Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Video Review: Making Herbs Simple, Volume 1


Have you noticed that I don’t promote a lot of products or companies on this blog? I won’t even wear a t-shirt with advertising, let alone spend money in order to be some company’s billboard. But that’s a blog post for another time. Suffice it to say, the product or company has to be pretty special for me to willingly promote it.

A while ago, I was blessed to receive the Making Herbs Simple video from the Bulk Herb Store for free in a blog giveaway. What an excellent beginner video!



Shoshana walks you through how to forage and use some of the most popular medicinal herbs. Her easy-going relaxed ways make you feel comfortable, yet at the same time she is quite knowledgeable. You also meet her mother, and you realize Shoshana grew up doing what she’s teaching, which lends credibility to her information.  

By the time you finish watching the video, you’ll be much more comfortable and confident using herbal remedies at home.


Great selection of bulk herbs, books, and remedies. Articles, Research Aids and much more.

Like I said before, I don’t promote very many products or companies, just the ones I really like. I hope you take a few minutes to browse the Bulk Herb Store website. I’m overdue hosting a giveaway. I may have to wander around the store a little myself, looking for prizes. We’ll see. There is this tea sampler I've been eye up...

Brussels Sprouts




Forget horses, snakes, and tigers. This is the Year of the Cruciferae for us! Our cruciferous plants have done amazingly well in the garden this year.

Cruciferous plants, by the way, are those yummy crunchy vegetables with a distinct flavor or bite like broccoli, cauliflower, turnips, cabbage, and Brussels Sprouts. These veggies like cooler temperatures and tend to bolt (go to seed) if those cool temperatures are followed by a warm spell. I expected my way-too-many rows of Cruciferae to flower at any moment because of the unseasonably warm weather we’ve been enjoying. Thankfully, we only lost a couple of heads of broccoli, so far.

New cruciferous plants for us this year are cabbage and Brussels sprouts. My Polish roots have been missing more cabbage and sauerkraut on the menu. The Brussels sprouts were an experiment. I like Brussels sprouts, and when I started roasting them, my family started liking them, too. Unfortunately, they can be quite pricey in the store. Now I know why!

Like their brothers and sisters in the cruciferous family, Brussels sprouts like cool weather. However, they like it for a lot longer than their siblings! Cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower are ready to harvest in 70 to 90 days. Brussels sprouts take about 120 days to harvest. That’s 120 cool days. Not cold days. Not warm days. Cool days. You might get that many perfect temperature days in a Saskatchewan summer, but here in tropical Florida the only “c” word used to describe our weather is caliente!

Anyway, I am pleased to report that our experiment was a success and we have Brussels sprouts. I had no idea how many Brussels sprouts to expect form a single plant, and I knew I could freeze or pickle any extras, so I planted 15 plants in the main garden, and Jared planted 4 in his section of the garden.



I’m so glad my family now likes Brussels sprouts. We recently harvested about 4 or 5 meals worth of Brussels sprouts from just three plants! Here’s a little hint if you’re growing them and want the entire stalk to ripen at the same time. When the bottom sprouts are about 1/2'” round, break off the small center leaves at the top. This worked very well, and Jared was able to harvest an entire plant all at once!

I’m certain I’ll be freezing quite a few to enjoy later on, but until then, we’ll be enjoying them at dinner at least once a week. If you don’t think you’re a fan of Brussels sprouts, try roasting them. Roasting really mellows the flavor. Try my Roasted Vegetable Medley recipe, cutting the recipe down a bit in order to use just Brussels sprouts, or try this Roasted Brussels with Balsamic and Cranberries from Pioneer woman. Last but not least, you can always try this recipe I found in the newspaper the other day. It has bacon in it. You can’t go wrong with bacon! No, it's not the healthiest meat, but in this recipe it's more like a seasoning. Enjoy!

Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Bacon
1 pound Brussels sprouts
5 slices thick-cut bacon, cut into pieces
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoons butter
Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 400°F.

