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Aug 22

J. Peterson Garden Design and 3 Summer Cocktails

  

 

 

I recently shared some cool and refreshing summer cocktail recipes over at the inspiring J. Peterson Garden Design blog and wanted to make sure you didn’t miss these 3 mouth watering recipes. 

 But first, I want to introduce you to the lovely Jenny Peterson, owner of J. Peterson Garden Design in Austin Texas.   Not only is Jenny a a hard working small business owner she’s also committed to enjoying an awesome happy hour!  You’ll always find useful tidbits of advice and gardening inspiration on her blog,  Facebook page updates and via Twitter. I LOVE this piece of gardening advice Jenny shares that involves a glass of wine! Watch the video here.  You rock Jenny! We are cocktails sisters!

Jenny Peterson and her team have been creating cool gardens in the Austin area since 2001. From elegant courtyards to funky meditation spaces and Longhorn gardens (Go Horns!), Jenny’s gardens span the spectrum. Austin and Austinites defy the norm, and their gardens should, too!  Jenny listens to her clients and brings out their style and taste so their landscape always reflects the personality of the owner.

Trained as a Master Gardener, Jenny brings a deep understanding of the ecosystems that promote a vibrant garden: healthy soil, integrated pest management, appropriate plant choices and organic methods. She is committed to using primarily native and adapted plants to conserve water and reflect the beautiful Texas landscape.

Visit this site often for regional gardening tips, project ideas, random musings and the occasional offbeat picture to put a smile on your face!  Contact Jenny to get started on your own slice of Austin grooviness:

 

Now, here’s the cocktail recipes that are sure to cool down any hot day… 

 

Cucumber-Tomato Water Martini 

  • 1 1/2 ounces gin
  • 1 teaspoon dry white vermouth
  • Ice
  • 3 ounces cucumber-tomato water
  • garnish: cocktail onion and cucumber slices

Fill a cocktail shaker with ice, add the gin, vermouth, cucumber-tomato water. Shake until cold, strain into a chilled cocktail glass.

Cucumber-Tomato Water 
  • 6 cups chopped tomatoes (the ripes juiciest you can find), chopped
  • 1 English cucumber, peeled and chopped
  • 1 tsp salt (optional)

Put all ingredients in a food processor or blender and pulse until coarsely pureed. working in batches, process the tomatoes, pulsing on and off, to create a very course puree. Pour puree in a cheesecloth or coffee filter lined colander with a bowl underneath to catch the liquid.  Refrigerate overnight.Cucumber-tomato water will be clear and not a tomato red color.

Cantaloupe and Watermelon Cocktail

This cocktail is a party pleaser!  As with all drinks, fresh is best so this drink entails the use of veggie juicer which is so worth the extra effort.  Juice up one cantaloupe and one small watermelon separately and pour juice into it’s own individual container .

  • 1 1/2 ounces vodka
  • 3/4 ounces of tripe sec or Cointreau
  • 1 ounce cantaloupe juice
  • 1ounce watermelon juice
  • squeeze of fresh lemon juice
  • ice
  • garnish: cantaloupe and a lemon wheel.

Make cantaloupe and watermelon juice with a vegetable juicer and store juice separately in its own container. Fill a cocktail shaker with ice, add vodka, triple sec, lemon juice and shake until icy cold.  Pour into a chilled martini glass and garnish with melon and lemon.

Campari Spritzer

    • 2 ounces Campari
    • 2 ounces orange juice
    • 6 ounces sparkling water
    • ice
    • Garnish with orange, or in  my case I used what I  had on hand…borage.

In a highball glass add the Campari, orange juice, and sparkling water.  Garnish.

 

 I’d love to hear what your favorite summertime hydration libation is?  Enjoy and stay cool!

 

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/22/3-cool-cocktails-to-beat-the-summer-sizzle/

Aug 17

Little Harvest- Wordless Wednesday

 

 

Feels good to grow your own!

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/17/little-harvest-wordless-wednesday/

Aug 15

#IGC11 Summer Party with #Gardenchat and a Berry Lemon Cocktail!

 

8/15/11 There’s a very special garden party event taking place on Twitter and that’s where I’m going to be tonight!  My Twitter name is @dirtandmartinis and I’ll be tweeting under the Twitter hashtags #IGC11 and #gardenchat.  Here’s the exact details of this massive garden party event along with the giveaways you could win if you join in tonight:

Join in the #gardenchat fun on Twitter and watch live coverage featured on this page on August 15th and follow #IGC11 Coverage from the IGC Trade Show Floor Aug. 16-18 coming to you from the Chicago Navy Pier.

*One lucky participant will have their name drawn at the end of the #gardenchat Summer Party Event 8/15 in @TheYarden as the winner of the @Subaru_Life Tailgate Wagon. YOU MUST BE tweeting on #gardenchat during the 7 -9 p.m. CT event to be eligible to win the Subaru Wagon featured on this page!

