Monday, January 2, 2012
Are you frugal?
I want to "simplify" once again...make the laundry soap I USED to make... and make the yogurt I used to...and other nifty things are encouraged on this blog. It's a frugal blog...that is how we have lived all of our married lives....that's how we supported our family on one income...that's our lifestyle...BEFORE it was cool or green.
Would you like to be encouraged to live more simply.."Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without?" The "Frugally Sustainable" blog will be a great help. It's help me dust off "the archives of my heart" and make the time to do it myself!
The blog is having a 23 day challenge...want to join me? It will be fun! Here is the link.
One incentive to visiting the website is the recipes that describe new ways to use the vegetables you receive in your shares or at the grocer. I've got a long list of articles I MAY get to read on one of these frosty winter evenings bookmarked in a folder...until then I'm back to making my own laundry detergent and making my creamy yogurt by the half gallon! :)
I pray all is well with you and your family...it's about to snow here! There is hope for spring though in the strawberries and garlic that still show green through the straw! For now, we're enjoying the "rest!"
Haven't reserved your share yet? It would be best to do it soon since we are "restricting" the number of shares at each market this year. Chattanooga and Oak Ridge are our new pick ups for the year, and we hope that Dayton and Crossville will be growing! I got an inside peek at the seed orders and there are SEVERAL new vegetables we are going to try and grow...artichokes...shallots...melons of several varieties...oh, I had better stop...I'm drooling! ha ha!
I hadn't planned a formal blog today, this just happened when I read about the challenge once again. Why not try it?
From our Farm to Your Homestead,
Abundant Blessings,
The Farmer's Wife
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
"It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas...."
As the old Christmas carol says, "It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas.." I know that before this gets posted the snow will be gone, but it sure has put me in the mood! We ended up with 2 inches of beauty clinging to the trees, blowing across the fields, turning the grey of late fall into a beauty characteristic of God Almighty!
There is so much going on here on the farm since we delivered our last share, and picked for our last farmer's market! There are many decisions to be made in order to serve you correctly come spring. We're about to sign the final papers on our new farm! There will be 30 more acres to grow a WIDE variety of vegetables and fruits now. The new farm also has a reliable water sources with a pond and year round stream. We've bought seed for an innumerable amount of different verities of vegetables. (The boys only groaned when I asked them exactly how many varieties!) We're putting our strawberries "to bed" for the long cold mountain winter with cushy beds of straw and row cover. Calculations are also being made for greenhouse supplies, and marketing supplies. Equipment needs are also lively topics of conversation around the farmhouse dinner table as we are growing out of the hoe and watering can stage of the farm and into a midsized family farm. Sometimes my head swims with all the facts!
We are praying more of you sign up for the coming season soon as the bills must be paid for all of this EARLY in the year. A down payment on a share (or the total cost if you are able) for a loved one would be an amazing Christmas gift! If your family would like to be used to meet a need in a struggling family's life, consider giving the gift of a share for Christmas! Church groups, civic groups and family members can help a family in a meaningful way by doing so. What a blessing that would be!
Inside the farmhouse we're busy with the book work side of our school year. With 6 grades and a preschooler there is never a dull moment. Levi (just turned 6) has all ready finished his first math book! He's learning to read also...so he keeps me on my toes! I also have a 12th grader zooming towards the finish line (he'll be done well before the growing season begins in earnest in March). The Lord has me in several stages of life at the same time...this all keeps me on my knees beseeching HIM for wisdom. I'm a blessed woman!
Since family farming and Farmer Steve being carpenter Steve at the same time doesn't really work, we're working feverishly to finish our home this winter while the greenhouses are empty and frosty. Early plantings will be the the big boy's work, so Farmer Steve's goal is to get as much as possible done during the winter. So far he's "finished" (all framing and rough sheet rock hung (not finished) the mud room, 10' 'X 6' pantry, family closet just off the laundry room, and the library/home school room/family room is taking shape. There is even a large closet that will hold sewing supplies...we'll have to really get organized...so that too is in the works...a complete reorganization. I revel in this as I am an organizer.
The Lord has progressively blessed us with more and more space over the past 12 years. When we moved to the farm we had a little mountain (shack) "cottage" with 1,000 square feet for 11 people. We put a bathroom in it and felt RICHLY blessed. With a commitment to stay debt free we've built our home stage by stage. This final stage has a lot of the "heart" of the home in it...a LAUNDRY room!!!, family closet library/school room, and pantry!! Right now I jump from our back door into the little old "cottage" to get to my groceries... but a finished pantry right off the kitchen will be a HUGE BLESSING! I feel soooooooooooooo blessed!
During the finishing of the mud room we had a family crisis...Noah (13) had an accident with the large table saw. He was ripping studs when a knot shot out slicing the fleshy part of his thumb/hand.This brought an involuntary response as he fell into the blade. The blade cut across 4 of the fingers on his left hand! Praise God he now is regaining the use of most of his fingers. Many stitches and a skin graft latter; he is on the mend. We praise God for His protection, as he could have lost those fingers!
I've been enjoying cooking with my children again now that the kitchen is back to a family kitchen again! I loved the challenge of baking for the Crossville Farmer's Market, but it was a HUGE drain on our family, and Lord willing we will be taking on a new focus for the 2012 season. Now that Momma is focused only on family, the kitchen is once again an intricate part of our classroom. Each child has an assigned day of the week where they get to serve alongside me as we minister to our family's needs. I love the creativity and energy they bring to the kitchen! Each one of the olders has several specialties, partly because they LOVE to make what THEY love to eat. Isaac (17) loves Mexican and Italian, and can whip up the best pizzas (it takes about 7 large pizzas for supper along with a fresh salad and fruit.) Caleb loves roasts, homemade cornstarch pudding and doughnuts. Adam's specialty is oatmeal...really he knows how to cook, but plays helpless and needs lots of directions. He is funny in the kitchen. Give him a recipe and he's fine...he feels competent the woman the Lord is preparing for him will be a GREAT cook (so he doesn't have to!) ha ha! The younger children follow recipes and work alongside me. Titus (15) and Faith Anne (11) can take over the bread making if need be, and really enjoy it! I love fall and winter evenings in the kitchen. I light candles or the lanterns, and we use the summer's bounty to create new dishes.
Here is a new idea for the greens I pray you froze or canned this summer. If you didn't have any extras tucked away for winter, try using fresh or frozen spinach from the grocery store. I did get about 80 gallons of mixed greens put up, so I just pulled one of these bags out to make this winter savory soup. Serve with your favorite quick bread, or a loaf of fresh bread....for me, it takes 3 loaves!
