Tag Archives: food

After The Storm …

In nw New Jersey we got about 10 inches of snow, a drop in the bucket compared to the 3 FEET plus in  other states.

5pm Friday night       -      7am Saturday morning

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To the west     -     to the east

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Breakfast of coffee and oatmeal pancakes with Cookie Butter (thanks Deb).

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And then the sun came out.

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I hope everyone affected by what has been an historic blizzard, with over 3 FEET of snow  in some areas, are safe and sound.

(CLICK HERE if you’re curious as to what Cookie Butter is, besides being addictively delicious)


I Love Chocolate …

My creation


Recipe for a Snowy Weekend: Cinnamon Shortbread

I love to bake, but don’t do it often enough. So, when Susan asked me if I would like to try out some recipes using King Arthur Flour Flav-R-Bites, I don’t think she had even finished her question before I said yes.

The first question was what to test them in, and I decided that I should keep it simple, so that the bites would stand out and I could see what they added to the recipe. One of my favorite basic cookies is shortbread, which I have found is a great base for adding flavors.

When I was younger, my dad and I would make shortbread around the holidays for when friends would come by. Then, as time past, we started giving it as gifts. Eventually, my dad and I became shortbread slaves between Thanksgiving and New Years. Every day brought a fresh list of people we simply had to give shortbread to! My mother is a very generous person. After a while I got sick of the sight and smell of my once favorite cookie. At some point the Shortbread Sweat Shop closed. For years I couldn’t look at shortbread in any form. Then one day someone gave me a piece of packaged shortbread, Walkers if you must know, and I ate it to be polite. My love was instantly rekindled! I called my father and got the recipe that we had made thousands of times and began making that classic, dense shortbread again.

The shortbread that I made when I was younger was the hearty shortbread that comes in thick squares made by pressing the dough into a baking pan. I hadn’t really every seen a dainty shortbread cookie until I worked at the restaurant at the Takishamya department store where I made their green tea shortbread cookies. This was the first time I had made shortbread that was flaky, from the powdered sugar, and added flavor, the green tea. Honestly, I didn’t much care for the green tea, but I did experiment with other flavors, which was fun, and a really nice variation for the return of the holiday shortbread baking.

Before I picked up the Flav-R-Bites I wanted to make sure that I had a really good shortbread, a combination of the flaky and the dense. After several test batches, I found the combination of granulated and confectioners’ sugars that gave me the texture I wanted. Then, I added the Flav-R-Bites and wow! These things are great.

Cinnamon Chip Shortbread
2 sticks sweet, unsalted butter at room temperature
¼ cup granulated sugar
½ cup confectioners’ sugar
2 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp salt
1/3 cup King Arthur Flour Cinnamon Flav-R-Bites* ($7.95/16 ounces)

Butter an 8”x8” square tart pan or baking dish.

Beat the butter and sugars together in a mixer with the paddle attachment until they are fluffy and light in color.

 

Meanwhile, mix the flour, salt and flav-r-bites together in a bowl. I like to use a whisk for this as I find that it mixes well and fluffs up the flour.

Add flour mixture to butter mixture and starting on slow speed so that the flour doesn’t fly into the air, combine until the dough is just uniform. Do not over mix or your shortbread may lose some of its eventual flakiness.

Press dough into prepared pan or dish and score into squares or rectangles with a butter knife. If you forget to score the dough at this point, it’s really not a problem.

Chill for 1 hour, then place in a preheated 300 degree oven for 1 hour until just golden brown.

Allow to cool a bit before slicing along scored lines. Once the shortbread is out of the pan, continue to cool as long as you can resist eating it.

This shortbread is wonderful warm or completely cooled. If it lasts overnight, the texture changes and becomes a little crumblier, but they are still just as amazing as warm out of the oven.

*We also tried this same recipe with the maple Flav-R-Bites and we love it just as much.

 

Slow Week

For some reason this week has felt never-ending.  At the same time, I don’t feel like I’ve accomplished much.  Maybe it’s just the winter doldrums.  It’s gone from bitter cold with a smattering of snow (enough to lightly dust the ground but melt by the next day) to sunny and in the high 50′s.  There’s talk of rain tomorrow.  Winter rain is not something I handle well.  It makes me grumpy and bitter that it should be beautiful snow; delicate, beautiful flakes of happiness to settle on branches and cover the world in a layer of fresh white.  Instead it’s rain and mud and brown and grey and cold and BLAH.

