Rosella! How to plant, harvest and use them.

Rosella’s are one of the plants that has grown consistently well for us here on our little piece of paradise.  They’re quite low maintenance and we haven’t had any problems with pests.

Rosella is a type of hibiscus that grows in tropical and subtropical regions. The rosella fruit is actually the protective calyx around the seed pod which is rich in vitamin C and antioxidants. So far, we’ve made jams, cordials, teas and sauces with them. Apparently, you can even add the flowers to salads to eat, you can stir-fry the leaves, and roast and dry the seedpods to grind and make flour with. We haven’t tried those yet, but maybe next season.

We plant our rosella seedlings in September, or as soon as the risk of frost has passed, in well-draining and fertilized soil, topped with sugarcane mulch.  Seedlings are spaced about 1 metre apart.  We’ll water them regularly when they are young or if we are going through a dry spell, but once they get going, they don’t need much maintenance at all.  Rosella’s grow abundantly around February to March, and it seems the more you pick the more they keep producing.

When the rosella’s turn deep red and look nice and plump, they’re ready to harvest.  Just snip them off at the bottom of the calyx. (We’ll leave a few rosellas on the plant to mature into seed pods for next year’s planting.)

An apple corer deseeds the rosella beautifully, but if you don’t have one, just pick the calyx off around the seed pod. I like dehydrating them in one piece, that way I can put a couple of whole rosellas in my tea and they’re easy to just spoon out when ready.

Rosella Jam

Rosella Jam is so easy to make. You only need 3 ingredients. Rosellas, sugar or honey, and water. The only measurement we go by is whatever the weight of the cooked rosellas are, use the same weight of sugar or honey. The seedpods contain pectin which thickens the jam. You don’t actually eat the seedpods, they are just used to thicken the jam.

Steps:

  1. Separate the seedpods from the calyces and wash them separately.
  2. Put the seedpods in a pot. Fill with just enough water to cover the seedpods. Bring to a boil and then simmer for about 20 minutes.
  3. Once the seedpods have cooked, strain the juice into another pot and discard the seedpods. This is the juice you will make the jam with. It contains the pectin from the seeds which will thicken your jam.
  4. Add the rosella calyces to the juice and cook for another 20 minutes, stirring regularly.
  5. Once the rosellas are cooked, they can be blended if you want a smooth jam, or you can leave them if you like the texture. At this point pour the jam into a bowl and weigh the mixture and return to the pot.
  6. Whatever weight your mixture is, add the same weight of sugar or honey to the mixture and cook for about another 20 minutes or until the mixture is the right consistency. (One way to test is to put a plate in the freezer beforehand. Drop a blob of jam onto the frozen plate. If the jam sets firm, and you can tip the plate sideways without the jam running off the plate, it’s good to go!)
  7. While the jam is cooking it’s time to sterilize your jars. Wash them well with detergent and warm water, then place them in the oven at 120 degrees celcius for 10 minutes. Boil some water and sit the lids in the boiled water for 5 minutes, then drain.
  8. Once your jam and jars are ready, pour the jam into the jars, let them cool a bit and put the lids on.

If you accidentally add too much water like I did the first time, no worries, you can make it into a cordial for drinks, or a syrup to add to desserts.

Here are some ways to eat your rosella jam!

Garden Update!

It’s been a while since we’ve updated the blog. Not that we’ve had nothing to blog about, it’s just that we’ve been so busy with so many projects, and blogging is quite time consuming.

Now that we’ve been on our property for over 5 years, we’ve learnt quite a bit. We’re finding out what naturally grows well for us here in the Clarence Valley and what techniques and methods we need to use to help the plants that don’t grow so naturally here. We’ve failed a lot of plants, but we’ve had a lot more successes. We’re learning how the weather works to and against our advantage, and the possible natural disasters that we need to be prepared for. We’re discovering what types of pests keep coming around and which plants are more likely to be ravaged by them. There is so much to learn but we love it! We will be forever learning here on the farm!

Here’s Koro and Jojo checking out the cherry guavas and avocados in the food forest.

Our best growing plants here in the Clarence Valley have been garlic, turmeric, ginger and rosella. They’ve been fairly low maintenance and we haven’t had problems with pests. We harvest and use these extensively which I will post about in the coming days…so stay tuned! Sugarcane and Arrowroot grow well here as well, which we use as wind breaks and shade for summer. They also make good chop and drop plants (chopping down to use as mulch).