1 pound Italian or Smoked Sausage
1, 10 oz. frozen chopped spinach (or fresh)
1/2 C. chopped onion
1 heaping tablespoon minced garlic
1/2 t. Italian seasoning
48 oz. Chicken broth (bouillon cubes will work in a pinch)
1/4 C. pearl barley (if you'd rather substitute brown rice, millet, or a mixture of both like I have done)
My, it sure is looking a lot like Christmas! It has taken me too long (again!) to get this posted. We've been baking cookies, making fudge, and a pot of homemade cranberry sauce is bubbling on the stove with cranberries from my uncle's bogs in Massachusetts. We've decorated an old fashioned Christmas tree with homemade ornaments,a string of popcorn, and a colorful paper chain the children made. I've been making gifts, and the workshop has been a hum of activity. BUT, the real meaning of Christmas isn't lost in all this activity. We have two nativity scenes as the focal point of our home during this time....it's too easy to loose focus. The world is SCREAMING its message of buy, buy, buy, get, get, get...gooooooooooo! Christ's message is full of peace..."I am come that they might have life, and they might have it more abundantly." John 10:10
Mrs. Stephen E. Colvin
The Farmer's Wife
Friday, October 28, 2011
Overcoming Arugala Phobia
5:30 p.m.
Steam is rising from my stove top, the food processor has been whirling, my hands smell like garlic, and there is green "stuff" in every dish I'm making tonight. Everyone that comes to see what is for supper tonight has made unpleasing sounds...what's up?
If you ask my boys at market what our favorite way to use arugula or rocket they say something like, "We like to compost it best." This has actually happened several times! They don't like the smell in the field...packing shed...or my kitchen. Honestly, it rarely makes it to the kitchen. We're tickled so many of ya'll like it so well, as it is a very forgiving crop.
Well, tonight I've decided that we are going to overcome our arugula phobia...as we haven't given this green a fair shake yet. I did some research and chose three recipes to try. We're baking up about 30 potatoes to fill the gap IF we decide we were right all along. I kind of have it figured that we have some room to grow....like a small child that doesn't like carrots at first sight. If you try the same vegetable again in a few weeks they don't spit it in your face, but delight in the sweetness. I thought I'd share the results with you along with the recipes (and of course my tweaks) in this post.
Saturday, October 29, 2011
The dust has settled on the long curving driveway away from the farm...Adam and Isaac are in the grand city of Knoxville at the downtown Market Square Farmer's Market, Caleb and Noah are also in the metropolis of Farragut selling produce and delivering shares at the Dixie Lee Farmer's Market, then delivering to the West Knoxville drop off at a sweet family's home where over a dozen folks pick up, and Farmer Steve and Titus have made their drop off in Dayton...they alllllllllll survived the Great Arugula Challenge! I'm proud of the contestants! Everyone ate well, almost heartily. :) Here are the results:
The top rated dish was Pasta with Tuna, Arugula, and Hot Peppers. In our family, almost anything hot and spicy will go over well, so I thought this would be "the spoon full of sugar makes the medicine go down. In the most delightful way". It scored an average of 9 out of 10. I plan on trying this recipe with some of the mixed greens I've frozen this winter. You can control how spicy your meal is by how much pepper you add. I used dried peppers you've gotten in your shares all season. I encouraged you to dry them...I ground up 2 and used the entire amount for a delightfully spicy, but not overpowering dish. We usually don't like tuna casseroles...but the boys said they didn't even know tuna was in it! The garlic and peppers hid the fishy taste remarkably. This is a good recipe to sneak fish into your diets. :)
1 lb. dried fettuccine, spaghetti or linguine
1/2 C. extra virgin olive oil
2 large cloves garlic , or more to taste, finely minced
GENEROUS pinch hot red pepper flakes
1-6 oz. can tuna packed in water or olive oil, drained
sea salt
1/2 to 3/4 lb. baby arugula
2. While pasta cooks, heat olive olive oil in a large skillet on medium-low heat. Ad the garlic and hot pepper flakes and cook until garlic is fragrant and sizzling. Add tuna and shred it into fine flakes with a fork. Season with salt. Keep warm over low heat.
3. Just before the pasta is ready, set aside 1 cup of boiling pasta water. Drain pasta and return to the warm pot set over moderate heat. Depending on the size of your post and skillet, either add the arugula nd the tuna mixture to the pasta in the pasta pot, or add the drained pasta to the skillet with the tuna mixture and add the arugula. Toss vigorously with tongs, moistening with some of the reserved pasta water. The arugula will wilt in the heat of the pasta. Salt to taste. Serve immediately.
Coming in second was Arugula Pesto. Since we finally got over our mind block on pesto, (yes, we have a couple of food "hangups"...thankfully the eggplant crop failed! I have a winter to prepare for the "Overcoming Eggplant Phobia" blog!) and have 6 pints in the freezer for the winter I thought Arugula Pesto would be another good recipe to try. I baked about 30 red potatoes to test it on...the worst thing that could happen is that we ate buttered potatoes, right? Well, the pesto was another hit. I don't have a number for it, but our new found pesto lovers liked the garlic taste without the bite of basil. (I like basil pesto better.) The real test came today at lunch when I was serving leftovers to Farmer Steve. He asked for the green stuff on his potatoes. :)
1/2 cup shelled walnuts
1/2 cup fresh Parmesan cheese
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
6 garlic cloves, unpeeled
1/2 clove garlic peeled and minced (not roasted)
1/2 teaspoon sea salt (I used more.)
1. Brown 6 cloves of garlic with their peels on in a skillet over medium high heat until the garlic is lightly browned in places, about 10 minutes. Remove the garlic from the pan, cool, and remove the skins.
2. Toast the nuts in the same pan over medium heat until lightly brown, or heat in a microwave on high heat for a minute or two until you get the roasted flavor.
3a. Food processor method (the fast way): Combine the arugula, salt, walnuts, roasted and raw garlic into a food processor. Pulse while drizzling the olive oil into the processor. Remove the mixture from the processor and put it into a bowl. Stir in the Parmesan cheese.
3b. Mortar and pestle method: Combine the nuts, salt and garlic in a mortar. With the pestle grind until smooth. Add the cheese and olive oil, grind again until smooth,. Finely chop the arugula and add it to the mortar. Grind up the other ingredients until smooth.
Because the pesto is so dependent on the individual ingredients, and the strength of the ingredients depends on the season or variety, test it and add more of the ingredients to taste.
