Vermont School Garden

A visit to a Vermont public school garden through the seasons.


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Making Garden Vegetable Soup for Open House

queen of the harvest

queen of the harvest

Ten first and second graders and one fifth grader gleaned in our garden to make a vegetable soup. They found a colorful assortment of early fall vegetables. We brought their finds indoors, washed up, and began cutting the veggies into bite sized pieces. We didn’t have any onions so I brought some onions, pre-diced, from home After sauteeing these in a few tablespoons of olive oil, we added the childrens’ cut up beans, beets, tomatoes, kale, peppers, potatoes, lettuce and celery. Did I miss anything? Organic chicken stock completed the dish. Just pour on enough to cover vegetables. Beets added a colorful rosy compliment to the greens. When the vegetables were tender the soup was done. I just added a few tablespoons of vinegar to add  flavor interest. The children were so excited to be contributing this soup to our open house potluck supper.

found beans

looking for veggies

looking for veggies

Katalina's pepepr

pepper gleaners

pepper gleaners

look at these beans

look at these beans

careful dicing

careful dicing

cutting celery: Watch what you're doing!

cutting celery: Watch what you’re doing

dicing beets

dicing beets

stirring the soup

stirring the soup

simmering soup

simmering soup


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Corn Stalk Harvest

using a shovel

 

 

 

Grace digging

digging digging

digging digging

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, we let nothing go to waste in our school garden. In October, Westminster Schools traditionally hold an open house for parents and students. there’s a pot luck soup and bread supper before students take their parents to show them their classrooms. Each year the school is decorated for this event. There is no shortage of corn growing in Westminster, but most of it gets chopped up into silage—not our popcorn stalks. Students from the fourth grade came out to the garden and helped dig up the stalks, cut off the roots and stack them for decorating the school. I wasn’t sure how they would handle their jobs, but I didn’t need to worry about this crew. They quickly fell into line and worked together to get the job done without many reminders. Most stayed on through their recess to finish up the work!

among the corn rows

using a clipper

using a clipper

organized team effort

organized team effort

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

wheelbarrow ride

wheelbarrow ride

 

 

stalks stacked and ready

stalks stacked and ready


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Popcorn Harvest , Grade 4, 2013

Great harvest this year!

Great harvest this year!

Fourth graders looked at the two rows of popcorn they planted last spring and they estimated how many ears would be harvested. Then they got to work, (with a few breaks to run through the rows). In teams they harvested three ears of corn, peeled back the husks and tied the ‘triplets’ together. If you’ve never done this, it may sound simple but it isn’t. If you aren’t careful the husks slip right off the ears. In our plan for drying, the corn is hung similar to decorative corn, in threes in a cool dry place. This year our custodian, Adam Hallock, rigged some drying lines right in the dining hall at school. That way, as the popcorn dries, the children can look at it and remember where their weekly popcorn snack came from. Many thanks, Adam! I will get a photo of our drying popcorn to add to this entry.

You may be wondering about the loose ears of popcorn. Nancy Bladyka, fourth grade teacher will let the students experiment with other environments for drying the popcorn ears. Some will go in their classroom. Some will go into a freezer. Students will predict the best environment for drying. Then in January, we’ll hold a popcorn “pop-off.” May the best environment win!

triplet

gathering triplets into bins

gathering triplets into bins

triplet 2

wheeling husks to the compost

wheeling husks to the compost


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Eating A Garden Rainbow

Kathy, Mary and class

Nola crunching celery

Nola crunching celery

sounding words

sounding words

The First Graders in Kathy Hewe’s and Mary Bissell’s class challenged themselves to find something to eat in every color of the rainbow. They were surprised to discover new tasty treats after vowing that they “hated celery and peppers.” Being the newly minted writers that they are, most of the records they kept were words in invented spelling. (I hardly saw any drawing!) You could hear them saying each sound of the words they were writing aloud as they grappled with their new form of communicating. So exciting to witness! CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE

crunching on a beanbean munchingkale munchng

writing about kale

writing about kale

sounding tomato

sounding tomato

note taking green things

note taking green things

looking closely at a rspberry

Xavier and Tegan writing

Xavier and Tegan writing

another way to write raspberry

another way to write raspberry


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Cool Kale Math

kale harvestersThird graders worked on the concept of multiplication while they harvested kale for kale chips. If all 12 students present that day harvested four kale leaves each, how many kale ribs would there be when we were finished de-ribbing? I can tell you that there was a LOT of kale for making kale chips! Students estimated the answer to the problem and then brought the ribs back to the classroom (4 each) to check their work!

It’s so easy to make kale chips. Preheat your oven to 450. spread the torn kale leaves on a cookie sheet. Add a bit of oil and salt to taste and mix with your hands. Bake for 5 minutes then remove just to stir. Put back into the oven until all the kale is crisp (about another 5 minutes). These chips are yummy just as they are, but you can experiment with different flavors of salt (garlic, onion) or add a dash of cider vinegar when out of the oven.

