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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from
pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you see them you should grab them while they are available. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 5:50:30 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> > I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from > pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He > suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I > do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I > heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper > flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the > cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. > > It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you > see them you should grab them while they are available. > Why are they called 'scapes'? |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
"Dave Smith" > wrote in message ... >I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I do >asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I heated up >some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper flakes, some >chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the cooked pasta to the >sauteed veggies. > > It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you see > them you should grab them while they are available. I've heard of them. Gardener wanted lentils and Pad Thai. Not sure what I'll have. Don't have much of an appetite. Maybe some bean tacos. Winco had the Taco Bell brand on sale for 68 cents. I can stuff them with small red beans and cheese. Sounds good! |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 6/26/2019 7:13 PM, Julie Bove wrote:
> > "Dave Smith" > wrote in message > ... >> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >> pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. >> He suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the >> way I do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghettiÂ* and while it was >> cooking I heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of >> hot pepper flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I >> added the cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. >> >> It was darned good.Â* Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if >> you see them you should grab them while they are available. > > I've heard of them. Gardener wanted lentils and Pad Thai. Not sure > what I'll have. Don't have much of an appetite. Maybe some bean tacos. > Winco had the Taco Bell brand on sale for 68 cents. I can stuff them > with small red beans and cheese. > Sounds good! Â* I'm having pork loin steak with a baked potato and some southwestern-style (canned) pinto beans . Mrs. doesn't get home until 10 or so , so I'm on my own tonight . I could eat dark chocolate and raisins if I wanted ... but that would ruin the taste of my Kentucky Straight Sour Mash Bourbon Whiskey . <burp> -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 17:11:15 -0700 (PDT), "
> wrote: >On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 5:50:30 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote: >> >> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >> pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >> suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I >> do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I >> heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper >> flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the >> cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. >> >> It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you >> see them you should grab them while they are available. >> >Why are they called 'scapes'? Indeed. Landscapes, cityscapes and scapegoats, but garlic scapes? Maybe they're garlic shoots. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
> wrote in message ... > On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 5:50:30 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote: >> >> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >> pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >> suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I >> do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I >> heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper >> flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the >> cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. >> >> It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you >> see them you should grab them while they are available. >> > Why are they called 'scapes'? https://www.dictionary.com/browse/scape |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
"Bruce" > wrote in message ... > On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 17:11:15 -0700 (PDT), " > > wrote: > >>On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 5:50:30 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote: >>> >>> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >>> pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >>> suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I >>> do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I >>> heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper >>> flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the >>> cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. >>> >>> It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you >>> see them you should grab them while they are available. >>> >>Why are they called 'scapes'? > > Indeed. Landscapes, cityscapes and scapegoats, but garlic scapes? > Maybe they're garlic shoots. They are. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 6:50:30 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from > pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He > suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I > do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I > heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper > flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the > cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. > > It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you > see them you should grab them while they are available. I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. Perhaps next year I'll do it differently. Did yours come with flower buds attached? If so, in what state of development were they? Cindy Hamilton |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
Dave Smith wrote:
> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from > pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He > suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I > do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I > heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper > flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the > cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. > > It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you > see them you should grab them while they are available. they are quite easy to grow and harvest. along with green garlic they are one of the things that make gardening worth it. mine are just now showing up on the stalks. i have been leaving mine alone the past few years because i need a supply of scapes to keep giving away. people always seem to want garlic for planting and this garlic is pretty strong and has been in our area for quite a long time so it survives our cold winters. i used to grow several hundred garlic plants a year, but downsized a few years ago so i'm now only growing a few dozen. the variety is being picked up by a farm a bit south of us so they will be distributing it eventually if it works out for them - i hope it does as it is a good variety and nobody should be without garlic. in the middle of winter when things are finally calming down i usually take whatever garlic is starting to sprout that i want to keep for cooking and grind it up, drench it with lemon juice, pack it into small jars and freeze it. this will keep for some time and makes a good gift to people who like garlic and cooking. if you don't like lemon or want variety you can use any acidifier (lime, orange, vinegar, etc.) in this. songbird |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
Cindy Hamilton wrote:
.... > Did yours come with flower buds attached? If so, in what state of > development were they? before they get far along - while still tender. once they start opening up and developing then they can have harder woodier parts that aren't going to get tender when cooked. you can then take the bulbules and use them just like you would use a garlic clove. the garlic i grow gets bulbules as large as many small cloves of garlic (small marble size) and they are a good way to increase the stock of planting if needed (i used a lot of them for growing slender stalks to be used as green garlic). songbird |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Wednesday, June 26, 2019 at 6:50:30 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote: >> I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >> pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >> suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I >> do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I >> heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper >> flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the >> cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. >> >> It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you >> see them you should grab them while they are available. > > I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. > Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. > That made me laugh, Cindy! Jill > Perhaps next year I'll do it differently. > > Did yours come with flower buds attached? If so, in what state of > development were they? > > Cindy Hamilton > |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote:
