19 Jul - Squashes, Onions & Wine

A quick round-up on the plot as it's sort of mid-July. First in the greenhouse. The tomatoes are just coming on stream with the first few proper sized 'Alicante' picked this week though I did have a few cherry 'Gardener's Delight' at the end of last week. I've taken a load of lower leaves from the plants to help with ripening. The 'Californian Wonder' sweet peppers are developing well; a fair number can be seen per plant along with more flowers which will hopefully produce more peppers. The Cucamelons are forming; I'm still not sure whether they are worth the effort or not but I can definitely see a couple now. (Below - cucamelon forming).


The onions looked a bit small a few weeks back but they are bulking up nicely now. The thunderstorm that brought heavy rain with it last night will no doubt add a few more grams to the Sturon onions before they start 'going over' next month. I noticed that the tips of the thick green leaves are just turning yellow so they are right on time.


The parsnips and carrots have put on good top growth; this doesn't guarantee anything below of course but, as I've used a bar as part of the sowing process (see 11 Apr 2014 post) and I'm hoping for my best carrots ever - this shouldn't be too difficult as my carrots have been tragic in the past.

The squashes are forming well and I've been doing a bit of hand pollinating every time I go to the plot just to help things along a bit. The Sweet Dumpling have now taken over their allocated space and I have a number of squashes already well formed - this gives me hope of a decent crop by the Autumn. The Hunter F1 plants have been slower to develop so are smaller than the Sweet Dumpling, nevertheless there are fruits developing on these too. (Below - Sweet Dumpling forming).


Occasionally I remember that I have two pumpkins, Jack O'Lantern, planted on the far edge of my plot. Despite the fact that I tend to miss them out in routine inspections, watering and feeding, they are doing OK. There are a few small fruits forming with one decent sized pumpkin that has already required a tile underneath - I'm hoping this will become a prize specimen by Halloween. (Below - Jack O'Lantern pumpkin that's looking good already).



I've hand quite a few handfuls of 'Cobra' French beans already despite most of them not even making it to the top of their canes yet. The runner beans 'Scarlet Emperor' have really 'bushed' out and are well beyond the top of their canes - I've only had a single handful of early beans but the vines are covered in flowers so I've my fingers crossed for a steady supply both for eating fresh and for the freezer.


Needless to say that the courgettes have gone mad - the plants are massive and I've got to pick fruit everyday or I'll end up with marrows. There's a fair few jars of lovely blackcurrant jam already in the fridge and five gallons of gooseberry wine fermenting away in demi-johns. I've just put on another five gallons of nettle and fennel wine - there will be more wine-making in the coming weeks when the top fruit and blackberries are ripe.

The last word for this post is that my 'rescue' hens will be arriving early in August - everything is in place for them though I'm slightly nervous as I've never had poultry before. Nevertheless, I'm really looking forward to having a few hens on the allotment, fingers-crossed they will settle in and will have a happy time with me and my family.

That's it, until next time, bye for now - I'll leave you with a piccy of the plot in mid-July.




13 Jul - Easy And Quick Wine Making Method

I've been making wine for 30 years now - oh and drinking it too. When I started wine-making the books were full of things like "add 15 tonnes of fruit and leave 10 years to ferment and clear ...", OK not quite that bad but not far off. Then I discovered a book called 'Easy Wine Making In 21 Days' and it changed the way I made wine and my method is essentially what is in that book.

I have a basic recipe which underpins both red and white wine - and this is it for 5 gallons of a wine which will be around 15% in alcohol terms.

  • 5 x 500g bags of raisins (or sultanas) (you can use grape concentrate but this is expensive)
  • 4 to 5 kg of plain white sugar (4 bags with fruit = 11-13% alchohol; 5 bags 14-16%)
  • 2 heaped teaspoons of yeast nutrient
  • 2 heaped teaspoons of citric acid
  • 2 heaped teaspoons of pectolase
  • 2 heaped teaspoons of general wine yeast (or a sachet if you can't get the tub)
  • You will also need baby bottle sterilizing tablets and Campden Tablets.

The raisins/sultanas will be at your local supermarket while the rest of the stuff will be at your local Wilkinson store (or online but may cost more).


