Lettuce, spinach, and corn salad greens for salad. Thinned the window basil and used that on pizza.


From Forest to Skillet: Edible and Native Plants in the Cross Timbers of Oklahoma. 837 yard species and counting!
Lettuce, spinach, and corn salad greens for salad. Thinned the window basil and used that on pizza.
The chef made amazing venison enchiladas tonight.
Wes cooked up a very nice dinner with garden harvest storage and some ground venison courtesy of Paula!
The chef served a pork and tofu soup this evening with rice.
I went out to get the kohlrabi and cabbage for Wes and uncovered some more areas.
Wes requested rosemary to season dinner this evening.
Gardening with Prairie Plants was SO BEAUTIFUL. Mom gave it to me a few weeks ago and it was just filled with magnificent pictures of prairies and prairie gardens throughout the Great Plains. I really also liked how it paid attention to the different regions (wetter and drier, north and south), so it has lots of good info on plants native to each region. It mentioned some medicinal and edible uses of native plants too though it refers to other more complete sources. Did I mention the prairie photos? Definitely added to the favorite references spreadsheet.
Grow Cook Eat by Willi Galloway had a lot of useful tidbits I hadn’t found elsewhere, such as soil temperatures for germinating (the Johnny’s seed catalog seems to have air temperature? or so I assume, as it’s not specified) and some sections on mustard greens and bok choy. I have added it to my spreadsheet of useful books.
For those interested in cooking (aka not me anymore), it also had a lot of recipes and talked about eating parts of plants that aren’t usually discussed, like radish seed pods and various flowers of vegetables.
Great progress has been made.