Monthly Archive for July, 2006

Now, what to do with those toe-may-ters?

At Blooming Glen last week, cherry tomatoes were pick-your-own. Avery has very little love for tomatoes; he likes sauces, salsas and pico de gallo, but won’t touch them plain. Given that, he was wondering what we would do with all of them:

Of course, because they are cherry tomatoes, pico de gallo and sauce just seemed a bit labor intensive. (Not so for the larger ones!) While Jase and I used them in salads and as snacks, Avery was left to his own devices. Thankfully, he came up with something:


An untraditional use of cherry tomatoes, yes. But acceptable :) Or should that be, 8-)

Our kitties are Interior Decorators

Tonight, while I tried my hand at jarring tomatoes, Avery played catch in his newly acquired football gear, and Jason listed some comic books.

And the kitties created a new centerpiece for the dining table:

Thanks, kitties. It looks great!

I think I can, I think I can

Last week I decided that it was time to try canning some veggies. My parents always put up tomatoes and tomato sauces, so in the perfect world residing in my head, I pictured me and dad (mom is out of town) in his kitchen, preparing tomatoes together while trading memories of us kids growing up, preserving nature’s bounty, and maybe sharing a laugh or two.

Right.

In reality, dad had tickets to see Cirque du Soleil and I was left with his ancient copy of Stocking Up, some old Ball jars and rings, a jar-grabber-thingie, and assurance that I would have no problems. Oh, and did I mention that it’s like, 90 degrees with 80 percent humidity here? And we have no air conditioning? Yeah. Good times.

I wanted to jar some tomatoes this weekend, not because we had a bounty of them, but because I’ve never preserved vegetables or fruits. I thought it’d be a good idea to experience the learning curve before I had 20 pounds of tomatoes taking over the kitchen. Turns out, this was a good idea. My learning curve was an hour of researching and a steaming hot two hours of jarring.

In addition to Stocking Up, my resources were Homecanning.com, an Ohio State University Extension fact sheet, and a blurb in the back of From Asparagus to Zucchini. Once I thought I had my head around the process, I gathered my supplies and hit the (already hot) kitchen.

Step One
Gather the gear, start water boiling, and hope to goodness that you don’t mess up. Oh, and notice how hot it is already in the kitchen.


Step Two
Prepare the tomatoes by boiling them for a minute or two, then dropping into ice water to split skins. Peel and core tomatoes. And save skin for the compost pile :)


I used a combination of Blooming Glen tomatoes which were a variety of yellow, orange, and red colors, and some early roma tomatoes from our home garden.


Step Three
Place mixture into a jar, clean the rim, put on the lid, screw on the ring. Put jar into pot of boiling water, making sure that two inches of water cover the jar. Cover pot and boil for ten minutes. Note the elevating temperature of the kitchen, and fear that you might melt.


Step Four

Remove jar, and wait for lid to pop, insuring that it’s sealed. Upon hearing the popping sound, jump up and down and clap hands. Call boyfriend into kitchen to look at sealed jar. Call dad to tell him that, it worked! It really, really worked! And that you heard it pop!

Overall, the experience was… hot. Very, very, very hot. But, totally worth it :) At one point, I actually started to heat the tomatoes in the jar in a pot of boiling water. I thought I read that one should heat the jar and its contents to 170 degrees, then lid and boil it. Turns out, I was reading canning directions. So, I lost about 30 minutes there, but hey, that’s why I put up the tomatoes this weekend - to learn what to do and not to do.

I definitely want to make some sauces and salsas to jar. Any favorite recipes? More importantly, any jarring advice? Please, do tell :)

Broccoli, tofu, peanut sauce

We harvested some pretty amazing jalepenos from our little garden yesterday. I’m on a mission to use our amazing veggies as they come in, so I went on a hunt through my archives for a recipe.

Tonight, I made a broccoli tofu stir fry with spicy peanut sauce for dinner. I’ve seen the recipe a bunch of places online, but I think it originates from The Broccoli Enchanted Forest. Here is the recipe I had:

Broccoli and Tofu in Spicy Peanut Sauce

1 pound firm tofu
1 pound broccoli (or another leafy green vegetable)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 cups chopped onion
2 tablespoons grated fresh ginger
2 tablespoons minced or crushed garlic

Spicy Peanut Sauce:
3/4 cup natural-style smooth peanut butter
3/4 cup boiling water
5 tablespoons rice vinegar
3 tablespoons soy sauce
4 tablespoons blackstrap molasses
cayenne pepper
1 cup coarsely chopped peanuts, lightly toasted
2 green onions, minced (include both whites and greens)

Cube tofu in 1 inch pieces and put in a saucepan with water to cover, then heat over medium heat until boiling. Reduce heat and simmer for about 10 minutes (or until needed for recipe). While tofu cooks prepare sauce.

Place peanut butter and 3/4 cup boiling water in a medium bowl and stir until homogenous. Whisk in vinegar, soy sauce, and molasses. Season to taste with cayenne.

