Tag Archives: food

introducing the newest members of chez farm – chickens!

last weekend, our dreams of chickens on chez farm finally came home to roost. (sorry, i just could not resist). we decided to go with the coop and chicken package provided by victory chicken co.
they bring the coop, the chickens, starter bags of food, hay, wood chips, all you need for basic chicken-husbandry – easy-peasy.

we did have to prepare the space where the coop would go.

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and here we are!

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that’s veronica in the run, there. she’s a barred rock hen, about eight months old and already laying lovely brown eggs for us. the other two aren’t visible (they’re inside the coop in this picture) and their names are estelle and nedra. they’re easter egger hens, who lay blue-green eggs. they’re a little more timid and haven’t quite got used to their new surroundings yet. and they’re very camera-shy.

in case you haven’t guessed, veronica, nedra and estelle are named after the ronettes. (oh come on, try and think of better names for chickens than the members of a motown girl group). all three of them are ridiculous and adorable and i’m completely in love with them already. and they’re great layers – we now have nine eggs from hens we’ve only had for six days (plus the one i ate this morning).

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see? shy.


In the Garden: Kale

While the tomatoes all languish in the house (outgrowing their pots by leaps and bounds) waiting for it to warm the heck up, the cold – weather crops are all coming in like crazy.

The beans and peas are starting to climb the wire trellis and I hope soon we’ll see some actual pods.

The lettuces (Black Seeded Simpson and Red Romaine) are all just about ready to be picked for salads, and the spinach is not far behind.

The broccoli is getting nice and leafy and I am waiting impatiently to see the flowery part!

Then there is the kale.  It is screaming for attention and picking right now – growing head and shoulders above everything else.  I wasn’t planning on making anything kale – related for dinner tonight, and it’s not very tall yet – but it is very crowded so I decided the time was about right to pick some of the tender leaves for making kale chips.

Kale is one of those greens that is very at home in a potato or ham – based soup – it is very sturdy and flavorful without being too overpowering (it is actually a part of the cabbage family).  It is also very good for you – being high in beta carotene, vitamin K, vitamin C and even calcium!

Kale chips can be made with large, fully – grown kale leaves, but I like to make them with the more tender, smaller leaves.  If you use big kale leaves, you’ll need to remove the stems and the ribs to make the chips.  With the small, baby leaves it’s not really necessary.

Preheat your oven to 300 degrees and wash your kale.  I just give mine a quick rinse if I’ve just pulled it from the garden – really all I am worried about is that we don’t end up eating too many hidden little bugs or spiders!

Lay your kale in a single layer on a cookie sheet either coated with cooking spray or with foil.

Drizzle some olive oil and salt and pepper to taste.  I also like to splash some vinegar on them – like salt & vinegar chips (malt vinegar is best, but just about any will work)!

Bake for about 20 to 25 minutes or until they are nice and dark and crispy.

They will come out like this – all nice and blurry!

Oona and I hogged all of these up before anyone else even got wind they were done.  They were yummy!


Tagged: Farm, food

Easter Omeletes

I’m the type of person that likes traditions.  The more the better!  And if there isn’t a tradition for something, you can be sure I’ll do my best to start one.

The last few years I’ve been making omelets for breakfast each Easter. We don’t really celebrate Easter beyond the bunny and an occasional family gathering, but with all that candy going on first thing in the morning, and with it being spring and the chickens swamping us with eggs……you can see where it was just a natural progression.

The thing is, and I don’t like to brag – especially about myself – I make a pretty mean omelet.

My grandmother – you know, the one who was the head chef at her own restaurant for over twenty years? She took me into the kitchen one day when I was young and taught me to make omelets.  I remember she and my grandfather even took me out and bought me my own omelet pan at the restaurant supply store once I’d mastered it.

I’ve been making omelets almost exactly as she taught me ever since. And now I am going to share it with you.

First, crack a few eggs into a large bowl.  The general rule is two to three eggs per person.  I personally like a two egger – if I am making it for Paul it’s a three.  If I am filling it with loads of extras, two is usually best.

To my eggs I like to add salt and pepper and some dill.  I’ll always add fresh chopped basil if I have it, or dried if I don’t.

Then whisk it up good.

Next you can decide what else to put in your omelet.

Cheese? Excellent.  Make sure you have some grated or shredded cheese at the ready.  I like to chop up mushrooms, tomatoes, green peppers and red onions as well.  Sometimes I like to be different and do sun dried tomatoes with marinated artichokes and goat cheese.  Be creative – meats are good, as are all kinds of cheeses and veg.  Whatever you want, prepare it ahead of time so it’s ready to toss in.  This Sunday I used shredded cheddar, green peppers, onions, sun – dried tomatoes and mushrooms.

 

Meanwhile prepare your pan.  I use a non – stick skillet generously coated with Pam.  This is where my technique differs from my grandmother, who uses a seasoned omelet-only pan with no spray. I like the ease of my eggs sliding right out when I want them to.