Wash Brussels sprouts. Trim off ends. Cut larger sprouts in half. Set aside.

Heat one tablespoon of olive oil in a large skillet over medium –high heat. Cook the bacon until crisp. Remove the bacon from the pan with a slotted spoon and place on a paper-towel-lined plate to drain.

Add remaining tablespoon of olive oil and butter to the pan. After the butter has melted, add the sprouts and cook for 3 minutes, just until the sprouts have started to brown. Add the bacon back to the pas and toss gently. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Spread the sprouts and bacon in a 9”x13” baking pan. Roast in the preheated oven for 15 minutes, or until the sprouts are fork-tender. Remove from the oven and serve. Makes 4 servings.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Harvest Time


This is my favorite part of growing a vegetable garden: harvesting! The menu plan often looks so odd because we eat what’s ripe. Sometimes the menu has to change because too much cauliflower ripened at the same time or not enough carrots were ready.

Finding creative ways to prepare everything is often a challenge. I can’t always make the time to search for new recipes to try so I recycle old favorites. Mashed potatoes becomes mashed potatoes and turnips. Cream of cauliflower soup tastes wonderful with a couple of turnips and a potato added to the mix. And just about anything can be roasted and tossed with roasted garlic and olive oil.

I’m grateful my family doesn’t mind being human guinea pigs. Most of the time, my odd creations are edible, except maybe that turnip-potato pancake disaster. The first bite wasn’t bad but the after taste was killer! Note to self: cook the turnips first.

I’m also grateful that my family love simplicity. No heavy sauces hiding those veggies for my family. They prefer the taste of the vegetables instead of the heavy taste of rich cream or cheese sauces.

Isn’t that why we started growing vegetables in the first place: to enjoy the taste of fresh vegetables that didn’t travel in the back of a truck for three days before landing on the store shelf, continuously losing flavor until I unsuspectingly reached in and snagged some flavorless wonder to serve up to my family and call it healthy. 


When I looked in the harvest basket this week, I smiled, knowing that every bit of dirt caked under my nails from weeding, every drop of odoriferous compost tea I spilled on my garden shoes, and every bead of sweat that poured from my skin while tending my garden was so worth the temporary discomfort. This was our first year of being completely chemical free in the garden, and the vegetables are amazing. Now, if I could just find a few more interesting turnip and cabbage recipes, it’d be the perfect garden season!

Thanks for stopping by and tolerating my whimsical ramblings! Most of you are still planning your spring garden and ordering your seeds while I’m going on about harvesting my garden in February. I still have a month or two of good growing weather left, just enough time to replace my harvested plants with a few peas and green beans. I guess it’s time to fire up the canner!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty


Monday, February 27, 2012

Menu Plan Monday 2/27




So many veggies are ready to be picked in my garden again this week. It looks like another veggie-heavy week. I don’t mind, that’s for sure. Although, I am running out of healthy but interesting recipes and ideas. Nobody’s tired roasted vegetable medley and salads yet, so I still have options.

I pray you have a blessed week with less stress because you created a menu plan!

Don’t forget to stop by Organizing Junkie for more menu ideas! If you’re looking for some new recipe resources, check out this Recipe Index Round Up.

Menu Plan for Week of 02/27/2012

Breakfast 

Lunch
Lunch of the week – Salads, wraps or leftovers
Fruit of the week – Apples, bananas, and oranges

Dinner
Monday – Roast Chicken, mashed turnips and taters, steamed veggies, cauliflower
Wednesday – Halupki, salad
Thursday – Jared’s Cooking Lesson: Baked macaroni and cheese, herbed tomatoes, salad
Friday – Chili, cornbread, salad
Saturday – Cabbage Soup
Sunday – Leftovers and salads

Snacks – Crackers and peanut butter, fruit, yogurt, carrot and celery sticks, or popcorn.