MORE #gardenchat GIVEAWAYS :

*We have amazing garden products that are featured on this page that will be given away after the #IGC11 Event. These prizes will be given away to those who participate on the #IGC11 / #gardenchat twitter stream. The more you share the more chances you have for your name to be drawn as a winner.

WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED at Monday 8/22 during the #gardenchat hour (9-10 p.m. ET)

Guest at The Yarden Party will receive a goodie bag filled with gifts from these #gardenchat supporters :

@seedkeeperco , @greensoil , @liquidfence, @subaru_life, @Stark_Bros  @CoronaTools, @pallensmith , @gardenshoeson , @territorialseed  @BBBseed@Spring_Meadow

 

 The cocktail I’m going to be drinking tonight is dedicated to the founder of GardenChat, the lovely and hard working Bren Haas.  She’s a gardening mama who loves to plant seeds using social network and she does this all voluntarily!  She can be found on Twitter, Facebook, and she shares her midwest garden, life and photography on her blog at bggarden.com

If you’re not familiar with Twitter and joining in a chat Bren has made a step-by-step instructional video on how to join in.  She shows how simple it is to participate via Twitter and the hashtag called #gardenchat.

Bren,I hope you like this cocktail bursting with fresh berry color and citrus flavors.  This pink cocktail is for you:

 

 

Berry Lemon Cocktail

 

  •  3 ounces citrus vodka
  • 1/4 cup of mixed berries (I used raspberries, strawberries, blueberries and blackberries)
  • 2 tsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 2 tsp sugar (adjust according to taste)

Muddle the berries and sugar in a martini shaker.  Fill shaker with ice, add citrus vodka, lemon juice and shake until icy cold.  Double strain (see note)  into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with lemon, edible flowers and/or berries.

Note: You want to keep those ice chips and berry debris out of your cocktail.  To learn what it means to double strain your cocktail, please watch the 39 second videohttp://www.hitthehighbeam.com/?p=705

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/15/81511-summer-party-with-gardenchat-and-a-berry-lemon-cocktail/

Aug 12

The Dirt & Martinis Garden

 

Happy Friday everyone! 

The weekend has arrived and a lot of us gardeners look forward to playing in the dirt,  harvesting produce, dead heading plants, planning new projects and focusing as much time as we can being and living in our gardens.  Although some view tending to the garden as work, I view it as cheap therapy.  There’s something about the smell of a tomato plant, herbs, and even the soil that can lower my heart rate and lift my spirits.  With that it mind, let’s take a walk through my garden, the Dirt & Martinis little patch of heaven.

Welcome to my garden…

 I have a few butterfly bushes and lots of bergamot!  The bees and hummingbirds love it….

Here’s some Russian sage, more bergamot in the background and I don’t know what the red flower is, do you?  My garden is also full of rocks.  I heart rocks…

 

Along the way I have nasturtium, basil, dill and cilantro growing in pots.  Here’s some I have planted in an old toolbox… 

 

I’m fond of succulents, hummingbirds and, yes, there’s more bergamot…

 

All throughout my garden I have mystery plants popping up.  I think this may be a pumpkin that appeared one day from underneath the flowers. 

  

Here’s some echinacea.  I find the colors of this flower mesmerizing and I think the bees do too…

 
 

I do have lots of flowers, but I assure you I have some edibles growing too.  Here’s one that is both edible and ornamental, a daylily…

 

 In my veggie garden I have shallots ‘saffron’ from Annie’s Annuals…

 

Here are Kentucky blue pole beans growing up an old ladder… 

 
 

There’s more veggies in my garden to show you but it’s time relax with something icy….

  I hope you make time to eat, drink, and play in the dirt this weekend garden friends!  Stay cool and thanks for joining me on a short tour of the Dirt & Martinis garden!

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/12/the-dirt-martinis-garden/

Aug 10

Sunflower

 

 

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/10/sunflower/

Aug 10

Pimm’s Cup

My borage is finally getting put to use!

 

Summertime blues are easily erased with a glass filled with love, happiness and citrusy goodness.  Ok, that may be a little over the top, but after a day of rolling in the dirt, aka gardening, nothing hits the spot more than an icy cold cocktail that tastes crisp, cool and clean.  An example of a cocktail that has those 3 ingredients is the Pimm’s Cup.  There’s many variations of this herbaceous summery cocktail but I like the simple version most:

Pimm’s Cup

  • 1 1/2 ounces Pimm’s No.1 Cup
  • 2-3 ounces of lemonade, lemon-lime soda OR ginger ale
  • Lemon slices
  • Cucumber slices
  • Optional garnish ideas: orange slices, borage flowers, mint leaves, apple slices, berries)

Directions:

In a cocktail shaker filled with ice add a measure of Pimm’s and lemonade.  If using soda, add the soda after the Pimm’s has been shaken, otherwise you’ll have a big mess.  Shake until cold and then strain into a glass filled with ice (if using soda, add now and then stir)  Add lemon and cucumber slices and garnish accordingly.

