Love deeply. Laugh. Cry. Talk to God. Be realistic about the to-do list. Stay in touch. Hug. Dream. Smile. Break Bread often with Family. Spend Time with your Girlfriends. Shop til you Drop! Extend Grace. Be Quick to Forgive and Slow to Anger. Walk. Breathe. Sing. Dance. Read. Eat Chocolate. Savor a Good Glass of Wine. Wiggle your Toes. Sleep well. Life is Good!

Showing posts with label Food Preservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Preservation. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Continuing Education .... not just for the professional type!


home-stead
Noun:
1. a house, esp. a farmhouse, and outbuildings.
2. a person's or family's residence, which comprises the land, house, and outbuildings, and in most states is exempt from forced sale to meet debts.
3. the place you rest your head ... and declare, for tax purposes.

Verb:
1. to claim, settle and farm a parcel of land.





The word itself conjures up an image in the mind not unlike the above photo (source unknown).

The last couple of years I've become familiar with a lot of new-to-me buzzwords.  Juicing (not as in sports enhancement).  Homesteading.  Foraging.  Charcuterie.  Organic.  Dehydrating.  Alternative (heathcare, cleaning products, toiletries, ....).  Drying Racks.  Cheese-Making.  Rain Water Catchment.  I learned more about old buzzwords I'd already incorporated into our lives.  Composting.  Vertical Gardening.  Square Foot Gardening.  Rotation Gardening.  Bread baking.  Meat grinding.  And, 're-growing' more celery, ginger, scallions, and a whole lot more food from the scrap ends!  Who knew?!!

It may seem like an enormous pile of contradictions. I'm in no way professing to be an all-organic, fair-trade, eco-friendly, never-gonna-buy-anything-made-in-China, carry my own 'green' bag to grocery kinda gal.  I've made a hodge-podge of eclectic choices and incorporated many changes ... slowly, subtly, sporadically ... into our life the last few years.  We will always be consumers to some extent or another. I still prefer the old light bulbs.  I still use the dryer.  Though I do use a drying rack during the less rainy seasons and have turned to using woolen dryer balls in lieu of dryer sheets.  I don't have chickens or goats, or raise rabbits.  Though we do eat wild boar and venison and pheasant because my husband hunts.  We catch the fish we eat too.  I want to learn how to make the best pasta, the best cheese, the best sausage, the best pizza.   Though we still occasionally frequent our favorite local restaurants.  I still drive an SUV (eight years old and paid for).  I still take my dogs to the groomers for baths.  I still use a dry-cleaning service ... not for dry cleaning but for laundry of my husbands shirts.  I am contemplating returning to the ironing board, but for now, I have too many other irons in the fire!  :-)

Why?  Well, it's simple, really.  Because I can.  I do it because I can, not because I have to.  Not because I can afford to.  Because I can learn to do it before I have to do it ... and before I can't afford other options.  Because I honor my grandmother by using many of the skills she taught me when I was younger.  I do it because I want to.  It's not easier.  We all know it's easier to run to the doctor when we feel ill.  To get a shot.  To pop a pill.  Or, to just grab a pesticide or commercial weed killer, instead of  mixing up a safer, equally effective alternative.  But, easy isn't always better.  The better (for me) way takes more time, skill and discipline ... a day filled with shortcuts.  I learned that for the first time when I decided to home school 14 years ago.  And, when I decided to learn and try alternative measures for a few health issues.  I'm still learning.  I still take shortcuts ... but I'm more selective; more mindful.

I've started paying attention.  You know how it goes?  Life gets far to busy to be concerned with what's going on in the news.  Prices have been going up the last few years at the grocery store.  Big time!  That alone re-energized the gardener in me.  Learning about GMOs and organics further motivated me to start canning and preserving what we grow and what I can acquire from local gardeners.  Healthcare is fast changing.  I've avoided gallbladder surgery, bone spur surgery and rotator cuff surgery by seeking alternative routes.  I didn't share that to boast, but simply to say 'there is always a better way' ... unless you find yourself in an emergency and unable to speak up ... being at the mercy of the healthcare system  ... which is not all bad.  Conventional medicine and procedures do have their place in times of emergencies and life threatening situations.  That's another blog post altogether!