One of our favorite fruits that we’ve been struggling to grow here is a mango tree. We had one growing really well on the Gold Coast which we planted and did nothing else to it and it thrived. But here in our frosty climate with clay soil and a few years of either drought or floods we’ve struggled with them. We’ve killed quite a few – not intentionally of course, but we do have a couple that are looking really good at the moment in the food forest. Hopefully they’ll survive this winter and will keep flourishing!!!

We’ve had good seasons and bad seasons of potatos, tomatos and the usual basics. We love corn but have to fight the critters before they beat us to them. We’ve had a lot of bandicoots (a marsupial that looks like a large rat) this year. They love our garden too! Our gardens are forever changing, as are our challenges. Bring it on we say!!!

Here’s just a few of the goodies we have growing in our gardens. I will endeavor to post more details as we learn how to grow, harvest, and use them!

The Food Forest

It’s been a while since we last updated…and there’s a lot to update on. We’ll start with the food forest. In winter last year we were lucky enough to obtain over 100 fruit and nut trees from a friends farm. These included different varieties of pecans, almonds, mangos, peaches, plums, cherries, finger limes, cherry guavas, figs and more.

Unloading a truck full of fruit and nut trees

We created the food forest on the patch that we had previously built up as garlic beds and then pig pens. The pigs did a great job of digging up the weeds and grass and fertilizing the area. Here’s the transformation from a dirt patch to the food forest! Most of the trees were bare rooted (dormant in winter and have no leaves) so it looked like we were just planting twigs. But as spring and summer hit and the leaves grew, our food forest started taking shape.

Pumpkins, watermelons and zuchinni started popping up everywhere thanks to the pigs dropping seeds all over the place.

The peaches surprised us with some early fruit. We certainly weren’t expecting any fruit this summer so it was pretty exciting. We can’t wait to see what they produce over the next few years.

Peaches Yum!

Perfect time for gardening

With all the isolation time we’ve had over the last couple of months and the weather turning cooler, it’s been the perfect time to get out in the garden.  We’ve been as busy as ever cleaning up, weeding, preparing garden beds and planting.

Here’s some of the goodies we managed to harvest this year despite the drought.

Corn is always a winner with the kids!

We’re just eating the last of our water melons now, but we also had rockmelons, honey dew and candy melons

Who knew peanuts grow underground?  I watched a video of a lady harvesting peanuts so I thought we’d give it a try.  I bought some raw peanuts from a health shop and we planted them.  They came out just as peanuts should…we’ll definitely grow heaps more next year!

Our turmeric, ginger, lemon grass and arrowroot are all multiplying well.  They will die down over winter but will bounce back when spring comes.

Karl’s well mulched pumpkin patch and cassava plants.  You eat the roots of the cassava, so Karl’s just checking them to see if they’re ready or not.  On the left is the start of our sugarcane plantation…it’s only 1 row at the moment.

When you don’t mulch your garden it ends up full of weeds.  This was the watermelon patch that didn’t get mulched…but thats OK we bought in Sydney the goat to tidy this up for us.  He’ll munch it down in no time!  If we had put in that extra time mulching around the watermelon seedlings it would have saved the hassle of weeds later (lesson learnt!)

goat

Here’s a few more things we managed to keep alive over the drought period.  Tomatoes, strawberries, eggplant, capsicum and chillies

I didn’t know anything about rosellas until Karl pointed out that they’re edible.  They are packed full of nutrients and are usually made into jam, but we’ve been using them in a tea with lemongrass and ginger…this is our Covid immune booster tea!…and this is why:

Nutritional value:  Rosella flowers contain 260-280 mg of vitamin C, vitamin D, B1 and B2 in each 100 grams.  Rosella tea itself contains very high calcium, approximately 486 mg per 100 grams.  It also contains Magnesium, Omega 3, Vitamin A, Iron, Potassium, Beta Carotene and Essential Acids.  In traditional medicine, rosella is known to increase stamina and endurance, help with detoxification (neutralizing poison) as well as lowering blood pressure, blood sugar levels, uric acid and cholesterol in the body.  Helps to treat a cough, sore throat and canker sores, yet can also soothe a migraine. https://organicmotion.com.au/rosella/

Our garlic went well this year and we have a new season of garlic all planted and happily growing.

These are our loofah plants.  We’re just waiting for them to turn yellow so we can pick them.  They will be our body scrubs…I’ll put up a post when they’re ready!

We’re getting our winter gardens ready now – peas, beans, lettuces, kale, cauliflower, broccoli etc.  Yep we’re as busy as ever.  This isolation time has actually been a lovely time for us.  When we were going through the drought and fires we were wondering whether we made the right choice moving out here…but at times like this we are so glad we took this opportunity and are counting our many blessings! Keep safe and healthy everyone!!!

