Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumBreakfast Friday 18 August 2023
Coffee, vanilla yogurt with granola & blueberries later today.
chillfactor
(7,694 posts)Skilled home fries
Sunny side up eggs
Bacon
Toast with strawberry jam
Orange juice
Coffee
Emile
(29,795 posts)gademocrat7
(11,165 posts)Cheddar cheese toast with Gala apple slices later.
Callalily
(15,012 posts)MissMillie
(38,961 posts)scoop of salsa on the side
pile of tater tots
a clementine
coffee
pazzyanne
(6,601 posts)Vanilla yogurt, blueberries, and a slice of toast later.
NJCher
(37,868 posts)Twenty-one seed whole wheat toast with avocado.
Next up: sliced watermelon.
Emile
(29,795 posts)melon like Sugar Babes. Maybe a couple more weeks before our melons will be ripe. They are a seedy melon, but oh my God they are so sweet!
NJCher
(37,868 posts)Can you believe it? It was a mistake so I couldn't complain much. But I am watching it and it looks healthy but I don't think it or any other curcurbit will last much longer because......
WE HAVE A HORRIBLE POWDERY MILDEW PROBLEM HERE.
The way it works at the garden is that I start a lot of plants in the greenhouse and the gardeners are free to take what they want. When I told him he could take the watermelon, I meant the seed, not the started plant.
Yeah, you just reminded me that I need to go look up the supplier for those powdery mildew-resistant plants. There is still time to grow more squash, cukes, etc. because we also have tents to put over the plants if it gets cold. Plus these things have a grow time of 55 days.
The guy who took the plant is named Juan. When he got his plot the first thing he told me is he wanted to grow a watermelon! That's been his whole thing this summer. It's all he talks about, all he thinks about. As soon as he comes home from his job at the Home Depot garden department, he goes to the garden to check his plant. It's really kinda' cute.
I noticed the plant itself is actually smaller than other curcurbits. Is that the case with yours? It's ok that the melon is small--that's actually better because it's easier to protect from the groundhog.
Emile
(29,795 posts)wished they didn't have so many seeds. I don't have a mildew problem in my garden, but I do have blight in the soil. I have to spray my tomato plants after each rain to control the blight. If I don't spray I get one good crop of tomatoes and the plants die. I wonder if there is something you can spray to control mildew?