My favorite dish came in last...I like the fresh vegetable taste of the Stuffed Tomato recipe I found. Maybe I am appreciating the tomatoes more lately as I know their days are numbered. We had a freeze this morning, so there is no more picking for this season. Right now I have about 15 bushels left as I am in canning mode, and I took a few of them to enjoy this recipe. Our family doesn't like mushy vegetables even a little bit..so as for the stuffed pepper recipe I baked them only long enough to get the filling warm and keep the tomato al dente. I tweeked this recipe after reading the reviews. One reviewer mentioned how the original recipe needed some body as it was like eating a tomato with dip stuffing. So I added whatever I was craving by that point in the evening...so bacon, mushrooms, and onions were included in Val's version. By adding the bacon and mushrooms it turned this side dish into a main dish. Of course it will probably be just as good vegetarian style by just dicing up some of the tomato pulp to give the filling some body. I give it an 8, and enjoyed the leftover tomato for lunch today. :)
Baked Stuffed Tomatoes
1, 15 oz. can garbanzo beans
4 ounces trimmed arugula
1 T. minced garlic
1/4 C. cottage or ricotta cheese
5 T. grated Parmesan cheese, divided
1/4 C. olive oil
6 slices bacon, browned and crumbled, optional
1 small onion, chopped and sauteed in bacon drippings, optional
1/2 small can mushrooms, finely chopped and sauteed with the above two ingredients (I used Portabella.) optional
4 medium to large tomatoes, pulp removed
2. In a blender or food processor, blend the garbanzo beans, arugula garlic, cottage or ricotta cheese, 4 T. Parmesan cheese, and olive oil until smooth.
3. Stir in the sauteed ingredients, reserving bacon drippings for future seasoning.
3. Place tomatoes in an 8X8 inch baking dish. Stuff the tomatoes with the garbanzo bean mixture. Sprinkle with remaining Parmesan cheese. Bake until stuffing is warm and tomato is still strong.
So, the great Arugula challenge is over...another season is ending. We pray we've been a blessing to each of you. I'll be switching back to writing monthly, unless the Spirit directs otherwise. During this time of prayerfully slower days, I'd love to hear from you! I could use some feedback on how to improve this blog. I'll soon be loosing my rookie status, and want to do all I do to the "glory of God".
Striving to Please my Saviour,
The Farmer's Wife
stevecolvin99@gmail.com
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
BUSY Fall Days on the Farm
We're all recovering from our biggest and best fall farm day ever last Saturday. Whew!! It was an exhilarating day of preparation, meeting new and also welcoming old members of our "farm family". There were many highlights for me...one special moment was spent in the kitchen with one talented shareholder that painted a picture of our vegetables as they appeared in her share during the season. It now hangs in our dining room as a remembrance of a our 2011 growing season, and one woman's delight in God's provision for us all. Thank you Pat!
The weather was beautiful and the Lord painted the perfect fall background to our day. One blessing to me were the children. I enjoyed sharing the wonder of nature with many of them as they discovered each item on their list during the nature scavenger hunt. (One adult couple even joined in, and were excited with their finds!) In the kitchen garden folks heard squeals of delight from toddlers finding peanuts during the peanut hunt. Lots of folks chose to go on a hayride into the woods with farmer Steve pulling them with his tractor. They visited our waterfall...the beauty this dry fall wasn't in the water, but the beauty of the woods off the bluff overlooking a deep gorge below.
The 30 foot farm buffet table was loaded with smoked turkey and pork, 4 kinds of breads, squash dishes, salads, pickled vegetables, potato dishes, and 6 ' alone of desserts! Everyone ate sitting around a campfire on bales of hay or chairs they brought....it grew strangely silent as folks enjoyed the meal surrounded by a fall farm landscape. As the darkness fell, children of ALL ages enjoyed roasting marshmallows over the dieing embers...and folks began to slip away into the darkness to return to their homes...
So, another farm day is over, and our season is coming to an end. Several folks are reserving their share for the 2012 season all ready. We will probably be limiting the number available at each market so we can spread our harvest days out over the week. So if you would like to be part of our "farm family" next year, go online and reserve your share. Then you can visit us once again in the spring! We are looking forward to it.
I've been VERY busy this week. Early Monday morning during my devotion time with the Lord I begged for strength and wisdom to accomplish all it looked like I needed to get done the next two days. I asked especially that the Lord would, "multiply my strength". One of the first things on my to-do list was to clean out the walk-in refrigerator of the weekly shares that weren't picked up and culled vegetables that were a bit too "nasty" looking to go into shares (but perfectly edible). It seems that several people think their shares are over, so I had SEVERAL to separate. The box truck brought four eighteen gallon tubs of mixed greens, three boxes of tomatoes, two bus tubs of mixed squash, two boxes of broccoli and cauliflower , and a box of basil! In my heart I was struggling with being overwhelmed as school had to be added to the list also...then ..WHAT A BLESSING HE SENT ME! My sons that are usually busy in the fields joined me in the farm kitchen for the day! My strength WAS multiplied! The kitchen was a bee hive of activity and I kept telling my "organized" self that it didn't really matter that things were done MY way, just that we all enjoyed getting them done. When the steam lifted, we had 5, 1/2 pints of pesto, 10 gallons of broccoli and 9 gallons of cauliflower in the freezer, 26 gallon bags of mixed greens, 51 quarts of salsa and 19 quarts of tomato juice canned, 1 gallon of chopped onions in the freezer along with 19 quarts of shredded zucchini and 4 gallon bags of squash frozen. We all were exhausted by the day's end, but we can all smile at the results. The years of including all my children in the food preserving process has been well worth it....from the youngest (Charity and Levi are our washers) to Adam, Caleb, and Isaac they all were used to answer my prayer of "multiplied strength". Thank You Jesus!
Like I said, we love to can our own salsa...we like it even better when all the ingredients come from our farm. We have gleaned tomato fields in the area for years, but now with the increased production of our own farm we f\inally have enough seconds for me to do some of our canning! Our salsa has a different "personality" each year....and even differs from batch to batch. This recipe does a mild tasting salsa, just add hot peppers to make it spicier. Here is our basic recipe.
1 1/2 bushels tomatoes
15 cups diced onions
3-4 cups hot peppers, chopped fine
4 1/2 cups vinegar
3/4 C. minced garlic
1/2 cup salt
Pour everything in a large pot, mix well. Cook until boiling and simmer for 30 minutes. Fill sterilized jars to one inch from top. Clean rim of jar with a damp paper towel. Top with sterilized flats and bands. Process in a boiling water bath canner 25 minutes. Let sit on your counter 24 hours after processing. Remove bands and store in a cool, "dark" room.
Today I've made 16 loaves of fresh bread for our shares, cleaned the house after a busy week, made a huge dinner for my hungry family, went to a birthday party with my little girls, AND WELCOMED MY OLDEST SON MATTHEW HOME FROM THE MIDDLE EAST WITH HIS NEW BRIDE BRITTANY! After the party I packed squash and lettuce shares, jostled in the line packing shares with ALL my boys (we taught Matt and Brittany how to pack shares! :) and then made a light supper.
Saturday (As usual I'm taking two weeks to get this out.)