> > On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > > > I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. > > Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. > > > That made me laugh, Cindy! > > Jill > She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 12:40:08 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: > > > > On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > > > > > I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. > > > Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. > > > > > That made me laugh, Cindy! > > > > Jill > > > She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! A night or two ago there was a rabbit munching in the area where the chopped-up scapes ended up. I wonder what rabbits use for breath mints. Oh, wait. I've got some spearmint growing in a pot on the patio. I'll have to check it. Cindy Hamilton |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 6/27/2019 12:46 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 12:40:08 PM UTC-4, wrote: >> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: >>> >>> On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >>>> >>>> I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. >>>> Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. >>>> >>> That made me laugh, Cindy! >>> >>> Jill >>> >> She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! > > A night or two ago there was a rabbit munching in the area > where the chopped-up scapes ended up. I wonder what rabbits > use for breath mints. > > Oh, wait. I've got some spearmint growing in a pot on the patio. > I'll have to check it. > > Cindy Hamilton > Rabbits with garlic breath, LOL. Hopefully they like spearmint. Eating garlic scapes sounds a lot like an attempt at a trendy food thing. Dave said his pickleball friend is "an organic garlic farmer". Okaaay. I'm glad they tasted similar to asparagus, that's good. I can't see garlic scapes really becoming a thing. You could boost the sales image by not cutting and running over your scapes with a lawnmower. If you do wind up trimming and cooking them, please report back. Jill |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 2019-06-27 1:02 p.m., jmcquown wrote:
> On 6/27/2019 12:40 PM, wrote: >> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: >>> >>> On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >>>> >>>> I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. >>>> Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. >>>> >>> That made me laugh, Cindy! >>> >>> Jill >>> >> She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! >> > LOLÂ* She did say she'd maybe re-think it next time.Â* To me, garlic > scapes sounds like a way for "organic" farmers (Dave did say his > pickleball friend was an organic farmer) to sell what would normally be > considered trimmings.Â* It's great that they find a way to sell those and > know they can be used in recipes.Â* Garlic scapes are not something I'd > run into at any local market.Â* Sounds to me like something "trendy". I am sure that anyone selling farm produce would want to market any part of a plant that he can profit on. The scapes have to be removed so that the bulbs will produce more cloves. I had not heard of them before but I did a little research and there are recipes for them. Trendy or not, you might want to check the price and see if they are worth trying. They were pretty darned good. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Thu, 27 Jun 2019 09:46:33 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
> wrote: >On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 12:40:08 PM UTC-4, wrote: >> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: >> > >> > On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> > > >> > > I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. >> > > Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. >> > > >> > That made me laugh, Cindy! >> > >> > Jill >> > >> She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! > >A night or two ago there was a rabbit munching in the area >where the chopped-up scapes ended up. I wonder what rabbits >use for breath mints. > >Oh, wait. I've got some spearmint growing in a pot on the patio. >I'll have to check it. > >Cindy Hamilton Critters don't eat garlic, onions, or daffodils... they don't eat mint either. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 6/27/2019 1:54 PM, Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2019-06-27 1:02 p.m., jmcquown wrote: >> On 6/27/2019 12:40 PM, wrote: >>> On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: >>>> >>>> On 6/27/2019 6:03 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I saw them, cut them off my garlic plants and threw them in the yard. >>>>> Then I ran over them with my lawn mower. >>>>> >>>> That made me laugh, Cindy! >>>> >>>> Jill >>>> >>> She wanted to make sure they were really destroyed and dead! >>> >> LOLÂ* She did say she'd maybe re-think it next time.Â* To me, garlic >> scapes sounds like a way for "organic" farmers (Dave did say his >> pickleball friend was an organic farmer) to sell what would normally >> be considered trimmings.Â* It's great that they find a way to sell >> those and know they can be used in recipes.Â* Garlic scapes are not >> something I'd run into at any local market.Â* Sounds to me like >> something "trendy". > > I am sure that anyone selling farm produce would want to market any part > of a plant that he can profit on.Â* The scapes have to be removed so that > the bulbs will produce more cloves. I had not heard of them before but I > did a little research and there are recipes for them.Â* Trendy or not, > you might want to check the price and see if they are worth trying. They > were pretty darned good. > I appreciate the information. But I can tell you for sure I will not see garlic scapes in the produce aisle or at farm stands. They'd be as rare as fiddleheads down here. Jill |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
Dave Smith wrote:
.... > I am sure that anyone selling farm produce would want to market any part > of a plant that he can profit on. The scapes have to be removed so that > the bulbs will produce more cloves. false on that last bit. it has a slight impact on the size of cloves, but their being produced up top doesn't stop anything from happening down below. i wish my camera weren't broken this season but the cloves i tend to get are pretty large because of starting with the largest cloves for the previous fall's planting. > I had not heard of them before but I > did a little research and there are recipes for them. Trendy or not, > you might want to check the price and see if they are worth trying. > They were pretty darned good. songbird |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On 2019-06-27 2:31 p.m., jmcquown wrote:
> I appreciate the information.Â* But I can tell you for sure I will not > see garlic scapes in the produce aisle or at farm stands.Â* They'd be as > rare as fiddleheads down here. This is the first time I ever heard of them. The guy usually gives us a pint jar of garlic powder and a small bag of garlic. When we left the other day and he said he had something for us I thought be meant the same as usual. I don't remember ever seeing them in a store anywhere and I had never heard of anyone cooking them. After trying them, I have to wonder why. |
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Dinner tonight... garlic scapes
On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 18:53:17 -0400, Dave Smith
> wrote: >I never heard of these things until yesterday. A friend of mine from >pickleball is an organic garlic farmer and he gave me a bag of them. He >suggested that they are good sauteed in olive oil. I did them the way I >do asparagus. I cooked up some spaghetti and while it was cooking I >heated up some olive oil in a frying pan, added a pinch of hot pepper >flakes, some chopped red pepper and then chopped scapes. I added the >cooked pasta to the sauteed veggies. > >It was darned good. Garlic scapes have a very short season, so if you >see them you should grab them while they are available. For many years we grew a lot of garlic, as many as 20 different varieties in four to six 50 foot rows. Old age takes its toll and we've cut back to only two rows this year. However, after trying several recipes, including pickling with and without dill, both my wife and I agree that the best use for garlic scapes is in the compost pile. http://i66.tinypic.com/o73xn6.jpg Ross. |
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