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A bella life in WANAKA

Annabel Langbein shares her top tips for gardening – north and south – from her home in Wanaka.

- Words Carolyn Enting

Nothing gives Annabel Langbein more pleasure than growing her own food. She’s been doing it since she was a hippie living up the Whanganui River at age 17 and since that golden time, it’s been a passion that has become a lifestyle.

Since making the permanent move to Wanaka from Auckland four years ago, she’s never been happier. “Living off the land is a lot of hard work but it’s also fun. It’s a very engaged physical life. My life is busier now and I’m fitter,” she says.

The lakeside 27-acre property that Langbein and husband Ted have owned since 1996 is now a swamp-free mecca with a beautiful garden as well as a view over the lake. Planted out with trees over the years on frequent family holidays south, Langbein admits Ted had a vision.

“He bought it without telling me. We were married and had small children and honestly I wanted to kill him. ‘What do you mean you’ve bought a bog on the side of the lake?’ It was just bracken, blackberry and rosehips. I looked at this land and I thought you have to be mad. And honestly, it was a feud for months. I was just furious with him because we didn’t have any money,” she says. “And now I’m the luckiest person in the world because he had the vision and it’s absolutely gorgeous. So I have to be very humble and say ‘thank you’.”

While most people – north and south – give up on gardening over winter, Langbein’s vegetable garden has fed the family through the colder months. “We’ve seen winter all the way through without having to buy vegetables. I’ve got rocket, lettuce, mâche, Brussels sprouts and broccoli – which I covered up so it wouldn’t freeze – beetroot and carrots. In the store, I’ve got garlic, onions and potatoes. There’s about 32 different plants that I can grow here during winter,” she says.

With a diploma in horticultu­re, Langbein understand­s the cycles and seasons of plants, and knowing daughter Rose and her boyfriend were homeward bound from New York, she planted a big winter garden in February.

Rose and Langbein produced Together which won a best book award at The Foodies NZ Food Media Awards in 2019.

A foodie, Rose, 27, shares her mother’s love of cooking but not gardening, though she is learning.

“It was so funny because Rose came home and she’d been shopping at Eataly in New York, being able to go and buy burrata and heads of radicchio so she’d go to the garden and get whatever the plant was and cut the whole thing off. And I was like, ‘oh no, no, no, because then you won’t have any more again. Only pick the outer leaves and then the middle leaves can keep growing’,” laughs Langbein. “It’s been really fun for her learning about gardening and growing, and then you actually value it more. You have this incredible sense of connection. I think that’s what gives me so much joy – you grow it, you look after it, and you harvest it, you cook it, you eat it. It’s a very connected feeling and it’s also something which requires you to be very present in your life. And I think that that’s something we’re all seeking and in this world where everyone’s got so much anxiety and angst and pressure, valuing it and giving yourself permission to spend some time in the garden, to spend some time cooking, it’s very nourishing. And it’s quite physical as well, if you are out in the garden. You don’t need a gym membership, you can just go out and dig.”

When to plant

Now is the perfect time to plant a vegetable garden, advises Langbein. Don’t wait until Labour Weekend, otherwise most of your garden produce will be ready when you’re away on your summer holiday!

There is no reason why you can’t plant a lot earlier in September, as well as planting two weeks later than you normally would do. That way, you’ve given yourself a bigger window.

Also, it’s a good idea to know where it’s going to be sunny for the longest time during the day, “because pretty much everything that you plant in spring is going to be happy in the sun”. And later on, if it gets really hot, you’ll want some shady spots to put things like rocket.

The soil should be well drained, so if you have clay, you’re better to do raised beds and add soil – and don’t forget the weed mat. “You’re much better to deal with it at the start because once you’ve got couch in your beds, you’re going to be fighting with that grass forever.”

If you have a number of raised beds, she suggests growing brassicas in one, leafy greens in another, have a separate one for potatoes and if you live in the north, one for chillies, tomatoes and peppers.

And set up an automatic watering system, or all your hard work will be in vain.

Rotating the beds each season is also important otherwise you will get disease or bugs will coming in. After potatoes, she

suggests planting leguminous vegetables like snow peas or beans, which add nitrogen to the soil, and after that, brassicas, which will use that nitrogen.

“Keep those cycles going, though last year I looked and realised I’d planted potatoes and brassicas everywhere so I really mucked up my whole flow chart planning there,” she laughs.

Choosing what to plant

“The first thing to ask yourself is ‘what do I like eating?’” says Langbein. “Because there’s no point in growing radishes if no one in the family is going to eat them.

“And if you haven’t got a lot of room then grow things that don’t take up a lot of room and are also expensive. So instead of paying $3.99 for a tiny bag of rocket, grow rocket or spinach because you’re always going to use those leafy greens. It’s so easy to grow and it’ll grow for about nine months of the year, and if you pick it high enough on the stem, you’ll get a second cut.”

