Ridiculously yummy tomato.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Today, I ate...
garden tomatoes with local goat cheese:
...vanilla ice cream with bourbon peaches (both homemade, natch)
...and meat on a stick.
At least the dough was homemade...
Labels:
bread,
garden,
industrial food,
supermarket purchase
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Peach seconds
This is the second 1/2 bushel of peaches we've purchased this summer. They are seconds, which means they look ugly, but are half price - perfect for jams.
Some of the bushels were pretty gross - moldy peaches or lots of fruit flies. But this one was good. It takes a little longer to inspect seconds, but it's worth the time. In this 1/2 bushel there were only 4 peaches that were questionable for human consumption and they went to the chickens. These don't look too bad after being blanched, eh?
They became jam. All of them! A few recipes below.
This is my summer jam set up. Far too hot to cook in the brick house, so we have a cast iron propane stove with three burners.
I try to keep the amount of exposed fruit and sugar low to keep the bugs down. Typically I do all the combining of ingredients in the kitchen and just bring the pot outside. That way fruit-covered utensils and sugar coated measuring cups stay inside, near the sink.
My Ball Blue Books (the blue one is from the 40s - I love it!) and a piece of paper to write down recipes as I go. This year I've been experimenting more, but it's helpful to have info on fruit to sugar ratios from the good folks at Ball.
The far blue pot is sterilizing my jars. The close pot is boiling some jam. See the steam! The poor middle burner never gets used.
Important utensils: wooden spoon for constant siring and a skimmer on the spoon rest (which gets washed about 80 times a day during jam season), and my teaspoon on a cup contraption. I scoop a little jam on the spoon and let it sit on the cup to cool a little to assist in finding the gelling point. This is more for the coarse testing - finer testing is done with a freezer plate - but the spoon lets me know when I'm close.
And a cookie sheet (which also gets washed 80 times a day) to help tote everything from the sink to the picnic table.
24 jars of jam! From farthest to closest:
- plain jam with pectin
- peach rum jam
- jalapeno peach jam (below)
- peach honey lavender jam (same recipe as the strawberry honey lavender)
- vanilla bourbon peach syrup (below)
Many of these are only soft set, which means they are a bit runny. Because the flavors aren't really what we're looking for on toast, I've left them thinner for ice cream, pancakes and yogurt.
Yum.
Jalapeno Peach Jam
4 cups peaches
3 cups sugar
1.5 teaspoons jalapeno pepper flakes
juice of 1/2 lemon
Put it all in the pot and boil until gelling point (or a little thinner). Process 10 minutes in boiling water bath.
We're thinking this will go great with goat cheese or brie. Or maybe to accompany smoked chicken/turkey.
Vanilla Bourbon Peach Syrup
4 cups peaches
3 cups sugar
juice of 1/2 lemon
1.5 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 cup bourbon
Toss everything but the bourbon in the pot and boil close to gelling point. When you've only got a few minutes left of boiling, add the bourbon. It's going to thin out a lot - boil until it thickens to your liking. Process 10 minutes in boiling water bath.
If you add the bourbon early, a lot of the flavor cooks out. Adding it at the end preserves the flavor, but makes the jam thinner. Because this isn't really a flavor I crave on toast, I'm cool with that. Most of this is destined for ice cream or maybe shortcake (if I don't eat it all with a spoon, first.)
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Fast Food Fix
From BBC News
According to the article, we could save so many lives for the cost of a packet of ketchup. And no one has to change their eating habits!! Brilliant solution, yeah?
Give out statins with junk food
Fast food outlets should consider handing out cholesterol-lowering drugs to combat the effects of fatty food, say UK researchers.
According to the article, we could save so many lives for the cost of a packet of ketchup. And no one has to change their eating habits!! Brilliant solution, yeah?
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Berries Blue
We got 10 pounds of Indiana blueberries last weekend.
Ten.
Pounds.
Bill made some dutch oven blueberry cobbler over a fire (pictured with homemade vanilla ice cream):
I made jam, natch. One is blueberry lime from the Ball Blue Book. It is my first pectin jam of the season, and the first jam to set. I still need a bit of practice on finding the gelling point. Up till now, I've made a lot of really yummy syrup that will slide right off of toast. The other is blueberry peach (recipe below). It also hit the gelling point. I don't know if that's because blueberries and/or peaches are naturally high in pectin and therefore better at setting, or if I've learned patience.

Blueberry Peach Jam
3 peaches, skinned and cut into small pieces (~2 cups)
3 cups blueberries
3.25 cups of sugar
squeeze of lemon juice
Combine into pot, boil to jelling point. Fill hot jars, process 15 minutes in boiling water bath.
Ten.
Pounds.
Bill made some dutch oven blueberry cobbler over a fire (pictured with homemade vanilla ice cream):
Can you tell which is lime and which is peach? No? Me either. Which is why we always label jams.
I also made blueberry pie ice cream. It's vanilla ice cream with graham crackers layered with blueberry sauce. Yum. I'd make this again, but I would modify the blueberry sauce a bit to cook more water out of the berries. After only 7-10 minutes of boiling, most of the berries are still intact and freeze into little berry ice cubes. I think a longer cook, or even using some jam, would mitigate this.
