Tag Archives: food

Garden: My first carrot!

Tea …

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When the going gets tough, the tough make soup!

I spent all of Tuesday writing and editing, writing and editing, writing and editing, and making five kinds of soup.

Yes, I am well aware that that sentence makes me sound as if I’ve lost my marbles. I’m okay with it because I’m starting to suspect that irrationality is part of the job description for starting a new magazine.

I’m was just working away, wishing like hell that I had a freezer full of soup so that I could just pop a portion into the microwave and produce something to quiet my growling stomach.  Wouldn’t that be lovely? And it would be even nicer if there were several soups to chose from, right? And, of course, the soup would have to be made from scratch, ’cause love is the most nutritious ingredient of them all.

Then I remembered all those vegetables that we harvested on Sunday, just sitting in my kitchen, waiting to find their purpose.

And suddenly, this idea became an idea that must. be. acted. upon. I was positively compelled to drive to the market for missing ingredients and make my dream of a frozen soup wardrobe a reality. I can’t explain it. (Actually, I can. Lack of Sleep + Hunger= 3 Hours of Chopping, Stirring and Vacuum Sealing. It’s science, y’all.)

If you happened to be working at my house tomorrow and you find yourself hankering for a delicious cup of homemade soup, you can have your choice of Chicken, Vegetable, Tomato & Roasted Red Pepper, Roasted Garlic and Curried Carrot & Parsnip.

The Curried Carrot & Parsnip is particularly amazing. It’s also vegan, which makes a nice change for those of us trying to eat less meat. I made the recipe up as I went along and you can totally take liberties with the proportions, depending on how you like your soup, thick or thin, spicy or un.

Curried Carrot and Parsnip Soup

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 large onion, diced medium

1 pound carrots, peeled and chopped into medium dice

1 pound parsnips, peeled and chopped into medium dice

1 glove garlic, minced

1 1/2 -2 teaspoons curry powder

4 cups vegetable stock

salt and pepper to taste

red pepper flakes for garnish

Heat the oil in a large saucepan. Add the vegetables and sauté for five minutes. Add curry powder and stir well. Sauté an addition minute or two to allow the spices to bloom.

Add vegetable stock and simmer until the vegetables are tender. Remove from heat. Using an immersion blender (or working in batches with a traditional blender) puree the soup until it is smooth. Taste and adjust the seasonings.

You can finish this soup with a touch of cream at the end (which would make it decidedly un-vegan) but remember to heat the soup gently after the addition of cream. You only want to heat it through. (If you are starting a magazine- and therefore making this soup for the freezer at two a.m.- do not add the cream until you are ready to re-heat and serve.)

EDITED TO ADD: I just realized that making soup when I am stressed is what I do. Remember the great “Your donkey isn’t pregnant” French onion soup of January, 2012?

Soupy Fall Day

Y’all might want to sit down for this one.

I finished a pair of socks.

I know, shocking.  A finished object.  What’s more, I immediately cast on another pair of socks that’s been waiting in the wings for a few YEARS.

If you can believe it – these are from the same ball of yarn.  This is just the way it knitted out.  Crazy.  I wasn’t sure I was okay with the difference at first, but honestly, a pair of hand knit wool socks is a pair of hand knit wool socks.  They will be well appreciated in my boots come winter.

They also fit quite comfortably inside my new orthopedic shoes.  (Orthaheel – I love them!)

The pattern is Grumperina’s Jaywalkers (this is my 4th pair I’ve knit – I know the pattern so well now that they are easier to whip out).  The yarn is Schoppel Wolle (Zauberball, I think) that I picked up at Maryland Sheep & Wool last year.

It’s been awful and dark and rainy and very windy (we are under a tornado watch until 7 tonight) and thick out  so the kids are snuggled on the couch watching movies and I am working on the next pair of socks.  On the stove we’ve got some Butternut Squash and Apple Soup bubbling for dinner.  This is my favorite go – to fall dinner because it’s easy, delicious and terribly in season.  You can find the original tutorial I posted for it a few years back  HERE.

Make yourself a big pot (it’s gluten – free!!)  and serve with a salad or some hot sweet potato rolls.

Go! What are you waiting for???


Tagged: food, Gluten-free, Knitting, Seasons

Painted Apples …

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On Meat Birds & Other Farmy Things

So.

Meat birds.

Birds that are engineered by us humans to grow at an alarming rate so that they are ready for “harvest” by about 8 weeks of age.

Mine are now 14 weeks old and they are still not ready for harvest.

I have to admit, I was getting really, really worried about this.  We’re spending WAY more on feed than expected and it has been feeling like we’ll never get these birds into the freezer.

Internet to the rescue!

I found some message boards for chicken farmers talking about this very thing.

You see, I’ve been feeding a combination of commercially – prepared and processed feeds along with fresh pasture.  We don’t generally leave just a huge feed bin out constantly full of food.  If you do, they won’t forage.  We wanted a better tasting, healthier bird.  Less commercial stuff.  Apparently, when you limit the processed grain and turn them out onto fresh grasses regularly, they grow a lot slower.  Their mortality rate is much lower.  And – get this – they end up tasting better.