You want a medium-ish heat.  Not too hot; you don’t want the eggs to sizzle when they hit the pan.  You will need them to cook evenly and gently.

Pour your eggs in the pan.  After a minute or two the bottom will start to cook a bit.  You want to lift one side of the pan off the heat now and scrape everything down to the side on the heat.  Then, holding the cooked bits back with your spatula, rock the pan the other way so the fluidy bits of egg run down into the side you’ve just scraped.

Believe me it is hard to take pictures of yourself doing this!

Always let the runny parts pool down into the side of the pan touching the heat.

Scrape the cooked bits down just before you move that side back down onto the heat.

It’s not very tricky; you just want to maximize the amount of heat the runny parts get while minimizing the heat onto the cooked parts.  This way none of it gets overcooked and hopefully nothing gets undercooked either (it helps to use fresh-that-day eggs if you are worried about undercooking!).

You want to keep this up until about 60 to 70 percent of the eggs are cooked.  You need enough runny egg left to hold it all together when you lay the pan flat again.

Now’s the time to toss in your extras.

At this point, if I think the eggs look a bit too runny or if there is an awful lot of cheese to melt, I will put a lid on the pan and let it cook until almost completely firm.

But – here’s the trick – you don’t want it 100% cooked just yet, because you need it to remain a bit flexible to fold it.

You’ll carefully fit your spatula under one half of your omelet, lift it,  and gently fold it in half.

This is where you’ll let it finish cooking, if it isn’t already done.

Et voila!  Delectable omelet for you!

 


Tagged: food

Eggs Thru Crystal …

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I think I see bunny ears !!!


Egg-cellent …

My creation


Week #5 Mosaic …

edited


March Catch – Up

If you’re a farmer (even a small – scale one) you’ll know that spring is the busiest time of the year.  Garden patches need tilling, seeds need to be started, coops and run – ins need to be cleaned and aired out for summer, and baby animals need to be prepared for.  This year I have felt the busy-ness and anxiety more acutely because we’ve had one of the warmest Marches on record.  The bugs have exploded in population and things are sprouting and blooming well in advance of normal.

One of the things keeping me busy (and exhausted) is my new vegetable garden project.  I’ve mentioned before I fenced in a plot out front that’s just under 1,000 square feet.  Since we have really terrible soil, and since I’ve had issues in the past with too much moisture pooling around the root systems of my plants, I’ve followed the example of Juniper Moon Farm and made raised bed rows to plant in this year.  They are raised and rounded so that excess moisture flows off.  I have 5 long raised beds to plant in now, thanks  to weeks of digging, a load of compost, and a day of tilling.

Right now there are three kinds of onions, Rainbow Chard, two kinds of beets and little finger carrots sprouting out there.

An onion peeking through the straw mulch.

Now that it is April things are getting a little more exciting because it means it is almost our safe window for planting the seedlings we started indoors, such as our tomatoes, squash and herbs.

They’ve had a nice sunny spot in the house waiting to be garden – ready.  Soon we’ll be receiving blueberry and raspberry plants that I ordered along with sweet potato and purple potato plants.

If all of this isn’t enough, we’ve got plans for a honeybee hive this spring to help pollinate our plants and increase our vegetable yields, and we have landscapers coming out next week to start clearing our woods for fencing. The goat shed is slowly being cleaned out to be ready for its once and future occupants.

The chickens are in full egg – laying mode and we are seeing about 2 dozen eggs a day now. I’ve been giving eggs away to anyone who’ll take them and even sending dozens off to two local restaurants, and I am still drowning in them.  I am thinking I will make a bunch of freezable quiches and cookie doughs one of these days to use up some of the surplus.

Unfortunately we won’t have fresh goat milk this summer – Milkshakes aborted her babies.  It turns out she had in fact been bred by the sheep in the fall and was therefore unable to carry the pregnancy.  They were tiny, amorphous blobby things that were never meant to live.  As I said, goat/sheep crosses aren’t viable.

Most likely I will try to breed her again this fall, for babies and milk next spring.

As you can see it is very busy outside right now in preparation for summer.  Once the hot weather hits I hope to be able to spend some time indoors fixing the wallpaper Oona destroyed and touching up paint and other things we’ve been neglecting.  But let’s hope the hot doesn’t come around too soon.


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden, Pets

Frozen Hot Chocolate …

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Serendipity ~ New York City


A Deceptively Simple Cake

I think every cook needs an easy, delicious dessert in their repertoire. Olive Oil Cake is mine and now it can be yours too.

The reasons to love this cake recipe are myriad. It’s dead simple to make. It’s got a lovely, not-too-sweet flavor. It’s made in one pan, so you don’t have the angst of getting the layers even and there’s only one pan to wash up. Your guests will have probably never had it before. They will say things like, “who would have thought you could put olive oil in a cake?!?” It’s a very grown-up dessert.