My full life got fuller today. I am sooo blessed! My mother-in-love is wanting to make a special relish that I make called, "Red Stuff"...it's an old family recipe that we may can and sell next year. She called wanting to pick tomatoes today with me and my little ones. Since all the farmers on the mountain are preparing for a freeze, today is really the last definite day to do so. We have stripped our vines of all tomatoes this week also. With only 7 buckets to can I was wondering how to make what we need...today the Lord provided two HUGE fields of tomatoes to pick! I now have twenty-two bushels of tomatoes to can...more salsa, red stuff, and whole tomatoes will soon be put into jars for the long winter ahead. What a blessing it was to see my eighty-five year old mother-in-love and her new husband (he's eighty-three!) picking down the long rows of tomatoes with my children....they will cherish today's memory for years to come. We now have 23 BUSHELS of tomatoes to work! Praise God!
Tuesday (October 25th)
This is becoming more of a journal than a blog...sorry. We hosted a wedding reception for our son Matthew that is now home from the middle east last night. They are now off to Puerto Rico, my childhood home, for their honeymoon. They were married on July 9, 2011 and are now just getting alone together! I'm thankful that things have a chance to wind down a bit now as the season is winding down.
The boys (6 of them) are making salsa today. The farm kitchen is a bee hive of activity!! I've had other responsibilities to keep me out of their way...so I encourage, fetch needed ingredients, and will help with the eventual clean up! I'm soooo proud of them. I think they have about 100 quarts going on our 6 eye stove!! Jars are lined up over all my counters! I have to tell you about a first! Usually when I need jars from our root cellar I ask one of the boys please go get them. They bring up boxes of them to me, saving me a lot of lifting. Today, with Isaac (17) in charge, they brought a piece of plywood down there and sorted jars onto it...then they carried the board with 100 jars on it to the kitchen porch door! I grabbed the camera real quick to see this unique method. When we do something around here it is always in a big way.
I hope you are enjoying the fall vegetables in your shares. We are for sure! We've really enjoyed the cauliflower and broccoli, so I thought I'd share a few of my experiments from last fall. Below is the basic recipe...feel free to use just broccoli, a mixture of of the two or even chopped greens like spinach, Swiss Chard, kale, or others! I've used it many different ways with whatever the Lord puts in my hands to feed my family. :)
Broccoli/Cauliflower Cheese Soup, Spinach Cheese Soup, Green Cheese Soup (that's fun)
2 T. Olive oil
3/4 C. chopped onion
Add:
6 C. water
6 chicken bouillon cubes
Add and cook 3 minutes:
8 oz. vermecelli (thin pasta) broken up in small pieces
1 t. sea salt
Stir in and cook 4 minutes:
2 packages frozen broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, greens, or combination of each(I freeze in quarts for soups or use 10 oz. frozen packages of store bought) cut up fine, but chunky
1/8 t. garlic powder
Add:
6 cups milk
1 lb. Velveeta cheese or grated cheddar
Cook only until cheese melts, BUT DO NOT boil.
OPTIONAL
Brown and crumble bacon for a garnish...this is best on cauliflower.
I'm getting the"fall itch" for soups and fresh breads...I get a craving, then it's soup season in full swing once again. Last winter we had soup almost every lunch. I put the ingredients in a 6 quart crock pot and ground the wheat for muffins while doing the breakfast dishes. Then as school wound down for the morning I mixed the muffin of choice and we had a nice cozy lunch. It sure was nice. Maybe you could try it out. Remember the above soup's vegetable choice can be almost anything you have extra of in your refrigerator. I'd really like it if you comment below on what you've tried...then maybe I can try it too!
Adam brought me to the "stats" page for this blog to reassure me that folks are reading it. Thank you! I felt like I was writing to empty cyber space. I pray it is a blessing to each of you.
Pretty soon we'll be enjoying early evenings with more time indoors for family fun. One thing the Colvin family likes to do is to cook together. One of our favorite fun times is to make pizza, a Mexican dish, or egg rolls together and then watch a good movie together. We use all kinds of vegetables to make our egg rolls...they are nothing like what you get in a restaurant but we love them! We clean out the refrigerator's vegetable shelf and add a bit of shrimp or something cut up small. I'll list several vegetables, but use what you have on hand. Plan a family fun night and try out this recipe!
1 small head of cabbage
1 medium onion
1 small carrot
handful of snow peas
broccoli
cauliflower
bean sprouts
1 rib celery
1/2 pepper
handful radish
ETC.
Meat or seafood in your egg rolls is optional. If you choose to include some, cut it in small pieces. We like a small amount of imitation crab meat or shrimp. You can use boneless chicken breasts, a small steak or whatever is in the freezer. Cut it up in small pieces and stir fry it in a small amount of oil with a tablespoon of choped garlic. Remove from the oil when finished and place in a small bowl. Place the bowl in the middle of a large round tray. (or improvise)
Next,cut all vegetables in small pieces. (They must be uniform size so they cook quickly.) As you chop your vegetables start with your seasoning vegetables first...onion and a bit of fresh ginger. Place them on a tray at the"12 o'clock" position. Then assess your vegetables...which take the longest to cook? Carrots are always longest in my choices, so I cut them up in small pieces and place them at the "1 o'clock" position on the tray. Then in the above list I'd chop cauliflower and place it at the "2 o'clock" position and so on ending with cabbage which is the last one to be added as it is your filler. You can do this ahead of time and cover it until cooking time. My children like to help with the chopping though, and we make it a "party" atmosphere.
I have a large wok, so I heat it up with about 1/8 C. oil. I add the seasoning vegetables at "12 o'clock" position. Cook only a few minutes before adding the vegetable in the "1 o'clock" position (if it's carrots, stir fry them a bit longer than the rest of the vegetables)...working your way around the tray giving each addition a minute or two to stir fry before adding another. The last addition should be the cabbage which should be your last vegetable as it is the "filler". When the stir fry is barely "limp", it is ready to fill your wrappers.
Follow the instructions included in your egg roll wrappers to wrap them. Be careful to not over fill them. (Start with about "1/4" cup of vegetables and see how it rolls up.) We use a mixture of 1 T. flour and 1 C. water to moisten the edges and "glue" it together. Place them on cooling racks to dry a bit before deep frying. We fry in our wok and drain in a vertical position to drain well.
Serve with sweet and sour sauce and Chinese hot mustard.
Val's Sweet & Sour Sauce
3 T. oil
1 C. sugar
1/4 C. corn starch
2-3 T. soy sauce
2/3 C. apple cider vinegar
1 1/3 C. water
Add:
2-4 T. chopped onion
1 T. finely chopped grated giner
Cook until thickened. Refrigerate leftovers, keeps well. I like to mix with Chinese hot mustard for a zingy sauce!