If you want, that will make you a basic raisin wine, popular with the Victorians apparently. The idea is that the raisins/sultanas give the wine 'body' and acts as a base for additional flavours (you can use grape concentrate but that is expensive). Use raisins on their own for a nice basic wine; use sultanas along with other fruit. Flavours come by adding fruit from the allotment or, in in winter, flavoured tea bags - yep really - the new flavoured teabags make fantastic wine - I especially love the summer berry teabags and the nettle and fennel (forget the mint though - not good for wine). When using teabags you need all the sultanas as there is no 'body' in the teabag liquid; however, if you are going to use weighty fruit from the allotment like gooseberries, plums, apples or rhubarb then you can reduce the bags of sultanas by one or two bags. Come the autumn there's free fruit too like elderberries, damsons and blackberries all of which make delicious wine. So, rule of thumb, if you aren't using bulk fruit then stick a 500g bag of sultanas per gallon. If you are using proper fruit you can replace a bag of sultanas with 2 kilos of fruit up to two bags worth - always have at least three bags of sultanas in 5 gallons for a 'base'. (Pictured below - flavoured teabags - sterilising tablets and the various powders needed).


For 5 gallons you will need some equipment: a 5 gal brewing bin (or similar container with a 5 gallon mark on the side); six 1 gal demi-johns; syphon tube; hydrometer; 5 plastic air-locks and drilled bungs. Scout around boot sales for brewing bins and demi-johns, they also appear regularly in places like Freecycle - once you have these they will last virtually all your life. The air-locks, bungs, hydrometer and tube are available cheaply enough online or in Wilkinson.

The Hot Stage
An hour before you start fill your 5 gallon brewing bin with clean water and add 5 sterilising tablets. I always do this outside as it's easier. After an hour, empty the bin and rinse out with clean water, just enough so it doesn't smell of chlorine. Stick a kettle full of water on to boil and then start chopping up the sultanas - a food processor is the easy way of course but I used to do it by hand in the early days. My little food processor can only manage a bag at a time, add a little water to the sultanas to stop it all getting too sticky and the motor struggling. Once chopped up, stick them in your brewing bin - if you are adding fruit - chop in the same way and stick it in the bin with the sultanas. (See below for flavoured teabags). (Pictured below the sultanas and sugar in the brew bin).


The kettle's probably boiled by now so add the sugar and then carefully pour the boiling water over the mix. Fill the kettle again and put on to boil again. Stir the mixture with a long handled implement (the choice is yours) with the idea of dissolving all the sugar granules. You will probably find that the extra kettle full of water you have put on to boil will be needed to help with the dissolving process - so add more boiling water if needed. (Below - the hot stage - boiling water on the fruit and sugar).


(If you are using flavoured teabags stick 10 in a large plastic jug (2 bags per gallon) and pour on a load of boiling water and prod with a wooden spoon with the idea of getting as much flavour out of the bags as possible. Pour the favoured tea into the brew bin while holding back the teabags - add a bit more boiling water to the jug to see if you can prod the last drops of flavour from the bags and again add the liquor - dispose of the bags - don't add them to the brew bin). (Pictured below - fennel & nettle teabags being prodded to release their flavour).



The last part of the 'Hot Stage' is the addition of a few of the powders - it's time to add two teaspoons of yeast nutrient; the same of citric acid and, the same for the pectolase. (The nutrient and the citric acid help the yeast ferment the wine - the pectolase breaks down usable natural sugars in the fruit and helps stop the wine forming a cloudy 'haze' which isn't very nice when it comes to drinking). (Below - Pectolase added).



IMPORTANT - do NOT add the yeast yet as the boiling water will harm it. Do NOT use the Campden Tablets at all for the moment - these are used much later on).

The Cool Stage
Give everything a good stir then top up the bin to the 5 gallon mark with cool water. Ideally the liquid should be tepid rather than freezing cold by the time you have got it up to 5 gallons. Now add the yeast. Brewers yeast used to be available cheaply in decent sized tubs and I used to add three or four heaped teaspoons but now I've noticed yeast seems to be sold in single sachets so just add one of them if you are keeping costs down. The yeast will multiply in the brew anyway, it just might take a few days longer that's all. (Yeast going in).