On the plus side, we actually did get those bitter cold snaps that I was hoping for.  With any luck this will keep the overgrowth of parasites and pests in check this year.

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Also I should be happy that we’ve gotten some snow.  Some snow is better than no snow, right?

Plus, in between the snow and rain and the cold and the warm I have managed to get outside and take care of a few things here and there.  Which is when I discovered these:

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My garlic has sprouted! All those many bulbs I planted in the fall are waking up and sending out shoots in preparation for spring.  I have already begun dreaming of my garden this year and my head is full of plans for what we’ll grow and where we’ll put the new squash bed.

But for now it is still winter, and I still need to tough it out and finish my darn sweater before it gets too warm to wear it.

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One sleeve to go!


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden, Knitting, Pets

Roasted Garlic Chicken Soup

Are y’all bored of me blogging about soup yet? I ask because my sister said she is bored with my posts about my auto-immune disease and my friend Kris has made it clear that she has read enough about my tatas to last a lifetime.

I know I write about soup a lot but there is a good reason for that- it is one of the few things I can eat with my auto-immune disease and it warms up my tatas! [HA! See what I did there?]

Seriously though, I do love soup in the cold months. I could eat it every single night! This week, I seem to be getting a cold and once again, I find myself away from the farm and my freezer full of homemade soups. Sadly there is no chicken soup delivery service in Fort Worth, Texas. As little as I felt like leaving the house, the rule when you have Crohn’s Disease is that if you feel like eating something, you should eat it because the Lord only knows when you will feel like eating anything again. To the grocery store!

I was still mulling over whether to make my standby (and beloved) Chicken Soup or the always-good-for-a-cold Roasted Garlic Soup when inspiration struck- why not combine the best elements of both?

I don’t want to be braggy but I have to say that this is far and away the best soup I have ever tasted. It’s a little more work than you may want to do when you have a cold but I strongly encourage you to make a big pot of it when you are healthy and to freeze a bit for future colds. It’s truly extraordinary.

INGREDIENTS:

4 heads of garlic, separated but unpeeled
3 sprig of thyme
2 large onions, diced small
4 large carrots, diced small
4 celery ribs, diced small
2 rotisserie chickens
1 sprig of rosemary
2 quarts of chicken stock (preferably homemade from your own hand-raised chickens)
1 Tablespoon all purpose flour
salt and red pepper flakes to taste

Preheat the oven to 350. Place the garlic cloves in their peels in a small baking dish and scatter with thyme sprigs. Add 1/4 cup of water. Seal the pan tightly with foil and roast until the garlic is roasted and mushy but not browned, about an hour.

While the garlic is roasting, gently sautee the mirepoix (2 parts onions, 1 part carrots & 1 part celery) in  a little bit of safflower oil until they are tender but not browned.

Time to tackle the chickens! Shred the chickens, removing and discarding the skin but reserving the bones.

Tear the chicken into bite-sized pieces and refrigerate until needed.

Pour the chicken stock into a large soup pot. Add the reserved bones from the chicken and the rosemary and bring to a simmer for at least half an hour; an hour is better. Remove the the bones and the rosemary from the stock.

When the garlic is tender, squeeze about half the garlic from the skins, setting the rest aside for now. This is a terrible, sticky job but it’s totally worth it.

Put the roasted garlic into a sautee pan with a little olive oil over low heat. Using the back of a spoon or a potato masher, work the garlic into a paste.

Add the flour and stir, making a roux. This may seem weird but it is going to add body and thickness to our soup. Stir together over heat for at least a minute, and until you have achieved a consistent paste.

Remove 4 cups of hot stock from the stock pot and slowly add the stock to the garlic paste, whisking continuously as you do. When the stock is fully incorporated into the roux, bring to a simmer for two to three minutes, then return the stock/roux mixture to stock pot.

Slip the rest of the garlic cloves from their skins and add them whole to the stock pot.

Add the softened mirepoix, shredded chicken and red pepper flakes to the stock pot and bring the soup to a simmer. Once the flavors have had half an hour or so to blend and mingle, taste the soup and add salt as necessary.

Once the soup is heated through, it’s ready to serve, although this is one of those dishes that improves overnight in the fridge. I served the soup over cooked couscous and it was the perfect compliment. You can try it with noodles, pasta stars or wild rice as well.

