A
Pagan Cooks from Her Garden with Spring Herbs
article
used with Permission
©
by Catherine Harper
The
garden year for my family starts at Imbolc, when the
pruning begins and we see the first tips of new growth.
Those first weeks are the slow ones in the garden, the
cleaning and setting of the stage. The overwintering
vegetable beds are weeded and cleared of debris for
the spurt of growth that will come with the lengthening
days and warmer soil. The last of the previous autumn's
dried up stalks are pulled up and added to the compost
pile, and the ground is raked. But as Imbolc turns toward
the equinox, spring accelerates.
As
the days lengthen and the grass begins to grow again,
snowdrops and crocuses flower, and daffodils begin to
form heads. The pruning needs to be finished before
the sap runs too strongly (and many times I have spent
days late in February pruning in the rain, having waited
in vain for better weather). Whether we have finished
our preparations or not, the garden is returning to
life.
Each
spring, as the chives first begin to return, it is time
to pull back the covers and wake up the herb garden.
It begins with trimming back the grass from the bricks,
and raking the grass and leaves from the walkways. My
primary herb garden, the one right behind the kitchen,
is one of concentric circles of bricks -- alternating
rings of plants with rings of grass -- and over the
winter the bricks are overgrown with grass and moss.
Once the initial trimming is done, I start on the outermost
ring and begin to slowly work my way around.
As
a rule I don't spend a lot of time weeding on my knees.
In many ways our property does not allow it. An acre
may not be that much space, really, but on my knees
I would not work through our gardens even once a year,
and the encroaching blackberries and writhing kiwi vines
would invade the house through the ventilation slits
and strangle us in our beds. The last few years I have
been initiated into the lore of different kinds of specialized
hoes, and these -- and in extreme cases my Rototiller
-- bear the brunt of the work.
But
for the herb garden, with its small plants and tight
spaces between brickwork, I do things the old, slow
way. The outer ring is marked with the compass points,
and I start in the east, between the lady's mantle and
southernwood. Over the fall and winter, the moss has
grown across the beds in such a thick layer that sometimes
I can pull it back like a sheet of felt. In places grass
roots have squeezed between the bricks and sent up their
green standards, and there are myriad sprouts of stinking
Robert to be removed.
Around
it goes, past the poppies, coltsfoot and the first of
the many clumps of salad burnet. Who would have thought
that sweet cicely, a tender, anise-scented herb, would
have sent roots as big as my fist, burrowing under the
border and knocking the bricks out of alignment? At
a few points along the rhizomes, pale green shoots are
beginning to unfurl their fern-like leaves. This year's
oregano is a low-lying cluster of leaves at the base
of last year's withered stems and must be worked around.
The tall, dried-out stalks on the vervain need to be
removed, and how did I end up with so much of an herb
I use so seldom?
The
winter savory has only a few old leaves on it, though
rosettes of sorrel run wild in the grass. The rue is
spindly and unevenly colored but still has many leaves,
and rosemary has lasted through the winter with its
usual fortitude. The chives, usually the first of the
new herbs up for the year, are a few inches tall, a
good height for distinguishing them from the surrounding
grass and moss. The sage has changed little over the
winter, but its gray-green leaves, last year's growth,
look subtly ragged and old. The next clump of salad
burnet is thick with new growth.
Around
the ring I make my slow way, on my knees, working from
the east with the sun, as in so many other circles I
have traversed. Beneath my hands the weedy, green fuzz
gives way to rich, dark earth punctuated by clusters
of plants made tidy. I pile the weeds and cuttings at
eight points, the quarters and cross-quarters of the
circle, and as I lay out the turning of the seasons
in miniature, I plan ahead the year. Here I will plant
clumps of parsley. This year I will plant runner beans
at the same time I send in my taxes, and a month later
begin to move the nightshades outside. I will wait to
move the basil outside until only a few weeks before
midsummer, and perhaps this year I will plant it in
copper-rimmed pots to ward off slugs. And just as the
garden is flourishing in the heat of the year, it will
be time to start the cold weather crops, the kales,
Brussels spouts, mustard and chard that will fill the
garden and be eaten as we head back down into winter.
The circle curves around, and I am back to where I began.
Coddled
Eggs with Herbs
This
is a very good time of year for eggs, as many have observed.
As the days lengthen, hens (those whose days are defined
by natural light and not artificial light on timers,
anyway) begin to produce in earnest. For this recipe,
fresh eggs are strongly recommended.
You
will need an egg coddler, which is a small jar of glass
or ceramic with a close fitting lid, made with such
materials that it can be dropped cold into boiling water
without cracking. (Do not try this with just any small
jar.) You can find them at culinary supply stores, or
sometimes at tea shops.
Set
a pan containing about four inches of water on the stove
to boil. Butter the inside of your coddler, including
the lid, for later ease in cleaning. Beat one egg with
a little milk or cream. Add a little grated mild cheese
(or soft goat cheese) if it suits your fancy and a scant
teaspoon each of finely chopped chives and sweet cicely.
Pour the mixture into the coddler, close the top per
the manufacturer's instructions, and place it in boiling
water for 7-8 minutes. Open the coddler and eat the
eggs with a spoon or on toast.
Herbed
Cheese Spread
This
is almost too simple to be called a recipe. Fine-chop
a tablespoon or more of fresh, savory herbs. (Chives
and salad burnet work well, but as with the previous
recipe, other savory herbs may be substituted as they
become available.) Place the herbs on a cutting board
or in a bowl. Take a piece of cream cheese or soft goat
cheese roughly the size of a tennis ball, and place
it on the herbs. Knead the with your fingertips until
the herbs have been worked all the way through the cheese.
The flavors will mature better if you let the cheese
sit in the refrigerator for at least a couple of hours
before serving.
Lentil
Terrine
This
is another recipe that works very well with chives and
sweet cicely, though I use chives and mint more often.
More olive oil can be substituted for the butter to
render it deliciously vegan.
1
medium sized shallot, chopped
2
tablespoons olive oil
2/3
cup red lentils
2
cups water
1/4
cup butter (1/2 stick)
3
tablespoons wine vinegar or the juice of half a large
lemon
1-2
tablespoons mixed fresh herbs, finely chopped
Brown
the shallot in two tablespoons of olive oil. Add the
lentils, stirring until they are coated with oil and
slightly browned. Add the water, and bring the mixture
to a simmer. Cover, reduce heat, and leave it to cook
until lentils fall apart (approximately half an hour).
Remove cover, and stir while the water evaporates until
the mixture is both thick and smooth.
Add
all but 2 tablespoons of the butter, letting it melt
into the lentils. Remove from heat. Add the vinegar
or lemon and salt to taste (start with one teaspoon
of salt, and work up -- remember, this is a spread,
and can be fairly salty). Stir in the herbs, and pour
the mixture into an appropriately sized ceramic pot
with a lid, or other fitting container. The remaining
two tablespoons of butter should be melted and poured
over the top. Let chill for at least two hours before
serving, or better yet, let it refrigerate overnight.
Copyright
© 2003 Emerald City/Silver Moon Productions

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