But my two favorite things about this cake are: 1. It is fool-proof and 2. You probably already have everything you need to make it in your pantry.

I have made this cake so many times that I can knock it together with my eyes closed. I originally used a Nigella Lawson recipe but over the years I’ve made so many modifications that I now consider it a collaboration between Nigella and myself.

Yes, I do measure all my ingredients into small bowls before baking. It cuts down on mistakes and makes me feel like I’m cooking on t.v.. 

Ingredients:

4 large eggs
1 cup granulated sugar
Zest of 1 lime (freshly grated, please!)
Zest of 1 lemon (see note above)
1 ½ cups unbleached all-purpose flour
¾ cup polenta (you can substitute fine corn meal here or even coarse corn meal that’s been whizzed in the food processor)
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
¾ cup olive oil
Confectioner’s sugar for garnish

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In the bowl of your electric mixer, beat the eggs, sugar and zests.

Beat on high until the mixture is light and has tripled (or thereabouts) in volume.

Combine the rest of your dry ingredients on a bowl and whisk them together. With the mixer off, add one third of the dry ingredients to the bowl and turn on low. While the flour mixture is being incorporated, slowly add half the olive oil. Repeat the process, mixing only until you can see that the dry ingredients are incorporated. (Over-mixing is what makes cakes tough rather than tender.) When you’ve added everything, stop the mixer and scrape any remaining flour from the sides of the bowl. One last burst of mixing and your done.

Pour the batter into a well-greased 9 inch Springform pan, and pop it in the oven. Set the timer for 25 minutes but it will probably take 30. You can test this cake by inserting a wooden toothpick as normal, but remember that this cake isn’t getting iced so don’t make a big whole right in the center if you can avoid it. The cake will pull back from the side of the pan when it’s done and will spring back when lightly touched.

Cool your cake in the pan on a rack for 10-15 minutes before removing the side of the pan.

After removing the sides to the pan, put the cake back on the rack and place the rack over the sink. Sprinkle with powdered sugar using a fine mesh sieve or a sifter.

Voila! Serve with red wine and much laughter under the stars.

The Beginnings of Something Wonderful

Happy first day of spring!  I may not be a fan of summer or very-warm weather, but I just adore spring.  My sinuses aren’t too thrilled, but that’s another story.

This first of spring is even more exciting and special for me because I am finally seeing the ideas and desires I have held for so long come to fruition.  Especially with regards to the new garden.

I’d been wanting to move the vegetable patch closer to the house and make it bigger (with room for a beehive) and so a few weeks back I got outside and started making it happen.  I pushed the kids’ giant wooden swingset about 15 feet from where it was (by myself! And yet I wonder why my neck and shoulder is bothering me so much lately??) and started staking out the outline for fencing.

Then I got to work digging.  By hand.  Again, by myself.

I’d had the idea that we really needed to move things along if I was going to get the early spring seeds and bulbs into the ground.  Our only machinery with a tiller attachment is currently down (and ancient).  I didn’t have the funds to hire someone to come with a big tractor, so I grabbed a shovel and went to it.  The finished area is just under 1,000 square feet.

I decided I wanted rows of raised beds in this garden because I’ve lost so many plants over the years due to excessive moisture pooling at the roots.  In a slightly rounded and raised bed the excess runs down the sides and away.

To do that, I started digging furrows, or trenches.  I probably made them too wide and too deep (stubborn digging without a plan isn’t the best idea) but there are now 5 long raised beds out there.  They still need to be tilled, since the dirt is nearly solid clay.  Thankfully I still have a whole shed full of composted llama and goat poo to mix in.  Still, I am concerned I may need to order up some dirt due to the extremely poor quality of the soil I dug out of our ground.

The clay is so hard I had to use a mattock to break it up.

There’s space in the shadier back – side of the garden for the bees to go so they have free access to keep our plantings pollinated.

Soon the onions will go into the ground along with the beets and once they are ready, all of the vegetable seedlings that are currently germinating in the dining room.

This is not nearly as impressive as Caroline’s seed selection!  But this represents about 2/3 of what we are planting this year.  I’ve ordered onions, seed potatoes,  and blueberry and raspberry bushes as well.  Come fall we’ll do another crop of late summer vegetables and some things to overwinter.

The biggest challenge in all of this?

This:

Keeping these insatiable scratching and digging and eating machines out of the garden.  I’ve got the woven wire up: I just need a gate.  Paul has a friend coming out to plan out the logistical part of clearing our wooded acres here and fencing it all in.  Hopefully giving the poultry a wider ranging area will make the vegetable patch less of a lure for them.

Hopefully by fall you’ll be hearing me say how sick I am of preserving so many fresh veggies!


Tagged: Farm, food, Garden, Pets, Seasons