Fennel is another expensive vegetable that’s easy to grow. Langbein likes cooking it in a pan with butter until it’s lightly brown and then adding stock and cooking it until it’s tender. “Then it sort of caramelise­s and is delicious with fish or chicken.”

Though avoid planting bronze fennel, she warns, as that is invasive and can take over your garden!

Spreading the love

Globe artichokes, which are pretty, or Jerusalem artichokes with their sunflower-like flowers, are both really useful architectu­ral plants to have in the garden. “They look really good in your perennial bed,” says Langbein. “Make borders out of parsley and chives. And I always grow a lot of dahlias in my vegetable garden as they bring the beneficial insects. So you can kind of mix it up a bit. You can eat marigold flowers, which also keep insects away as well. And why not put asparagus in the perennial bed? Because the annoying thing about having asparagus in your garden bed is that it has to sit there for four to five years before it gets establishe­d and you can harvest it and it has beautiful flowering fluffy heads.”

Langbein has also hedged her bay tree to look like a Christmas tree, which means she has bay leaves as well as a tree for the festive time of year. Looking ahead to Christmas, she suggests making homemade gifts from what’s in season or what you have a surplus of.

“What’s really good right now is all the citrus and you could make your own yummy marmalade. I always put a cup of whiskey in my marmalade right at the end. It just gives it this delicious flavour,” she says. “Don’t go and use the family’s expensive whiskey, but a cup of whiskey at the end is fantastic. And then make a nice label and you’ve got a whole lot of Christmas presents already made.”

Another idea is making infused vodka. “When berries come into season, you can just chuck a whole lot of raspberrie­s into a bottle of vodka with some sugar or boysenberr­ies or blackberri­es or currants. I made lots of cassis last year with currants, sugar and vodka. You need to leave it for quite a while for the colour and flavour to infuse, but it’s delicious.”

Langbein is also excited to be launching her own gin later this year with Arrowtown distillery Broken Heart Spirits. The gin, named Bella, contains about 18 aromatics she’s spent years experiment­ing with and perfecting – and she has a shed full of different brews concocted as she’s worked towards finalising the recipe.

Life in food

Bella is also the title of her most recent book about her life in food.

She really enjoyed writing Bella, which is different from her cookbooks as it tells the story of her life as well as including some delicious recipes, of course. She loved the writing process and is considerin­g writing some fiction.

Will there be another cookbook on the horizon? Actually, yes. She and Rose have collaborat­ed on another book, Summer at Home, to be released later this month!

Country life

Rural living, even though Wanaka township is a 12-minute drive away, means that Langbein tends to use less, waste less and reuse things.

“I’ve always been a bit of a hippie at heart because I like the idea of the values around traditiona­l hippiedom, which was about not wasting stuff and living a pretty simple, connected life. And I think it’s made me even more conscious of that and not in a sort of preachy, bossy way, but just hoping to show other people how you can do a lot with very little.”

She loves the sense of community, too, where neighbours look after one another, as well as the laid-back lifestyle, though she observes Wanaka is changing.

“You used to able to go into town in your gumboots having a bad hair day and I still do it. It doesn’t worry me, but there’s a lot of very elegant people walking around in high-heeled shoes. And I’m thinking, ‘what are you doing here?’”

She never has a typical day, though since moving south she’s taken up meditation and tries to do a meditation as well as some stretching each morning.

“I’m not very good at the winter. I don’t really go outside until after lunchtime. I have been known to stay in bed quite late working on my computer in the mornings,” she laughs.

What is a given is that she’ll be cooking for at least one or two hours each day.

“Somebody just sent me a whole lot of grapefruit, so I’m going to make some marmalade. And, I’m often fiddling round because suddenly you realise that you’ve got eight heads of broccoli that all need to be harvested at once, and then there won’t be any for X amount of time. So what are you going to do? You’re going to freeze it, which I never would’ve thought was a good idea but when I went to Antarctica, all they had was frozen broccoli. It was actually really good. Just blanch it and freeze it.”

“You grow it, look after it, harvest it, cook it, eat it – it’s a very connected feeling & something which requires you to be very present in your life.”

 ?? ?? Loving life
Since moving permanentl­y to Wanaka from Auckland four years ago, Langbein says she’s never been happier.
Loving life Since moving permanentl­y to Wanaka from Auckland four years ago, Langbein says she’s never been happier.
 ?? ?? Nature’s bounty
Langbein is loving teaching daughter Rose, already an avid cook, about gardening.
Nature’s bounty Langbein is loving teaching daughter Rose, already an avid cook, about gardening.

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