Place the bin in your house, the kitchen is a good choice, it needs to be a room that isn't going to get too cold. No need to stick it in the airing cupboard etc - modern brewing yeasts can tolerate lower temperatures and temperature fluctuations. Nevertheless, I find the process is much faster in the summer than the winter, even with central heating - constant warmish temperatures are better than the hot and cold of being by a radiator. If your brewing bin came with a lid place it loosely on top - yeast gives off carbon dioxide when working and the gas must be able to escape - if you don't have a lid just cover with a clean tea-towel. (Below - leave a gap for the CO2 to escape or things could get messy).



For the next week give the brew a stir everyday - you should see that small bubbles are forming at the surface, you should hear them when you stir the liquid. At this stage the yeast requires air to reproduce - the yeast is both multiplying in number and changing some of the sugar to alcohol while giving off carbon dioxide as a by-product. After a week it's time to move the liquid from the brew bin into demi-johns.

The Demi-John Fermenting Stage
This first part of this is a bit of a faff - again, I do this outside as it can get messy. Your demi-johns need to be sterilised so fill them with water and pop in a single sterilising tablet and leave for an hour; then rinse with clean water so it doesn't smell of chlorine.

Now - here's the objective: you want to get as much liquid from the brew-bin into the demi-johns without all the cruddy fruit solids going in. I have a tried and trusted method which goes like this: first use a sieve to get as much fruit from the liquid as possible.


Next, a large funnel is placed in the demi-john, on top goes a nylon filter bag (used in jam making I believe) and on top of that does a narrow mesh kitchen sieve. The sieve catches most of the crap while the nylon bag gets the smaller particles. (Below - funnel, sieve and nylon bag used to filter the brew into jars).


I top each jar up to about half-way - rinsing the sieve and bag out as necessary when it gets clogged, then repeat so each demi-john gets a good even portion of the brew. I then top up to the neck of the jar with water if there isn't any brew left. Fit an airlock and bung (remember to put water in the airlock) and in an hour or so you will see bubbles passing through the airlock. The purpose of this stage is to remove the fruit solids and, to exclude the air from the yeast so the yeast stops putting energy into multiplying itself and concentrates on turning sugar into alcohol.


The hydrometer is a cheap but useful piece of kit which removes the guesswork from wine-making. Sugar and water are much denser than alcohol - if you add the hydrometer to your brew immediately you should see that it reads perhaps 50 or 80 on the scale. As the sugar gets turned into alcohol, the liquid becomes less dense and the hydrometer will sink further into the liquid. (You can pop the hydrometer straight into the neck of the demi-john - just make sure that the liquid is half way up the neck so you can fish the hydrometer out but not too far towards the top or the liquid will over flow when the hydrometer goes in). You are aiming to get the hydrometer to zero on the scale - if like me you like your wine on the dry side then let it sink just below the zero mark - if you like it a little sweeter then zero or a point above will be fine. (To get a proper reading make sure that the hydrometer isn't touching the glass jar - just push it into the middle of the neck so it's floating freely - it helps to put the jar on a table so you can see more easily).

Give the wine a week to ten days to ferment out so the hydrometer reads zero - this can be a shorter time in warm temperatures or longer in cooler temperatures. Check the jars regularly. Once at zero the fermentation process needs to be stopped.

Stopping Fermentation & Clearing
This is a simple process. Put your full demi-john jar on a table or kitchen counter and the an empty sterilised jar on the floor (this is why and extra is needed). Crush two Campden Tablets with a tea-spoon and put the powder in the bottom of the empty jar. The Campden Tablets will kill the yeast - the yeast's job is done. Use your siphon tube to carefully 'rack-off' the liquid from the full jar to empty one with the Campden Tablets - the aim is to leave behind as much of the crud lurking at the bottom of the top jar - most of the siphon tubes for wine-making have a plastic gizmo on the end that helps you do that. This takes a bit of practice but aim to leave the crud behind.

Do this for all of the five jars (cleaning one out each time to become your empty) and don't forget the crushed Campden Tablets - these are very important as you don't want the yeast fermenting. Once the jars have been 'racked off' - give them a few days in cooler temperatures and then you can either leave them to clear naturally or add wine finings. I always add finings (follow instructions on the packet) as I find that they will make the wine virtually clear in less than a week - this packet is good for all five jars. (I mix the sachets in a litre measuring jug with 200ml wine from each jar and pour the same amount back).