 

(CLICK TO ENLARGE ANY IMAGE)

bowls of torn kale

kale rib multiplication

kale rib multiplication


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Grampa, Is It Harvest Time Yet?

corn silk beards

corn silk beards

Fifth grade classes harvested their decorative/Indian corn last week. They wondered about why they couldn’t just cook it and eat it like sweet corn. Some of them will try to do just that and they’ll report back to us about how their experiment turned out. The colors of the corn were gorgeous as you can see. The day was spectacular! Are those ‘horse tail’ clouds in the sky? Teams of students husked the corn without completely removing the husks. They tied the corn in bundles of three and took them back to hang in their classrooms. This corn will need a few weeks to dry before we can try grinding it to make cornmeal as the Native Americans did. (CLICK TO ENLARGE ANY IMAGE)

Indian corn colors

decorative corn harvesthusking native am cornteamwork tyingtying corn for drying  bringing in the corn to dry


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Family Pizza Night

Sawyer and his mom, Teah enjoying their pizza dinner.

Sawyer and his mom, Teah, enjoying their pizza dinner.

 

It was Family Make You Own Pizza Night for After School students and their families last Thursday. Students helped make this dinner a success for their families in so many ways. They harvested lettuce, celery, tomatoes, peppers, nasturtiums and beans for a salad. Older students helped make pizza dough. Younger students made the sauce a week or two ago (see earlier blog). Some of the boys thought it would be nice to decorate the tables with flowers from our garden, so they cut bouquets for the tables. One talented parent created games to keep little ones occupied while the pizzas cooked in the oven. Each parent went home with pizza dough,  sauce for making another pizza at home sometime in the future. The flowers went home too! We hope to have more family supper nights during the year.

Annaleeza and Abby make dough

Annaleeza and Abby make dough

kneading pizza dough

kneading pizza dough

prepping for dinner

prepping for dinner

prepping for dinner

prepping for dinner

make your own pizza

make your own pizza

eat your greens with pizza

eat your greens with pizza

eat your greens with pizza

eat your greens with pizza

family 4

 

family

family

harvesting for dinner

harvesting for dinner

kale chips and roasted cherries: topping choices

kale chips and roasted cherries: topping choices

ready for the oven

ready for the oven

 

 

 

 


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Pickled Beets YUMMY!

beets processed and ready to eat

Harlow Farm gave us enough small beets to make almost 20 quarts of pickles for our school salad bar. I had noticed that these were a popular item at lunch time. The After School students of all ages got together for a ‘pickling bee’ yesterday. It was impressive to observe how kind and encouraging the older students were toward the younger ones. The beets were pre-

beet peelers multi-age

beet peelers multi-age

boiled and cool, so it was very easy for even the youngest children to pop off the peels. After the bowls were filled, older students were the ‘quality control’ managers, making sure all skins were removed. I had brine boiling to ladle into sterile filled jars. I overheard a few great conversations among students as the red beet juice colored their fingers:

“So this is where the expression ‘beet red’ or ‘red as a beet’ comes from.” “I don’t need to buy fake blood for Halloween. I can just cook beets.” ” Hey, these taste sweet!”

Notice how all are working together on this project. (You can double click photos to enlarge.)

multi-age beet peelolders quality controlmeas.cinnclovesMeasuring cinnamon and cloves.

boiling water bath

boiling water bath

cleanup crew

Cleanup crew!

You can find the recipe for these pickled beets at Allrecipes.com. We just added 1/4 tsp. cinnamon to each jar.


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Making Pizza Sauce

Ripening Sungolds

Young After School students made pizza sauce the other day for a Make Your Own Pizza Night at school. Families will make their own pizzas together at school this Thursday. Then they’ll take homemade tomato sauce and pizza dough home with them to create their own  pizza night. The girls making the sauce on the far left had the best time squishing those tomatoes. Older students added diced onions and garlic. I cooked the whole mixture down to a sauce that night. It’s stored away in freezer bags until Thursday. Can’t wait!

squishing tomatoetoamoes and onions in potstrainng sauc

Tomato harvest Aug

Tomato harvest Aug.


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September Celery Harvesting

Abby's harvestAbby, a sixth grader, and I harvested celery for the entire school last week. You can see it in the background. She wanted her flowers and raspberries front and center for this photo. Our celery is feeding the entire school at snack time once a week. The kitchen supplies raisins and peanut butter or cream cheese for ‘ants on a log.’ This past week, a crew of K through third graders harvested our all school Thursday celery snack. They had a good time as you can see below:

ASP celery harvest

Happy muncherpulling up celery

Jays celery

Can we eat this celery now?

Can we eat this celery now?

6th grade celery harvest

6th grade celery harvest