Notes:

  • Borage is the traditional garnish of the Pimm’s Cup and is used for it’s cucumber flavor.
  • Pimm’s Cup is the official drink of Wimbledon.
  • Pimm’s No. 1 is made from fruit, spices and is gin-based.
  • Pimm’s is low in alcohol.

 

 

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/10/pimms-cup/

Aug 03

Borage

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/08/03/borage/

Jul 28

Got Junk? Don’t Throw it out…Plant It!

 

This post originally appeared on the #gardenchat blog.  You can follow #gardenchat on Twitter and on Facebook.

Reduce, reuse, recycle are words we hear everyday and sometimes several times a day. Specifically in the area of reuse, gardeners all around the world, from all walks of life and economic status have taken the incentive to use items that were headed to the landfill to create unique gardens.

Not only does reusing items help the environment but it allows us to get very creative in our garden spaces with little or no money. There are several ways to use junk and trash in our gardens .  For example instead of recycling, why not reuse cardboard egg cartons, toilet paper rolls and newspaper for seed starting? Mini blinds can be cut up for for plant labels, old windows can be turned into cold frames, veggie scraps and yard waste can be composted to create nutrient rich soil.

Another way to turn trash-into-treasure and reusing found objects is by creating funky planters. Here’s a peek of trash and junkyard finds that I’ve turned into planters.  My motto is if it has a vessel or receptacle you may as well grow in it!  The three materials I look for when proverbial dumpster diving are metal, wood and straw. 

Metal

Galvanized metal stock tanks and cattle troughs make excellent container and water gardens.  I love Pam’s article, on her blog Digging, No Bull!  Cattle troughs make great containers.  Keep your eye open for these cool containers at yard sales, second hand stores and flea markets.  I recently picked up two of these containers that a friend of mine was going to take to the dump.  Score!  Another fun way to use metal is by planting in cut-off pieces of metal pipe. 

 

Wood

Wood is another material that gets wasted and thrown into the landfill.  A vertical garden can be made out of a pallet, mini raised garden beds can be achieved from wooden wine boxes, a salvage door can be turned into a potting bench and an old toolbox can be transformed into a planter.  Here is a toolbox I rescued from the trash and planted with herbs…

Note:  Do not use railroad ties or other treated lumber in your garden because of chemicals thay may leach into the soil.

Straw

Straw you may ask?  Yup, I specifically look for those fabulous kitchy vintage Hawaiian straw tote bags .  Often found at second hand stores and estate sales these bags make great containers for planting not mention a playful conversation piece in the garden.  Yes, I’m a bag lady and proud of it!  Here’s my latest straw bag planter project that I created from bags purchased at a local second hand store for $2.

Do you use junk in your garden? 

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/07/28/got-junk-dont-throw-it-out-plant-it/

Jul 20

no words wednesday

Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/07/20/no-words-wednesday/

Jul 19

Kale Chips turned into Kale-Sesame Seasoning

 

Kale chips, I love thee, but you are too messy.

My garden is in full swing production of Red Russian kale so I thought I would make homemade kale chips.  The recipe I used is from the talented Deb and Alex over at Smitten Kitchen:

Baked Kale Chips
Adapted from a bunch of inspiring places

1 bunch kale (about 6 ounces)
1 tablespoon olive oil
Sea salt, to taste

Preheat oven to 300°F. Rinse and dry the kale, then remove the stems and tough center ribs. Cut into large pieces, toss with olive oil in a bowl then sprinkle with salt. Arrange leaves in a single layer on a large baking sheet (I needed two because mine are tiny; I also lined mine with parchment for easy clean-up but there’s no reason that you must). Bake for 20 minutes, or until crisp. Place baking sheet on a rack to cool.

Smitten Kitchen’s recipe makes a lovely batch of delicous, nutricious kale chips to snack on, but be prepared to pull out the vacuum cleaner after eating.  Since, I’m not into “labor-intensive” snacking (and a messy eater, truth-be-known, haha) I quickly turned my beautiful batch of kale chips into a “furikake-ish” seasoning blend with toasted sesame seeds and red pepper flakes.

Where you come in, is what should I use it on?  Thoughts and suggestions are highly appreciated!  Anways, here’s the recipe…

Kale-Sesame Seasoning

  • One batch of kale chips (use above recipe)
  • 1-2 Tablespoons red pepper flakes
  • 1 teaspoon of fresh ground pepper
  • salt to taste, optional

With a mortar and pestle, or your hands, grind up kales chips to a powder, but not too fine.  Mix in final ingredients and store in the refriderator.

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Permanent link to this article: http://dirtandmartinis.com/2011/07/19/kale-chips-turned-into-kale-sesame-seasoning/

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