Monday, December 31, 2012

Another day of eating

Day 2


Its Monday.  And its New Year's Eve.  What are we up to?  Being awesome and falling asleep on the couch.  [insert obvious being poor meme].

Here's what we are eating today- note the lack of most festive foods/holiday treats because that stuff is just too expensive to buy and I haven't had any time to bake.  Food from my previous post may not have its source labeled.

Breakfast:
Bacon, eggs, toast, and homemade jam

Snack:
Roasted peanuts from Christmas

Lunch:
Leftover pork tenderloin sandwiches (from Christmas, gotta use that up!)

Dinner:
Olives and cheese from the Co-op
Homemade chicken soup (chicken leftover from previous post)
Bread
Chocolate bar from Co-op
Eggnog =)

This is a simple, typical day for us.  Every single time that we eat meat with bones, I save those bones to make soup.  It is a little tedious, but stretching out meat this way saves so much money.  You'd be surprised how good the flavor of the broth it.  

Happy New Year, and be safe!

Friday, December 28, 2012

What we eat: how we eat organically/sustainably for next to nothing

What we eat.
Day 1


I"m starting this on a Friday.  'Cause I like Fridays.  I'm spending the day catching up on knitting Jon's sweater...a task that I've sadly put off for a long time.  I'm also making whole wheat bread (recipe from Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book).  I thought that it might be a good idea to record what we eat for a week, with recipes, notes, and advice.  Eating on a budget is difficult, and eating well is even harder.  I hope that this list might help others to stretch out meals creatively as well as help me see where we might be lacking in our diet.  I won't be posting every day, but I hope to give a good picture here of what we eat!

(Jon's parents sent us back after Christmas with a ton of food, things that we don't normally have)

Breakfast:

Bacon from Our Place Farm in Loudon, NH (trade for labor at Kelly Corner Farm)
Local eggs from the local Blue Seal (trade for labor at Kelly Corner Farm)
Homemade maple oat bread from last week
Organic tea from Ocean State Job Lot
Coffee from Co-op with raw milk
Organic banana

Lunch:

Leftover pork tenderloin sandwiches, with pork from Jon's parents, same bread, and kale
Homemade caramel cream pie, made last night from the Better H&G Cook Book (raw milk, local eggs, turbinado sugar, etc.)
Strawberries from Jon's parents

Snack:
Homemade bread and homemade blackberry blueberry jam

Dinner:

Olives and cheese from the Co-op
Roasted chicken (trade for labor at Kelly Corner Farm) with mushrooms (from Jon's parents)
Boiled cabbage, potatoes and carrots (organic carrots and potatoes from Co-op, cabbage from Jon's parents)
Stonyfield caramel ice cream from Co-op, on sale
Whole wheat bread, warm from the oven
Organic eggnog from Co-op


Friday, December 21, 2012

Roast Duck

Today, I made roast duck.

It is the most amazing thing I have ever made in my entire life.  I am not exaggerating.


Seriously.  Go look at the pictures, and you can imagine the absolute goodness.

I didn't take a picture of it.  Because there wasn't time.  We ate it all.

The glaze makes it, too.  With root vegetables underneath to cook in the duck fat.

If you've never made roast duck, you must try it.  It takes a little over 4 hours, but it is just so incredibly worth it.  

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Great Aunt Jeanette's Maple Oatmeal Bread

Today is the day that I'm making sticky buns AND bread.  Because I'm hungry.  And I'm on a sweet kick.

Right next to my cookbooks, I keep a large untidy stack of papers and magazine bits.  These are my favorite recipes.  Some my mother copied down, some are from my Grammie, and some I have printed or clipped out long ago.  This bread is amazing, especially with my uncle's maple syrup.  Slightly sweet, full of flavor, and when toasted with butter...better than any other bread I've tried!

Great Aunt Jeanette's Maple Oatmeal Bread

Yield: 2 loaves

Combine:
2 cups boiling water
1 cups oats
1/2 cup maple syrup
1/2 tsp salt (I used sea salt)
2 Tbsp butter

Stir, and cool to lukewarm.