One should never be so comfortable, confident and complacent to think hard times won't fall upon them.  I have friends who've lost jobs.  And, friends who've had to re-invent themselves because the labors they offered have become a lower priority as people make cuts in their budgets.  I've seen many, many businesses close.  Businesses which have been around for 30 years or for only two.  Some, who's temporary entitlement incomes have been reduced.  Many who's weekly paychecks have recently had huge, ragged bites taken from them.  We've had our own 'Rob Peter to pay Paul' moments.  Hardships penetrate all of our lives.  A little learning goes a long way in keeping one afloat.  Learning helps one to be prepared for leaner times.  But, what good is learning without practical application?   One must learn not only from books, but from trial and error.  I've made many mistakes along the way ... learning curves.  Making mistakes is part of incorporating the newly learned skill into the eating, breathing and walking day-to-day routines.  This is how gardening is mastered; how baking is taken to new levels; how health is improved; how we learn to depend on ourselves and our faith more.


I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes.

Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things,
trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, 
changing yourself, changing your world.

You're doing things you've never done before, and more importantly, 
you're Doing Something.

Don't freeze, don't stop, don't worry that it isn't good enough, or it isn't perfect,
whatever it is: art or love or work or family or life.

Whatever it is you're scared of doing, Do It.

Make your mistakes, next year and forever.

~ Neil Gaiman ~




Be where you are.
It's your own journey.
Do it, or simply ... don't.  


UPDATE 9/7/2013:   I still use the drying rack ... indoors and out (dryer is rarely used anymore! That alone cut nearly $100 off each of our summer power bills compared to last year)!   We no longer use the dry cleaner to take care of my husband's shirts.  I iron them all now.  That cut a $50/month expense!   I'm baking sourdough weekly (perfect for diabetic husband), canning, gardening and whatever else I take a notion to learn!


Friday, August 17, 2012

Peaches! Peaches! More Peaches!



Old Fashioned Peach Preserves
Source:  Preserving the Harvest

1 quart water
1/2 teaspoon ascorbic acid
3.5#s peeled, pitted and chopped peaches
5 cups sugar
1/4 cup lemon juice
3/4 teaspoon almond extract

Prepare an acid bath by pouring the water into a medium-sized bowl and adding the ascorbic acid.  Dip the peaches in the acid bath; drain well.

Combine fruit, sugar and lemon juice in a heavy 6-8 quart saucepan.  Stir over medium heat til sugar is dissolved.  Boil slowly, stirring constantly, until thickens, the fruit is translucent, and a cooking thermometer reaches 220 degrees F.  Stir in almond extract.  Remove from heat and skim off any foam.

Ladle into sterile jars, allowing 1/4" headspace.  Cap and seal.  Process ten minutes in boiling water bath.



Note: I doubled the recipe (since there was no pectin used) 
and ended up 16 half pints.  Two thumbs up!  




More Carolina Peaches
in a Light Syrup


Light Syrup:  1-2/3 cups sugar + 4 cups water
I doubled it for seven quarts of peaches.  There was 
little more than a cup left - which I poured into the
pot with all the peelings .... making peach honey!



This is what I was doing this morning at 




The beginnings of  Peach Honey!

I'll update when it's finished and canned!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Wuzzup?!

What's on your to-do list today?

A little fun, I hope!
I got up this morning with the hopes of going treasure hunting and maybe getting some creative studio work done, but the kitchen chores and garden took over.  The day isn't over yet!  But, I've had fun already!  Maybe our idea of "fun" differs!  Ok ... satisfying?!!

So far I've peeled, cubed, blanched and loaded the dehydrator with 10#s of potatoes and a large bag of organic sweet corn. I also broke out the new FoodSaver (Christmas gift from my daughter and son-in-law, along with a book about cheese-making! She knows her mama well!) and put away six bags of cooked pork roast (salvaged from the hunting camp last week!).  I'm gonna kick back for half an hour and
watch The Pioneer Woman and sip on some
more of  the pineapple juice I made this morning!

I've got three pounds of ground venison on the stove.  I'm gonna try a dehydrator experiment with it after cooking and draining it well. It will, of course, go into the freezer (taking up 1/10th the original space) since it is dehydrated and not freeze dried. I've been doing my homework! This can then be used for spaghetti, lasagna, tacos, chili, burritos, casseroles, etc. If this works, there will be a repeat!  I'll take the package out of the freezer after about a week and see how it tastes in one of the above-mentioned recipes.  There are 13 more pounds in the freezer waiting for me to do something creative with. Great way to make room for the next load the Great Hunter brings home!  And, the dehydrator isn't as heavy as the pressure canner.




Who knows what the afternoon will hold after the Aleve and caffeine kicks in!  I  want to visit a friend in the hospital at some point today.  (Hey AG!!  Waiting to hear when the tests are over so I can crash your party!).

