Hebt u iets om te verkopen?

Eat Your Yard: Edible Trees, Shrubs, Vines, Herbs, and Flowers For Your Landscap

Objectstaat:
Nieuw
Prijs:
US $32,58
OngeveerEUR 30,40
Verzendkosten:
Gratis Economy Shipping. Details bekijkenvoor verzending
Bevindt zich in: South El Monte, California, Verenigde Staten
Levering:
Geschatte levering tussen ma, 24 jun en do, 27 jun tot 43230
De levertijd wordt geschat met onze eigen methode op basis van onder meer de nabijheid van de koper ten opzichte van de objectlocatie, de geselecteerde verzendservice, en de verzendgeschiedenis van de verkoper. De leveringstermijnen kunnen variëren, vooral gedurende piekperiodes.
Retourbeleid:
30 dagen om te retourneren. Koper betaalt voor retourzending. Details bekijken- voor meer informatie over retourzendingen
Betalingen:
     

Winkel met vertrouwen

Geld-terug-garantie van eBay
Ontvang het object dat u hebt besteld of krijg uw geld terug. 

Verkopergegevens

Ingeschreven als zakelijke verkoper
De verkoper neemt de volledige verantwoordelijkheid voor deze aanbieding.
eBay-objectnummer:364880969307
Laatst bijgewerkt op 31 mei 2024 20:23:15 CESTAlle herzieningen bekijkenAlle herzieningen bekijken

Specificaties

Objectstaat
Nieuw: Een nieuw, ongelezen en ongebruikt boek in perfecte staat waarin geen bladzijden ontbreken of ...
ISBN
9781423603849
Book Title
Eat Your Yard : Edible Trees, Shrubs, Vines, Herbs, and Flowers for Your Landscape
Publisher
Gibbs Smith, Publisher
Item Length
7.5 in
Publication Year
2010
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Illustrator
Yes
Item Height
0.6 in
Author
Nan Chase
Genre
Nature, Gardening
Topic
Plants / General, Landscape, General
Item Weight
23.1 Oz
Item Width
9.8 in
Number of Pages
160 Pages

Over dit product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Gibbs Smith, Publisher
ISBN-10
1423603842
ISBN-13
9781423603849
eBay Product ID (ePID)
77870132