Thank you for stopping by!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Chicken Tractor


When I tell people that I have a tractor in my backyard, those who know where I live look at me funny. When I tell them that I put my chickens in it, they really look at me funny. Yes, I really do have a chicken tractor in my backyard, but this chicken tractor doesn’t run like a Deere. In fact, it doesn’t run at all. Let me explain.

Although my chicken coop provides plenty of space for my girls, and they eat a good laying feed plus plenty of kitchen scraps for variety and a balanced diet, I like to let them forage whenever possible. The scratching and hunting is good for them physically, they get to enjoy a few bugs that wouldn’t normally venture into the coop, and the soil gets aerated from their scratching and naturally fertilized from their...well, you know. Unfortunately, we no longer have a fence around the vegetable garden, so my chickens’ free-range foraging had to stop. A single chicken can decimate an entire broccoli plant in seconds! However, I didn’t want to completely lose the benefits of foraging. The chicken tractor to the rescue!

A chicken tractor is nothing more than a frame covered with some kind of mesh that can be easily moved around the yard. Our first tractor was made from wood and a 2-inch by 3-inch wire mesh. It was too large and heavy to truly be mobile, and the large mesh allowed the chickens to nibble at plant life nearby. Our current tractor is made of PVC pipes and bird netting, the kind used to keep birds out of backyard ponds. It’s lightweight and a good size, but PVC doesn’t stay together well during moving or hold up to the Florida sun very well. The pipes will probably shatter in the next year. The next tractor will either be made of all wire with an arch at the top or wood and bird netting.



I often joke that our chicken tractor is really a chicken playpen, a safe place for my girls to play without getting hurt or hurting something else. I can place the tractor in empty areas of the garden, and the chickens will weed it, till it, and fertilize it. The smaller mesh of the bird netting keeps the girls from eating nearby plants, and the top mesh keeps the neighborhood hawks from swooping in and carrying off my hens.



Thank you for stopping by! If you can’t let your chickens free range, or you want your chickens to help out in the garden, I highly recommend a chicken tractor. The really are handy to have on  the urban farm.

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Homemade Mayonnaise


Whenever we are out and about for the day, I always make sure we have an on-the-go lunch and dinner plan. While I don’t mind an occasional spicy chicken sandwich from Chic-fil-a, our budget and our bodies couldn’t handle a steady diet of fast food.

Sometimes our quickie lunch consists of peanut butter and jelly or cream cheese and jam sandwiches, some carrot and celery sticks, and a couple of pieces of fruit enjoyed off the tailgate of the truck. However, for those very full days at the fair, I wanted to pack something more substantial, like grilled chicken breast sandwiches and macaroni salad, but it’s a little tough to make that macaroni salad without mayonnaise. Ok, I had about a tablespoon of salad-dressing-type mayo hanging out at the back of the refrigerator for who knows how long. The fact that it was still perfectly fine should have been a clue that we shouldn’t be eating that stuff. Shouldn’t mayonnaise go bad at some point?? Haven’t we all heard the horror stories about potato salad going bad and crippling an entire picnic with food poisoning? Yet, this stuff was fine after months in the refrigerator. Scary. Even scarier is The Miracle Whip Experiment at Everything Home with Carol. Evidently, Carol left her salad-dressing-type mayonnaise on the counter for a month…and it was still perfectly fine!

Anyway, I was still facing mayo-less macaroni salad and no desire to run to the store. I also know that it is possible to make my own mayonnaise. I’d been putting it off forever. I can be such a coward sometimes. But I still needed mayonnaise! So, I opened up my Great Big Book of Everything (aka, my Better homes and Garden Cook Book), and found a mayonnaise recipe. The recipe called for egg substitute and a very high ratio of oil to egg product. I replaced the egg product with real eggs and in about 10 minutes I made mayonnaise...and it was terrible! Way too much oil!