Also, I might have to make my own graham crackers. We have a "no transfats in the house" rule, and it turns out nearly all graham crackers are made with partially hydrogenated oils. Except the organic ones. Which taste like cardboard.
After all this, plus freezing a bunch of berries and tons of munching, we've still got some left in the fridge.
10 pounds is a lot of blueberries....
Blueberry Peach Jam
3 peaches, skinned and cut into small pieces (~2 cups)
3 cups blueberries
3.25 cups of sugar
squeeze of lemon juice
Combine into pot, boil to jelling point. Fill hot jars, process 15 minutes in boiling water bath.
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Variations on Strawberry Jam
Over the past two weeks we purchased three flats of local strawberries at the Farmers Market. That's 24 quarts or 6 gallons! We ate some, made some strawberry bread, froze a bunch and made some ice cream.
But, of course, I had to make jam too!
The first flat of strawberries was a bit under-ripe. It was the first week of the farmers market and I think the strawberries were rushed. They weren't real flavorful on their own, so I chose jam recipes that included a lot of other flavor: Strawberry Lemon Marmalade (with thyme) and Strawberry Balsamic Black Pepper Jam (recipes below).
The following week the strawberries were much better and became jam with a greater emphasis on fruit and less on accouterments. In addition to plain ole strawberry, we made some Strawberry Honey Lavender and Plum-Kissed Strawberry (recipes also below).
Strawberry Lemon Marmalade (with Thyme) - adapted from Ball Blue Book.
1/4 cup lemon peel
4 cups strawberries
2 lemons - juice and pulp
5 scant cups of sugar
3 sprigs of thyme
Boil the lemon peel for 5 minutes and drain.
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Strawberry Balsamic Black Pepper - adapted from Canadian Living
4 cups strawberries
approx 1.5 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
3 cups sugar
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Strawberry Honey Lavender - adapted from here
4 overflowing cups of strawberries
1.5 cups of honey
1.25 cups sugar
1.5 tsp dried lavender
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Plum-Kissed Strawberry Jam
4 plums (canned last fall)
2 cups strawberries
1.5 cups sugar
Crush strawberries and plums
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Plain Old Strawberry - from 1944 Ball Blue Book
Measure all leftover strawberries. Add 3/4 as much sugar as strawberries. Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point. Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
But, of course, I had to make jam too!
The first flat of strawberries was a bit under-ripe. It was the first week of the farmers market and I think the strawberries were rushed. They weren't real flavorful on their own, so I chose jam recipes that included a lot of other flavor: Strawberry Lemon Marmalade (with thyme) and Strawberry Balsamic Black Pepper Jam (recipes below).
The following week the strawberries were much better and became jam with a greater emphasis on fruit and less on accouterments. In addition to plain ole strawberry, we made some Strawberry Honey Lavender and Plum-Kissed Strawberry (recipes also below).
Strawberry Lemon Marmalade (with Thyme) - adapted from Ball Blue Book.
1/4 cup lemon peel
4 cups strawberries
2 lemons - juice and pulp
5 scant cups of sugar
3 sprigs of thyme
Boil the lemon peel for 5 minutes and drain.
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Strawberry Balsamic Black Pepper - adapted from Canadian Living
4 cups strawberries
approx 1.5 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
3 cups sugar
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Strawberry Honey Lavender - adapted from here
4 overflowing cups of strawberries
1.5 cups of honey
1.25 cups sugar
1.5 tsp dried lavender
Crush strawberries
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Plum-Kissed Strawberry Jam
4 plums (canned last fall)
2 cups strawberries
1.5 cups sugar
Crush strawberries and plums
Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point
Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Plain Old Strawberry - from 1944 Ball Blue Book
Measure all leftover strawberries. Add 3/4 as much sugar as strawberries. Add everything to a pot and boil to jelling point. Fill sterilized jars and boil in hot water bath for 10 minutes
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Pickled Radishes...yum?
In less than a week, we've picked over 11.5 pounds of radishes. It'sa lot of damn radishes. They are totally yum...but really. Eleven pounds is a lot of radishes.
This happened mostly because Bill planted the radish seeds all at once, rather than in two week intervals as recommended on the seed packet. But what does a seed packet know anyway?
There aren't many recipes for preserving radishes. Perhaps because most people read the seed packet and spread out their planting. We did find one old timey canning recipe for pickled radishes. The garden forum where we found it said the recipe is from Colonial times.
2 dozen radishes
1 cup sugar
1 cup cider vinegar
1 tbls mustard seed
1/2 tsp celery seed
2 tsp dill weed
Stem radishes.
Mix all other ingredients in a saucepan. Heat until sugar is melted and mixture is clear. Add radishes to jars, fill with hot liquid mixture.
Keep in fridge, or can in a boiling water bath 20 minutes.
We're going to let them pickle for a week or so and report back on how they taste!
2 dozen radishes
1 cup sugar
1 cup cider vinegar
1 tbls mustard seed
1/2 tsp celery seed
2 tsp dill weed
Stem radishes.
Mix all other ingredients in a saucepan. Heat until sugar is melted and mixture is clear. Add radishes to jars, fill with hot liquid mixture.
Keep in fridge, or can in a boiling water bath 20 minutes.
We haven't tried them yet, but the jars sure are pretty. 7 uncut pounds of radishes filled 6 and 1/2 pint jars. I quintupled the recipe above to have enough juice to fill up the jars.
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