I am feeling a lot better about these birds, if not poorer, given that we’ve fed them several weeks longer than anticipated!

I’ve also recently been spending more time over at Juniper Moon Farm.  As you may have read, Susan has been ill so I have been helping out.  It’s been wonderful spending some quiet time in the mornings and the evenings with the animals.

Only the dogs seemed to want to cooperate for photos, however.  Everyone else was too busy taking advantage of the cooler temperatures and dewy grasses.

Oh great, not the paparazzi again.  Can’t you see I am eating here???

I have been trying to make friends with little Stella, as well, but is has been mostly in vain.  Her mother is so friendly and approachable, but Stella is much more of a tease.  She looks all sweet and cute and cuddly in the pasture, but try to approach her and she runs off to mama, tail between her legs.  She doesn’t look back until there’s a giant Luna safely between me and her.

Nanny nanny poo poo, you can’t catch me!!!!


Tagged: Farm, food

It’s In The Air

Can you feel it?

Fall is on its merry way, and I couldn’t be happier.

I turned 36 this weekend, and I spent the day thinking about how fortunate I am at this point in my life, and I realized that unlike many people I know, I look forward to each birthday.  Maybe it’s the time of year; my birthday means fall is coming.  September is easily one of the most beautiful months.  Or maybe it is the knowing that I got through another year on this crazy planet and came through it (hopefully) another year wiser.  Either way I am happiest when the days get shorter and cooler and when the nights are crisp and long with the smell of fallen leaves and wood fires.

My truck full of rocks came and Paul spread them out over the culvert.

It still looks like a big old mess down by the stream thanks to all the rain we’ve gotten, but he drive the tractor over the new “bridge” several times and it is good and solid.  We’ll be able to drive hay over it soon enough.

I haven’t spent too much time admiring it, though.  Since there is still a large pile of brush in the stream next to it full of frogs I am wary of the snakes that surely infest it.  We spotted one in the mud on Sunday, but couldn’t be sure if it was poisonous or not.  I haven’t been down there since.  Next weekend we’ll finish getting it all cleared out for the fences.

I  ventured out Sunday and bought a couple of bottles of french wine in town and an assortment of cheeses  and had a wonderful evening with the book club ladies.  The perfect way to cap off a beautiful weekend.

My friend Jessie brought me this:

A cake with a Dr. Who Tardis on it, decorated by her very talented husband.  Do they know me or what!

 

Even the weather has been in on the wonderful: it’s been much lower in humidity and temperature, making for lovely fall – ish days and nights.

The mums are blooming.

The persimmon tree is fruiting.

I think it’s about time for a mug of hot apple cider.


Tagged: Farm, food, Seasons

Coming Soon …

A*U*T*U*M*N

My creation


Labor Day Laboring

While most everyone else we know is barbecuing and relaxing for the holiday weekend we’ve been working our backsides off inside and out.

Paul’s been playing in the mud rescuing the stream from the mangled tree debris that our less than wonderful landscaper piled there, and I’ve been cleaning, working on lesson plans and making pasta.  There was also a brief time out for the new season of Dr Who.  Because we’re still obsessed, y’all.

We had to install this culvert so we could extend some logs and mud over to stream as a land bridge without interfering with the water.

Did I mention that neither of us has any idea how this kind of thing is supposed to get done?  At least Paul is having fun with the backhoe attachment on our friend’s tractor.

Now all we need is more dirt and maybe some gravel to cover over it all.

The side Paul has finished up is flowing nicely again.  We even saw a fairly large crayfish (crawdad for you Southerners) hanging out on the bank.

See all the debris still on this side?  Don’t you love it when you pay someone to do a job for you and then you end up having to re-do it all?

All I know is it’s getting done.  Paul even thinks we may start fencing next weekend.

What a fabulous birthday present for me!

As for inside the house, there is pasta drying in preparation for the freezer.  September is when the basil in the garden has grown into a giant, bushy shrub and must be harvested before the first frost.  My favorite thing to do is make up a huge amount of pesto and make ravioli with it.  I can freeze enough to last all winter if I don’t get sick of making pasta before I’ve used it all.

I use Susan’s pasta recipe – in fact if you click that link you’ll see my hands creating the last big batch of pesto ravioli we made last year at this time.

Sweet heavenly pesto.  I could eat it for every meal.

Little pillows of delightfulness!  I let them dry on a cheesecloth or clean dishtowel for an hour or more (until they are not sticky anymore) and then toss them into a ziploc freezer bag.  They can be tossed in boiling water from frozen or fresh and take very little time to cook.

For my pesto I fill a blender with fresh basil leaves, toss in a handful of cherry tomatoes, a handful of parmesan cheese, a heaping tablespoon of minced garlic, about half a teaspoon of sugar, a handful of pine nuts, and 3 or 4 tablespoons of olive oil.  These are all approximate values, and I adjust according to taste.  Not everyone likes sugar or tomatoes in their pesto, but I find it gives it an extra something.  You can also substitute walnuts if you don’t have pine nuts, but I prefer the pine nuts.


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden

Sin-ful-icious …

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Cookie Butter on oat bread… CLICK HERE.