Thankfully, I had just seen a link to a mayo recipe on one of my favorite link-ups. Chara over at Stitching Hearts Together posted her recipe along with some variations. I was back in the kitchen for one more try. Ten minutes later, I had mayonnaise…and it was good! It was VERY good! My family loved the macaroni salad and the chicken salad I made later in the week. I don’t think I’ll be buying mayo ever again.

Mayonnaise

1 egg
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup oil

Combine the egg and salt and mix well.

Add oil in a slow steady stream while mixing at a high speed. This step should take at least 5 minutes if you are pouring the oil slowing. At some point, the oil and egg combination emulsify, and you have thick and creamy mayonnaise.

Tips:

I made this mayonnaise once with my mixer and once with an immersion blender and a wide-mouth quart-sized jar. I loved the jar method! Mixing and storing in the same container? Perfect!

The first time, I kept the recipe simple and added extra spices to my salad instead of to the mayonnaise. However, you can add some zip to your mayo with any of these optional ingredients:

1 tablespoon vinegar (any flavor)
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon chili powder
A little yellow or Dijon mustard

The possibilities go on and on! I added raspberry infused vinegar and dry mustard to the batch I used for chicken salad. So good!

Use a good quality oil that hasn’t turned rancid. You’ll know by the smell. Extra virgin olive oil, grapeseed oil, coconut oil and even plain old vegetable oil can produce a good mayonnaise. Take a tip from Chara and mix your oils for some different flavors.



Thanks for stopping by! I hope you try this recipe and not be a coward like me. If you use a lot of mayonnaise in your cooking, you’ll definitely love this recipe. If you don’t use a lot, then you’ll really love that you don’t have to make a lot at a time. Enjoy, and tell me how it turns out!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty

Monday, February 20, 2012

One Last Walk Through the Fair


The Florida State Fair 2012 ends tomorrow. By Tuesday, the nearby interstates will be crowded with tractor trailers pulling the Best in Show side-by-side with the not-quite-up-to-snuff livestock. Fold-and-go carnival rides will jockey for position on the highway, racing off to the next big event. The aroma of a hundred fryers cooking up a riotous mixture of deep fried goodness mingled with the smoky tingle of BBQ ribs and chicken topped off with the sizzling scent of succulent sausages and lightly peppered with a hint of live farm animals will quickly dissipate as tents are packed away and the barns doors close.

So, if you would please, indulge me just once more for one last walk through the 2012 Florida State Fair.




Colleen's bunny, Pirate, took home 2nd place. Yay!! 




Look! I found Elvis!

 
Lawnmower Racing


Tug-of-War Time!












Menu Plan Monday 2/20



The fair is officially over. Okay, it’s officially over for us but open for everyone else one more day. All we have left is one more drive over to the fairgrounds to pick up our entries and our ribbons after the fair closes. I have to admit that the Florida State Fair 2012 was a lot of fun. A lot of work, at times, but definitely a lot of fun!

In the end, I’m taking home eight ribbons, Jared is taking home three, Colleen is taking home three, and I lost count of all the ribbons the kids in our 4-H club won. For a small club, we leave a big impression! Hearing our little group make such a big sound during the awards announcements for the baking competition was almost better than winning the awards. Almost.

The menu is veggie heavy as turnips continue to ripen and Brussels Sprouts, cauliflower, cabbage, scallions, and carrots start coming in also. This is the time of year when dinner often consists of a small grilled chicken breast and whatever veggies are ripe that day. Don’t be surprised if that’s what you see on the menu!

Don’t forget to stop by Organizing Junkie for more menu ideas! If you’re looking for some new recipe resources, check out this Recipe Index Round Up.

