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Summer Harvest for Christmas Lunch

Thanks to my family for a delightful Christmas day here at our home playing in our permaculture garden. It was so relaxing and low-key.

We perhaps ate a little too much, but the food was so delicious, fresh and healthy and much of it directly harvested a few moments before we ate. I’m so pleased we created very little packaging with our shared meals today.

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My christmas breakfast – Maia’s jaboticaba jam on Les’s choc-cherry sourdough with fruit…mmm
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Evan’s fruity face on rye, chia and cinnamon porridge
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Sourdough pumpkin and choc-cherry bread
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Breakfast platter
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Collecting eggs for lunch

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Evan’s sisters help with the lunchtime harvest
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A selection of ingredients for the eggy bake and salad.
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I love collecting a leaf from this and a leaf from that. Our lunch bake included pumpkin leaf, red hibiscus spinach, brazilian spinach, comfrey, garlic chives, sorrel, vietnamese mint, perpetual spinach, kale, rosemary, thyme, oregano, parsley, sacred basil and asparagus
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Hugh loves eggy bake, but with out the ‘stuff’ on top! I always make a special section just for his ‘tongue-taste’.
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The dairy free version also tasted delicious, I just added a few more herbs for extra flavour instead of cheese.
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Maia’s collection for the salad.
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These little cherry tomatoes were bursting with flavour and had such great firm texture. They made this very simple salad. 
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Sitting down to share our simple garden lunch, followed by Nanna’s Christmas Pudding from her Nanna’s traditional recipe.
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The simplest home-made lemonade. Our own rainwater with bubbles and a splash of lemon juice from our tree.
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Melting the beeswax for the salves.
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Making personalised blends of the salves as Christmas presents. 
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Hundreds of bright blue dragonflies hovered close to the water’s surface and circled around us while we were testing out the kid’s new kayak and row boat today on the lake below our house. 
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The perfect end to a wonderful day – heading out to ride through the valley.

Maia reflected that she wanted Christmas everyday. Although she loves the gift-giving, she really just loved having everyone around.  Hugh was surprised at how much rubbish we created from even the simple and practical presents we shared. He suggested next year we only have one or two special unwrapped presents. I like his thinking.

8 Responses

  1. Fiona Chain
    Fiona Chain at |

    Hi Morag, I have just discovered your blog via Down to Earth. Absolutely love it so far. Looks like you had a beautiful Christmas Day. I am going to add your blog to my daily reading! Have a great day and a happy New Year.

  2. Tammy
    Tammy at |

    Simply lovely.

  3. Morag Gamble
    Morag Gamble at |

    Hi Fiona, Thanks for visiting! Best wishes for the new year.
    Morag

  4. Australian Gardening Granny
    Australian Gardening Granny at |

    Your Christmas food looks delicious, love the breakfast fruit platter.
    I would love the recipe for Evan's porridge, but maybe you have already given it in an earlier post. I haven't worked my way through them all yet. And the eggy bake!

  5. Morag Gamble
    Morag Gamble at |

    I simply use 1 cup of organic rolled rye and a 1/4 cup of chia and cook up like standard oat porridge. I usually add cinnamon into the pot, and sometimes a sprinkle of himalayan salt. It only takes 10 minutes. Sometimes I soak it overnight, then it's just a few minutes cooking time. I really like the flavour and know that it is far more nutritionally-dense.

    I love experimenting with breakfast porridge – sometimes I add millet, sometimes quinoa, sometimes amaranth, sometimes buckwheat. I suggest rinsing and soaking them first.

  6. Australian Gardening Granny
    Australian Gardening Granny at |

    Thank you for the recipe. Definitely try this one.

  7. Morag Gamble
    Morag Gamble at |

    Hello Jo, Thanks for taking up Rhonda's invitation to come and visit my new blog. Welcome. Best wishes for 2016 and in the further development of your Redcliffe Garden.

  8. Jo Bellotti
    Jo Bellotti at |

    Hi Morag! I have just found you (through Rhonda) and am delighted to read your blog. We live in an increasingly Permaculture-driven small block on the Redcliffe Peninsula, and delight in spending spare time up your way. Thanks for writing, and here's to the future!