Freezing Beets is easy peasy, and you end up with "two vegetables" to freeze, as the greens a cinch to freeze too! They make a great spinach substitute. |
I've had some helpful "criticism" lately...where is the "Farmer's Wife"? Well, I'm here still. Since we've stopped commercially farming, I've not considered my readers as interested in the farm, so I've been writing about other things. Your letters are asking about the farm, vegetable recipes, and canning advice. So, today I'll bring you alongside the Farmer's Wife and give you a glimps into my day. Prayerfully you'll be encouraged and possiblly even challenged to try something new.
Spring gardens are now behind me, and I have the summer garden "laid by" as the mountain women used to say. I just planted my second batch of yellow squash, zucchini, and cucumber seedlings. I find succession planting these protects me from the grumblies when my first planting succumbs to the latest blight. My first
plantings do taper off, so these will pick up the slack in about a a month. I'm always thinking ahead.
A majority of my days are spent outside in one of the gardens. I still have the canning garden, cottage kitchen garden where I plant the faster growing vegetables like beets, lettuce, peas, cucumbers and green onions in a smaller amount that I can quickly pick for our meals. Then I have a flower and herb gardens. We can't get away from the farming life.
I've harvested my spring beets, planted a few more, and am eager to plant our fall ones come mid August. My children love them as they are like serving candy for supper!
I froze what we didn't eat or share since we goofed on making our kitchen cabinets too low over the stove. The new microwave that proudly hangs there without taking up counter space (I thought this would be a plus.) is too low for my pressure canners and larger waterbath canner....so before long we'll be moving it!
These are Detroit Dark Red and Golden Beets. |
Then slip the skin off. Sometimes you'll have to cut a line in your beet to help the skin come off. These came off real simply! :)
Not all my beets were big beauties, but these smaller ones were just as tastey. I remember serving this size to my toddlers as they made for great finger food. |
I poured the greens from one bag into a large dishpan and left only enough that would fit with "wiggle room" into my smaller waterbath canner. Using a wooden spoon, I made sure the greens were under the water and separated a bit. For safety sake, TUCK THE END OF YOUR BLANCHING BAG (PILLOW CASE) INTO THE HANDLE OF THE POT SO IT DOESN'T CATCH ON FIRE. |
I set my timer for three minutes. (Yes, I know that you "should" start timing when the water boils again, but I find that it overcooks the vegetables. This timing has worked for years with alllll kinds of vegetables and I still retain the highest level of vitamins.) |
A peek inside the pot. |
When the 3 minute timer goes off, hold the blanching bag up above the boiling water. Let it drip a bit, and then place it on the underneath side of the lid to the pot. This will slow the drips down as you take it to the sink.
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Looking at these pictures now a couple of weeks later, I see I really had spinach greens on my mind! I labeled the bags that way! |
Get as much air out of the bags as possible...no you don't NEED a vacuume sealer. It may be better, but you don't have to spend a lot to put up a harvest. Remember those folks selling all the latest (now the freeze driers) are making their living that way and are selling you something. (One of my favorite bloggers is really having fun with her freeze drier and is pushing them. But SHE DIDN'T SPEND A COUPLE OF THOUSAND DOLLARS ON HERS!) Lay your bags flat on a cookie sheet or other flat frozen item so they will save space in your freezer this winter. (If it looks like it's going to slide...it WILL! So secure your stack.) Aren't my lil' bags cute? This is our first year to use quart bags. I've been using gallon or even two gallon bags with our large family for so long! So, the Farmer's Wife has shared how to put up the harvest....now to share a recipe that didn't go so well to show you EVERYBODY has some recipes that just don't "hit a home run". My yellow squash is coming in "hot and heavy" so I'm always looking for a creative way to use what God puts in my hands. A Google article raved over the "golden way" to use summer squash that everyone was raving about. (That should have been a warning to me right there!) Squash Butter! Supposedly the famed late Julia Child (the Public TV chef of my childhood) had made something similar...yahhh. I don't do anything small so I jumped in and made a 4X batch to begin with...The first batch came out brown instead of golden. I was having fun though and wasn't going to let Google snooker me!
Not to be bested by Google, I set my sights on a beautiful golden Squash Butter that the article had inspired. I put on my thinking cap and geared up for SUCCESS! I set out with a heafty 5X batch, and I stood over the pans stirring/scraping OFTEN. I used large pizza pans as lids to help steam the squash rather than "fry it" as the recipe described. Then I used an immersion blender to get the smooth paste before cooking it down a bit more. It was MUCH better looking and tasting, but it was still....just ok for all that work. (The Farmer said it just tasted like garlicy squash...with "that look" on his face.) I think the whole family liked the smell of the house more than the little bits of artisan bread with Squash Butter on it. I'll use it in an artisan bread this winter, but I'll not make another batch. Lesson learned...CANNER BEWARE of Internet recipes.
So as you can see I too am learning after 40 years of canning. But....it is fun to try something new! |
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