Dissolve 1 package dry yeast in 1/4 cup lukewarm water and add to oat mixture.

Add flour* (maybe up to 5 cups) as needed.  <-- Here, I added flour a little at a time until the dough came       away from the sides of the bowl and 'felt right'.

Knead (or use electric mixer 5-7 minutes) until dough is stretchy and when you slap it, it feels taught.  It will be a little sticky.



Let rise until double (depending on kitchen temperature, 11/2 to 2 hours).

Punch down.  Shape into loaves, place in greased regular sized (9 by 5?) dough pans.  Rise again about 30 minutes, until dough starts to reach top of the pan.

Bake at 350 for 35-40 minutes.

Remove from pans and cool on wire rack.



*All purpose flour works, but bread flour is really great!  <--My mother's side note.

(These loaves are very flat...because I had the sticky buns in the oven right before the bread and turned the oven off before putting the bread in...I didn't realize this until the timer went off 40 minutes later...still tastes good, though!)


Monday, November 12, 2012

Grammie's Brown Sugar Cake Recipe

I spent maybe half an hour today looking for a coffeecake recipe that looked decent, and I couldn't find anything that sounded good and used ingredients that I already had.  Then I remembered, yes, I had finally unpacked the cookbooks and random pieces of paper with family recipes on them.  And somewhere in that pile was Grammie's brown sugar cake recipe.

It is like a cake/coffeecake hybrid, with a brown sugar flavor in an old-fashioned cake form.  If I was ever asked what I wanted for a treat, I would ask for this cake.  I have no idea where the recipe came from.

So now I am sharing it here.  It is rich and goes a long way.

Brown Sugar Cake

2 cups flour
2 cups packed brown sugar
1/2 shortening

Combine.  Mix until crumbly.  Set aside 1 cup of mixture.


(I substituted the following today: 1 cup whole wheat pastry flour, 1 cup all purpose flour, 1 cup white sugar, 1 cup demarara sugar, 1/2 cup lard)

Add these remaining ingredients:

1 egg, beaten
1 cup sour milk (if you don't have sour milk, measure just under a cup of milk, then add cider or white vinegar to meet the 1 cup mark, let set for a few minutes, and it will sour)
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt (I used sea salt)
1 tsp vanilla

Blend well.  

Pour into a greased 8x8 pan.  Spread reserved mixture on top.


Bake at 350 for 30 to 40 minutes, until a cake tester or knife inserted into the center comes out clean.  My oven runs hot, and it took me 40 minutes, but keep an eye on it so it doesn't burn!


Of course I cut it when it was still piping hot, but you get the idea.  Best coffeecake ever.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Snow/rain day and chocolate swirl gingerbread

I am convinced that my daily motivation to get up and do something is directly related to weather and amount of sunlight.  I have been known, when the clouds part and a beam of sunlight floods into the living room, to jump up and yell 'sun!' and stand in it.  Today started with snow (YAY), but is now just full of rain and I have barely been able to move off of the couch.

At least I haven't let myself take a nap.  Yet.

Today, I worked on some knitting and made some lamb broth from some bones.  And I ate a relatively large amount of snacks.  Today was also another day that I gave in to hunger and had some peanut butter toast.  Maybe its just that I'm too lazy to think up something else, but when I am starving and I haven't planned ahead, at least I always have homemade bread handy!  Now that I've already given in today, I might as well top it off with this dessert that I found on tastespotting.com.

Chocolate swirl gingerbread.

I have no idea how it will turn out, but the pictures alone make me want to go to the trouble of melting chocolate swirling batter.  It even uses whole wheat flour.  That means they are healthy!

Besides, Jon has been out all day in this weather, and he deserves a treat =)

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Gluten and hunger

Going gluten free is hard.  Very hard.  I had no idea how much I depended on wheat in my diet.  And I did make a few things that worked out very well, like banana bread and rice-based dishes.  Making baked goods with wheat for Jon led to a lot of temptation, and there were days where there was nothing to eat but a little bread.  At that point, I had to make a decision to go hungry or eat wheat.  If I had more money and time, I would have been able to stick with the diet.  So.  Instead of completely going without, I am making choices.  If I can avoid gluten, then I do, but if I can't, then I shouldn't worry so much about it.  This isn't a diet because of an allergy, it is a choice.