Trim broccoli or cauliflower and cut into bite-sized pieces. Heat a wok or large skillet over high heat, then add oil and swirl to coat the pan. Add the onioin and stir-fry for a minute or two. Add broccoli, ginger, garlic and salt. Continue to stir-fry over high heat for another 5 minutes, or until broccoli is bright green and tender-crisp. Stir in tofu and stir-fry for another minute or so. Lower heat to medium and pour in sauce. Stir until everything is well coated.

Serve immediately over grain, topped with peanuts and minced green onion.

We replaced the cayenne pepper with three lightly sauteed and seeded homegrown jalepeno peppers. I sauteed them with a bit of the onion and threw it into the food processor, along with the rest of the peanut sauce.

Served over a bit of quinoa, and a side of the High Life.

The meat-eating boyfriend gave this vegan-licious dinner five stars, as did I :)

Jase rocks

Jason finished up some flashing on the roof, and while he was up there, he plugged up the gutter over our porch. The one that spills buckets of rain water onto the flower bed in front of our house. That means, we could also plant the hibiscus and phlox that we bought today. Yay!

But, the real story is the praying mantis that Jase saw in the bed. She was eating a fly. A fly whose leg was still twitching.

You can’t see the fly leg twitching action in these photographs, but if you make them larger (by clicking on them), you can see it’s lower body. By the time we saw the scene, the mantis had already eaten the fly’s head.

As I was taking photos, it stopped eating and turned to look at me. While looking up praying mantis at Wikipedia, we learned that they are one of the few insects that can turn their heads, and that there are 2,300 mantis species world-wide. We also learned that a praying mantis is capable of capturing and killing a humming bird.

Pretty wild.

Flowers and farmers

Jason, Cinder and I went to the Indian Valley Farmers Market this morning. Clearly, we do not need any more produce, but man… it was still hard to pass it all by!

We did get a perennial hibiscus and a white phlox (photo on left) from Ray’s Greenhouse and two pounds of pasture-raised chicken breast from Deep Springs Farm.

We also stopped by Brumbaugh’s farm stand (photos below), where they had some very pretty cut flowers, lots of hanging baskets, yummy vegetables and some early fruits. We got three stems of zinnia (one for Jase, Avery and Mikaela) and one stem of lisianthus (photo above right).

Oh, and even at 9am, it’s freaking hot and humid here. Blech. I think we’ll be hiding indoors, under a ceiling fan until the sun starts to go down this afternoon.

Kegger Jammer

So, Avery Cain is with his pops this weekend, and our neighbor asks us, “what are you going to do?”

“We’re going to have a kegger jammer,” said Jason.

Um, yeah.

Either that, or we’re going to harvest our little garden.

See those pumpkins? How freaking sweet cheeks are they? Back in March, when we tore up the back yard, we moved the compost pile - literally a pile - into the spot that would be our garden, as a sort of fertilizer starter for our veggies.

The previous October, Avery and I picked up some adorable little pumpkins from a local roadside stand. They were cute decorations, then began to rot, then were deposited into our compost pile. Apparently, some seeds from the pumpkins did not decompose, but rooted themselves into our new garden instead.

Ironically, or interestingly, or whatever, the pumpkins are actually vining out of the garden, through the new fence, and over/into/through the for real compost bin (that was built using our old fence pieces).

Now, wtf to do with pumpkins in July?

PS: Although she didn’t actually make a recommendation, my seester delivered a yummy eggplant lasagne-type thingie to me yesterday. I was especially excited because, since “re-becoming” an omnivore, she rarely makes veggie meals. We’re big meal sharers, so Jason has been enjoying her awesome cooking all by himself. It was nice to enjoy a sister-made meal again. The lasagne was great - even the eggplant part!

Sunny heads

They weren’t pictured in this week’s CSA Bootie Shot, but Avery and I picked a bouquet of flowers at Blooming Glen on Tuesday. Unfortunately, they were quite wilted by the time we got home. In addition to picking the flowers first (of course, we should have done all our other picking and saved the flowers for last), we have a couple other Tuesday stops (including a stop at Bolton’s for local milk and eggs) after the CSA. Next time, we will havea jar with some water on hand. See, we can be trained!

Tricia wrote in the farm’s newsletter this week:

“Even if we don’t like the heat, the crops sure do, especially the gorgeous flowers. Speaking of which keep an eye out for the bright yellow goldfinches who perch on top of the sunflowers, munching on the seed heads.”

Although we didn’t see any finches, we saw honey bees on a bunch of the sunflowers - three on one even! The sweeties wouldn’t stay still for a photograph, though :)

Details, details, details

Right before we left for holiday, Jase finished up the crown molding in the living room. The actual molding has been up, but the caulking and touch-up paint had to be done:

He’s pretty good, yes? Oh, and don’t mind the slash of paint on the ceiling, which is visible in the photo, as it’s not visible in real life.

While he was finishing this project, I was updating one of our other blogs, and we were listening to This American Life. A perfect no-work afternoon :)

Super Pooch Update

We got some update photographs of the super pooches:

Harvey…

Gretchen…

Tucker and Cinder…

Uuum, yeah. I think we can safely assume that these puppies daddy is a small horse.

We love you, super pooches! Thank you for all the joy, slober, and cuddles you’ve given us. We miss and love you!

:-D




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