I'm not one for fatties -

Started by tim, October 21, 2006, 17:08:31

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tim

Prefer them long & lean!!

tim


saddad

Good looking Leek Tim, what variety?
8)

Georgie

Nice looking Leek, Tim.  How do you keep 'em so clean?   ;)

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

tim

Dad - Musselburgh - was given them this year.

Georgie - that's with the outside skin off.

And they are in a newly dug pasture bed to avoid the dreaded ROT - 12" deep.

Hyacinth

Lovely Tim! Bet mine would be looking like that if I'd taken them out of their pot and planted them out earlier :-[  I'm growing Musselburgh too, think I planted out about 100. I like leeks :D

MattyJC

Thats a cracking leak Tim, did you manage to avoid any rust on them? My Musselburgh have a fair bit on the leaves...although they still taste great!

Regards

Matt

grawrc

Lovely looking leek Tim. I prefer them not to big and fat as well. I love them braised with a bit of butter and lemon. Just as good cold as hot!

I've got some little Musselburgh in and rather bigger and almost ready to eat Bandit which are looking very good. I took my camera along today but didn't get a chance to take any photos. The skies opened and we got soaked to the skin. maybe tomorrow.

tim

Matt - the outer skin was showing signs of something - don't know what.

MrsKP

am i supposed to be having trouble pulling my Musselburgh's out ?

I start tugging gently, then wiggling and waggling around, tug a bit harder and then a bit harder still and out it pops, but usually snapped at the roots.

i've still got half a dozen or so still in, outer skins look a bit manky, for want of a better word, but always lovely once the first layer or two is off.

There's something happening every day  @ http://kaypeesplot.blogspot.com/ & http://kaypeeslottie.blogspot.com/

grawrc

I always find them tricky KP if I've planted them deep (to get big white bits), but I'm only wee! ;)

MrsKP

i suppose i should be grateful that i've only lost roots, after all i'm not showing, i'm eating  ;D
There's something happening every day  @ http://kaypeesplot.blogspot.com/ & http://kaypeeslottie.blogspot.com/

manicscousers

we had a broken fork so ray cut it down for leeks, it now has 2 prongs, just the thing

Robert_Brenchley

I don't tug mine; I lever gently with a fork. That's my usual technique for getting anything which is either deep-rooted, or planted very deep, and the only time it fails is with extreme cases like a big parsnip. Then I employ the nuclear option; the spade. It's almost the only thing I use it for these days.

supersprout

That is a beaut tim. Kaypee, I learned last year that leeks are supposed to be dug, not pulled :-[
Old habits die hard though ;)

tim

Positively DIG!!

And start well out & deep - nothing more infuriating than scarring a thing of beauty like that.

MattyJC

I shall post a picture of my rusty leaks later Tim, if I get the chance to pop up lottie. I have a feeling the have something else too, we can compare!

regards

Matt

bellebouche

That's splendid!

I'm several months off having anything close to that!


MrsKP

my leeks are in a very large pot so not suitable for digging, so i shall attack them with a hand fork.  thanks for the tips !
There's something happening every day  @ http://kaypeesplot.blogspot.com/ & http://kaypeeslottie.blogspot.com/

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