Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts

12.17.2010

homemade christmas

i've been a flurry of homemade gift activity.

i think part of it is that i fret that a jar, or two, of something handmade won't please my family. i think my friends will appreciate it, but my family—well i've known them since the age of rampant materialistic gift-giving so i haven't quite gotten it out of my mind that that is what they want.

so thursday night i put on some music and whipped up some:
this weekend i'll have a few more items i want to make, as well as coming up with recipes and labels for the items i am giving away. i have a busy weekend of holiday social parties so i am not sure how i will fit it all in. its hard to want to do two such different activities at the same time.

if i had thought ahead of time, i would have kept track of everything i've spent. but given that i have enough items to gift dozens (yes, multiple!) of friends and family, i think i am still ahead of the game.

9.05.2010

an ambitious fall

perhaps i just do better in fall. but, perhaps i just can't remember last summer.
either way, i feel infinitely more in tune with september. i have five quarts of tomato sauce in the freezer, four quarts of frozen corn, four jars of pickles and seven jars of salsa.

and i'm not done yet—!


starting on monday and continuing through the week i have plans to make:

  • applesauce
  • curried green tomatoes
  • canned tomatillo salsa
  • pickled jalapenos
  • pickled red onions
  • nectarine jam (or jelly?)
  • whole tomatoes
  • (possibly) more salsa or ketchup?
  • infused liquors (pear, hot pepper, other)
roasting a chicken on monday too. looking forward to it.

somehow the whole allure of canning—rooted to the kitchen, doing as much as you can before things go bad, looking towards the colder months on the horizon—resonates with me.

7.15.2010

interesting reads for the day

from the New York Times
i love the High Line park. i saw it in february though, i bet in summer it is one hundred times better (and more crowded.) i think it would be awesome if the trend caught on in other cities. cities need more green!


from the blogs
this weekend kicks off a considerable amount of on-my-own-time, which i am hoping to use to get myself going on several projects—including fruit butters, garden catch-up and finishing my cloth napkins.

the world seems to be pointing me in the Go For It! direction.

5.20.2010

The Etiquette of Canning Jars via Food in Jars

an excellent post at Food in Jars about canning. i heartily subscribe to the first rule—i have heard you should never loan anything unless you'd be okay never seeing it again.

and the second one, right oh!
i know there are people out there who aren't using my Christmas treats (achem, my mother). so read up and shape up!

5.14.2010

its easy to get overwhelmed

today i read this at Sustainable Eats.

i was completely taken by surprise as this is a woman who i have been constantly amazed by what she can and has done. but the surprise only lasted a moment because who can really be surprised that someone might become worn out when making everything from scratch—not to mention fighting an uphill battle to do it.

i am fighting really no battles to do what i want and am only doing a fraction of what she has undertaken and frankly, i am overwhelmed all the time.

its never good to hear that someone is in a rough spot but it is comforting to know that even the ones that Do It All get tired. i am constantly wondering how people do it all and how i can't.

turns out its just a matter of perspective and persistence. maybe i should push myself a little more, i think i'd find out that i can be a little more successful and a little more happy.

for now i will take a short vacation to portland and leave my house and garden responsibilities behind me, so that i can rally and wreak havoc on my projects next week.

3.25.2010

some excellent home and garden reads for today

while i wait for a spare moment to sit down at home and import some more adorable photos, i will sit at my desk job and intermittently check the new york times. today in a matter of clicks i stumbled upon some interesting reads that i thought i would share today.

behold my bounty:
along the theme of these articles i have to say that i am continually looking for a way to bring gardening indoors but am constant failure at it. my houseplants typically look wan at best, snacked on at worst.

the same failure of attention spelled doom for my last kombucha project as well, although it is something i would like to get started with again.

so often i wish to be building patterns in my life that make the homemade tasks part of the daily grind and i've never found it easy. its hard to feel that you are embracing a way of life when it doesn't come easy. i'm not sure what the solution is.