By the way, this is an amazing gf banana bread recipe.

And this is a wonderful egg substitute for when you run out of eggs and still want to bake (I used whole flax seeds).




Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Gluten-free challenge, Days 2 and 3

Yesterday was my second day on this diet.  I had been quite dissatisfied with Day 1, craving gluten like crazy.  I made some bread with Bob's Red Mill GF Flour Mix, and it ended up burnt and didn't taste good at all.  I peeled the burnt crust off, and it is somewhat decent when toasted.  Somewhat.  I never realized that making bread without gluten would be so difficult!  Yesterday was so much better because I actually ate enough food and even found some gluten free treats out in town.

I woke up feeling amazingly good- lots of energy, not groggy.  Still felt nauseous, just like every morning since high school.  I went out and helped gather up sheep from the field with my friend, and then took town all the summer's electro-net fencing.  I had enough energy to do chores all afternoon.  Jon and I went to the co-op and got some dessert- Jon got bread pudding, I got a flourless vanilla cupcake.  Then we went to a local sushi place and got one roll to split with the leftover soup that was waiting for us at home.  I think that if I can treat myself to healthy and still gf treats and keep my stomach full, this experiment might work =)

Especially since chips are allowed.

Today is day 3, and I have no idea what I will bake or cook today.  But I feel good, full of energy and hope.  Who wants to teach me how to make sushi?

Monday, October 22, 2012

Gluten-free challenge, Day 1

My cookie ideas are going to be an extra challenge now.  I have decided that I will go gluten-free for two months.

This decision comes from a lot of thinking and a tip from my cousin- that going gluten-free might greatly assist  my dreams of having children.  As far as I know, I am not gluten intolerant.  But I have seen studies that may show that not eating gluten can greatly increase fertility.  I don't know what will happen.  I do know that there is a bigger plan out there, and maybe this is my way of being guided.  At the very least, I will have a chance to do lots of experiments with new recipes, ingredients, tastes, and who knows what will happen!

I will be going to the co-op today to get some ingredients in bulk form, and hopefully they have what I 'think' that I need.  There are so many strange flours and starches in gluten-free recipes.  I have no idea of cost or if the store will even have them.  I may end up coming home with a bag of Bob's Red Mill Gluten-Free Flour Mix!

Also, from my last post, here is how to make one chicken last for many, many meals:
Day 1: Roast large whole chicken with tons of root veggies for dinner
Day 2: Slices of chicken with leftover veggies for lunch, chicken marsala pizza for dinner
Day 3: Leftover pizza for lunch, buffalo chicken pizza for dinner
Day 4: Leftover pizza for lunch, chicken soup for dinner (made with boiling the carcass in water, straining broth out, then adding the rest of the meat back in with veggies)
Day 5: Leftover soup for lunch, stretch out soup with more veggies and black beans
Day 6: Leftover soup for lunch.  Leftover soup for dinner.
Day 7: Leftover soup for lunch.  Leftover soup for dinner with extra side dishes (didn't I say black beans are amazing?!)
Day 8: Leftover soup for lunch.  Just over a week with one chicken!

And that is how we keep grocery bills down!

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Oatmeal chai cookies with whole wheat flour and flax seeds

Last night, I hardly slept at all.  It was the first night we programmed the thermostat, so of course it was so hot and dry that I couldn't stay asleep on the night before Jon had to get up super early.  This resulted in a migraine, a three hour nap on the couch, and spending the entire afternoon knitting/watching scary movies (not that I don't do that part anyway...).  Sometime during my nap, I woke up to a program all about chocolate, and it highlighted some very unusual flavor pairings.  After my brain cleared up a bit, I had a thought- I love cookies.  I'm hungry.  What recipes are out there that I haven't tried yet?  What about using different flavors that you wouldn't get in a traditional cookie?  I found quite a few new recipes out there, especially on pinterest, and decided to have a go at making some new cookies.

Oatmeal chai cookies

I adapted the recipe from here.

