budaveg - your vegetarian home in Hungary
contact us

Urban gardening- containers and pergolas

Here is the follow up to my gardening story. When you have a tiny garden you start going vertical and use all the available space- so you need pergolas and containers.

Pots and containers are pretty common everywhere for flowers but we experimented with growing edible stuff- and hey they are pretty too! Our tomatoes did really well in the simple flower pots, we really only needed to keep them safe from the dog, but otherwise were easy plants. This year we planted some in the garden and they did amazingly well, we had yellow tomatoes, and cherry tomatoes as well, my favourites are the yellow ones, fantastic taste, really sweet!

I planted strawberries too, but they didn’t give a lot of fruit at all- we had like 20 berries from 10 plants- a plain waste of money…

James built a fantastic pergola to have some shade in the hot summer days, and also to have a place for the kid’s swings. I planted pink roses on one side and kiwis on the other at the posts, and runner beans in between. I planted normal runner beans and these special long green beans I discovered at the local market a year ago. The runner beans did really well, and I picked enough beans for 3 soups in the middle of the summer. Then just before the second harvest hundreds of shield bugs appeared on the beans, but they didn’t seem to harm them. I consulted Aron again and he said that they would suck the beans dry- and he was right, we lost the second harvest. Luckily there was a third batch right in October because we had an amazingly warm and sunny autumn. Look at these beans, I am in love with the colours!

I also planted these long green beans called “Turkish beans”. They like to run up to four meters and weren’t too happy with the mere two meters I provided them, still we had a few beans, enough to steam as a side dish.

Finally a trick I learnt from Aron; before the frost came I had to pick all our tomatoes and I was so upset about the green ones, but he advised me to put them on a tray with a few apples, put a tea towel on the top and they would ripen. And they did! They taste like store tomatoes, so not as good as the sun ripened ones, but at least they are organic.

Honestly I don’t think we saved any money on growing our own food, plants and potting mix are not cheap-but quality local veg is. However it was fun, very satisfying to pick warm sun kissed food and I think it is good to show your children, after all they learn by example.

by zsofi

Paprika spice harvest at the “Biokert” organic farm

A few weeks ago on a sunny Saturday morning we were again driving up north to the “Biokert” organic farm where we get our vegetables from in a CSA scheme. We had enjoyed the harvest festival so much we were really looking forward to be back on the farm where our kids and dog can roam free and we can meet and greet the other members.



We were invited to help with the spice paprika harvest- which we did for 10 minutes before we realized that our kids and bouncy dog were more trouble than they were worth and retreated from the paprika field. We walked around to see how the vegetables were doing in the poly tunnels, and collected sunflower seeds from the drying flower heads for the bird feeder. Oliver was delighted when Dora, farmer Áron’s golden retriever mix, joined him and they happily romped around and made a mess.

Everybody bought cakes and snacks and it was hard to leave the picnic table with all those delights. A friendly couple made a delicious vegan curry on the open fire.

But the real treat -at least for the kids- came when we all piled on the trailer of the tractor and Áron drove us over to a neighbouring pony farm! The trip was the bumpiest ever which meant that all those little kids were screaming with delight. They all could go horse riding on the ponies  including our 1,5 year old girl who hasn’t been near a horse before. Since than she keeps saying “horsie horsie” non stop. There was a flock of sheep and a very friendly pussycat as well to entertain the kids while they were waiting for their ride. There was also a real double decker tram from a bygone era.




Then we jumped on the tractor and bumped back to the farm for lunch- but unfortunately our kids were absolutely knackered by then (they get up at 6 am), so we had to say goodbye and pile them into the car. We were heartbroken to miss the vegan curry but Renáta filled our Tupperware box to take away. Yum!

The CSA season is almost over and we are looking forward to next year. It was brilliant to get all those lovely organic veg, fruit, flour, paprika spice and sun-dried tomatoes from the farm. It definitely reformed our eating habits, as we had to use the veg we were given- and started eating beetroot, mangold, turnips -and learnt a handful of new recipes. Meeting like minded people from our quarters was an added bonus, and it seems many other families will join next year.
Do you live around Szentendre? You might want to join too!

by zsofi

Organic vegetable box scheme in Hungary

Last week we joined a community supported agricultural project, something I have been contemplating for a while. I do believe organic produce is the best for both the family and the environment and we have been aiming to buy as much organic as possible. A dear friend of ours used to get  veg for us from the organic market at MOM Park, but they are now packing up to move to Hawaii to join a raw food community which left us with no organic veg!
I asked two of my friends who joined this CSA at the start and both were extremly pleased so we signed up too and last Friday picked up the first batch from Szentendre:

Pretty impressive, right? We got 6 kgs of tomatoes, a bag of green peppers, a big bag of cucumbers, a handful of basil and dill, 3 big squashes, 4 courgettes,  a bunch of carrots, a bag of potatoes, a celery, cabbage, a bunch of beetroot, a roman lettuce and a big piece of horseradish! Seems really a lot, and now my meal planning has to upgrade to make sure we can use all these tomatoes and squashes this week- which means making vegetarian lecsó perhaps 3 times a week. The horseradish is way beyond my scope so I happily gave it away to a friend.

Budaveg guests can now look forward to organic tomatoes and cucumbers among their breakfast goodies!

This farm is on Szentendre Island and we’ll receive vegetables throughout the season and some berries, probably melons too, but they have no fruit trees yet. They are also producing wheat and sunflowers so I am looking forward to organic flour and sunflower oil! You have to pick up the produce at Szentendre every Friday afternoon. When you join you sign a contract to buy your share of the produce which is 28000 hufs/5 weeks.You also get on their mailing list and you recive an email with what to expect on Friday and great vegetarian recipe suggestions. At the moment 30 some families joined but they have enough produce for 60 families so drop us a line if you are interested!

 

by budaveg