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You are here: Home / Archives for Mel Marx

March 29, 2017 by Mel Marx

Turmeric A Wonder Root Plant

Turmeric, a member of the ginger family, is a yellow wonder root plant. Curcumin, the active ingredient in Turmeric, is a powerful antioxidant and has anti-inflammatory properties. Studies are still being conducted on this plant but preliminary research suggests that eating turmeric can help ward off dementia, inhibit the growth of tumors, lower cholesterol, reduce inflammation, improve digestion, lower blood sugar levels and fight infections.

To buy your Turmeric plant please visit our nursery.  For more information on what our nursery has to offer click here.


Wendy, one of the nursery’s key volunteers made this deliciously irresistible gluten free Turmeric and Orange cake and kindly shares the recipe with you all.

Wendy’s Gluten Free Turmeric and Orange Cake

Ingredients

250gm butter
250gm sugar
5 eggs
150gm thick yoghurt
25gm finely grated fresh turmeric
250gm almond meal
100gm fine polenta
1 tsp baking powder
2 large oranges – finely grated rind & juice

Icing:
¾ – 1 cup cultured cream or yoghurt (sweetened)
Finely grated orange rind

Method

  1. Pre-heat oven to 180’C. Line a 22cm round spring form tin with baking paper. Grease with butter and coat with ground almonds. In a mixing bowl cream the butter and sugar till pale. Add one egg at a time, mixing well after each one until combined. Stir in yoghurt and turmeric.
  2. In a separate bowl, combine the almond meal, polenta and baking powder. Fold together into cake mixture alternatively with the orange juice & rind mixture.
  3. Bake in the oven for approximately 1 hour. Turn out the cake after five to 10 minutes of cooling in the tin. When completely cool, spread on topping. Cover with berries if desired.

Share & enjoy!


Sian’s Golden Turmeric Milk

Ingredients

  • 2 cups plant – based milk (e.g. rice, almond, soy)
  • 3 Tbs finely grated fresh turmeric
  • 1 Tbs finely grated fresh ginger
  • 1 tsp coconut oil
  • 2 tsp honey
  • 1 tsp cinnamon, or 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1/2 tsp nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp cardamom
  • 2 star anise
  • 1 pinch of black pepper

Method

  1. Combine all ingredients in a saucepan on low heat until bubbles start to form. Do not boil.
  2. Strain milk into mugs (to remove the solid parts).
  3. Optional: Top with star anise and cinnamon or nutmeg.

Note: If you would prefer to use full cream milk, the coconut oil can be left out due to the milk already containing fat. Follow instructions above, however wait until the milk is hot (above 70°C) before adding the ginger. Ginger juice contains a protease that can cause the milk to curdle at temperatures below 70°C, but is fine above 70°C.

Note 2: The health benefits of turmeric are increased if it is consumed with fat and black pepper (which contains a substance called piperine), which is why these ingredients are both incorporated into this recipe!

 


 

Filed Under: Nursery, Organic Farmers Market Tagged With: city nursery, hard to find plant nursery, inner city nursery, medicinal plants, Nursery, Organic Nursery, Recipes, turmeric

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Leafy Greens alternatives to lettuce during hot summer months

Lebanese Cress - leafy greens
Lebanese Cress – Leafy greens
Kangkong - leafy greens
Kangkong

Summer means Brisbane gardeners have to be creative with their salads. Lettuce, english spinach and other greens are hard to grow. Take a look at leafy greens.

Darker leafed lettuces, and open hearted ‘cut and come again’ varieties will last a lot longer than cos or iceberg types.
We can also use perennial leafy vegetables, chopped herbs, sprouts, and edible flowers during the hotter months.

A fresh alternative to lettuce is lebanese cress. It is a delicate looking plant that likes to grow in damp places.

Kang kong, or water spinach, will grow happily in a well watered pot, or small water feature. The leaves are a great substitute for baby spinach.

Mushroom plant is another green that likes a sheltered spot. The leaves are high in protein and iron, and taste slightly of mushroom.