3/4 cup brown turbinado sugar (Demarara) 
1/3 cup plus 1 Tbsp soybean oil
2 eggs (I used free range)
1 tsp vanilla (I used homemade)
1 cup whole wheat flour (I used stone ground)
3/4 cup white flour
1/2 cup regular oats
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt (I used sea salt)
1/2 tsp cardamom
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 heaping spoonful of flax seed (I used organic)

Because I am a rebel, I don't bother to mix things separately, and I used my Kitchenaid.  Set oven to 350.  Mix brown sugar and oil together.  Throw in everything else in the order listed.  I didn't grease my cookie sheet, but you can if you feel like it.  Drop by large spoonful onto a cookie sheet.


Leave lots of room for spreading.  They puff up quite a bit.  Bake for 15 minutes.  Let cool on the cookie sheet for a few minutes.  The very bottom may stick a tiny bit, but they should come off if you're careful with the spatula.  Cool on a cooling rack.  Makes 18 cookies.

The result?  OH my goodness.  Slightly crunchy, yet puffy and cake-like, wonderful oatmeal flavor, hint of spice.  I would definitely increase the chai spices if you wanted a more intense chai flavor, but this is enough for my tastes.


And you would never know that there was whole wheat flour in these!

I think this is a good start to a long project.  I will think up some more recipes soon.  Also, in my next post, I will write about tips on how to make one very large chicken last two people for 9+ meals.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Best ginger cookies, ever.

After lots of research, I have discovered the best ginger cookies I have ever tasted.  Here is a link to the recipe, which was hiding at the King Arthur Flour site all this time.


I substituted veg. oil for the butter (0.56 cups), because that is what I had.  And I added all of the optional ingredients.  I also used turbinado sugar to roll them in and they only took 8 min. to bake.

You're welcome.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

And yet another move!

We have moved, again!  This is my seventh place since college, fifth since we married.  To quote Scott Pilgrim, it is a "long story filled with sighs".  So here we are now, in an apartment with a full-sized fridge and washer and dryer!  If you know me in real life, feel free to ask me where I'm now located.  

There is a large window that floods the living room with light, giving little sunny warm spots on the carpet that make me long to curl up on the carpet and take a cat nap.

For the first time in my life, I have a dishwasher.  I have no idea how to use it.  I think it needs special soap.

I am already enjoying the benefits of doing laundry in a washer instead of the tub.

Basically, we are very happy where we are now!


Tavie is rocking out to Gogol Bordello here, exploring his new environment.

Having a full sized fridge with freezer is suddenly a puzzle.  I have almost forgotten how to buy groceries ahead and make large meals to last all week.  I haven't even touched the freezer yet, except to look inside and marvel at how cold it is!  Food is even keeping longer with the fridge at the proper temperature.

Now that I have the luxury of all these modern conveniences, I find that I am used to not relying on them and hardly miss them!  I'm sure that will change with time- the freezer is calling for some applesauce.  And ice cream.

We are still unpacking the mountain of boxes that ended up in the basement.  I have no idea where any of my books are.


On another note, Jon and I participated in this event:
It was a lot of fun, and I even sold a bunch of my knitted things while demonstrating spinning!  Jon demonstrated stone and wood carving.  We really hope some of the leads that we got follow through for future jobs!

I have neglected this blog lately, but now that we are almost settled in, I will really try to keep up with all of my fall recipes!  I have also discovered the perfect ginger cookie recipe I will reveal in my next post!

Monday, September 10, 2012

Another day, another car down

Its happened again.  For anyone that knows me, this is the third time that this has happened to me.  Complete with a story full of stormy weather at night, struggling on back roads, having the road completely blocked with a fallen tree, the car with a failing transmission, and Jon coming to rescue me.  My poor Ford Escort decided that it was done on the way home from Jen's house, and by a miracle I was able to limp it to the family homestead up north.  Jon and I went back up later to look at it with my uncle.  The transmission fluid was empty, which seemed very wrong, but even after a refill, there was no leakage and the car still wouldn't go above 15.  Today, I am looking for someone to tow it away and hopefully give me some money for it.  I'll miss that poor car!