Isaiah 40: 28-31
The Farmer's Wife
Friday, September 30, 2011
A Farmhouse Visit
(September 29th) Our family is standing out in the chilly breeze this evening packing your shares...I'm down at the house checking on a batch of bread that is almost done for the bread shares. The house smells yummy and the warmth of the stove is making my hands tingle...home...the word brings with it many fond memories.
We are praying for protection from the forecasted frost this weekend....the yellow, patty pan, and zucchini squashes I'm packing this evening will die quickly with an early frost. So please pray with us, for this is "your farm"!
This week we've planted around 11,000 strawberries as a family. It is always fun to have a big project to work on together. Adam's innovative idea on how to create raised beds with the equipment we all ready owned saved us a lot of money and possibly crop loss if we planted on flat beds. You can see the new crop of berry plants when you visit the farm for our fall farm day.
Speaking of the fall farm day, It has been announced officially now for October 15th from 3 p.m. until dark. We're very excited to meet you and your family. For you see, most of our family doesn't get to see you each week at the markets. We hear stories of each family, ways you are cooking your vegetables and funny stories of market "happenings", but we don't have a face to put most of the stories with. This is "your farm" , so come out and enjoy it. We are making plans to make it a fun evening together, so please be courteous and R.S.V.P. us as soon as possible. For those of you whose Momma didn't teach you what that means, it means répondez s'il vous plaît, meaning “reply please” or "please respond". The easiest way is to e-mail us...that way we can keep track. Last minute phone reservations will also be taken. I just REALLY need to get an approximate count so I can plan the meal. Thank you!
We will be providing the meat and drinks for the evening. We ask that each family bring a side dish (preferably with vegetables from your share and the recipe to share). For the comfort of your family please bring jackets, boots or sturdy shoes for children, blanket or lawn chairs, and a flashlight. We usually have singing around the fire at dusk, so if you play the guitar, mandolin, or banjo, please bring it with you also. We love to sing!
I'm also going to give a plea for help this year. We've found that the more our shareholders get involved, the more fun they have. If you'd like to help set up, serve, run the farm sale table, or plan/lead a children's activity, just write me at stevecovlin99@gmail.com. Our farm sale table will be located on the porch where you sign in and Lord willing we'll be selling jams, relish, bread, granola, pumpkin and apple cinnamon rolls,wooden children's toys for Christmas, and more.
It's after 9 p.m. and we just finished our supper...Fridays are very busy here as we like to pick the majority of our vegetables for your shares the day we pack. You can't get much fresher unless you have your own garden. As I was grilling our hamburger "steaks" I grilled the Italian frying peppers (long red ones) that were in shares last week. I filled the halves with mozzarella cheese as they neared completion and they were a special treat. We've also enjoyed bartering for mushrooms at 2 of our markets (Market Square and Dixie Lee) and have enjoyed the following dish:
Enough rice to feed your family (I cook up 4 C. brown rice to 8 c. water)
1 large onion, sliced
1 lb. farm fresh mushrooms (available from other vendors at both markets)
2 garlic cloves (put thr0ugh the handy "musher")
1/4 c. butter
1/8 c. olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
Since this is just a made up concoction, do all the above to your family's taste and size.
Cook brown rice as directed. I have a rice cooker and I highly recommend them. When the rice is nearing completion melt the butter and oil together. Add "mushed" garlic. Next add a layer of onions. Place sliced mushrooms over onions. Cover and let simmer for about 5 minutes. Stir at this time. Watch carefully and serve when onions are still a bit crisp and mushrooms have begun to "wilt". Season with salt and pepper. Spoon over rice. I will also be stuffing peppers with this mixture next week.
Stuffed Peppers
Using the above recipe add 1/4 lb. browned breakfast sausage.
Cut the tops off sweet peppers and clean out the seeds and membrane as much as possible. Spoon warm rice mixture into the pepper cavities. Place them upright on a casserole dish. Bake until the peppers are el dante. (That's the secret..we don't like mushy peppers.)
Samuel Christopher Biggs
September 29,2011
8 lbs. 9 oz.
21 inches long
Proud Parents:
Bryan & Hope Biggs
One of our favorite recipes for winter squash is to bake, and whip it. I often serve squash this way for Sunday dinner during the winter. I can do all the work on Saturday, and then pop the casserole dish in the oven or microwave on Sunday.
There is no particular theme to this week's blog, just a short visit with your farmer's family....so here is what has been going on!
We've begun planting for next year. Strawberries are in the ground and doing well. We have approximately 11,000 plants for early spring harvest. Be watching for details on how you can be guaranteed our sweet and tangy berries. (Well, Lord willing almost guaranteed.)
We are also planting around 13,000 plus garlic bulbs. My boys smell sooo good these days. When they come in the farmhouse on breaks the spicy aroma of Italy wafts through my kitchen! We so enjoy the fresh garlic and you'll be enjoying it too if you join us in 2012.
We are in the process of negotiating on acreage for farm expansion! This is a large step of faith for our family. It is approximately 63 acres and has about half that acreage in tillable fields. There is a year round creek that we can keep the pond full with. That is a BIG improvement for us as we ran out of water here on the farm in August this year and were unable to water. This put a BIG damper on seed germination. It looks like the perfect property for our family...separate tillable fields with even a great field for wheat, oats, soy beans and dry bean production that allows our "new" large combine direct access from the road. Our boys are VERY excited about the possibilities if the Lord allows us to purchase it. Please pray with us for the Lord's will in these weighty matters.
The men are still planting for your last weeks of shares. Today Bok Choy went in and tomorrow, Lord willing lettuce will be planted. I can all ready taste the late fall stir fries we'll be able to have! Ha ha!
The other day the boys topped a few Brussels Sprouts plants as the little "cabbage like" sprouts are now ready to fill out. They brought me home the tops...I thought they had cut me some miniature collards, so I made a great breakfast of Green Eggs and "Ham" (If you don't have that recipe do a search on the website for it.) with it. After we had eaten, the boys asked how I liked the greens...I really did as they were mild and collards are my favorite. That is when they told me we had just eaten Brussels sprout tops! What a great surprise! Most farmer's just cut thetops and drop them in the paths, but we know that most of the brassica family's (broccoli/cabbage family) greens are edible...why waste anything? Look for them in your share this weekend, and use them like any other green!
One vegetable that continually shows up on my counter each summer is green tomatoes...I have fond memories of pickled green tomatoes as they were the adults special pickle in my childhood home...that means I rarely got any. So nowadays I sit them on the windowsill or put them in the fridg with good intentions. Well, I've got a recipe that I think will bring smiles to my family and we'll be having it tonight. It calls for several items in your share boxes, so you may want to try it also with that green tomato that has been siting in your fridg for weeks also :)
Green Tomato Rice
This is a delicious rice dish to serve with pork or beef, and it's a great way to use green tomatoes.
