Times Colonist

Locally sourced veggies on the menu

- HELEN CHESNUT Garden Notes hchesnut@bcsupernet.com

Over the past few months, I’ve been surprised at the new businesses that have opened in my location. The pandemic has caused some closures, certainly, but obviously, there are people who see these uncertain times as an opportunit­y.

Are they crazed risk-takers? Maybe not. Most Canadians won’t be travelling south or to tropical areas this winter. They might still need a break, a pleasant place to visit and perhaps stay for a week or two. And what part of Canada has the mildest winters?

Anyway, that’s what I’m hearing: The winter might bring a busy “tourist” season, as people across the country seek a safe location for a winter holiday.

Fresh, unique businesses bring an uplifting optimism and energy to a community, especially in troubled times such as these. The careful monitoring of safe distancing I see in stores is also encouragin­g.

Among the new enterprise­s are a men’s clothing store and a boutique shop specializi­ng in locally made products made with sustainabl­e materials. A popular café has been transforme­d by new owners into a bakery by day and a specialty restaurant in the evening.

A menu posted by the door was intriguing enough to draw me, with a friend, inside a restaurant for the first time in seven months. We chose a spot in a back room with three wellspaced tables.

It’s a small operation, run by a couple who offer unusually creative dishes based on locally grown and foraged vegetables and fruits and local seafood. My friend had cod in a buttermilk sauce with baby spinach and purslane and a zucchini and apple dish in a separate bowl.

I was delighted with a squash dish: curled ribbons of pickled, orange-fleshed winter squash served over cubes of cooked squash in a sweet red pepper sauce.

As one of the owners greeted and spoke with couples who came to occupy the other two tables, I noted that they were out-of-town visitors. The restaurant has aroused much interest. I’ll be back from time to time as the weather changes, to see how these inventive chefs transform foods that we grow in our gardens into epicurean highlights in a meal.

Bulbs and more. I stroll through several of my local garden centres often at this time in the year, looking for hardy spring bulbs, winter container plants, and the odd perennial or small shrub for adding to the landscape.

On my latest visit to an outlet near my home, I picked up some stocky young pansy and viola transplant­s for the bowl-shaped planters on the patio. To fill two oval planters set in an old hammock strung between trees, I bought for each planter a colourful heuchera (coral bells) and a heather. Extra pansies and violas will fill in the rest of the space in those planters.

I’ll make another trip back soon for dwarf irises, crocuses and miniature daffodils to set into the patio and hammock planters.

I also came across a shasta daisy (Leucanthem­um superbum) with lemon-yellow flowers, which I have planted in the garden. It’s called Real Sunbeam. I’m fond of the several, typically white-flowering shasta daisy clumps that have bloomed in my garden for years and I have long wanted to add a variety with yellow flowers. I’d noticed one called Banana Cream listed among the perennial plants in the T&T Seeds catalogue.

When I came to the bulb section, the first thing I noticed was the number of colourful packets marked “NEW.” This garden centre had decided to bring in more than the usual number of the year’s bulb introducti­ons. I swiftly selected some of them.

Among the Triumph tulips, which I like for their classic beauty and sturdiness, I chose a dramatic one called Slawa. It’s a stunner with burgundy

petals so dark they are nearly black, edged in deep rose and bright coppery orange.

As a companion tulip to Slawa, I selected Apricona, another Triumph in soft rose pink with a slight hint of orange flaming.

New among the miniature daffodils is Arctic Bells, a “hoop petticoat” type of narcissus with delicate, flaring blooms on 10-centimetre stems. Each bulb produces several flowers, which open pale cream and slowly, over several weeks, turn ivory.

I’ll soon go back to that garden centre to choose a few more bulbs for a display of potted flowers on the patio in the spring.

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 ?? HELEN CHESNUT ?? Triumph tulips are popular for their classic shape and strong stems. They bloom in mid-spring and are excellent for growing in pots and in garden beds.
HELEN CHESNUT Triumph tulips are popular for their classic shape and strong stems. They bloom in mid-spring and are excellent for growing in pots and in garden beds.
 ?? HELEN CHESNUT ?? As a change from the usual white-flowering shasta daisies, there are several varieties with yellow flowers. This one is called Real Sunbeam.
HELEN CHESNUT As a change from the usual white-flowering shasta daisies, there are several varieties with yellow flowers. This one is called Real Sunbeam.
 ?? HELEN CHESNUT ?? Purslane is a popular vegetable in Europe. Its thick, juicy pads have a slight lemony flavour.
HELEN CHESNUT Purslane is a popular vegetable in Europe. Its thick, juicy pads have a slight lemony flavour.

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