Once clear you can now 'rack off' into clean jars (leaving the crud behind) so you have a gallon of clear wine to bottle or store as is. You can store the cleared wine in a clean demi-john but remember to fit the air-lock containing water as you don't want the air to spoil your wine. Keep in a cool place. If you want to make red wines then the process is exactly the same but you will need to add fruits like elderberries, damsons and/or black berries. Personally I like to make a white wine with the sultanas but add a few handfuls of red fruits to produce a lovely rose wine.

(Pictured below is a demi-john of wine which has been cleared with wine finings - you can see in the picture that the finings have dragged all the suspended particles to the bottom of the jar forming a white layer. Siphon the wine off leaving this layer behind. The bottles contain finished wine. Home made wine should not be cloudy).



That's it - below two more pictures of rose and red wines fermenting and clearing. I hope this has been helpful - cheers ...




11 Jul - Winter Cabbage & Turnips

A spot of nice weather has allowed me to plant out some winter cabbage. I sowed a few Ormskirk Savoy last month in modules and the seed germinated well despite a 'sow-by date' of 2011. The young cabbage plants have been set out in the space vacated by my early broad beans. I had intended to use this space for my leeks but having doubled the size of my plot recently, I've been able to put the leeks on the new plot.


I've grown Ormskirk Savoy for a number of years and they are a great variety which will stand throughout the winter and have a wonderful iron flavour. Savoy's, with their deep green, crinkly leaves are somehow suited to the depths of winter. I turned the soil over and added some fertilizer before planting nine cabbages, though ideally I'd prefer the ground to be firmer for brassicas but as I've already dug up the broad beans it's looser than I'd prefer. I've firmed them in well and they usually do OK. Needless to say I've covered them with a frame and net to try and keep the butterflies and pigeons off.


Though this might appear a bit strange, it's almost mid-July and I've just sown my turnips. I'm not a great fan of root vegetables though I do enjoy them in thick stews when the cold weather arrives. So, I've timed my turnip sowing so hopefully they will coincide with my swedes and parsnips in the late autumn. I've sown turnip 'Snowball' once again as they usually do well for me.

The onions are swelling really well now; at the beginning of June I thought that it would be a poor crop but over the past month they have developed well and a good harvest is in prospect. I have found 'Sturon' sets do well on my patch and I tend to buy them year after year as they are a good all round onion. Hopefully they will put on a bit more weight in the next few weeks before they 'go over' in August.


If you are a regular reader you might remember that I sowed 'Blue Lake' climbing French beans earlier in the year but they germinated very poorly. Having decided to scrap that batch I bought the renown 'Cobra' instead and they are doing much better, already giving me a good handful of beans even before they are halfway up their canes. I look forward to a decent crop of French beans which I always consider to be more refined than runner beans.


Myself and my wife have been sorting through a few pound of freshly picked blackcurrants this evening and jam making has now commenced. Great stuff. I've also got a few pound of gooseberries too - wine making this weekend? I think so. See you ...


07 Jul - Pondering Poultry

I've been having a bit of a think over the past few weeks about having some chickens on the plot. I've been hankering for a few hens for years but have never had the space nor the courage to move on with the idea. As I've doubled the size of my plot and my allotment neighbour is an experienced poultry keeper; it seemed a good time to have a few hens. Like my old plot, my new plot has room for four 32 foot long by 6 foot wide beds though the end bed has a plum tree which shortens the length though this is mitigated by incorporating a side strip which makes it around 9 foot wide rather than six foot. (I use this narrow side strip on my old plot for a cold frame, rhubarb, some flowers and, this season, two pumpkin plants).

I originally thought that this shortened bed would be used for more fruit but this would be a bit of a waste as I already have one bed laid to fruit and it produces more than enough for us. So, I've decided to fence off this bed to keep a few hens on. I've put up a coop and some netting to keep the hens where I want them, it's just a matter of waiting for the hens. While I can go out and buy some (there are number of suppliers in my area), I've decided to take on some ex-battery hens in an attempt to give them a bit of a better life than their tiny cages. I've contacted the British Hen Welfare Trust (www.bhwt.org.uk) and have registered for four hens - it's just a matter of waiting now for a re-homing day near me - this could be a few weeks or up to a few months. I'll let you know how this progresses.