Ingredients:
- 4 slices bacon, diced
- 1 bunch green onions, sliced, with most of green (6 to 8)
- 4 medium green tomatoes, peeled and chopped
- 1 jalapeno pepper, seeds removed, minced
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 2 cups chicken broth
- 1 cup long-grain rice
- dash dried leaf thyme
- salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- dash Tabasco sauce, optional
- 1/4 cup fresh grated Parmesan cheese, optional
Preparation:
In a medium saucepan, saute the bacon over medium heat until crisp; remove to paper towels to drain. In 1 tablespoon of the bacon drippings, saute green onions for 1 minute. Add green tomatoes and saute for 1 minute longer. Add garlic and jalapeno pepper; saute for another 30 seconds. Add the chicken broth, rice, thyme, pepper, and Tabasco sauce. Bring to a boil. Stir, reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer for 20 to 25 minutes, or until rice is tender and liquid is absorbed. Stir in Parmesan cheese just before serving, if desired. Sprinkle with the cooked bacon
I know there is cauliflower in a few of your shares this week, and others will enjoy it in the coming weeks. Like all the other vegetables we grow, our family enjoys them best just simply steamed. Here are some basic ideas to get you started:
Steamed Cauliflower
Bring one inch of water to a boil. Add 4 C. cut up cauliflower. Add 1/2 -1 t. salt if desired. Return to a boil then reduce heat and simmer 5-8 minutes. Drain. Cooking a whole trimmed head takes 10-15 minutes and is great for a special occasion. Serve plain, buttered or with one of the following butters or cheese sauce.
Lemon Butter
1/4 C. melted butter
2 T. Lemon juice
1/2 t. grated lemon rind
Mix ingredients and toss with 4-6 cups cooked cauliflower just before serving. Also Good on carrots, broccoli, green beans, squash, spinach and other greens.
Parmesan Butter
1/4 C. butter
2 t. Parmesan Cheese
Melt butter. Add cheese. Serve over cooked cauliflower. Also good on asparagus and broccoli.
Many years ago when I was learning to cook, my dear husband came alongside me and rescued me from a flopped cheese sauce. He wrote out his directions for me and my cheese sauce became a success! At the time I was buying expensive frozen Green Giant broccoli and cheese sauce! I used this to make Chicken Diavan. (see recipe below) Now I use it for whenever I want a cheese sauce..and I don't use the sliced cheese anymore...I just use shredded.
Farmer Steve's Cheese Sauce
2 T. butter
2 1/2 T. flour
1 cup milk
either
4 slices American Processed Cheese
or
1/2 C. Shredded Cheddar Cheese
1/4 t. Worcestershire sauce (optional)
Dash of salt or garlic salt & pepper
1. Melt butter in saucepan & blend in flour.
2. Add milk and other ingredients
3. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly 'til smooth and thick. Approximately 7 minutes
4. Serve over cooked cauliflower or broccoli.
2 cups deboned chicken
1 large head of broccoli or 2 packages of frozen
Steve's Cheese Sauce
2 T. mayonnaise
2 t. lemon juice
Chop broccoli up into mouth sized pieces. Steam broccoli lightly. Drain. Stir mayonnaise and lemon juice into broccoli, and then add cheese sauce. Pour into a large casserole dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes.
Optional: top with buttered bread crumbs.
I have an Amish waterbath canner from Lehman's that helps me save time in the kitchen all year round! It was designed with waterbath canning in mind, but I use it for many things. I can boil 100 pounds of chicken leg quarters in it to debone for recipes! When the chicken is removed I have several gallons of rich chicken broth to can for my chicken and dumpling recipe. I also have frozen this broth in small portions to use for cream of chicken soups that I make. There are so many uses for this broth. It's real handy for a quick chicken noodle soup in the winter. Check out the link to see what I'm describing. Husbands, it makes a great Christmas gift for a serious cook and shareholder. :)
I've been using this handy canner for years and this year I've put up to 84- 1/2 pint jelly jars into it!! I rarely use my 7 quart canner anymore as I can usually do one or two batches in my Amish canner and be done with it! It holds 15 quarts or 27 pints.
I also use it for a blancher! I thought I had come up with something new this year as I blanched my mixed greens and broccoli to freeze. I took an old thin pillow case and filled it with broccoli spears or chopped greens. With my Amish canner half filled with boiling water I dunked my 1/2 filled pillow case into the water. I then used a long wooden spoon to submerge the greens into the water then watched for the water to boil. When it started to boil, I set the stove timer for 3 minutes. When the timer went off I pulled up my bag (the end was layed over the side to keep it dry) and let it drip a bit. Then I used the wooden spoon to press the bag of greens against the side of the canner until it stopped dripping badly. Next I carried it over to the sink which was filled with cool water and dropped the bottom of the bag in again. I swish it around with my hand and let it cool. When it's cool, I lift it up into the dish drainer (that I've washed!) and press the water out of it. Then in just in a matter of minutes I pour the greens from the bag into labeled gallon bags. I've used this method for blanching for broccoli and for mixed greens with GREAT results! When my mother-in-love called the morning I tried out "my invention" I told her what I was doing...she exclaimed, "Oh I loved my blanching bag! It was all stained up, but it sure saved me time!" I guess I stumbled on an old idea that somehow has been lost in the age of fancy gadgets! Try it out this fall!
(Saturday October 8, 2011) Well the boys are all back from the markets in the big city. They are bubbling with stories and are also excited that many of you plan to join us for our fall farm day. We're excited too! The little ones are all had their Saturday night baths, and are tucked into bed. The boys and Steve are in the living room planning next year...I think it's funny how next year holds sooo much promise....we are like that each year. But with all the plans for expansion, their dreams may come true. They're about to start accepting share reservations for 2012, so reserve your spot. There will be a limited number of shares at each market accepted and we have a waiting list all ready.
Good night! I hope to visit with you soon in my farm kitchen!
Psalms 130:3,4a
Abundant Blessings,
The Farmer's Wife
Val
Monday, September 19, 2011
Thriving in Lean Times
The first step in surviving in lean times is to acknowledge all that we have comes from the hand of God. As I look around my home I see soooo many items that I cherish have come from God's hand through the hand of another. My husband had a corporate job for almost 35 years. During that time he worked hard to provide for our family. We learned to be obedient to God's Word and tithe his earnings back to God...it was all His anyway! We saw how the 90% we had left after tithing went farther than the 100% could have...it was only God! Many, many people have asked over the years how in the world we could "make it" on one income. Striving to honor God in all areas of your life is the key...
The next key to not only surviving, but enjoying these days is all in our attitude. We can choose to be frustrated that we can't make our favorite casserole because we don't have the cream of chicken soup it calls for, or you can learn to make a cream sauce and add a chicken bouillon cube! The picture God gave me YEARS ago was, "What do you have in your hand now? That's what I am to use." Lean times are creative times...time to rise to a challenge as a wife and family....it's time for us all to learn to pray and see God's hand provide!
