Recipes
Here in the Farm Kitchen, things are done a bit differently. Like using up what you have. Making it pretty. Including those you love. You know, Different.
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Honey Glazed Rolls, Roasted Brussels, and the Rotten Tomato Experiment
So no rolls last night, but I am making them for tonight. We’re having a(nother) beautiful day today, sunny and mid sixties, so it felt like time for a last hoorah on the grill. Cheeseburgers it is, and of course, a cheeseburger isn’t complete without it’s bun, so that’s what I’m making as we speak. Well, okay, not that exactly making it; the rolls themselves are doing that; in the way of puffing out a bit. Once they’ve gotten to be the proper shape and size, I’ll bake them for a bit in a hot oven and call it a day. I tend to like my rolls with flecks of…
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The Fruits of our Labor and a Good Use of Space
The sun has finally come out and with it a nice soft breeze; a perfect day to hang clothes up on the line, which is just what I have done. More leaves were moved from under the big maple out front to the berry patch–this time the rosehips and the raspberries. If this nice weather holds out tomorrow I’ll work on the blackberry patch and the cranberries. Then that will be just about done, which will be fine with me. By this time of year I am ready to slow down a bit with a good book and a cup of tea. There’s a pot of chili on the stove,…
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A Kitchen Woodstove and Blueberry Muffins
The drizzle continues on this first day of November, but it’s warm–nearly sixty degrees. And it’s a good thing, too, because the furnace decided not to work. It appears now to be it’s annual thing. Sometime in November it up and decides it’s done. We coax it along, pat it gently, plead with it to give us another year, and it does. One of these days it will not be so easily swayed. But, thankfully, today was not that day. It only needed a new battery; an easy fix. But, I must say, my heart skips a beat each time it decides not to work. A furnace isn’t an easy…
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Two Little Pigs Call the Farm Home and Chicken Chowder
The rain is coming down in sheets, but it doesn’t seem to bother the pigs at all. Oh. Didn’t you know we had pigs? Yes. They came on Sunday and now we have pigs. They’re pasture pigs, so we put them in the chicken yard, under the mulberry trees. Oh, my did Chicken Little have a fit about that! She spent the whole day squawking to anyone who would listen. She’s much better today, though. She’s discovered that a pig can be useful, after all. Now you’ll find her right behind them, scooping up all the worms their digging brings up. I spent the morning moving leaves from under the…
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Hidden Leftovers: Arancini
Last night, as we do on most Tuesday nights, we had a largish group over for dinner and prayer. Each of us brings a dish to share, and since I had some portobello mushrooms I wanted to use up and some fresh rosemary looking a bit limp, not to mention that last bit of a block of asiago cheese, and I’d just made some good bone broth and had a bit of that left in the fridge. In short, it was leftovers to begin with. Yes. My kind of food. Now, to make arancini, you have to have leftover risotto, and in order to have leftover risotto, you have to…
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Expanding the Kitchen Garden to Include Grains and Animal Feed
November 1st. That’s the starting date to enjoy the (canned) fruits of our labor. The date plugged into all of my calculations of exactly how much I had to can from our Kitchen garden to feed us all this Winter. Six months. November to April. That’s (approximately) twenty-four weeks. So, if we’re having spaghetti once a week, we’d needed twenty-four quarts of sauce. The same goes for chili (actually, those twenty-four quarts can be turned into chili, Spanish rice, or goulash–you know, in case no one actually wants to eat chili each and every week), and etc. and so on and so-forth. And while God was very good to us…
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Rendering Tallow, Bone Stock, and Roasting Pumpkins
Time to Thanksgiving is ticking away. And any unsold turkeys will end up finding their home in my freezers, so I’m starting to thin them out now. And that means rendering the block of beef fat that’s been in there since July. And it also means making some stock. But first, let’s start with that fat. (Normally) The fat gets chopped into one inch cubes and placed in a large cast iron skillet where it melts the day away. Today, however, I looked at that fat. It looked back at me. And I threw the whole mess in the pan. One giant glob of fat, still partially frozen. What’s the…
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A Cost/Benefit Analysis of a Greenhouse
The Farm is no longer productive. The berries have all but stopped, the herbs have been gathered and are hanging from the rafters as they give up and dry already. The last of the apple peelings are drying in the greenhouse. Oh. Yes. Well, I guess that part is still productive. In the greenhouse there is row after row and shelf after shelf of our winter greens. Or they will be. Right now it is just dirt. Dirt I have to keep moist and warm. This will be the first year for the greenhouse for us. We’ve had cold frames in the past with some success, but this is new.…
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Getting the Winter Greens in, Putting a Garden to Bed, and a Good BLT
Today the sun is shining brightly down, taking the sting off the chill. The greenhouse soaks up all that sun and makes it feel like July. Which is good, since that’s where I spent most of the day, planting the Winter greens. There will be spinach and arugula, beet greens and kale, wheatgrass and the lettuces. Some will be for the animals (they like a nice green treat in Winter, too), but most will be for us. The culinary/medicinal herb garden was officially put to bed today, with the last row being tucked in with leaves, then coated with mulch (that helps to keep all those leaves from blowing right…
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Honey Wheat Bread
There are a few raspberries still clinging to life, and because I am who I am, I have to go out each and every morning and gather what I can. Today’s gleanings measured in at just under one cup–just enough to nibble on with my breakfast. For lunch there’s a bit more gnocchi in the freezer–leftover from last Friday’s exploits. Maybe I’ll have them, tossed in a pan with some brown butter and sage. These are all fringe things, of course, to what is really going on, and what is really going on is that I’m making a loaf (or two, we’ll so how this dough comes out) of honey…
