There is also a HUGE patch of collards I need to pick and cook.  I wonder if
collards can be dehydrated.  I've done spinach (which there is some of that out there too).  Hmmmm.  Back to the books to find out!


TTFN!
terri

Friday, January 13, 2012

 Guess Who's Been Dehydrating?!!!

Carrots, Okra,
Spinach and Mixed Veggies!


Marshmallow!!
Think "Lucky Charms"


Meyer Lemon Peel !


Orange Peel
Specifically:  Satsumas!


Assorted Chili Peppers!

Sunday, November 20, 2011

It's the Pith!! Who Knew?!!!


During last week's process of a multitude of satsumas and lemons gathered from my neighbors' tree, I saved a couple gallon size bags of peels.  I forgot I had the satsuma peels in the fridge, which were supposed to be part of the attempt to make marmalade. Oy vey! 

Anywho!  I pulled all those peels outta the fridge Saturday morning.  I stacked the Meyer lemon peels and sliced them into thin strips .... very thin skinned, so they didn't have much pith at all.  Then I tackled the Satsuma peels.  They had a LOT of thick pith.  So, with my trusty serrated grapefruit spoon in hand, I set out to scrape the pith off.  Surprisingly easier than I thought.



After I took a retail therapy break (!), I stacked and sliced the peels into thin strips.  Onto the dehydrator it all went for an overnight spa treatment!  I think I ended up with 7 trays total! 


But wait!  That's not all!  While I was cleaning the kitchen I picked up the bowl full of the scraped pith to throw it in the trash.  I hesitated and paid a visit to Google.  I found out the most nutritious part of the orange is, second to the juicy Vitamin C .... guess!  The pith!  That bitter white webby stuff.  Who knew?  So, I thought .... hmmm, I thought.  I piled it onto the last dehydrator tray and stacked it with the rest of  'em.  I'll throw these into the food processor and make a fine powder to sit along with the blueberry powder and beet powder to put into smoothies!  Go Me, Go!  

Dehydrated Pith waiting its turn to be pulverized.
After 12 hours because I didn't get out of bed at 1am to check, everything was completely dried and went into the food processor in batches: lemon peel and Satsuma peel.  The pith will get its turn tomorrow.  Each of the other were processed into powders.  I ♥ my Cuisinart, but the coffee herb grinder was tougher and took on the job like a pro!  Now, I have citrus powder to use in those recipes that call for such and which I nevah, evah have on hand (and, don't forget smoothies!).  Yes!  I have that Stepford Wives grin on my face!!




So during all the dehydrating frenzy, I pulled several bags of frozen veggie pulp from the freezer.  Remember when I was juicing a couple of months ago?  I just knew there would be something I could do with this pulp eventually!  I thawed it and dehydrated it.  It's waiting to be pulverized into a fine flour for thickening soups or stews.  I've done the research!  This kind of stuff is expensive to purchase thru organic food sources.  I'd already been tossing it into beans and stews from the freezer ... with good results!  I also have fruit pulp in the freezer.  Imagine a fine powdery fruity flour that can be added to cake or muffin batter.  Oh!  The possibilities!



The assortment of dried peppers below look like

Christmas tree lights before grinding.
They are so beautiful, I may only grind on an as-needed basis!

 


And, YES! the marshmallows!  Yum!! 
A handful of these crunchy bits
is good for a sustained sugar buzz!



Gimme a holla (leave a comment)! 

Saturday, November 19, 2011

When you do things out of necessity, it's a good thing when you enjoy doing it. Necessity, in this case, is hunting season has arrived and the freezer needs cleaning out.  Unfortunately, using things up from the freezer means not putting cooked food back in the freezer.  Kinda defeats the purpose.


So, the first thing out was 15#s of ground venison.  Yep!  15 p-o-u-n-d-s.  What to do with it?   Can it, obviously.  But, this meant I had to make more room in the (heavy duty) pantry - the one with the good wood non warp shelving.  Which means more pantry items go into the studio.  I told a friend this week that my studio is beginning to resemble a general store.  The upside is I can see what I have and it's not buried in the deep dark recesses of the pantry. 

and that's only the spaghetti sauce!

I pressure canned spaghetti sauce and chili w/beans ('cause that's how we roll around here!).  Later (next month or as the Great Hunter sees the necessity) I'll make stew with all the stew meat and pressure can that.  The remaining studio space is feeling a little threatened.  Oh my!  It's exhausting.  But, in a good way!