Wedding day photo with the car

Now...who wants to drive me places?!?!

Really.  

We are not planning on getting another car.  There is no way we could afford it, I work from home, and Jon's truck is reliable.  I have enough work to do around the house.  There is yet another pile of tomatoes sitting on the kitchen floor that need to be sauced or made into something.  There are probably more outside.  

My poor garden is a mess.  There were so many critical times when I needed to be out there weeding that we were off in another state or I was busy translating.    The squash bugs ate all but two pumpkins, several spaghetti squash, and one butternut squash.  Then they moved on to my one summer squash plant, then the cucumbers...

I had aphids on my eggplants so bad that they are only now flowering and I have one tiny eggplant starting.  I should not have planted my tomatoes so close to other things and so close together- they are now covering the peppers almost completely.  The weeds are terrible.  I didn't hill my potatoes so they didn't produce well. I didn't weed the herbs in the back soon enough and only a few basil plants survived.  My melons went out so ate that the one tiny melon that formed was consumed by squash bugs.  Ahh...oh well.  There are so many good things that happened with the garden this year, that I should not complain!  This is my biggest garden yet.  I did not have the advantage of any tools besides a hoe and a pair of gloves.  We have enough tomatoes to make me overwhelmed.  The carrots and kale are beautiful.  The cinnamon basil was such a success that I would grow it again in a larger quantity (only a slight cinnamon scent, just like a sweet basil, I still use it in cooking like regular basil, but beautiful purple flowers and tint on the leaves!).  The lemon cucumbers were again a success- hardy, plentiful, never bitter.  I will sit down a write a review for each variety that I planted this year with my comments and whether or not I would grow it again.  

I am going to go finish my tea and then contemplate what to do with those tomatoes.  Maybe I will dehydrate some today.  There are also apples to bake with =)  I long for that familiar smell of spices in the air that seems to arrive with the falling leaves.


Thursday, August 30, 2012

Why I Stay At Home



Not many people out there choose to either work from home or stay at home managing the household. Before I was married, I earned a degree in two majors and a minor, and then worked a full-time job and several part-time jobs at the same time. It was hard, but I managed. When I got married and lost my last job as a nanny (their mother chose to stay at home), I decided to stay home, too. It didn't really work. I felt a lot of pressure to find a job. Translating was very slow, and I didn't have much of a garden at that time. I got a part-time job that fall. And for various reasons that made me unhappy and exhausted, I quit. I spent a long time after that at home, and again I felt pressure to find a job to help pay the bills. I'm not sure why. Maybe I felt guilty. I took another part-time, and again it didn't work out.

Today I had a 'long think' about this. I had planned that someday when we had kids that I would stay home and translate on the side. I have an important place in the home. It really is a full-time job to clean, cook, keep the garden, take care of the landlords, as well as helping out at my friend's farm in exchange for food, translating, selling yarn and some veggies, and supporting my husband. What I do makes a difference. I also save money by growing food, trading for food, not commuting, and translating when I can get the work. I am able to be there for Jon when he needs extra help. Why should I give in to the pressure of working 9-5?

I will continue to stay at home. There are so many jobs out there that I could take and not be happy. I could give up baking and buy packaged food again. I could retire my car and start monthly payments on a new one. Or I could appreciate what I have and the difference that I make in our lives by doing what I do best and being happy.

Be happy.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Homemade ketchup, jam without pectin, and possible jobs for both of us

In all of my spare time, I made ketchup.  I also neglected to take pictures, because my camera is still out of batteries and my webcam is hard to hold over the stove, especially when things are boiling.  But I did it, I swear!  I used this recipe, from my favorite canning site.

When they said to use 25 lbs of tomatoes, I had no idea how much that meant.  I knew that the enormous pile of tomatoes on the floor were ALL ripe, and there were more to be picked outside.  I was also making bread, muffins, coffee cake, washing other veggies, etc., and had some pink fleshed crab apples to use.  My time and resources were limited, so I decided that whatever amount I had next to me was close enough.

Here are the steps that I took to make ketchup, all based on the recipe at the link above, and their canning instructions.  Canning safely is very important!

