tel: 512 280-1192                               Thursday, March 17, 2016
 
Nursery Notes: roses and citrus rule right now. We have over
50 varieties of roses: climbers, hybrid teas and tall, elegant grand-
ifloras. . . you name it! Don Juan, climbing blaze (red), climbing
American (coral), golden showers (yellow) Peggy Martin (Katrina
survivor). 5 gal. for $29.99.  (Check out David Sargert's amazing
rose photos here) Citrus: Meyers lemons, arctic and orange frost
satsumas, rio red grapefruit trees. Some blueberries and black-
berries still available, but  are going fast. All begonias on sale for
$9.99. Amazing cold hardy Basjoo bananas (hardy to zone 5!)
now in stock: 6.5" pots for $7.99. Please drop by to say hello, and
check out our plants before our big move this summer.

Create the Illusion of Water with Plants: 'Savvy, creative gard-
eners can use... plants in their water-saving gardens to create an
illusion of watery abundance,' writes local gardener Pam Penick
in her new book The Water Saving Garden. 'Choosing dry-adapted
plants to accomplish this sleight of hand makes the illusion even
more satisfying,' she writes .Read an extract here: Garden Design
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Diana Kirby's Elements of Design Class: learn all about great
plant combos and elegant design ideas  from this design expert
in a 4 hour class: March 26, 8:30 a.m. Holiday Inn (Sunset Valley)
Complete details here: Diana designs 
 
Our cool millennial mannequins in the old gift shop are rockin'
the garden hats at the moment. Mr. Plant models a $20 Menton
beach hat, while while Mrs. P sports a $29 Tula hat. (styling by 
Julie Blake; photo: d.m.) 🌿

Children in Nature: the city of Austin has received a $25,000
grant to help connect our children with nature. AISD, the city, UT
and Westcave Outdoor Discovery Center will be working on this
new project. The goal is to 'expand opportunities for children and
their families to be able to engage with the “outdoors,' said Andrew
Springer in a press release. Children in Nature 🌿
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Central Texas Gardener: What tomatoes and peppers should you
grow this year? Randy Thompson offers advice. Trisha shows how 
to turn weeds into a natural, nutritious fertilizer. Plant of the week?
Smoke tree. Sat.  at  4 p.m., Sun. at 9 a.m. or on-line here: KLRU 🌿  

 
The Joy of Barbeque Rosemary
                                 by Chris Winslow 
  
Rosemary is possibly my favorite herb. It is an essential seasoning
in any chef’s pantry, and comes in an array of shapes, growth habits
and flower colors.

The most common forms are either upright evergreen shrubs (up
to 3 feet tall), or low-growing groundcover plants. Their flowers
can be pink or white, but most often they’re blue.

One of the latest varieties of Rosemarinus officinalis  to filter into
the nursery is called ‘barbeque rosemary.’

My first inclination was to rub a branch to see if it smelled like bar-
beque. Not in the slightest. Like most of the rosemary I’m familiar
with, it had the fragrance of pine.

What's unique about this rosemary is its upright growth habit  and
its long, straight stems. The stems clearly inspired the name… be-
cause they make perfect barbeque skewers.

All the chef/gardener needs to do is cut off 12 inch sections from
the plant. These herbal skewers will release special aromatic and
savory essences into the food as it cooks, and are perfect to use as
shish kabob sticks or as pins for butterflied meat and poultry.

They will transform your ordinary barbeque food into succulently
infused delicacies!

Barbeque rosemary is easy to grow. Just plant it in a sunny location
with good drainage and it will flourish. When mature it will reach
a height and width of 3 to 4 feet. It is evergreen, winter hardy, and
fairly drought tolerant. Another plus? Deer won’t touch it.

Let’s fire up the grill! (We have some 4" pots of barbeque rosemary 
in stock for $3.59 each.) 🌿
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           Rosemary-Skewered Kebabs
                            a recipe by Mick Vann

4 one-inch cubes of lamb per kebab (boneless pork or chicken thighs
may be substituted)
2 one-inch wide sections of onion per kebab
1 one-inch wide section of red bell pepper per kebab
¾ cup olive oil
Juice of 1 small lemon
3 cloves garlic, chopped
3 tablespoons onion, chopped
½ teaspoon dried oregano (or 1 teaspoon fresh, minced finely)
¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
1 rosemary skewer per kebab, stripped of leaves, trimmed of side
branches, 5-6” long
Salt to taste
 ____________________________________________________
Pre-skewer meat and vegetables with the end of a thin chopstick or
an ice pick. Combine oil, juice, garlic, onion, oregano, and pepper
in a food processor or blender and puree to make a marinade. Place
meat in a re-sealable plastic bag with marinade, massage well, and
marinate chilled for 1 to 4 hours. Remove and drain meat, saving
the marinade for basting. Assemble kebabs by threading on rosemary
skewers: meat-onion-meat-pepper-meat-onion-meat. Grill skewers
over indirect coals, or under a broiler, basting with reserved marinade
until medium rare (pork should be grilled to 140º, chicken to 155º).
A bunch of parsley makes a nice basting 'brush.' Season with salt
and serve over rice or couscous. 🌿

Mick Vann is a chef, food writer, restaurant consultant, horticulturist
Check out Mick's blog here: Gustidude

  🌲 🌿 🌡
Please contact newsletter editor Darrel Mayers
with any ideas for articles or interesting links:
internationalrain@yahoo.com (hitting 'reply' to this email won't work)  
Visit the website: Its About Thyme     facebook
Visit the nursery: 11726 Manchaca Road, Austin, 78748