Then ... (there's always a then) I will deal with all the oranges.  Before Thanksgiving!  Aye Yi Yi!

Tuesday, November 15, 2011


Just another Tuesday ...

It's been a rainy, dreary day here in LA (Lower Alabama).
I spent the morning peeling lemons and limes for preserving.
During the process my hands began burning like fire.
A friend suggested washing my hands with milk.
I did. Little relief.
Then I slathered on Aloe Vera Gel.
A little more relief.
Who Knew?

Later, my dh came home.
He walked in with a sad look on his face.
Then, he broke the news ......


Yeah.  That's my blood orange tree. 
It snapped off at the base of the trunk. 
It was loaded. 
At least 100 blood oranges ... not quite ready for picking. 
Sad day, indeed.  I hope some are salvageable. 
I don't think oranges are like tomatoes.
They don't ripen after picking, do they? 

Needless to say, after that, I caved.



Note/next morning: I went out as soon as it was daylight
and cut the branches out of the way so I could retrieve
the fallen oranges. A total of 115! I cut into one and it was
very sweet and had just begun to turn the blood orange color.
Hopefully, not all is lost. I'll juice about 1/2 of these and 
 the rest I'll share with family, friends and neighbors.
Next Day:
A pretty decent harvest, don't ya think?!


Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Squash and more Squash!


1/2 bushel of zucchini
+
3/4 bushel of yellow squash
+
1 mandolin

=

9.5 gallon bags mixed squash
+
4 quart bags grated zucchini
+
one sliced thumb
(and five bandaids later,
I had to take a short commercial break).




I love the little mandolin!  It's perfect! 
I opted out of buying the larger one
until I saw how much I would use this one. 
It's such a time saver! 
I'm gonna ask Santa for a more heavy duty one,
I believe!  I really do ... believe!

Sidenote:  The little squash necks in the photo ....
they went on the mandolin too.  They produced another
gallon bag FULL of little slices ... perfect for soups!
I was gonna grind them up and use them in
cornbread dressing.  My aunt does that! 
You don't taste the squash, but oh my!! it's so moist!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Weekend Canning Projects!

On Friday, I ventured into
Attempting to make Jelly!
~
and ended up with
Apple Rosemary Jelly Syrup


I tried a recipe that said if I simmered the apples,
peelings and seeds, I wouldn't have to use pectin,
because apples contain natural pectin.
I was a bit mislead, because I later found out
that if I had used sour apples (i.e. Granny Smith),
it would have worked.Oh Well!
Although I can't detect any Rosemary flavor,
I have some awesome apple syrup for pancakes!
And isn't it a beautiful clear honey color?!!!

Then, Saturday,
I pressure canned green beans and turnip greens. 
I also picked up a case each of yellow squash and zucchini.
No! I'm not gonna can these! They are going in the freezer.
I may bake a few loaves of zucchini bread while I'm at it!

And, of course, I came home with 10#s of McIntosh Apples.
I may try the apple jelly thing again.  Maybe!
I will finish these tasks before
the end of next week ...
I hope!  I must! 
I have venison waiting to be put up! 
Thanks to the Great Hunter!
Oy Vey!

Monday, October 24, 2011

The Best Part of Waking Up , , ,


DayQuil and . . .


Today the exhaustion level is high ..... very high.
A combination of a chest/head cold (going on five days now),
joining the family at the fair last night (that cool night air didn't help any)
and canning fatigue (Yes, you "heard" right, Canning Fatigue")
after two long days and nights of canning.


I still have  42#s of Granny Smith Apples to deal with.
I'm thinking pie filling and dehydrating, if the dehydrator
arrives before the last apple is canned!


Keller-Bug just arrived for the day and went straight to her bed.
She's zonked out (9am) from her first Fair experience last night.
That's "Barney" next to her! After Jen posts the fair pics
on her blog, I'll link up so y'all can see them!


And .... it's time to feed the sourdough starter and bake some bread for the neighbors, of course!

But, first .... isn't it time for another dose of  Dayquil?
I'm thinking I may throw a load of laundry on and
curl up on the couch while Keller is sleeping off
her corndog hangover and the Ferris Wheel High!
She'll be rip-roaring when she wakes up!



That's about it for the miscellaneous thoughts
bouncing around in my head this Monday morning.
It's a little stuffy up there.  Hope I didn't bore you all to tears today!
I think I hit a home run with the "mundane"!
See Y'all tomorrow for Home Tour Tuesday!

Link up with Lowercase Letters and Miscellany Monday right here!