1.  Put a medium sized pot of water on to boil, have a bowl of cold water (with ice if you have the luxury of a freezer) ready.
2.  Throw some tomatoes in the boiling water -carefully- and wait about 30 seconds to a minute, or I just wait until one of the skins cracks.
3.  Take tomatoes out and put in cold water.
4.  Repeat.  By the way, boiling tomatoes smell really funky.
5.  Peel the skin off.  It should come off very easily.  Should.  Cut out stem part on top with the tough part, and any bad spots.  Squeeze out the seeds, trying not to get them all over yourself and the kitchen you may have just cleaned.
6.  If you are still sane by the time you are done, put 3 cups of vinegar on to simmer.  You will smell like pickles.
7.  Put the tomatoes in a thick-bottomed pot.  Add a medium sized chopped onion, a minced clove of garlic, 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon black pepper, 1 cup sugar or ratio of other sweetener, and 1/2 teaspoon dried mustard.  Put on to simmer for 20-30 minutes, until they look squishy.  This was actually all the salt that the recipe needed for my taste!
8.  Measure vinegar again, it probably reduced at least a cup down, add more vinegar until you get back to 3 cups.
9.  Put tomatoes through a food mill or like appliance, to get all the seeds out, onions, and other chewy bits.
10.  After washing out the pot, add the tomatoes back in with the vinegar.
11.  Stirring as often as you can remember, simmer until it cooks down to where you want it, or a little sooner.  It will set thicker as it cools.  This took me about the time it took to make dinner (half a chicken, roasted, with veggies), prep. and all.  You could do this in a crock pot if you have one big enough, or probably the oven.  Try not to burn it.
12.  Remember to get your canner going with enough time to have the water boiling before the ketchup is ready.  Ladle the ketchup into sanitized jars, and follow water bath instructions as apply to you.  I had pint jars in a plain water bath, for 30 minutes.
13.  When done, cool on a rack and let set until completely cool.  To be safe, I set it for 24 hours.  Label jars, especially with the date.

I ended up with 2 pints of ketchup, and a little left over that I stuck in the fridge.  I know that's not much.  But, it is SO good!!!!  Absolutely worth it.  It reminds me of the ketchup we would get in Russia.  Better than anything in the store.  You should try it.  Really.  And I'm not just saying it because I want you to sweat in the kitchen for an entire afternoon and end up smelling of boiled tomato skins and vinegar.  I'm just saying that if you have more tomatoes than you know what to do with, ketchup is a good idea.

On another note, I have been experimenting with box-pectin free jam making.  2 pints of blueberry and 2 pints of black-and-blueberry jam were successful without boxed pectin.  I really want to branch out into other types of jams, but I was always told that I must always follow a recipe, or there would be dire results.  There are so few recipes out there for the ideas that I have.  I think that I will need to go through my old Shaker recipe books, and do some experimenting.  There has to be a way to make it work without killing anyone.  If there is enough sugar and enough acid, it should work.  My goals for this week are blackberry-peach and plain peach jams.  Maybe I'll find some batteries and post my results!

As you may have guessed, I have tomatoes.  So many tomatoes.  I dream that they are chasing me.  I also have kale, carrots, beets, one or two bean that might grow bigger, summer squash, heirloom cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, kohlrabi, cabbage, potatoes, yellow onions, herbs, scallions, turnips, rutabaga, and I harvested my entire sugar pumpkin and spaghetti squash crop at once- most rotten where they grew or were full of squash bugs.  The vines are all dying.  Still, other veggies are doing very well and we have way too many.  I have started selling a few at my friend's farm, earning enough money for gas to keep my car going.

And...I may have a job baking crackers at a local bakery!  I have a phone interview tomorrow, and will write more if it works out =)  There's more!  Jon will be starting teaching woodworking to kids once a week!  Things always look up if you have hope.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Canning tomatoes

I didn't wake up this morning and think, 'Wow, today's a great day to spend in the kitchen hovering over boiling pots of things and getting covered in tomato juice!'  But that's what happened.  And some lamb broth making (now also covered in lamb tallow...), more garden harvesting, cleaning, bread baking, veg. dehydrating, moving heavy objects, and taking my landlady out for errands.  This was also one of those days where I found myself in public with various food splotches on my clothes and dirt all over my unshaven legs.

