prayer,
We'd slip out 'mong the daisies and' put one up from
there.
Charles is remembered in the name of the journal of the North
American Mycological Association (NAMA), McIlvainea
("Mick-ill-vay-nee-ah").
1893 Birth of Elizabeth Coatsworth, American
writer of fiction and poetry for children and adults.
In 1931, She won the Newbery Medal for her children's
book, The Cat Who Went to Heaven.
Elizabeth's poems invoke sentiment and thoughts of home. Her poem
November begins,
November comes
And November goes,
With the last red berries
And the first white snows.
Her poem Nosegay is about a small bunch of
flowers. Nosegays were typically sweet-scented and worn at the
waist or bodice.
Violets, daffodils,
roses and thorn
were all in the garden
before you were born.
Daffodils, violets,
red and white roses
your grandchildren's children
will hold to their noses.
1920 On this day, a 37-year-old Virginia
Woolf gardened with her husband, Leonard, at the new home they had
bought the previous year. The garden covered three-quarters of a
hectare and came with mature apple, plum, cherry, and pear trees.
Of the two, Leonard was more the gardener, but Virginia was happy
to assist whenever she got the chance.
In her diary on this day, she wrote,
The first pure joy of the garden… weeding all day to finish the
beds in a queer sort of enthusiasm which made me say this is
happiness.
Gladioli standing in troops; the mock orange
out.
We were out till nine at night, though the evening was
cold.
Both stiff and scratched all over today, with chocolate earth
in our nails.
Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation
The Pickled Pantry by Andrea Chesman
This book came out in 2012. It's an oldie, but goodie.
And the subtitle is From Apples to Zucchini, 150 Recipes
for Pickles, Relishes, Chutneys & More.
Well, this is one of my favorite books. I use this every single
summer.
And I love what the publisher says here about Andrea's book. They
write
Blending your grandmother’s pickling know-how with today’s
Internet resources, Andrea Chesman shows you how easy it is to fill
your pantry with tasty homemade sauerkraut, Salt-Cured Dilly Beans,
and Rosemary Onion Confit. Explaining classic techniques in simple
language, guiding you to helpful websites, and making you laugh
with humorous stories, Chesman provides inspiration and
encouragement for both first-time picklers and dedicated home
canners. With tips on pickling everything from apples to zucchini,
you’ll enjoy exploring the stunning variety of flavors that can
fill a Mason jar.
And I can tell you from experience that when the pandemic hit, and
we had that first year of everybody rushing to garden, Andrea's
book was a go-to resource for so many people as they were dealing
with their first garden harvest.
Now I thought what I would do is walk you through the table of
contents because that helps you understand Andrea's book's
structure. This is really a book about pickling. There are other
items and other recipes covered here, but this is primarily a
pickle resource.
So, what is covered here is:
1 All About Pickling page 10
2 Fermented Pickles page 34
3 Single Jar Pickles page 72
4 Big-Harvest Fresh-Pack Pickles page 122
5 Salsas, Relishes, Chutneys page 148 (This is one of my most
dog-eared sections in this book.)
6 Refrigerator & Freezer Pickles page 202
7 Recipes for Enjoying Homemade Pickles page 236
I also wanted to share just a little bit about what Andrea wrote in
the introduction to this book because you'll get a little glimpse
of her marvelous sense of humor. She wrote this in the
introduction.
Naturally I wanted to pack all that freshly harvested goodness
into jars to preserve it for the coming winter. I asked my grand-
mother how she made her pickles. My grandmother was not a woman
enthralled by the domestic arts, nor was she overly chatty. She
told me to put cucumbers and dill in a crock, cover them with
water, then add enough salt so "it's just before you gag.
Well, that sounds like my mom. That's exactly how my mom tells me
about how to make our family recipes. So this one made me
smile.
Now the other story that I wanted to share with you is this
fantastic idea that Andrea came up with for sharing your pickle
bounty. If you're part of a garden club or a group of gardeners in
your neighborhood, maybe you can pool your resources when it comes
to canning time.
I had the opportunity to collect pickle recipes and gather them
together for a book. It began with a "pickle barter party." Because
so many traditional recipes yielded seven or nine jars of pickles
(a boiling-water-bath canner load), I thought it would be a great
idea to swap jars of home-canned pickles the same way people swap
cookies at Christmastime. My friends were all fellow
back-to-the-landers, and preserving food by canning, pickling, and
freezing was part of the lifestyle. Today's urban food swaps
accomplish much the same thing.
Great idea. Isn't that? And such a fun thing to do this summer. You
can do it outside. And not have to worry about catching COVID.
And here's what Andrea says about pickle preferences - and this is
so true - especially if you have kids.
What I learned as I tasted my way through batch after batch of
pickles is that preferences vary widely. For some people, no
pickle is too sweet; others hate garlic. But inevitably, there
is perfect pickle for every taste. It just requires collecting
and inventing many, many recipes.
Over the years, I've watched many trends and pickle making And
in the 1970s, just like today, many people rediscovered, pickle
making as they moved back to the land.
And so what's old is new again.
Well, I tell you what, you could do a lot worse than having Andrea
Chessman be your guide for pickling.
This is a hefty book. It is 304 pages of pickling everything - from
cucumbers (so that you can make your dills, your half-sours, your
bread-and-butters) to other vegetables (everything from carrots to
rhubarb cabbage, to even pineapple.)
The bottom line here is you can pickle it - and
that's Andrea's favorite saying.
Now, luckily Andrea's book is ubiquitous because this book has been
around for a decade.
You can get a copy of The Pickled Pantry by Andrea Chesman
and support the show using the Amazon link in today's show notes
for around $8.
And by the way, if you have a family reunion to go to, or you
just want to have a little family picnic, this would be a lovely
little hostess gift. It's so sweet and that cover is
adorable.
Botanic Spark
1905 The Flower Garden Day by Day by Louisa
Yeomans King
MAY 31. Take a part of this month if possible, and visit the
Arnold Arboretum, Boston, for lilacs, Asiatic cherries, crabs, and
general beauty; and Highland Park, Rochester, N. Y., for the great
lilac collection. The notebooks should go, too; and while it is
difficult to leave one's own garden at SO interesting a time, a
great enlarging of the gardening horizon is the result of such
travels.
Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener
And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every
day.