Tag Archives: Features

Shakshouka!

Earlier this week, Zac and I found ourselves at the end of the day without any plan for dinner– we’d spent the day building a greenhouse table (him) and getting the vegetable beds ready for fall planting (me). We were starving, and getting grouchier by the minute (I’m particularly guilty of that one). Reader, it was a moment that called for convenience food.

There’s no food more convenient than an egg, except maybe a jar of home-canned tomato sauce. Luckily, we have both in great supply here at the farm.

I’d been repeatedly running across recipes for shakshouka, the North African breakfast dish of eggs poached in tomato and pepper sauce. I showed the recipe to Zac– it’s from Yotam Ottolenghi’s wonderful cookbook Plenty– and he told me he could adapt it to work with canned tomato sauce.

Here’s what you do.

Start by toasting off the cumin seeds in dry pan. This will really build the base flavor for the entire dish.

Leave the onion and pepper sliced large because they will cook for a long time and you want them to hold their shape. I also like to leave the spicy peppers in large pieces so that the whole dish does not become too spicy but there are still burst of spicy flavor.

Now cook both types of peppers and the onions in the pan with the cumin.

Add all of the spices and the sugar to coat the cooked pepper and onions. This helps to spread the flavor and make sure they are well incorporated.

Once the spices fully coat the peppers and onions add the tomato sauce and cook slowly. Do not add eggs until the sauce doubles in thickness.

Make little nests in the sauce to hold each egg. This helps the eggs to better poach in the sauce.

Once the eggs are set, serve with some crusty or flat bread. The dish makes a great hearty breakfast or a quick solution for dinner.

Ingredients

3 bell peppers
2 small red onions
4 jalepeño peppers
1 teaspoon whole cumin seeds
1 small bunch basil, minced
4 sprigs fresh thyme, minced
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon salt
2 cups plan tomato sauce
4 eggs

Recipe:

Start by toasting the cumin seeds in a dry medium sized skillet. Once the seeds start to brown and become very aromatic add large julienned onion and bell peppers. Cook on a medium low heat until the onions become translucent and the peppers begin to brown. At this point add all of the remaining dry spices, thyme, and basil. Combine until the spices cover the peppers are onions. At this point add the brown sugar stir to combine and then quickly add the tomato sauce to prevent the sugar from burning. Now reduce the pan to a low simmer and cook until the sauce becomes at least twice as thick. Once thickened remove from heat and create 4 small nests in the onions and peppers that will hold the eggs. Add each egg quickly so that they will cook at the same speed. Return the skillet to a low heat and cook for 10-12 minutes slowly simmering. Once the eggs are cooked but still runny (you can cook the eggs all they way through if you prefer) remove from heat and serve with crusty bread.

Iced Coffee, Susan’s Way

I have never been a coffee fan. Even in college, when I needed to stay up all night studying, I just couldn’t force myself to swallow more than a tiny mouthful before tossing the rest and switching back to Coke.

I have always liked the iced coffee sold at coffee houses though, so I did a little investigating and found out that the difference is that iced coffee is cold brewed, which means it’s much, much less acidic than regular brewed coffee.

Enter the Toddy System, a cold brewed coffee maker that we use all the time at the farm. I’m not exaggerating when I tell you that nearly everyone who comes to the farm and tries our cold brewed coffee ends up ordering one when they return home.  Even people who like their coffee hot prefer to cold brew it and then heat it by the cup in the microwave.

Although I find the cold brewed coffee much less intense, I still cut mine with a whole lot of milk. Sort of cafe’ con leche but with more leche than cafe’. (When Carrie and I were in Paris a few months ago, I ordered my coffee by saying “Cafe au lait au lait au lait.” which got a lot of laughs from the French baristas.)

After a couple of years of making my coffee this way and playing around with the proportions, I have finally settled on my own perfect recipe. Here’s my method:

Make on carafe of cold brewed coffee following the manufactures instructors, but adding 1 /2 teaspoon of ground cinnamon, and 1/4 teaspoon each of ground cardamom and ground cloves to the ground coffee before adding the water.

When the coffee has finished brewing, pour the coffee concentrate into two ice cube trays and freeze overnight.

To make a glass of iced coffee, add 6 ounces of skim milk to a glass and top with a splash of cream. Stir in sugar to taste (I use around half a teaspoon per glass.) Add three or four coffee ice cubes. The lightly spiced coffee will melt into the milk, giving each sip a slightly different mx of flavors.

Waiting for Peppers

We’ve got a whole bed of peppers waiting in the wings behind the corn (thank you all for your kind– and very helpful!– comments on that post, by the way), peppers which, by rights, shouldn’t be here in the first place.

Since we lost our first set of pepper seedlings in the Great Tomato Freeze of mid-April, I remember planting the seeds for these guys in early May. During our Spring Shearing party in mid-May, the little overloaded (my fault) greenhouse collapsed, which wiped out a full half of the seedlings– all our jalapenos and most of the Thai chiles.