Thank you for making an investment into our farm by buying a share. One thing I've learned is that during challenging times money spent on QUALITY food will be the best investment for our families in several ways. Here are a couple of ideas to ponder on:
1. Good food boosts the morale of the family, making it easier to meet the other challenges that life WILL send our way.
2. Cheap food choices are often not nutritious. When our bodies are weakened by poor food choices, we easily come down with the latest "bug" going around. Sickness in the family makes it hard to stay "on top of" the challenges that lean times send us.
With this in mind, we're excited about the fall line-up of vegetables...one of the odd greens that you'll see is in your box this week is sweet potato greens. I've not tried my "mess" out yet, but here is the recipes I'll be trying. Buying a share of our vegetables also is a weekly entertainment and educational investment as you research ideas on how to use the vegetables and prayerfully cook together as a family.
Sauteed Sweet Potato Greens
2 cups Sweet Potato Greens - de-stemmed, rinsed & chopped
1.5 Tblsp Olive Oil
1/4 cup Onion, diced
1/4 tsp coarsely ground black pepper
1 fresh red or cayenne pepper - de-seeded, & diced
Directions
1. Heat olive oil over medium heat in saute pan.
2. Add an onion, ground pepper, and cayenne pepper & saute until tender & aromatic.
3. Lower heat to medium-low & add greens. Stir constantly until greens are slightly wilted and a deep green. Be careful not to over-cook.
Makes 2 servings.
Country-Style Sweet Potato Greens
- 1/4 cup vegetable or olive oil
- 1 quart, approximately, boiling water plus cold water (for blanching)
- 1 clove garlic, minced
- 1/2 onion, diced
- 1/2 teaspoon chili powder
- 1/4 pound sweet potato greens, thoroughly rinsed, stems removed
Rinse sweet potato greens and remove stems. Place in a strainer in the sink. Boil water and pour over greens in strainer. Let cool for 2 minutes, then pour on cool water. While that is draining, heat a heavy skillet over medium heat. Add oil. When warm, add garlic, onion and chili powder. Saute for about 3-5 minutes, till golden brown. Pat greens with paper towels to eliminate excess water. Add greens to skillet, toss all well, and allow to cook for 3-5 minutes. Greens will wilt and soften like spinach. Serve immediately.
I hope you also like the broccoli in your share! (Well, half of the shares are getting it this week.) It's one of my personal favorite vegetables. :) I'm looking forward to freezing as much as possible again this year. If you find you are unable to eat all that came in your share, you might want to freeze some also! There is nothing like eating freshly frozen/canned greens and other vegetables when the wind and snow are blowing in the winter!
Like I said, I enjoy broccoli...but I REALLY enjoy our freshly grown broccoli. We eat simply, so I won't give out casserole recipes that mask the taste of the broccoli with cream of soups or cheese. You can find them easily on the Internet or in ladies magazines. Our society has acquired the taste for "special"...by that I mean I have friends that make almost every recipe special with processed amendments. (Creamed soups, cheeses, stuffing mixes, or flavored vinegars, etc.) This adds to the cost of a meal and in my opinion takes away the fresh unique taste of each vegetable. At our home we save the special dishes for special occasions...thus keeping them special. We like steamed vegetables...simple dishes that highlight what God has created, not what man has conjured up to make more sales for their processed product. With this in mind, here are our everyday favorites and our holiday favorite.
Bring 1-inch of waqter to a boil in a large kettle. Add 4C. broccolli florets and peeled, sliced stems and 1/2-1 t. sea salt. Return to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer 7-10 minutes or until tender crisp. Drain. Serve buttered.
Variation: Sprinkle buttered broccoli with Parmesan cheese or bacon.
Broccoli Roll-Ups
1-2 slices of ham/turkey ham per person served
1 broccoli spear per ham slice
1/2 slice of your family's favorite cheese per ham slice -optional
On a cutting board place one slice of ham. Lay a broccoli spear crosswise at one end of the ham. If using cheese, lay cheese on top of the broccoli. Roll the ham up starting at the edge closest to the broccoli. Lay seam side down in a casserole dish. Secure with wooden toothpicks IF they are unrolling. Bake covered approximately 1/2 hour at 350 degrees or until broccoli is crisp-tender.
Variation: Place cooked brown rice in the bottom of a greased casserole dish. Place the brooccoli ham roll-ups on to of the rice. Cover with foil. Bake as usual until broccoli is cooked.
Broccoli Salad
1 medium sized bunch of broccoli-cut into bite small bite sized pieces
a small onion- diced
1/2 C. raisins
2 T. sugar
1 C. mayonnaise
2 T. raw apple cider vinegar (or what you have on hand)
Marinade above ingredients. Just before serving ad 1/2 lb. dried and crisp bacon and a sprinkling of sunflower seeds for garnish (optional)
We pray often for your family, as you are our farm family. We know of several families that are facing job relocations, job changes, and simply struggling to make the ends meet. If you are a believer go to THE only one who can meet those needs. Jesus Christ is waiting to hear your request...He wants to show Himself strong "on the behalf of those whose hearts are perfect towards him." No...we will not be perfect until we see His face, but perfect here means mature. Are we learning the lessons He's sending our way...or are we frustrated with "doing without". Let's all examine our hearts before Him and be teachable. Only then will we see the challenges as He does...lessons to conform us to His image. :)
How are you making your share stretch? I'd love to hear about it and the farm family as a whole will benefit if you will post your comments below. We need each others wisdom; so please share! I'll start us off...
1. I cut my vegetables in smaller slices so it appears like my family is getting a bigger serving. This works great for carrot and cucumber slices especially.
2. If possible when cleaning and slicing your vegetables, include the stems in your dishes. This is most easily seen in broccoli where you can peel the green off the stems and have a tender core to steam. This also works with greens...try chopping the collard, broccoli, mustard, or kale stems into small pieces. Put them on the bottom of your pot and lay the greens on top. The stems will steam longer and be tender.
3. I like to make vegetable soup stock from the clean peelings and outer skins of my weekly share of vegetables. For instance, wash the carrots or potatoes before peeling. save the outter oinon skins, save the tops to your celery, save the outer stem of the broccoli, etc. and place it into a ziploc type bag or jar in your freezer. When the jar or bag is full and you'd like to make vegetable broth for a recipe or to add nutrients to a soup place the contents of your bag into a large pot. Cover with water and simmer. Strain out the vegetable remnants. Freeze, can, or use immediately.
4. Serve your vegetables in a stir fry with a nice bed of brown rice. This stretches your meat as well as your vegetables.
