
No, this isn’t a study in how to abuse a compost.
This is the corner of our garden that cannot be seen from the house. In such, it has also become the collection of plant matter that neither my wife nor myself have the energy to take care of. Leaves, sticks, dead houseplants - they all end up here.
And while neither we or our neighbors really appreciate this corner of our yard, a few other inhabitants do. The hedgehog family was spotted roaming around the neighborhood last week so, while out of hibernation, they aren’t home right now. You can, however, just make out our star in the central upper part of this picture.
A better view (sans leaves):

These rhubarb plants have been here for years and years. They weren’t doing too hot when we moved in which is largely the reason the “compost” ended up where it did. However, 5 years after installing our heap of lawn refuse, they are very, very pleased.
And, one of the true highlights of spring for me is harvesting the year’s first batch.
This fresh in my mind, I swung by a patch of woods when biking home from lunch with my children. Our eagle eyes managed to find a great deal of tender nettles:


We actually found a lot more but I had forgotten my gloves and my quickly burning fingertips only allowed for this much…
Could there be better inspiration for a spring dinner? Nettle soup and rhubarb pie.
Start with the pie.
Clean the rhubarb stalks. The slugs had already taken their toll on some of these.

I needed a quick and easy pie so I assembled the following:

Butter (10 tablespoons), 1/3 of a vanilla pod plus 1 teaspoon sugar, the rhubarb (about 1 ½ pounds), one cup of flour, 1/3 cup sugar and 2 tablespoons corn or potato starch
Scrape the vanilla pod and add the seeds to the flour and the teaspoon of sugar. Cut the butter into cubes and put it in the bowl with the flour mixture.

Quickly pinch the butter into the flour until it is well distributed.

Dump the mixture into a baking dish and roughly form it into a pie bottom.

Add the 1/3 cup of sugar to the rhubarb and dump in the starch. Mix well and dump the rhubarb mixture onto the pie crust (or layer the rhubarb and sugar mixed with starch as I did).

Bake at 425 degrees for 25 minutes.
While the pie is baking, assemble the ingredients for the nettle soup:

Cream (¼-1/3 cup), 2 tablespoons each of flour and butter, about 3 cups veal stock and the nettles (about a quart). (Ignore the onion - I didn’t end up using it…).
Bring the stock to a boil and add the nettles.

Cover and simmer for about 5 minutes.

Add the cream and puree. Season with salt and pepper.
I served the soup with soft-boiled egg halves, some homemade smoked salmon, lightly whipped cream and a few drops of truffle oil.


The soup was very mild and very tasty. The nettles have a woodsy, grassy and hay-like aroma and flavor.
Your pie should be done by now:

Serve the rhubarb pie with softened ice cream or a little whipped cream.

Happy spring, everyone! We made it through yet another winter!
Last edited by
Bridgestone on May 11th, 2008, 12:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.