But even though I am coated in a layer of sweat now, too, I feel like I am actually making some progress in my summer goals.

(summer squash, straight eight cucumber, lemon cucumbers, less ripe tomatoes --> ripe and ready to be sauced tomatoes)
All of those ripe tomatoes only made 3 pints of plain sauce.
(cherry tomatoes next to house model and wood glue)

All of that is just from today, besides two green bell peppers.

Two cans of tomato sauce with veggies that I made a few days ago, but canned today.  They will be used up first.  That is also my French press <3

Purple pole beans.  Would not do these again- they have strings!  At least Jon eats them.

Dehydrating some cherry tomatoes and hot Portugal peppers.

Whole wheat bread ready to go in the oven.

Canner on left, lamb bones stewing on right.

Whew.  I am exhausted and I smell like lamb tallow (which I am saving, by the way, to use to fry something like potatoes in...somehow I think a lamb scented candle wouldn't meet Jon's approval).  But there is good food cooking/canning/growing.

My pantry is growing.

I haven't made yogurt, cheese, or butter for a few weeks while my parents are getting the cell count down, but now that it is on track again, I have dreams of mozzarella cheese and maple yogurt.  I've been getting fish and cookies at market for the vendor price, and have been trading my time and labor for eggs, lamb, and chicken.  Our grocery budget is extremely small, and I have been meeting it.  I really do miss ice cream, though.  We are getting a freezer from a family friend next month, and I am already thinking of all the ice cream that I am going to make!  

Summer has been extremely busy with translating, visiting friends and family, and working in the garden.  We mostly survive on my pizza, stews, sausage with veggies, pasta, berries from the woods, raw and cooked veggies, and bread.  Its working.  I am pushing through all of this canning and dehydrating now, to enjoy my own veggies in the winter.  The garden seems to be pushing me to my limits, though, and I wish that we already had kids that I could give chores to!  The orange pumpkins out there are calling me to make pies...

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Busy Summer

I can't remember the last time that I sat down to write here.  I have spent entire days out in the garden, catching up on what seemed to be an endless number of new weeds, things that needed harvesting, and managing pests.  Tomato horn worms are devastating my tomatoes.
File:Tomatoe-horn-worm2.jpg
(wikipedia image)
Despite those massive worms, most everything else is going very well, and coming very early.  The lettuce has bolted and the peas are done, the salad turnips and radishes are all gone, but I am picking beets, carrots, beans, cherry tomatoes, kohlrabi, spinach, Swiss chard, hot peppers, bell peppers, cucumbers, summer squash, onions, scallions, herbs and turnips.  Only three parsnips survived, and the eggplant is so chewed up by aphids, it probably won't produce (powdered mustard mixed in warm water sprayed on leaves helps, but only if you keep up with it!).  Rutabaga, cabbage, potatoes, tomatoes, spaghetti squash, butternut squash, pumpkins, leeks, and sunflowers might be ready as early as the end of next month!  I have no idea about the sugar beets or melons, they are so small still, but if we have a long season it might work!  I haven't checked the garden at my parents' in a few weeks...so those purple beans might be ready soon.  At least the dried beans that I planted there will be fine.  The good things about those is that you just leave them to dry on the vine, then pick the whole plant!  Super easy.

I have been running the dehydrator constantly, and it is still not enough.  We have more than we know what to do with.  Some things are very easy to store or leave in the ground until we want them, but others, like turnips, just keep growing, and we are sick of them.  I never want to see another turnip again.  If anyone out there wants turnips, please let me know!  Or anything else, for that matter...