Visit our City Farm Nursery for all your summer plants and seeds

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Gardening, Gardening in the sub-tropics, info, Leafy Greens, Nursery, Sub-tropics, Useful Information

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Sub-Tropical Greens

 

Brazilian Spinach
Ceylon Spinach

During the cool season, Brisbane gardeners can grow silverbeet, kale and cabbages. However, there are a myriad of subtropical leafy greens to turn to when the weather is too hot for these winter annuals.

Surinam spinach is a crunchy and tangy, drought hardy plant. It is very ornamental, with clusters of small pink flowers.

Brazilian spinach is a tasty, nutritious substitute for silver-beet. It is perfect in frittatas, or quiche.

Ceylon spinach is a beautiful clambering vine with delicate pink flowers and dark red berries. The leaves only need a light steam, so add them right at the end of cooking.

Sambung nyawa is a perennial leafy green that tastes like a cross between beans and spinach. It is drought hardy and has orange, butterfly attracting flowers.

For all your plant and seeds visit City Farm Nursery

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Gardening, info, Sub-tropical greens, Useful Information

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Worm Farm to keep composting worms

 

Worm farm food scraps
Worm farm composting worms

 

 

To keep your worms happy, you can buy a commercial worm farm, or make one from recycled materials.

Worm farm container

The container needs to be pest proof. It needs to have drainage and air holes. Bedding material can be shredded paper and cardboard (not coloured or glossy), cocofibre, dried leaves, or dried grass clippings.

What they eat

Worms can eat most fruits and vegetables, they really seem to like bananas and melons. Do not feed worms citrus, onions, or garlic. Don’t put meat, bones, or dog and cat poo in the farm.

How much they eat

Composting worms can eat at least half their weight every day. 1000 worms will eat 125g of food scraps. Happy worms can lay enough eggs to double their numbers every 8 weeks.

Placement

The farm should be situated in a protected spot, kept between 15C and 25C.

For all your composting needs visit City Farm Nursery

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Compost, Composting, composting worms, Gardening, info, Nursery, Useful Information, Worm Farm

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Wicking Beds and water conservation – make your own wicking garden bed

Wicking beds can be purchased, or made from recycled materials. The design of the wicking garden bed conserves water. Water is poured down the pipe into a reservoir. The water then slowly percolates upwards via the soil to the root zone of the plants, called wicking.  Plants are watered from below rather than from above.  Water is drawn to the roots, just where it is needed and when it is needed. Wicking beds are like self-watering systems.

Wicking beds

For all your plant needs and advice visit City Farm Nursery

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Gardening, info, Nursery, Useful Information, Water Saving, Wicking Beds

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

No-Dig Garden – also called a layer garden

Sometimes called a lasagna garden or a layer garden, a no-dig garden is a quick way to build soil and start a vegetable patch.  Digging is a lot harder and instead of using heavy garden tools, layer.  Work with nature to disturb the soil as little as possible.  No-dig is helpful for weed management and ensure that the soil does not get compacted.

Plenty of organic matter is put on top of the soil which provides mulching.  The result is fertile soil that has not been disturbed, letting nature take its course.

 

No-dig garden

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Gardening, info, No-Dig Garden, Nursery, Useful Information

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Beneficial Bugs

 

Good bugs are essential to our survival.

Ladybirds, praying mantids, lacewings and hover-flies, eat the aphids, mites and caterpillars that attack our plants. Honey bees, native bees, butterflies and moths pollinate our plants, giving us flowers, fruits, nuts, seeds, grains and vegetables.

We can encourage healthy populations of good bugs.

Choose not to spray insecticides or fly sprays at home and in the garden.

Buy certified organic or chemical free products

Plant bug attracting flowers.

Ladybirds are attracted to big, flat flowers like marigolds and calendula. Honeybees like flowers full of sticky pollen, like dandelions, borage and lavender. Native stingless bees really like the delicate flowers of tea trees, bottle brush and rosemary.