New Life on the Farm

Even amongst the drought, fires and smoke, life still goes on and we’ve been blessed with some new little ducklings.  Our ducks decided to make their nests in the garlic patch this year.  We’ve just started harvesting the garlic so we’ve moved these littles ducklings into the garden patch…this should be a little duck heaven for them.  Hopefully they’ll eat all the slugs, aphids and grasshoppers!

Ducklings

Indian Runner Ducks

 

We were also blessed with over 20mms of rain over the weekend and after just a couple of days we started seeing a tinge of green growing back in the grass…it’s such a lovely sight.  Hopefully we’ll continue to get some more rain over summer.  Here’s a picture of the green tinge coming back in fields, and the before and after photos.

 

We’ve still been managing to water the gardens throughout the drought and when you see things blooming it makes it all worth while.  I’ve never seen “all yellow” sunflowers before…that was a surprise.  It’s a race with the bugs to get to the strawberries first.  The apricot tree is producing even though the leaves are looking a bit wilted.  The kale is hanging in there despite the hot weather.  We have quite a few baby feijoa trees growing which are still standing strong (can’t wait to have feijoas!!).

 

 

Happy Birthday Karl!

It’s Karl’s birthday today… What does Karl do on his birthday?  He reaps the rewards of his hard work!

Our first time growing onions and they look pretty good to me.  We just started picking the zucchini’s last week.  If you don’t keep picking them daily they quickly turn into giants…like the ones Karl’s holding on the left.  It looks like we’ll be having zucchini birthday cake to celebrate (I’ll update the post with the cake later).  Our first cucumbers of the season are growing quick too.  The vine has hardly even grown and it’s producing already.

What Karl really would’ve loved for his birthday would have been rain (yep seriously).  The last 2 days were forecast for rain and we got absolutely NOTHING.  We keep track of rain on our calendar now since it’s been a rare event over the last year and a half. The last rain we had was 11mm 3 weeks ago.  We were happy with that but we are going to need a lot more than that to moisten this dry parched land and to get our creek flowing again.  We’re lucky we have a big dam we can still draw water out of for the gardens…but it’s getting pretty low.

Karl’s created all these garden beds to fill with all sorts of goodness and he’s just waiting for some good rain to soak it all…lets hope we get some so I can post an update with all these beds filled and flourishing.

So here’s the zucchini cake update…it was so moist and delicious even Tama loved it (and Tama doesn’t usually eat veges)!

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Here’s where I found the recipe if you’re interested https://www.handletheheat.com/easy-chocolate-zucchini-cake/

 

Got to love Spring time…

Spring is by far the best season of the year here in the Clarence Valley.  Summers are stinking hot, the cold winters are a nice change but the heavy frost limits what we can grow. Autumn is pretty nice, but spring is just the best!

Apricot Tree

Blossoms popping on the Apricot Tree

Baby Grapes

A baby bunch of grapes starting to grow

We didn’t even plant this pea plant, it just came up from last seasons dropped peas. The asparagus are shooting through.  We have to pick them daily to keep up with them.

Garlic

This years garlic crop

We have to give credit to Karl for the gardens.  He’s the main man around the farm.  He’s currently studying horticulture and gets to come home and put everything that he learns into practice.  From planting, to propagating, pruning, reviving, harvesting, cooking…he does it all!!! So if he’s not in the garden or tending to his animals, you might find him in his nursery with all his seedlings and precious plants.

Garlic anyone?

Our first big experiment was growing garlic. It’s garlic growing country here in Grafton so we grew heaps of it.

First step was creating the garden beds.  We don’t have any machinery yet so we dug out the grass and flipped it over on itself to create mounds and then covered them with compost.  A truck load of compost doesn’t look like much on a big back yard

 

Karl got a heap of garlic seed from a farmer down the road.  For those that don’t know – a garlic seed is simply a clove of garlic.  Here’s Karl and the kids sorting out the seed into big, medium and small seed piles.  You plant the big ones so they grow big garlic bulbs and you eat the smaller ones.  This is Russian or Elephant garlic.  They grow huge bulbs and are quite mild.
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Watching the garlic grow

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We harvested them about 6 months later and enlisted our older kids friends to come and help.  They just so happened to come camping at our place at the right time.  Thanks you guys!!!

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After harvesting you need to dry them out.  Karl learnt the technique of plaiting bunches of garlic from youtube…and we ended up with a years supply of garlic for our family, friends and neighbours!!! We’ve replanted garlic for this season and we still have a heap of garlic in the shed…anyone want some?