Today, I am making oat bread, boiling some lamb bones for broth, dehydrating cilantro, and washing clothes in the tub, Russian style.  I am going to the market later to sell yarn, demonstrate spinning, and help Kelly Corner Farm sell their goods.  I LOVE the market.  There are so many good things to eat!  I sometimes get things at a discount, too, because I help as a vendor.  Every week I come home with massive cookies, fresh fish, and maybe some blueberry milk or day old muffins.  Some vendors are willing to trade goods, too.  I feel very fortunate to have access to all of these wonderful and nutritious foods!  I strongly recommend going to your local market, make friends, get to know people.  Sometimes they might have a deal or opportunity to get something at a discount or in bulk, too.  Buying local when you can is so good for the local economy, reducing the need for transporting food over long distances and picking it before it is ripe or letting it sit, the nutrients fading away the longer it takes to get to your table.  I think that conventional produce, grown with care and sustainable practices, is much better than organic produce from the big store shipped from the other side of the country.  I could go on about that topic for a while...

July is almost over, and I am so far behind.  I have jams to make, weeds to pull, veggies to blanch and dehydrate, cheese to make.  My cupboards look so bare right now.  I am thinking of the winter and what we will eat then.  But for now, I need to go put that bread in the oven and mix up some blueberry and blackberry gingerbread, and hang up some clothes to dry, before heading out for market.  It is such a beautiful day!

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Excerpt from 2009 essay, written by me

She was taught how to be a farmer's wife as soon as she could breathe. Little fingers clasped a butter knife, imitating the swift repeat of older hands. She gained a roughness and scraped her bare legs in the maple tree out front by the falling porch. Shelled peas on the stone steps. Fell asleep between the pumpkins dreaming of butter and oat bread.
-MB

Friday, July 6, 2012

Butter and Vegetables

After a few early morning errands, I started the day with some butter-making.
Mmmm...buttermilk!

Then I started the yogurt maker.
Rose infused honey yogurt.

AND I finally got out to the garden to take some pictures.
Lettuce
Beets
Carrots
Kale
Peas
Bell Peppers
Beans
Tomatoes
Hot Peppers
Salad Turnips
Cinnamon Basil
Freckles Lettuce
Cilantro
Dill
Mizuna Cabbage
Radish

These are only the impressive ones.  There is so much more work to do!  My car has been broken for a month, so I have had lots of garden time.  Come visit me!!!

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Keeping up with chores.

It is hot.  I do not like heat/humidity.  This kind of weather makes me useless and keeps me awake all night.  So how can I get anything done when I just want to lie in front of a fan drinking water?

It is not easy.

Jon is out there, working on a wall job.  I have no idea how he can do physical labor right now!  That does give me some motivation to get up and get a few things done, though.

So far, I have swept the kitchen and bathroom, washed yesterday's dishes, made rhubarb yogurt muffins (pear butter instead of oil), I started some chicken broth, and some whole wheat yogurt flax/sunflower seed maple bread (I changed the recipe a bit) is rising.  My motivation has ended for the moment...but after the worst of the heat is done, I plan to make a chicken soup with the broth, mop the floors, scrub the tub and sink, clean the bunny cage, sort through peat pods and get rid of empty ones, brush the bunny, and then vacuum everything.  That is a very ambitious list, considering I haven't moved in half an hour and I am trying to give the appearance of not being home right now.

The garden is doing surprisingly well right now.  Lettuce is abundant.  Any ideas for uses other than salad?  Everything except arugula and parsley germinated.  I should have salad turnips and radishes next week.  And, only half of the garden is covered in weeds!  I fell behind with various trips to VT, MA, and this terrible weather.  The beans are doing very well at my parents', but as of a week ago, the sugar beets were not visible yet.

I now have a yogurt maker that is calling for me to experiment with it.  The cheese making supplies are in at my friend's house.

Also, the best method of making butter that I have tried is simply skimming the cream into a small tupperware, putting on the lid, and shaking it.  It takes a lot less time and I get a lot more butter simply using human power.  I can also walk around the house, put away dishes, watch tv, with only minimal cream splashing.

I probably should mop all of the floors now that I think of it...

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Barn raising.

The barn raising event is done and pictures have been edited!  

















 Yes, that is me way up on the very top of the barn, screwing on the whetting bush.
I am on the top left.



I think that I am starting to get over my fear of heights!

I am also on the front page of the Timber Framers Guild website.  Jon and I learned a lot about how to raise a frame, and we got a lot of practice in with joinery.  

Now back to garden work!