NZ Lifestyle Block

The red hot chilli pepper block

and its awardwinni­ng products

- Words Nadene Hall Photos Brad Hanson

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WHO: Anne & Steve Corkran, Emoyeni Products WHAT: small-scale market gardeners and food producers WHERE: Tokomaru, 20km south-west of Palmerston North LAND: 4ha (10 acres) WEB: www.emoyeni.co.nz, www.facebook.com/emoyenipro­ducts MARKETS: Feilding (every Friday, 9am-1.30pm), Hokowhitu (third Sunday of each month, 9am-1pm)

It's not often a smack in the mouth is considered a compliment. But some of Anne Corkran's award-winning chilli sauces are so hot, that's how her daughter describes them. Anne's concoction­s use chillies and other produce she and husband Steve grow on their block, 20 minutes' drive south of Palmerston North. The couple has won multiple accolades in the last few years. They beat 80 other sauce-makers from Australia and New Zealand at Sydney's Mr Chilli Awards. They've also been recognised at the Chili Chompers Global Hot Sauce Awards, which features competitor­s from 10 countries.

Anne's first attempt used a plum sauce recipe Steve's mum gave to her; she just added chillies. Customers loved it, but they kept asking her to make something red hot.

“So, I used a tomato base – a very mild flavoured tomato base with a hint of tangelo – and piled the Ghost chillies into it. I asked Steve,

‘is that hot enough?' And when he tried it, the first thing out of his mouth was, ‘holy sh*t, mother of god.'”

That's how H.S. M.O.G. (Holy Sh*t, Mother of God) sauce came to be part of a range of products, including chutneys and jams, that Anne makes and bottles in her certified kitchen. The couple sells them online and at their regular farmers' market stalls.

Her first saucy experiment for 2020 is called Glowing Ember. Anne says it starts off tasting like a good tomato relish, but then begins to smoulder in the mouth thanks to Carolina Reaper and Ghost chillies. Whether it makes it into their regular product range depends on customer feedback over the next few months.

Other recipes have come about by accident.

"Last year, I made a batch of Black Boy chutney but it didn't have any depth of flavour. Steve (my design team) had a bit of both chilli plum sauce and the Black Boy peach chutney on his plate. The flavour when they accidental­ly mixed was delicious. Black Boy peaches, plums and our first crop of Carolina Reapers produced a rich, full-flavoured sauce with smoldering heat. The first batch was called Dark Reaper Sauce; the second batch, with more chilli, was called Silent Assassin Sauce, up a few heat levels. Both batches sold out."

Anne is in charge of making the couple's award-winning chilli sauces, jams, chutneys, and pickles in a certified kitchen on their block.

Everything they make uses their homegrown chillies, fruit, and vegetables, mostly using plums as a base.

The couple have to warn customers that the supply of sauces, jams, and chutney is always limited by their plum harvest.

“In the first six months (of 2019), we sold as (many products) as we did in the whole of 2018,” says Anne. “Today, I processed 91kg of plums, but once I run out of plums in the freezer, there's no more (sauce).”

The chillies may be the hottest stars on this block, but they're just one small part of the incredible amount of fresh, sprayfree fruit and vegetables the couple grows all year round. There are dozens of crops, from oyster mushrooms, culinary flowers, and hydroponic lettuce, to microgreen­s, baby ginger and turmeric.

Making a living growing and selling their produce was a long-time dream for Anne (59), a primary school principal, and Steve (58), a transport manager. For 30 years, they grew flowers commercial­ly as a part-time hobby, first sandersoni­a, then calla lilies. They made the brave decision to quit their jobs and become full-time, small-scale, market gardeners in 2017.

“I think you mean foolhardy,” laughs Steve. “We were burnt out from our jobs, and we'd talked about it for quite a few years. It was the right time for us; we had pretty hectic careers and we thought, ‘let's get outside, do what we want, forget all the corporate stuff.'"

The first big decision was to agree on what they'd do if their dream of running a market garden were to fail.

“We had to ask ourselves, would we be happy if we needed to sell the place?” says Anne. “When we could say, ‘yes, we can live with that,' it took off a big layer of pressure.”

So far, the dream is thriving. All the crops are grown in raised beds as the soil on their sloping block is mostly hard clay. In the first year, they had six beds, 6.5m long by 1m wide. But their produce proved so popular, they couldn't keep up with demand and the number of beds has exploded.

“Last year we went to 36 beds, same size,” says Steve. “Now we have another 40 beds, so by the end of the 2020 season we'll have 110 beds in rotation, which will give us enough space to do carbon cropping, green manuring, and then rest the soil, so it builds up.”

At any time of year, around a quarter of the outdoor beds will be growing carbon or green crops. The Corkrans use wheat, corn, “and whatever else we can find,” says Steve.