The plants that survived have endured all sorts of disasters. I remember planting the tiny seedlings in June with Charlotte, and, honestly, I think we half-forgot they were there. With the dramatic and beautiful rows of corn acting as a screen, who remembered to bother looking at some scrabbly little pepper plants?

Somewhere in there, Zac put a thick straw mulch on them, but we’ve otherwise left them to their own devices. Luckily, they love the hot and dry weather we’ve been having.

The large majority of our plants are Alma Paprika peppers, which, the seed packet promises, change from a creamy white through yellow and orange to a cherry red. After ripening, you can either eat them fresh or smoke them to make paprika (guess which one we’re planning on doing?).

The plants are loaded with peppers, glossy, healthy, and still flowering– all there is to do is endure the wait for these I-can’t-believe-we-actually-have-them peppers to ripen.

Once the season’s over (come on, Autumn!) I’m planning on digging up a few plants, in the hopes that I can get them to produce peppers throughout the winter in the greenhouse. If any of you have ever done anything like that before– maybe with an ornamental pepper?– I’d love some tips!

This Morning in Pictures

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Emu

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Callum, always with that look.

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Sam and Bertie, best friends forever.

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Camembert, who’ll be our dairy buck this fall.

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One of the pups, sleeping right in front of the barn fan.

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His brother’s dreaming.

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Look at how grown-up Gnocchi is!

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Ewes and lambs in the front pasture.

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Cini

juniper moon farm

Sweet Monroe and Madison

Cheese Camp was Great!

This weekend we had a full house of enthusiastic guests who were here for our JMF cheese camp. Everyone who came got to learn about the cheese making process, from feeding and milking our goats to waxing off a fine piece of homemade cheddar.

We made a lot of cheese, including paneer, several kinds of chevre, yogurt, fresh mozzarella (in every size and shape you can think of), and goat’s milk cheddar. The best part is that everyone got to bring their creations home!

 Another great aspect of cheesemaking camp was that everyone got a chance to bond with our fantastic dairy goats. Once you milk a goat twice a day for three days you begin to build a relationship. As a final group photo everyone wanted to make sure that the dairy goats (the secret stars of the whole camp ) were included.

Thank you so much cheese campers for being a fun and exciting group! We had a such a good time and everyone built friendships that will continue well beyond the confines of cheese camp. We hope that you will continue to make cheese and inspire others around you!

And to all of who could not join us this time around, we hope to see you at a future JMF camp.

New Flash: It’s too hot to cook!

This is our favorite no cook, no effort tomato sauce.

Basil, ripe tomatoes and garlic.

If we had had a red onion I would have thrown that in too, but it’s still delicious without it.

Chop everything and put it in a bowl.

Add salt, red pepper flakes and a few glugs of olive oil. Give it a good stir and let sit on the counter, covered, for a few hours. Serve over pasta in front on the air conditioner.

Finis.

Probably something you would like…

I have a mad crush on this braided leather camera wrist strap. ($44)

I am totally going to try this!

I want to go camping in one of these transparent bubble tents!

I need a new pair of Chucks but they come in so many great colors now and I just can’t decide.

50 Things Every Creative Should Know

Recipe: Chicken Legs Baked with White Wine, Olive Oil & Parmigiano Reggiano from Alexandra’s Kitchen.

I am coveting these boxes, mostly because they are covered in my pal Lizzy House’s gorgeous fabric.

Speaking of Lizzy, girlfriend is having an amazing sale on all her quilt patterns right now, while supplies last.

Made me laugh. ($19.55)

A Canopy of Colorful Umbrellas Spotted in Portugal. This really knocked me out.

Ornithological LEGO master Tom Poulsom are amazing.

Christopher Boffoli’s photography series Big Appetites is inspired.

What’s making you smile this Monday?

More Forgotten Photos

When I was worried that Gnocchi wasn’t getting enough milk from Lucy, I would bring him in a weigh him daily on our kitchen scale. I can’t believe he was ever so tiny!

Once every six weeks or so, Zac brings the donkeys’ into the barn early in the morning to wait for the farrier.

Hoof trimming is not Daisy’s favorite.

Heirlooms from the garden.

Sweet Jack

Another Gnocchi pic.

Saturday Morning in Pictures

Some of our many, many chickens.

Bingley

Happy Cini

Willoughby. The more I look at her, the more I think she looks like Alabama.

Perseus and Lyra, two peas in a pod.

Little Clark, and all the lambs behind him.

Corvus and Canis

Forgotten Photos

I was looking through my hard drive for some photos I took this Spring and stumbled on a whole cache of pictures that somehow never got posted.

These are from a trip to our friends Lisa and Will’s farm.

These piglets were just a few weeks old when I took these pics.

This is New Dog. That’s not a description; that’s his name.

I’ll post more of these forgotten pics over the weekend.