Menu Plan for Week of 02/20/2012

Breakfast 

Lunch
Lunch of the week – Salads, wraps or leftovers
Fruit of the week – Apples, bananas, and oranges

Dinner
Monday – Chicken fingers, roasted garlic and Brussels spouts, steamed carrots, salad
Wednesday – Roast chicken, whatever veggies are ripe, mashed sweet potatoes, salad
Thursday – Jared’s Cooking Lesson: Potato, Turnip and Cauliflower soup (I’ll explain later)
Friday – Pork and sauerkraut with apples (slow cooker meal)
Saturday – Quesadillas, beans and rice, salad
Sunday – Vegetable soup, salad, bread

Snacks – Crackers and peanut butter, fruit, yogurt, carrot and celery sticks, or popcorn.

Thank you for stopping by!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Carrot Cake Jam


Although I usually preserve boring necessities like carrots, applesauce, and green beans, I also like to play a little and put up some interesting things like marinated mushrooms, peach salsa, and chunky apple-cinnamon syrup. I recently came across a very interesting recipe that uses up a few carrots in an unusual way, as a jam. Yep, carrots in your jam. Can you imagine?!

This Carrot Cake Jam is odd but oh-so-good! Don’t trust me? Maybe the judges at the Florida State Fair will convince you. Here’s what they had to say about Carrot Cake Jam:



The original recipe called for pears, but I didn’t have any on hand, and they were a bit up there in price. So, I used apples instead. I think the substitution worked out just fine. What do you think?

Anyway, this jam is great on toast or in a PBJ sandwich. However, topping a cracker with a little cream cheese and a dollop of Carrot Cake Jam is my absolutely favorite way to enjoy this treat.



If you try this recipe, please let me know what you think. Enjoy!

Carrot Cake Jam

1 ½ cups finely grated carrots
1 ½ chopped, cored, peeled, apples
1 ¾ cups crushed canned pineapple, including juice
3 tbsp lemon juice
1 tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp ground nutmeg
¼ tsp ground cloves
1 package (1.75 oz.) low-sugar powdered fruit pectin
3 cups sugar

Prepare canner, jars, and lids.

In a large stainless steel saucepan, combine carrots, apples, pineapple with juice, lemon juice, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring frequently. Reduce heat, cover and boil gently for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Remove from heat and whisk in pectin until dissolved. Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring frequently.

Add sugar all at once and return to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly. Boil hard, stirring constantly, for 1 minute. Remove from heat and skim off foam.

Ladle hot jam into hot jars, leaving ¼ inch headspace. Remove air bubbles and adjust headspace, if necessary, by adding hot jam. Wipe rims and adjust lids.

Process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes. Remove canner lid. Wait 5 minutes, then remove jars, cool, and store.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Happy Valentine's Day...Sort of


Happy Valentine’s Day! Valentine’s Day has always seemed a strange holiday to me. We celebrate the life and martyrdom of a Christian saint by giving each other flowers that die, trinkets that collect dust, and obscene amount of chocolate, idolizing the idea of romantic love that doesn't last. Ok, I can get behind the chocolate, but then again, I believe that rainy days and Mondays are good enough reasons to give and receive chocolate.

Anyway, do you know that no historian can pinpoint exactly which Saint Valentine inspired the holiday and that no one associated romantic gestures to the day until Geoffrey Chaucer’s poem in the 14th century?

All of this might make you think that I’m an unromantic cynic, but nothing could be farther from the truth. I’m a huge fan of love and romance. I’m just not a huge fan of telling people which day of the year on which to be romantic. I’m also not a huge fan of turning love and romance into a billion dollar industry. I’m also not a fan of an entire year of love and romance being completely disregarded and forgotten if your sweetie doesn’t give you flowers on Valentine’s Day.

I came across the best blog post yesterday explaining that while Americans spend an exorbitant amount of money expressing their “love” on Valentine’s Day, we still have the highest divorce rate in the world. Check out A Love Worth Celebrating on Growing Home for a wonderful post about love. I’m not going to spoil it for you, but it’s worth the couple of minutes to stop by Jacinda’s blog for a look see.