I was a little concerned about the brassicas a few weeks a go as they didn't seem to be developing as expected. However, despite the odd Brussels sprout plant being stunted by white fly (I've had to spray for this) the brassicas are now coming on well. Seven of the nine sprout plants are growing on and the majority of the cabbages are heartening up; I've ensured that they have had plenty of water and have given them a feed - this little boost has certainly helped. (Below - Primo II [aka Golden Acre] cabbage).


I've been hand pollinating the squashes at every opportunity. While squashes will do OK on their own I do tend to hand pollinate as well just to help the squashes set. I just pick an open male flower (on a long stalk), peel off the petals and rub the male anther with pollen onto the female stigma (the female has a tiny squash behind the flower and is on a shorter stalk). While hand pollination isn't always necessary, it does ensure that squashes develop well. If the tiny squash isn't pollinated it turns yellow and drops from the plant so as not to waste the plant's energy. (Below - female squash flower with immature fruit).


My old plastic bottle funnel system (see monthly video for June) used to target watering and feed to the squashes is really coming into its own now. It's surprising how quickly the squash plants develop and it can be very difficult to see where the plants are anchored into the ground. The funnel end is buried when the plant is put in so, all water and liquid feed goes straight to the roots.

The new plot is still half covered with plastic, a bed at one end is being used, the bed at the other end is now fenced off for the arrival of chickens but the two central beds are covered. I'll start work on these in the autumn when the grass has largely been killed - it's so much easier to deal with grass free ground rather than stripping turf off. All seems to be ticking along - I picked over 3lb of gooseberries yesterday afternoon and nearly the same weight of blackcurrants. The Sturon onions are swelling nicely and both the carrots and parsnips have put on loads of top growth. The runner beans and climbing french beans have raced up the canes - the runner beans have really began to fill out and I've even had a handful of runner beans - first week of July, that's early for me. That's it - see you soon.



06 Jul - Leeks In Plus A Quick Round Up

Well it's the first week of July; the weather remains relatively warm and humid though this week we've had some heavy rain showers. I'm not complaining about the rain though, after nearly three weeks of hot dry weather the plot needed a good soaking.

I've a done a bit of work on the new half of my allotment, planting up one 6ft by 32ft bed with some bits and pieces I had left over or, I had intended to put in the old half of the plot. This was done over the last fortnight of June. There is a courgette (I've 5 now, too many really but I'm taking them small rather than the usual marrow size they often become), a few Sweet Dumpling and Butternut squashes I had left from the old plot; a second crop of broad beans (Bunyard's Exhibition) which I quickly raised in deep root trainers; a row of Early Nantes carrots (I had some old seed left over) and, my Musselburgh leeks which were sown in February and have been raised in a large tray (see Feb 12th & 18th 2014 posts).


Under the frame and enviromesh are the leeks. When I first took over my plot in 2007, leek was a staple winter crop on the site, easy to grow without any fuss or special treatment. However, by 2010 leeks were being decimated in the autumn by some bug which demolished the centres of the plants and turned them to smelly mush. I did a bit of research and decided it was the leek moth. According to the RHS at the time it was just a problem on the south coast but reading around various online forums it was clear that the pest had already moved north. I covered my leeks with enviromesh in 2011 and as a result got the only crop of leeks on site that winter. Since then other plot holders have done the same and leek crops are growing here once again though throughout September careful checks need to be made on the plants. (Below - dibbing leeks in).


Crops are being picked nearly everyday now. Soft fruit like strawberries, gooseberries, blackcurrants and raspberries have been collected by the tub full; the strawberries especially have been prolific this year with bumper crops - so much so everyone is almost sick of them. I've dug up all my garlic despite small bulbs due to allium rust, still they will be fine for cooking with. Courgettes are being picked every other day; lettuce has peaked so I'm planting more; salad onions are tasty; the winter squashes are beginning to form on the vines; I've picked and frozen a few pounds of Sutton broad beans - I've cleared the plants and will use the area to plant out some winter cabbage this month; and I've already had a handful of runner beans. (Below - butternut squash forming and the reliable courgettes).




I've moved my compost bins to the other end of my now full plot. This is the 'shed end' and has now become the main focus of my plot. The shed itself isn't in bad condition when I took it over but I did give it a coat of wood preservative. Everything is growing well, the only real failure so far has been the kohl rabi which got pecked into submission by pigeons then were finished off by slugs. That's it - more news about the plot coming in the next few days.