For all your plant needs and advice visit City Farm Nursery

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Bees, Beneficial Bugs, City Farm Nursery, Hoverfly, info, Lace-wing, Ladybirds, Nursery, Organic Nursery, Pest Control, Useful Information

February 17, 2017 by Mel Marx

Container Gardening

Container Gardening buckets
Container Gardening old shoe
Container Gardening old vats

 

Practically anything can be made into a planter, or container garden.

Important factors to consider when choosing a container, or pot, are correct size, adequate drainage and good quality organic potting mix.

A good quality potting mix is essential for the health of plants in pots. Potting mixes are scientifically formulated with specific nutrients and water holding materials.

Make sure to use a specialty mix for plants such as native plants, succulents, and berries.

For all your gardening needs visit City Farm Nursery

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: City Farm Nursery, Container Gardening, Gardening, info, Nursery, Organic Nursery, potting mix, Useful Information

February 13, 2017 by Mel Marx

Best Organic Farmers Market in inner City Brisbane…

Organic farmers market

If you are passionate about what you eat and want to connect with real farmers that grow your food in the old fashioned way, then the City Farm Organic Farmers Market is the place for you on a Sunday. We pride ourselves on supporting small local farmers and organic growers.

At 4 am in the morning it is a hustle and bustle as the farmers start arriving to bring you the freshest picked produce on offer. The variety is astounding and the atmosphere is fun and eclectic. Customers start arriving at 6 am with many regulars doing their weekly shopping.

There are many stalls with a variety of vegetables, fermented drinks & fruits, jams, raw honey, free-range eggs, cheeses, organic meat and much, much more. For a full list of our stallholders, click here.

Come early and have an organic breakfast at one of our many food vendors, while listening to a busker softly playing in the background. Sit under the Mango tree and simply enjoy the Farm with all its rich history, community spirit and gardens.

Here is what some of our customers say:

‘We LOVE Northey Street markets!!!

Not only can we purchase all of our organic needs, we also start our Sunday with an awesome coffee, breakfast & relax whilst the children can play and create. We LOVE it’

‘We love it, it is the only place in Brisbane to buy top quality organic food and have been coming for 13 years’

This is a market where people connect and know each other, a place where families come and children play freely. So visit us, indulge your senses and tantalize your taste buds in the knowledge that our farmers are passionate about your health and the earth, only using chemical free and organic practices.

The market operates from 6 to 11 am every Sunday. To find us click here

Filed Under: Organic Farmers Market Tagged With: chemical free, farmers, growers, markets, organic, organic certified, organic farmers market

February 8, 2017 by Mel Marx

Different, edible, hardy and climate specific…

That is what you will find at the City Farm Nursery. Tucked away behind the Royal Brisbane Hospital at Northey Street City Farm is our nursery. What makes it unique is that it is a not-for-profit member owned nursery run by passionate staff and volunteers. We specialise in propagating and making available long life annuals, climate specific and different plants and fruit trees that other nurseries might not readily supply. It was started 15 years ago by passionate volunteers who saw the need to educate and provide edible seedlings and plants to people in Brisbane’s inner city.

Going from strength to strength it has grown into a fully-fledged nursery that is a member of the Nursery & Garden Industry Association Queensland.

We support the Farm’s vision of ‘Sustainability For All’ by providing organic and chemical free plants and good old-fashioned advice on all things you can grow in your City garden.

This is what some of our customers say…

“The delightful City Farm Nursery, a go-to place for edible, organic and rare plant species, provides a haven for birds, bees, frogs and people alike. The atmosphere is calming with an abundance of beauty and art. Thanks to the helpful advice from the staff, our garden is stocked with fruit trees, herbs and plants that are ideal for our subtropical climate. I highly recommend this nursery!”

“The best permaculture based plant nursery in Australia! We Brisbanites are very lucky to have such a great resource. Organically grown plants, with locally saved seed and cuttings ensures you get the most resilient plants for your garden. I’ve been designing edible landscapes and permaculture gardens for 20 years and recommend the City Farm Nursery.”

So for more about our products and much, much more click here.

Filed Under: Nursery Tagged With: Best Brisbane Nursery, Chemical Free Nursery, City Farm Nursery, Northey Street City Farm Nursery, Nursery, Organic Nursery

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