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!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Cottage cheese and keeping busy!

Update on yogurt making:  the yogurt may possibly have worked, but I should not have used a bath towel to insulate it...there was a hard green/blue mold that grew on the outside of the glass.  The yogurt looked fine.  I still got rid of all of it, though, and washed everything.  The glass was ruined.  So, I broke down and ordered a yogurt maker with an automatic shut-off.  It just wasn't worth the hassle!

I am also getting some cheese making supplies in the mail!  Soon, I will be able to make wonderful mozzarella, feta, and mascarpone!  I am overjoyed!

In other news, the lettuce is almost big enough to harvest.  Most everything has germinated.  There are little bell peppers.  There is an absolute ton of weeding to do...which I am less enthusiastic about...

Yesterday, I made cottage cheese for the first time.  I heated 4 cups of milk up to 120, added 1/4 cup white vinegar, stirred for 2 minutes, let it set for 30 minutes, separate the whey with a cheesecloth in a strainer, rinsed the curds, then added a little salt to them.  I cannot describe how wonderful they are.  Rich and fresh tasting!  There were a little less than 4 cups of whey left, which went into bread.  I got maybe 1/4 cup of curds.  But it is so worth it!

As soon as I can find my camera again, I will take pictures of everything that has been going on.  For now, I am exhausted and am ready to close the laptop and sleep =)

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Hiking, timber framing, and rain

For our first anniversary, Jon and I decided to hike Mt. Washington.  We didn't quite make it all the way up, because Jon has a tendency to go for the most direct, and somehow also most difficult, trail, and I am also very clumsy and not so good at boulder problems...  I also now hike in a skirt.  The link is to a newer version on the one that I got on sale.  I'm very amused that it is called the 'Chocorua Skirt', and my first hike wearing it was on Mt. Chocorua!

After our hike, we set off for a timber framing event.  You can check out photos of the progress at the link.  I made my first tenon by myself!!!  Positive thoughts for better weather!