3.23.2010

busy little baking bee

have had some excellent adventures in the kitchen as of late.

invigorated by the success of my bread, intrigued by homemade veggie burgers, and financially coming up short—i struck out on my own to make greek-style quinoa burgers ala martha stewart. although they were slightly less greek as we ditched the yogurt/cucumbers for the tomatoes, avacado and cheese that we had.

it was my first veggie burger effort but i thought it was pretty damn delicious—the homemade pita that i whipped up was the perfect compliment of function, texture and taste.

turns out pita bread isn't all that difficult to make from scratch. i was happy when i stumbled upon a post at Farmgirl Fare (my original blog obsession) that spelled it all out for me, thinking of the blog as a good friend, i knew that i could give it a go. if she can, i can! and it turns out i was right. the pita was delicious, i might be more likely to make pita in the future than bread—oh my.

i'm on a baking roll.

tonight i'll continue the trend with quiche and home made crust. in the past i've usually cheated with a store-bought crust, but this morning i just couldn't justify three dollars for something i could make at home for free. i think all this dough handling is making me more adventurous.

case in point: contemplating cinnamon rolls for this weekend. hm....
(later this week: seedling updates and cute animal photos—!)

3.15.2010

souplalalouza

it all started with Not Eating Out in New York—the blog, not the act. (though i will say that i really truly wanted to go to New York and cook my meals and no one was interested, despite all being poor and hip epicureans.*)

last week i caught their post about the yellow split-pea soup with smoked paprika and crisped leeks. it looked good, i tagged it for further review. a day later i check it out again and it simply sounds amazing, and i think, i've got to make this.

not long after i begin plotting to make some delicious split-pea soup, did the words 'celeriac soup' pop into my head and were shortly followed by 'white bean'. and suddenly Souplalouza (aka souplalalouza) was born.

my initial intent had been to hole up in my house and cook, cook, cook.
but my twenties got the best of me, and instead i slowly puttered here and there with the soup—taking the easy way on the split pea soup and using the slow cooker, cooking the beans two days before the squash—you get the drift.

i finally completed all the soups this monday evening while cleaning the house after a fairly raucous sunny sunday. my slow, drawn-out, process made for a slightly less impressive post but life is life, and i still found it to be a superbly satisfying sensory experience.
yellow split-pea soup ala slow cooker
2 cups yellow split peas
6 cups of vegetable stock
2 cups of water
1 white onion (sliced thin with the food processor)
2 cloves of garlic
1 tablespoon smoked paprika
2 bay leaves
salt & pepper to taste
*my homemade stock was heavy on the thyme, so i didn't use additional seasonings, but go for it!
  • place all ingredients in slow cooker.
  • cook in slow cooker on low for 10 hours.
for the topping
1 leek, sliced
  • preheat oven to 375 degrees. 
  • coat the round slices of one leek with olive oil and place down on a roasting tray. sprinkle with salt. 
  • bake about 15 minutes, checking after 10 minutes. 
  • remove from oven and let cool once evenly brown.
white bean and squash soup 
(inspired from Alice Waters The Art of Simple Food)
2 cups of white beans (navy), soaked overnight
3 cups of vegetable broth
1 medium squash (sweet meat), peeled and cubed
2 tablespoons of olive oil
3-4 sage leaves
2 bay leaves
1 large onion, sliced thinly
  • cook soaked beans in broth, adding 4 cups of water. bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, begin checking after 20 minutes for tenderness. save cooking liquid.
  • sautee sage, bay and onion in olive oil until onions are tender.
  • add squash, sauteeing five minutes and salting to taste.
  • add six cups of cooking liquid from the beans to the pot and simmer until squash is tender (15-20).
  • once tender, stir in the beans and season to taste.
roasted celeriac soup ala slow cooker
(what can i say, slow cookers are simply awesome for soups)
1 celeriac (about 1.5 lbs before trimming and peeling), peeled and chopped
3 leeks, white and light green parts sliced
1 small potato, peeled and chopped
2 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
2 1/4 c vegetable broth
salt and pepper
  • preheat oven to 350ºF. toss celeriac with 1 tbs oil and roast for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally
  • add celeriac to slow cooker with remaining ingredients, cook on high for 3 hours (until tender).
  • once tender, use immersion blender to puree soup.
  • if desired, add cream or milk and blend. season to taste

*scratch that, i did have one home-cooked pasta meal before rushing out to an improv show, kudos laurel!