Thanks for stopping by! By the way, I have a freaky Valentine’s Day fact for you that may help explain my lack of enthusiasm for this holiday. For those who don’t know, I was married once before, many, many, many years ago. We got married on Valentine’s Day. Things went very badly very quickly. When I finally got the courage to re-marry, I ended up marrying a man whose birthday is on Valentine’s Day. Since we’re still married 19 years later, I’m going to guess that Valentine’s Day was supposed to be significant to me, just not in the way that I thought!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty

Monday, February 13, 2012

Menu Plan Monday, 2/13




My dear husband’s birthday is this week, and I’m sad to say that we aren’t doing anything over-the-top amazing. My sweet family blew our amazing-over-the-top birthday budget on my birthday and then added an over-the-top Christmas into the mix. Plus, my poor hubby’s birthday lands right in the middle of all our State Fair craziness. Thankfully, he’s okay with a quiet birthday. In fact, he prefers them.

So, he’ll go to work that day as if it were any other day, and I’ll make a nice dinner and a Darn Good ChocolateCake for him, and he’ll be sweetly grateful for the quiet evening. This would make me completely crazy, however.

Anyway, we only have a couple more trips to make to the Fair this week to pick up a chicken and a couple of bunnies and to drop off two more bunnies for a different show. Saturday we get to enjoy the fair for the entire day without having to be at any shows or competitions at all! I can’t wait! I just love the fair!

I pray that you have a wonderful, productive, and full week ahead! See you at the fair!

Don’t forget to stop by Organizing Junkie for more menu ideas! If you’re looking for some new recipe resources, check out this Recipe Index Round Up.

Menu Plan for Week of 02/13/2012

Breakfast 

Lunch
Lunch of the week – Salads, wraps or leftovers
Fruit of the week – Apples, bananas, oranges, and pears

Dinner
Monday – Chicken and veggies in a creamy pesto over pasta, salad
Tuesday – Steaks on the grill, smashed taters and turnips, salad, chocolate cake
Wednesday Big salads, artisan bread
Thursday – Jared’s Cooking Lesson: Chicken Noodle Soup (He caught on so quickly, we might only do this one twice!)
Friday – Black beans and rice, salads
Saturday – Sandwiches and salads at the fair
Sunday – Hamburgers, salad

Snacks – Crackers and peanut butter, fruit, yogurt, carrot and celery sticks, or popcorn.

Thank you for stopping by!

Grace and peace be yours in abundance,
Betty

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Florida State Fair 2012


I have a thing about the food at the fair. Although I actually eat very little of it, I admire the creativity on the part of the vendors and laugh at the long lines in front of the strangest offerings.

Last year, I shared quite a few pictures of freaky fried fair foods, along with some fun photos from around the fair. This year, I only took pictures of signs I didn’t already have or of new things, so, I don’t have quite as many food photos so far. Because of the show schedule and the cold weather that set in, I don’t have many other photos either. Hopefully, I’ll have an opportunity to take more when we go back this week. You can always enjoy last years picture, too, if you’d like. Fun Fair Photos and Fun at the Fair.

This is another of those how-is-this-even-possible foods!
A waste of good chocolate in my eyes!
I think he likes it!
One of Jared's photography ribbons! I'm a proud mama!
 I couldn't get pictures of my daughter's  or my ribbons for food preservation because the jars a pretty far back from the glass, and you just can't tell from that distance what's what. And my batteries died before I could get pictures off all the ribbons our 4-H kids won. I'm one proud mama and 4-H leader!

I did manage to get this one though. ;)
Because everyone craves fettuccine alfredo at the fair?!
The making of the annual sand sculpture.
What a cutie...and the kid's not too bad either!
Rabbit showmanship
Why?





That was probably more than you ever wanted to see of the Florida State Fair, but I just can't keep myself from sharing all the fun sights of the Fair! I pray that you make it out to the Fair this week or if you live in another state, that you make time to check out your own fair this year. By the way, if you're worried about the cost, enter something in the fair, and you'll get a free ticket! Can't beat that deal!
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