Thursday, December 31, 2009

A Trip to Avery Island, Louisiana - Tabasco Factory

December 26, 2009.

We spent Christmas in Louisiana with our family and we made a trip to Avery Island to visit the legendary Tabasco hot sauce factory and mainly the Jungle Gardens which was first established by Edward Avery McIlhenny, the second son of the founder of McIlhenny company, Edmund McIlhenny. Here's some highlights of the trip in part one.


The signature logo of McIlhenny company with its renowned Tabasco sauce directs us to the factory and Country Store with a palmetto plant on its side, one of the most common tropical plants in the area. The whole place is seated on top of a very large salt dome of Avery Island which salt is mined and used in the process of sauce making.



The one and only Tabasco sauce factory where fermented tabasco pepper is mixed with vinegar and stirred for 28 continuous days, then bottled, labeled in many different languages, and shipped to all over the world. The factory produces 700,000 bottles of hot sauce each day. Factory tours available 7 days a week, but during the weekend the factory itself is not in operation. You are going only to see the bottling part of the factory through a glass window though. I was hoping to be able to see their warehouse where wooden barrels are stacked up high, but the area is not for public, I guess. The tabasco plantation is not open for public either and at this time of the year there's no activity there.


Tabasco Country Store showcases Tabasco's lines of food products and souvenirs, among them are the latest Tabasco Chipotle Pepper Sauce, jalapeno and sweet and spicy ice cream kit (you can sample them too), and a bunch of merchandises with Tabasco brand and Louisiana signature graphics.



A wooden barrel, where the mix of fresh tabasco pepper and Avery Island salt were stored to ferment for 3 years before mixed with vinegar to produce the signature Tabasco hot sauce, are exhibited by the entrance of the store. Variegated ginger foliage at the background are very common in this area.

© Burke's Garden, 2009.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Heavy Frost & Hibiscus

We got heavy frost on Sunday morning that turned the grass white and light brown, while in our little green house a tropical hibiscus was blooming.

© Burke's Garden, 2009.


Saturday, December 19, 2009

Winter Job

December 16, 2009.

Trimming and cutting down trees are winter job. That's what we have done this week. The oak tree in front of the house gets a severe trimming job to get rid of the mistletoes. One dead oak tree on the road side has to go down.




Four baby flying squirrels were captured. They were found inside the hollow part of the dead oak tree by the road. Mama Squirrel and the rest of the family managed to escape. We'll keep these babies until they are stronger and ready to be released if they want to. According to the tree man, they make good pets and would stay on your shoulder no matter where you go if you let them. They are sure cute, though.

© Burke's Garden, 2009.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Goodbye to Garden

The killing frost has come
I say goodbye to garden
See you back in spring









© Burke's Garden, 2009

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Our Neighbor's Fiery Pistachio Tree

"In the other gardens
And all up the vale,
From the autumn bonfires
See the smoke trail!

Pleasant summer over
And all the summer flowers,
The red fire blazes,
the grey smoke towers.

Sing a song of seasons!
Something bright in all,
Flowers in the summer
Fires in the fall! "
- Robert Louis Stevenson, Autumn Fires







This is our dear neighbor's pistachio tree. It's on fire!
It has the most wonderful fall foliage in the world
and it always does this every year!
We can see the red from our place. It's just too lovely.

Photos © Burke's Garden, 2009.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Do You See What I See?

"Winter is an etching,
spring a watercolor,
summer an oil painting
and autumn a mosaic of them all."

- Stanley Horowitz


Along the tree-bordered property line, across the yellow and green pasture, a red fiery tree is peeking through and screaming, "Look at me! Look at me!".

© Burke's Garden, 2009