1.21.2010

the bread adventures

has anyone else noticed how bread is the topic du jour? or am i just particularly attentive? there have been at least two posts this week alone on thekitchn.com blog regarding bread items, and february's Martha Stewart also features a spread on bread making.

all the discussion has definitely got me in the spirit. i've successfully completed three loaves of no-knead bread—but not without a fair amount of bumps along the way.

most notable?
  • on the first round: i failed to follow the directions for my new cast iron dutch oven and stuck it into the oven without a good pre-wash. result? filling my house with acrid smoke that somehow reached to every corner in moment.
  • on the second round: i did the final rise in the bread pan near the heater. somehow this led to a less than rustic looking crust. i expect...too much heat+oiled plastic wrap.
  • the third round: i successfully baked in the dutch oven as is included in the original directions, and then forgot about it. result? a very chewy crust. meh.
all in all, my first loaf, which was baked in a loaf pan after the dutch oven debacle, turned out the best. it was pretty fucking amazing if i do say so myself, and it has definitely jump started my interest in bread making.

my chief concern is how chilly my house gets and how drafty my kitchen is. there just simply isn't a spot that stays somewhat warm consistently anywhere in my house. i would love to set up a warming drawer but i've yet to have any brilliant brainstorms on where that can exist. every cupboard is filled with dishes, dry goods or other items that wouldn't do well with an additional twenty degrees or so.

a trick i learned from a friend when working at the bakery is to pre-heat your oven to its lowest setting, turn it off, and rise your bread in the warm oven. so for now, my bread making will be a weekend adventure. which, truth be told, is far more rewarding and enjoyable.

tomorrow i will undoubtedly begin the process all over.
perhaps my goal for february will be to tackle a classic yes-knead yeast bread.

1.11.2010

Remedy Quarterly

on a whim i decided to support the upstart magazine Remedy Quarterly.
i love it and i highly recommend that you check it out.

1.06.2010

bread baking goals: ammended.

so...what about all that bread i was going to make?
...yeah, hasn't happened.

but today i got a whole new jolt of vigor and purpose when i stumbled across a post on No Knead Bread. it wasn't their first post on Jim Lahey's book-slash-method but i had been dutifully ignoring all the mentions out of sheer guilt of not yet starting my baking project.

today was different somehow and after some light reading i was off like a cheap prom dress.

i'm now the proud owner of my bread: the revolutionary no-work, no-knead method.
sadly, i am not yet an owner of a 5 quart cast iron pot. sadly, the sale at Macy's had passed. (how dare they!)

this weekend will be the weekend. starting, friday after work—giving me plenty of time to devote my attention to the bread come saturday. very excited for the weekend now.

10.28.2009

mace (not in your face)

had to share this little blurb of an article—and i'll admit its just for the photo.
does that look just surreal? certainly makes me want to cook with it.

in the last six months i have become a hard-core, devouted rss subscriber, and subsequently, blog reader. of course, nearly all of them are kitchen or garden related. its interesting to peek in on others experiences. sometimes i learn something new, some times i just feel like i'm in good company.

i was going to try and pick a favorite but looking at the list there are enough to make the 'favorite' title erroneous. however, you can see a glimpse of what i read and what they are writing in the right column of this blog.

what blogs do you read? would love to hear of any others.

10.14.2009

sourdough starter from scratch

sigh.
i really want to create a sourdough starter using the grapes from the farm, based on this blogpost i read from Eating Locally in the Pacific Northwest.

sadly, i do not think i have the time or energy to be so dilligent and i don't think i have a single place in my house that will stay consistently 70 degrees for several days—or an area that i could set up easily to do so. or the energy to find an area to set up to do so.

hm. there is always next year?

10.12.2009

¡viva el jardinero!

this morning i read this blog post by Adriana at Anarchy in the Garden.
the timing of it was almost eerie. turns out that while i have been standing over a pan of roasting tomatoes, having some type of garden existential crisis, there has been a "a small skirmish erupt[ing] among garden writers and bloggers on the internet"(www.gardenblogger.com) about ME. well, not me. my generation.

to be perfectly honest, at the end of my first full weekend of tomato duty i was in the kitchen wondering what exactly i was doing. i do not know anyone who happily forsakes their weekend to spend the day and night playing with their own weight in tomatoes. i read the blogs of people who garden, farm, cook and can—i have a handful of friends with their gardens and kitchens. regardless, at that moment i wondered if i was being a little nutty.

i wondered if i was embracing a passion or hiding from an experience. why wasn't i "simultaneously self-absorbed yet philanthropic, craves information and connectedness, but seeks out only self-referential sources, is materialistic, impatient and in search of instant gratification" (www.anarchyinthegarden.com)? and if i'm not—how would my contemporaries relate to me?

