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July 16, 2011 at 9:15 PM #711342July 16, 2011 at 9:57 PM #710989mike92104Participant
[quote=sdrealtor]FWIW here is a great way to eat figs. Cut them in half and grill them with the inside down until well cooked. Pour a little balsamic vinegar on them and top with goat cheese. Let them sit for a couple minutes so the goat cheese melts a litle and Enjoy![/quote]
I’ll have to try that. we harvested the first round of our figs and froze them with the intention of making Jam later. The second round should be ready in a couple months.
July 16, 2011 at 9:57 PM #710138mike92104Participant[quote=sdrealtor]FWIW here is a great way to eat figs. Cut them in half and grill them with the inside down until well cooked. Pour a little balsamic vinegar on them and top with goat cheese. Let them sit for a couple minutes so the goat cheese melts a litle and Enjoy![/quote]
I’ll have to try that. we harvested the first round of our figs and froze them with the intention of making Jam later. The second round should be ready in a couple months.
July 16, 2011 at 9:57 PM #710835mike92104Participant[quote=sdrealtor]FWIW here is a great way to eat figs. Cut them in half and grill them with the inside down until well cooked. Pour a little balsamic vinegar on them and top with goat cheese. Let them sit for a couple minutes so the goat cheese melts a litle and Enjoy![/quote]
I’ll have to try that. we harvested the first round of our figs and froze them with the intention of making Jam later. The second round should be ready in a couple months.
July 16, 2011 at 9:57 PM #710236mike92104Participant[quote=sdrealtor]FWIW here is a great way to eat figs. Cut them in half and grill them with the inside down until well cooked. Pour a little balsamic vinegar on them and top with goat cheese. Let them sit for a couple minutes so the goat cheese melts a litle and Enjoy![/quote]
I’ll have to try that. we harvested the first round of our figs and froze them with the intention of making Jam later. The second round should be ready in a couple months.
July 16, 2011 at 9:57 PM #711347mike92104Participant[quote=sdrealtor]FWIW here is a great way to eat figs. Cut them in half and grill them with the inside down until well cooked. Pour a little balsamic vinegar on them and top with goat cheese. Let them sit for a couple minutes so the goat cheese melts a litle and Enjoy![/quote]
I’ll have to try that. we harvested the first round of our figs and froze them with the intention of making Jam later. The second round should be ready in a couple months.
July 16, 2011 at 10:19 PM #710999AecetiaParticipant[quote=briansd1]The lawn are a legacy of immigrants moving West and bringing their idea of the prairie house to California. Add to that the idea the tropical plants represent resorts and luxury (as if you are in Hawaii or some tropical resort).[/quote]
“Lawns as we now know them were an aristocratic custom developed in Jacobean Britain, which have since spread all over the industrialized world. For the European aristocracy, seeding and maintaining a lawn was a version of conspicuous consumption.”
http://www.farmscapegardens.com/blog/105July 16, 2011 at 10:19 PM #710148AecetiaParticipant[quote=briansd1]The lawn are a legacy of immigrants moving West and bringing their idea of the prairie house to California. Add to that the idea the tropical plants represent resorts and luxury (as if you are in Hawaii or some tropical resort).[/quote]
“Lawns as we now know them were an aristocratic custom developed in Jacobean Britain, which have since spread all over the industrialized world. For the European aristocracy, seeding and maintaining a lawn was a version of conspicuous consumption.”
http://www.farmscapegardens.com/blog/105July 16, 2011 at 10:19 PM #710845AecetiaParticipant[quote=briansd1]The lawn are a legacy of immigrants moving West and bringing their idea of the prairie house to California. Add to that the idea the tropical plants represent resorts and luxury (as if you are in Hawaii or some tropical resort).[/quote]
“Lawns as we now know them were an aristocratic custom developed in Jacobean Britain, which have since spread all over the industrialized world. For the European aristocracy, seeding and maintaining a lawn was a version of conspicuous consumption.”
http://www.farmscapegardens.com/blog/105July 16, 2011 at 10:19 PM #710246AecetiaParticipant[quote=briansd1]The lawn are a legacy of immigrants moving West and bringing their idea of the prairie house to California. Add to that the idea the tropical plants represent resorts and luxury (as if you are in Hawaii or some tropical resort).[/quote]
“Lawns as we now know them were an aristocratic custom developed in Jacobean Britain, which have since spread all over the industrialized world. For the European aristocracy, seeding and maintaining a lawn was a version of conspicuous consumption.”
http://www.farmscapegardens.com/blog/105July 16, 2011 at 10:19 PM #711357AecetiaParticipant[quote=briansd1]The lawn are a legacy of immigrants moving West and bringing their idea of the prairie house to California. Add to that the idea the tropical plants represent resorts and luxury (as if you are in Hawaii or some tropical resort).[/quote]
“Lawns as we now know them were an aristocratic custom developed in Jacobean Britain, which have since spread all over the industrialized world. For the European aristocracy, seeding and maintaining a lawn was a version of conspicuous consumption.”
http://www.farmscapegardens.com/blog/105 -
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