Saturday, September 28, 2013

Harmony fun

Below are some pictures of a recent evening at Harmony house. It was fun to listen to music and work on projects together (although I will admit that I was mostly just taking pictures this time around).

Mikaya and Catherine peeled and sliced so many sweet potatoes.

I believe they came in a huge donation of produce to Casa. The frozen, prepped sweet potatoes will be much appreciated come winter.

We ate many of them as scrumptious fries that night however. Hehe.

Neal and Cullom bottling some beer.

These bottles are waiting to be filled.




"Fall is the most wonderful time of the year"

Neal's uncle cliff visited over the fall equinox. Here we were particularly impressed with his opened faced grilled cheese sandwiches.

We got 30 lbs of "damaged" apples from an orchard 25 minutes away for just $7.50, and Cliff helped us process them into applesauce.

We love this tool for coring, peeling, and slicing all at once.

If we had felt really motivated, we could have used these apple peels to make apple cider vinegar. Maybe next time...

Recently, we have been experimenting with ferments. This is a typical saurkraut here. We also made sour beets with burdock root.

These are traditional style cucumber pickles (the type people would have eaten before canned dill pickles were invented). The little cukes sat in a salt water brine for a few weeks and naturally fermented on their own. We like the book "Wild Fermentation" by Sandor Katz for ferment recipes. Apparently other people love it to because there were 15 holds on the library copies we wanted to check out. We opted just to buy the book online since it was apparently so awesome.

Catherine graciously shared her Concord grapes with us and we used them to make juice. There was originally talk of canning some of the juice for later, but we drank it all before that happened. Hehe. We also made a wild grape juice to share with folks at Casa. It was so intense and sour that it required dilution and sweetening to be palatable to most folks.

There will probably be lots more pictures of our fall harvesting and preservations in the coming weeks, but I'm thinking the posting will be more sporadic. Hang in there.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

September harvesting

Here are some pictures of what we have been harvesting these last couple weeks.

Warted green Hubbard squash. I think there are four or five more out in the garden yet.

Popcorn. It's drying in the potting shed now.

Burdock root. We have added it to kraut so far, and we will use it in stirfrys and pickles in the future.

Beets still making it in the garden bed.

Ever bearing strawberries from the crowns we planted this year

More cucumbers. Next year we will just pick one type of cuke.

The tomatoes were late, but they've been consistent since August.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Cheap preservation

Last week we found a farm stand while driving through the country that offered c-h-e-a-p produce. 
We got 8 little peppers,10 pounds of pears, and a head of cabbage for $8! Crazy right? We are trying
 out some fun recipes this week, including 5 pints of pickled pears :)

http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/09/pickled-seckel-pears-recipe.html

We hope to make this chutney over the weekend. We've recently become huge chutney fans... So expect more 
chutney photos from us!
http://bellejarcanning.com/2011/10/27/pear-ginger-chutney-definitely-fall-here/

Anne and Dennis were kind enough to gift us with more slicer tomatoes again this week. Since we devoloped a 
new process for processing them (haha)...  We thought we would share some pictures. We are huge fans of canning 
sauce because it is by far easiest for us to make. We don't even take the peels off! Before this week, we cored 
the tomatoes, let them cook down in the crockpot and then depending on our moods, either blended them up
or just skipped right ahead to canning. This box had a full layer of tomatoes when we started.

This week we blended the tomatoes immediately after coring them. That way we didn't have to wait for the 
tomatoes to burst their skins before starting to boil down, plus we like the consistency, PLUS then we didn't have to
deal with blending boiling hot liquids. 

Catherine was generous enough to lend us a crockpot plus we had this one of our own so we were able to cook these babies down in just a little over 12 hours (it is a thin sauce though.. I'd say a thick sauce would have been 2 more hours or so).

The final product: four more quarts of tomato sauce :)