and then i stumbled upon Adriana's post and the can of worms it referenced and i thought, i'm not alone. i'm not the generational odd-duck. i putter in my yard, i putter in my kitchen, i experiment with recipes and like to watch the interactions of the plants and animals around me. i'm not a farmer and i am not martha stewart—i'm not a gourmet cook or photography student. i almost wish i was all of the above, but i'm human. i'm my own take on all of it. i'm amatuer. but i'm passionate.

i don't know what that makes me, beside happy.
the appropriate contemporaries will find me

9.30.2009

this years lessons

what i would do differently
  • plant timely
  • crowd my peppers closer together
  • trellis my cukes and melons
  • improve my succession planting
  • trim my tomatoes sooner
  • kill all the greenery around the beds
  • more root and squash crops
  • keep the berries watered
  • don't skimp on the cilantro
things i want to try next year

cellars

as i did last year, i am once again researching root cellars and cold storage for the winter.

the fact is that i do not have a root cellar, nor the space or wherewithal to create one outside. i need to come up with a workable system that can reside in my basement.

already from my reading i learned the errors of my way with my impromptu carrot cellar last year: no air flow and i left it outside during a particularly cold winter. i will not make that mistake again!

i've found these two articles rather enlightening:
this year i am starting off the fall season with a good number of carrots and beets in the fridge, several winter squash and potatoes, with more of each to come.

the carrots, beets, and few radishes and turnips have been doing well in plastic bags in the vegetable drawers of my additional fridge, so i think i will continue that trend. however, if i want to put more away (which i am seriously considering) i may make something outside of the fridge space.

i will get a crate set up for the potatoes and the winter squash can live in a basket or on a table in the basement.

depending on the load of apples and pears i pick up in portland (Portland Nursery apple tasting event is in a couple of weekends) they will either live in the fridge in brown paper bags, or i will pick up some luggs and store them alongside the potatoes and squash.

i'm taking a mid-week day off tomorrow to focus on harvesting the last of the summer's bounty—nothing like the threat of a frost to set one into motion. the next few days will be dedicated to preparation for the fall: canning, freezing, drying, saucing—and finding space for everything.

one big last hurrah before dark days (speaking of which...) set in and my energy is devoted to staying off of the couch.

8.31.2009

freezing eggplant

my past weekend was a mess of debauchery and youth.

driving out to dayton in the late evening is a beautiful experience, especially during harvest. the striped hills are like enormous polo shirts heaped across the landscape. as the sun goes down, the light makes everything look like a pastel painted jane austen background.

it was a lot of fun, but tiring, and i was glad when sunday rolled around.
my project for sunday night: blanching and freezing eggplant.

i followed these directions but after the experience i believe these may be better.
looking at the state of the eggplant after steaming them, i think 4 minutes was a little long and that the 2 minutes listed on about.com is a better choice. similarly, the second set of directions explains to put the lemon juice in the cold water bath, which also makes more sense to me.

still, they turned out all right. they will be useable and that is what counts.

and there will be plenty more chances. last night i processed six bride eggplant, one thai green eggplant and one large white patty pan squash. outside i have at least four sizeable globe eggplants that will need to be used, but i am thinking eggplant parmesan for those.

look at those beautiful babies growing

tonights project is multi-fold: freeze green beans, freeze squash, plant for fall.

8.26.2009

farm vacations hitting the news

while i was reading this story from the new york times, a friend sent me this story from cnn.com

wow.

it sounds so idyllic. having a beautiful farm with chickens, cows. a big barn. and then running a heuhotel and weekly farm dinner program for fresh new faces.

7.16.2009

i (heart) frittatta

i thought quiche was the one of the greatest inventions.
i've transitioned to frittatta.

for one, no crust to worry about.

two? bake it. like a quiche.
the first frittatta i ever made, i made like the books say: skillet to oven. well i am converted: all oven baby.

tonight i made frittatta: my eggs (3), strauss organic milk (1 c.), asparagus (2 c.), chard (1 c.), zucchini (2 c.), onions, savory, and garlic. and i put some lovely purple dragon beans on the side.

and i followed Mark Bittman's plan, less egg, more veggie (if you couldn't tell.) i bet i could go even less egg. or i guess more veggie?