Love in a Cup

One of the downsides of losing as much weight as I did so quickly is that I am always, always, always cold these days.  I have tackled this problem by dressing in layers (many of them made of wool!) and drinking cup after cup of hot tea.

Chai tea, with it’s aromatic blend of spices, is the my favorite way to start a chilly morning on the farm. This concentrate makes it easy to brew a cup in moments and it taste way better than the mixes you can buy. Store it in the fridge and just stir a teaspoon or two into you hot tea. Deliciously warming and spicy!

INGREDIENTS

1 teaspoon ground cardamom
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1⁄2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1⁄2 teaspoon ground cloves
3⁄4 cup powdered milk
3⁄4 cup sugar
1 cup hot water

DIRECTIONS

Combine the spices, powdered milk and sugar in a small bowl and set aside. Put the hot water in the blender and, with the blender running, slowly add the sugar mixture. Continue blending until well combined. Refrigerate the mixture for 24 hours.

To use, add one teaspoon of concentrate to each cup of freshly brewed black tea.

The concentrate will keep for up to three weeks in the refrigerator, officially, but I’ve kept it lots longer.

January Freeze …

During these frigid temps  here’s some suggestions for keeping warm.

Hot drinks like coffee, tea and cocoa.

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Hearty food like stew, grilled cheese and goulash.

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And of course a warm puppy to snuggle up with :)

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Sunny Days

We have been so busy these last few days enjoying the sun!  Everyone was rejoicing when it finally returned; the animals were kicking up their heels to play and stretching out in the hay to dry off and soak up the warm.

Though today it has gotten much, much colder and more windy, we are still thankful for it to be dry.  Even the indoor animals are spending their days moving from sun spot to sun spot.

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It’s forecast to be even colder the rest of the week.  The hoses are already frozen solid so there will be plenty of water – bucket carrying going on.  The fireplace will be on more or less all the time, and there will be plenty of bread and soup making to get us through.

Stay warm, wherever you are.

 


Tagged: Farm, food, Pets

Winter Makes Its Debut

I know I am very unpopular when I say how I love snow, but I’ll tell you this: it would be a darn site nicer to have had snow the last few days rather than the rain.  Our field became a mud pit, our bridge is nearly inundated with rushing water.  My boots were sinking in the mud each time I went out to feed (which is a lot, because we’ve been taking wheel – barrow – fulls down at various points during the day).

Then around 3 this afternoon it changed.  First a slushy, icy snow, which only added to the misery.  At this point Emily and I constructed a temporary (and not great) shelter out of the dog kennel and a tarp.  Only the goats are using it.  Sheep actually do just fine in the cold and wet, but I wanted to be able to keep their hay dry and give them an option to get our of the driving rain.  Since then it’s been a rather lovely snow to look at, and I’d have enjoyed being out in it more if not for already being soaked through from the rain.

We had an abbreviated school day today, knowing I would need to spend more time tending to the livestock, and afterwards I made tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches (our standard winter day fare).

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I am fond of the Tomato and Cheddar Soup recipe from this book.  It’s basically onions simmered in butter, half and half tossed in once they are soft and clear and foamy.  Shredded cheddar is added with a little bit of flour and then a can of Fire – Roasted Crushed tomatoes.  Salt, pepper, and alspice to taste.  It’s only slightly more complicated than heating up condensed soup and it goes smashingly with grilled cheese!

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Emily was my right hand (or arm, more like) today.  When it comes to the farm, Emily earns her keep.

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Amelia, like all the rest of the animals, looks a little worse for the wear.  They’ve been getting extra grain the last few days to make up for the lack of a large quantity of free – choice hay.  Plus the combustive process of their digestion provides them with body heat.

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See the outer wool dripping?  We’ll ALL be glad to see the sun again.

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The ground looks great, doesn’t it?  This is what it looks like at the gate; why a truck wouldn’t make it through.

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The geese, on the other hand, think this wet weather is the most amazing thing that has ever happened.  They’ve been flapping about, splashing in puddles and having far too much fun.

On tap for tonight is chili for dinner followed by board games and popcorn by the fire.

Bring it, winter.  It’s about time.

 

 

 


Tagged: Farm, food, Homeschooling, Pets

January Calendar Picture …

January 2013

The two pictures for January are of breakfasts.

My favorite breakfast anywhere, any time… Espresso Love blueberry scone and coffee. This picture was taken in May 2012.

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This was my daughter’s breakfast at the Black Dog Cafe in October 2012.   Great way to start the day on a crisp October morning.

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