Product Key Features

Book Title
Eat Your Yard : Edible Trees, Shrubs, Vines, Herbs, and Flowers for Your Landscape
Number of Pages
160 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Plants / General, Landscape, General
Publication Year
2010
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Nature, Gardening
Author
Nan Chase
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.6 in
Item Weight
23.1 Oz
Item Length
7.5 in
Item Width
9.8 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2009-032716
Reviews
EAT YOUR YARD: Edible Trees, Shrubs, Vines, Herbs and Flowers for Your Landscape by Nan K. Chase, is both useful and beautiful because she has a feel for the dreams - and limitations - of the home gardener. Rose water plum compote and Mountain Farm citrus lavender marinade sound lovely, and doable.
Dewey Edition
22
Number of Volumes
1 vol.
Dewey Decimal
635
Table Of Content
7 Introduction 11 Favorite Fruits Apple, Cherry, Crabapple, Peach, Pear, Plum, Quince 41 Nuts &Almond, Blueberry, Chestnut, Hazelnut/Filbert, Pecan, Walnut 67 Herbs &Bay Tree, Grape, Kiwi, Lavender, Mint, Nasturtium, Rosemary, Sage, Thyme 97 Hot-Country Choices Fig, Kumquat, Lemon, Lime, Orange, Olive, Pomegranate 119 Wildflowers Pawpaw, Persimmon, Prickly Pear, Yucca, Rose, Sunflower 141 Preserving the Harvest 151 Resources 158 Index
Synopsis
Eat Your Yard! has information on 35 edible plants that offer the best of both landscape and culinary uses. Edible plants provide spring blossoms, colorful fruit and flowers, lush greenery, fall foliage, and beautiful structure, but they also offer fruits, nuts, and seeds that you can eat, cook, and preserve. Author Nan K. Chase shares her first-hand experience with gardening, which lends the reader landscaping ideas as well as special culinary uses for fruit trees, including the crabapple and quince, nut trees, such as the chestnut and almond, and covering herbs and vines like the bay, grape, lavender, mint, and thyme. She instructs how to harvest pawpaw, persimmon, and other wildflowers for your meal as well as figs, kumquats, olives and other favorites. Mixing the ordinary with the exotic, most of the plants, trees, and shrubs featured in Eat Your Yard! can grow almost anywhere. With recipes ranging from savory cherry sauce and pickled grape leaves to pomegranate molasses and roasted duck with dried-fruit chutney, Eat Your Yard! is much more than just a landscaping guide. Includes tips and ideas on: Canning Pickling Freezing Juicing Fermenting Crabapple Jelly Use this jelly in yogurt with nuts for breakfast or as a glaze for roasted game or poultry. Pick a sweet-tart variety of crabapple as it approaches peak ripeness, but include some underripe crabapples for more pectin. Yield depends on the amount of crabapples picked. Two extra-large mixing bowls of fruit, about 15 to 18 pounds, yields 12 to 16 half-pints. Rinse the crabapples in batches, leaving plenty of stems. Halve the fruit, place in a heavy enameled pot, and add enough water to cover. Bring to a boil and cook until fruit is soft and the liquid is lightly colored, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat and strain through a cheesecloth-lined sieve into a clean bowl. Do not squeeze or press the pulp, as this clouds the jelly. Let the final batches sit overnight so all the juice can drip through. The next day, wash and scald canning jars, new lids, bands, and utensils, including a wide-mouth funnel. Measure the juice, up to 8 cups per batch. Bring juice to a rapid boil in a large enameled pot for 5 minutes, removing any froth that forms; at the same time prepare a water bath in a separate kettle for sealing the jars. Add 3/4 to 1 cup of sugar for each cup of juice. Dissolve sugar in the boiling juice, and continue to boil until the mixture reaches the jelling point. Test for this by pouring a small quantity of the mixture off the side of a wide cooking spoon; when it slows and forms a sheet rather than individual drops, the jelly is ready, usually about 15 minutes. Pour carefully into jars, leaving 1/4 to 1/2 inch headroom, gently cover with lids and bands, and seal in a boiling hot water bath for 20 minutes., Eat Your Yard has information on 35 edible plants that offer the best of both landscape and culinary uses. Edible plants provide spring blossoms, colorful fruit and flowers, lush greenery, fall foliage, and beautiful structure, but they also offer fruits, nuts, and seeds that you can eat, cook, and preserve. Author Nan K. Chase shares her first-hand experience with gardening, which lends the reader landscaping ideas as well as special culinary uses for fruit trees, including the crabapple and quince, nut trees, such as the chestnut and almond, and covering herbs and vines like the bay, grape, lavender, mint, and thyme. She instructs how to harvest pawpaw, persimmon, and other wildflowers for your meal as well as figs, kumquats, olives and other favorites. Mixing the ordinary with the exotic, most of the plants, trees, and shrubs featured in Eat Your Yard can grow almost anywhere. With recipes ranging from savory cherry sauce and pickled grape leaves to pomegranate molasses and roasted duck with dried-fruit chutney, Eat Your Yard is much more than just a landscaping guide. Includes tips and ideas on: Canning Pickling Freezing Juicing Fermenting Nan K. Chase writes about architecture and landscape design. Her work has also appeared in the New York Times, Smithsonian, Fine Gardening, Architectural Record, and Southern Living. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina, where she is a contributing editor of WNC Magazine. Crabapple Jelly Use this jelly in yogurt with nuts for breakfast or as a glaze for roasted game or poultry. Pick a sweet-tart variety of crabapple as it approaches peak ripeness, but include some underripe crabapples for more pectin. Yield depends on the amount of crabapples picked. Two extra-large mixing bowls of fruit, about 15 to 18 pounds, yields 12 to 16 half-pints. Rinse the crabapples in batches, leaving plenty of stems. Halve the fruit, place in a heavy enameled pot, and add enough water to cover. Bring to a boil and cook until fruit is soft and the liquid is lightly colored, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat and strain through a cheesecloth-lined sieve into a clean bowl. Do not squeeze or press the pulp, as this clouds the jelly. Let the final batches sit overnight so all the juice can drip through. The next day, wash and scald canning jars, new lids, bands, and utensils, including a wide-mouth funnel. Measure the juice, up to 8 cups per batch. Bring juice to a rapid boil in a large enameled pot for 5 minutes, removing any froth that forms; at the same time prepare a water bath in a separate kettle for sealing the jars. Add 3/4 to 1 cup of sugar for each cup of juice. Dissolve sugar in the boiling juice, and continue to boil until the mixture reaches the jelling point. Test for this by pouring a small quantity of the mixture off the side of a wide cooking spoon; when it slows and forms a sheet rather than individual drops, the jelly is ready, usually about 15 minutes. Pour carefully into jars, leaving 1/4 to 1/2 inch headroom, gently cover with lids and bands, and seal in a boiling hot water bath for 20 minutes., Eat Your Yard! has information on 35 edible plants that offer the best of both landscape and culinary uses. Edible plants provide spring blossoms, colorful fruit and flowers, lush greenery, fall foliage, and beautiful structure, but they also offer fruits, nuts, and seeds that you can eat, cook, and preserve., Eat Your Yard!has information on 35 edible plants that offer the best of both landscape and culinary uses. Edible plants provide spring blossoms, colorful fruit and flowers, lush greenery, fall foliage, and beautiful structure, but they also offer fruits, nuts, and seeds that you can eat, cook, and preserve. Author Nan K. Chaseshares her first-hand experience with gardening, which lends the reader landscaping ideas as well as special culinary uses for fruit trees, including the crabapple and quince, nut trees, such as the chestnut and almond, and covering herbs and vines like the bay, grape, lavender, mint, and thyme. She instructs how to harvest pawpaw, persimmon, and other wildflowers for your meal as well as figs, kumquats, olives and other favorites. Mixing the ordinary with the exotic, most of the plants, trees, and shrubs featured in Eat Your Yard! can grow almost anywhere. With recipes ranging from savory cherry sauce and pickled grape leaves to pomegranate molasses and roasted duck with dried-fruit chutney, Eat Your Yard! is much more than just a landscaping guide. Includes tips and ideas on: Canning Pickling Freezing Juicing Fermenting Nan K. Chasewrites about architecture and landscape design. Her work has also appeared in the New York Times, Smithsonian, Fine Gardening, Architectural Record, and Southern Living. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina, where she is a contributing editor of WNC Magazine. Crabapple Jelly Use this jelly in yogurt with nuts for breakfast or as a glaze for roasted game or poultry. Pick a sweet-tart variety of crabapple as it approaches peak ripeness, but include some underripe crabapples for more pectin. Yield depends on the amount of crabapples picked. Two extra-large mixing bowls of fruit, about 15 to 18 pounds, yields 12 to 16 half-pints. Rinse the crabapples in batches, leaving plenty of stems. Halve the fruit, place in a heavy enameled pot, and add enough water to cover. Bring to a boil and cook until fruit is soft and the liquid is lightly colored, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat and strain through a cheesecloth-lined sieve into a clean bowl. Do not squeeze or press the pulp, as this clouds the jelly. Let the final batches sit overnight so all the juice can drip through. The next day, wash and scald canning jars, new lids, bands, and utensils, including a wide-mouth funnel. Measure the juice, up to 8 cups per batch. Bring juice to a rapid boil in a large enameled pot for 5 minutes, removing any froth that forms; at the same time prepare a water bath in a separate kettle for sealing the jars. Add 3/4 to 1 cup of sugar for each cup of juice. Dissolve sugar in the boiling juice, and continue to boil until the mixture reaches the jelling point. Test for this by pouring a small quantity of the mixture off the side of a wide cooking spoon; when it slows and forms a sheet rather than individual drops, the jelly is ready, usually about 15 minutes. Pour carefully into jars, leaving 1/4 to 1/2 inch headroom, gently cover with lids and bands, and seal in a boiling hot water bath for 20 minutes.
LC Classification Number
QK98.5.A1C45 2010
ebay_catalog_id
4
Copyright Date
2010

Objectbeschrijving van de verkoper

Books Planet Store

Books Planet Store

98,6% positieve feedback
2,7K objecten verkocht

Gedetailleerde verkopersbeoordelingen

Gemiddelde van de afgelopen 12 maanden

Nauwkeurige beschrijving
4.8
Redelijke verzendkosten
5.0
Verzendtijd
5.0
Communicatie
4.9
Ingeschreven als zakelijke verkoper

Feedback verkoper (629)

g***e (1595)- Feedback gegeven door koper.
Afgelopen maand
Geverifieerde aankoop
Nice!! Thank you!!
7***a (501)- Feedback gegeven door koper.
Afgelopen maand
Geverifieerde aankoop
Book arrived on time, as described. Thank you.
d***s (496)- Feedback gegeven door koper.
Afgelopen maand
Geverifieerde aankoop
I did not receive. When inquired day after to be delivered, seller said could not locate & immediately gave refund. So I have no idea, but tracking never showed locations.