“Then we chop it down, cover it with plastic and when our microgreen­s are finished, we put the compost from the trays on top and plant straight into it.”

Their system means one bed can produce 8-10 crops a year. “We rotate it, from a heavy feeder to a light feeder, then compost, then it gets a break and we cover it up, then the leafy greens follow the legumes, that sort of thing.”

Most of the original beds are now 90% weed-free.

“We're trying to get to zero weeding,” says Steve. “Because we mulch it and then compost it straight away after tilling, no weed seeds are coming through. It's not like the old days when if we had bare soil, we had more weeds than seeds.”

They've had to accept they'll always have slugs and snails but have found their organic methods help control numbers.

“On the composted areas, we don't get as much because there's nothing for them to hide in," says Steve. "It's quite a ‘clean' area and that cuts down on quite a bit of the competitio­n. We also mow down low around the garden, so there's no hiding areas.”

All the growing rows are covered with hoops and microclima, a knitted, plastic mesh. Originally it was to prevent rabbits from demolishin­g whole rows of young crops in one night, but the couple has found it has other big benefits.

“It's sped up our growing cycle,” says Steve. “Plants are ready 2-3 weeks faster, and the health of the plants and their size is just so much bigger.

“We did quite a few comparison­s (to check), covered rows and (uncovered) control rows,” says Anne. “In the carrots, it made a massive difference; seeds wouldn't germinate when it was too hot, but because the cloth has 15% shade, the carrots still germinate even in the middle of a hot summer.”

The couple uses a Jang seeder. Anne fills the hopper, then pushes the seeder along prepared beds; seeds drop out at even spacings.

“We've had that nearly two years, and it's just so fast,” says Anne.

"The amount of effort we've put in has been worthwhile."

“You’re not having to go down a row and thin things. It’s a real time saver and we can plant more intensivel­y.”

The only machinery is a walk-behind, two-wheeled Grillo ‘tractor’ with rotary plough and tiller attachment­s, and a ride-on mower.

“My only other piece of equipment that’s mechanical is my hands,” says Steve. “We don’t want to get too intensive and tie up a lot of money in machinery. We got the tiller because it matches the width of our beds; one pass, up and down, and it’s ready to plant. I can do it now in 4-5 minutes, which saves 2-3 hours.”

It might sound like they have green thumbs, but Steve and Anne insist that isn’t the case.

“We’ve learnt by our mistakes,” says Steve. “Some years have been better than others, but our biggest thing is improving our soil activity. We have one experiment­al area that we’ve been cropping in the last couple of years, doing green crops, carbon crops, compost. (In 2019) it grew fantastic veggies, we didn’t water it, we didn’t dig it over, we didn’t do anything, and it cropped all year.”

The couple is now in Year 3 and say they’re happy with their progress.

“Things have exploded, far more than we expected,” says Steve. “If we do a cost-benefit analysis, the amount of effort we’ve put in has been worthwhile, and we’ll now focus on the (crops) that make us money.

“We were always quite happy for the first 3-4 years to give it a go, subsist on that and refine our processes, and then build on it. We’re keeping our heads above water, and the profit part is going to come later.

“The next step for us is to explore the opportunit­y to run courses, to assist people in gaining knowledge and confidence to make sauces, jams, preserves, and to create their own garden space for the individual, family, or on a larger scale to sell at markets and restaurant­s.”

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 ??  ?? The couple's block is named Emoyeni, inspired by a Wilbur Smith book.
The couple's block is named Emoyeni, inspired by a Wilbur Smith book.
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 ??  ?? TOP LEFT: all the outdoor beds are covered with microclima mesh to protect them from rabbits, but there are growing benefits too. TOP RIGHT: the couple planted four times as many potatoes for 2020 than they did in 2019, growing Swift Early, Jersey Bennie Early, Purple Heart Early/Late, and Summer Delight Late. Änne says from November to January, they harvested over 300kg of potatoes. BOTTOM LEFT: the natural soil is clay, so the couple has created a rich topsoil and grow everything in raised beds. BOTTOM RIGHT: the couple grows dozens of different crops, including a rainbow range of beets.
TOP LEFT: all the outdoor beds are covered with microclima mesh to protect them from rabbits, but there are growing benefits too. TOP RIGHT: the couple planted four times as many potatoes for 2020 than they did in 2019, growing Swift Early, Jersey Bennie Early, Purple Heart Early/Late, and Summer Delight Late. Änne says from November to January, they harvested over 300kg of potatoes. BOTTOM LEFT: the natural soil is clay, so the couple has created a rich topsoil and grow everything in raised beds. BOTTOM RIGHT: the couple grows dozens of different crops, including a rainbow range of beets.
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 ??  ?? The oldest beds are now almost weed-free thanks to their organic methods.
The oldest beds are now almost weed-free thanks to their organic methods.

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