5. Serve at least one raw vegetable or fruit at each meal. Raw vegetables and fruits have greater bulk.
Now it's your turn! Share how your family is making your vegetable or bread share stretch! Comment below.
was not arrayed like one of these. Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the filed, which to day is, and to morrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith? Therefore take no thought, saying What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewith shall we be clothed? (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek:) for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you. "
Matthew 6:28-33
The Farmer's Wife
P.S. I don't know why there is a big gap between here and the post comments...just scroll down please. :)
30
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Monday, August 15, 2011
Aprons
Life in a packing shed after a long day of picking and packing usually ends with everyone being jolly and jostling for a position in line packing shares. Yesterday (Friday) it was packing tomatoes...there were about 160 quart cups lined up on tables to be filled with tomatoes that had JUST been picked. Several of us had flats of ripe tomatoes (not green and gassed) and were filling the cups "until they looked good". To me, pretty looked good...to the boys big looked good. Hmmm, well, the flats fit under the men's arms better than mine so I was balancing mine on the edge of the table and knocking the empty cups on the far back of the table off on the ground. It was some "handsome" son's job to pick them up....then I had to have someone with longer arms fill the last two cups on the far side of the table. (None of my children have inherited my "petite" genes...so whoever is closest at the time is called handsome and asked to pick up the fallen empty cups. They "melt" when they are called handsome, and are ready to do what I need done.) After being alone in the packing shed most of the day it was a sweet blessing to be joined by 7 of my sons to finish up the work.
When the tomatoes were taken care of and the last of the thyme was bundled they begged me to begin supper...it was 7 p.m. and they were having hunger pains. I was ready too after packing potatoes, onions, yellow/zucchini/patty pan squashes, green beans, thyme, and tomatoes I was ready to retreat to the hominess of the farm kitchen. I had been wearing an apron made from the skirt of an old jumper which protects my clothes from the mud, water, and blossom ends of vegetables when as I scooped it up, my post idea came! As I held out my ample apron I had different boys scoop up potatoes, squash, onions, tomatoes, and other vegetables to carry down to the house for supper. I made a "goulash" as an elderly friend calls that type of a meal from all that was in my apron.
The last generation of mountain women all wore aprons. Recently I inherited three of my mother-in-love's aprons as she cleaned out her home. She and many other ladies wore these aprons everyday as sort of a uniform. It was a mark of pride that they were wives, mothers, and homemakers.
I have fond memories of farmer Steve's Aunt Glen who took me under her wing and taught me many of the skills I needed to provide for my family...she cooked, sewed, canned, gardened, quilted, along with the many responsibilities of being a farmer's wife. I've stood by her side canning peaches...not just a few...but BUSHELS of peaches on steamy August afternoons. When the Preacher or a neighbor stopped by for a minute on an unplanned visit she would quickly change her work apron as they got out of their cars, into one of her company aprons. Aunt Glenn then greeted her guest at the door looking fresh, and ready to entertain. Her days were filled with nonstop duties that ministered not only to her family, but to the widow down the road, friends who owned farms in other states, and of course the newest member of the family who knew nothing about rural farm life...ME! She "wore her apron WELL."
Where has the uniform of a homemaker gone? With the loss of the apron came a loss of pride in our"profession" or calling from the Lord. Society began to look down on the women who stayed at home to raise the children and provide a haven for their husbands. The highest calling for a woman is still her home. Charles Spurgeon once said,"You are as much serving God in looking after your own children, and training them up in God's fear, and minding the house, and making your household a church for God, as you would be if you had been called to lead an army to battle for the Lord of hosts." Nothing is more important.
The many skills a homemaker possessed in the past two generations that generated the need for the apron are also now vanishing. I thank God a few women are once again raising the standard high for this generation of wives, mothers, and yes, proudly, homemakers to see. What the world has to offer in the areas of food, clothing, entertainment, education, and even worship cannot compare to the time intensive commitment of a woman serving her family "from scratch".
My aprons are getting a lot of use this week..I've just finished a HUGE batch of almond granola. By HUGE I mean it contained around 90 cups of dry ingredients. It takes me most of the day to bake it, so I made a double batch of jalapeno summer squash relish. This is the second time I've made it this summer, adjusting the heat level each time....this is hot. :) Adam is finally smiling! So today I've made 23 pints of relish and two big bus tubs of granola...a good day.
Tonight I served 5 vegetables, homemade pinto beans, and cornbread in pans I also inherited from my mother-in-love. The recipe for her truly southern pinto beans was in one of last year's issues of The Farmer's Wife. We are eating tomatoes three times a day...ahhhh...so I thought I'd include a few ideas for using your tomatoes and other vegetables this week.
Several of my tried and true recipes come from these older mountain women that are now in glory with our Saviour Jesus Christ. They've left a legacy behind for me to follow. They often used ingredients found in their cupboards. "Running to town" was unheard of, as they often only went off the mountain to town weekly, if that. The fancy ingredients found in most recipes today would make them laugh, or ask, "What's that?!" Why not try this recipe for three of the vegetables in your shares this week. The buttered crackers were a treat and something new in the cupboard 30 years ago when I set up housekeeping...they often substituted buttered bread crumbs for the topping....you could too.
2 medium zucchini
2 medium fresh tomatoes
1 medium mild onion
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup crushed, buttered broken cracker crumbs
In a greased baking dish make alternate layers of zucchini, tomatoes and onions, sprinkling each layer with a little salt and pepper, also dotting with butter.
Cover top with crushed cracker crumbs. Bake in a 350* oven until vegetables are tender.
4 medium zucchini, sliced in 1/8" slices
1 large onion, chopped in 1/4" pieces
1 medium green pepper, chopped in 1/4" pieces
1 carrot, scraped and diced in 1/4" pieces
1 clove garlic, minced
3 T. butter
2 , 16 oz. cans tomatoes, drained well
1, 8 oz. can tomato sauce
1, 6 oz. can tomato paste
1/4 cup white grape juice
2 T. chopped parsley
2 teaspoons dried Italian seasoning
1 teaspoon dried whole basil
1/2 t. seasoning salt
1/4 t. "freshly" ground pepper
3 qts. water
2 t. salt
9 lasagna noodles
1, 16 oz. carton cottage cheese
2 cups shredded mozzarella or Swiss cheese
1 C. grated Parmesan Cheese
While sauce is thickening, combine 3 quarts of water and salt in a pasta pot; bring to a boil. Gradually add lasagna noodles. Boil, uncovered, 12 to 15 minutes or until noodles are just tender; drain well.
Spread 1/4 of sauce in a lightly greased 12 x 9 x 2" baking dish. Top with 3 noodles, 1/3 cottage cheese, 1/4 Swiss/Mozzarella, and 1/4 of the parmesan cheese; repeat layers twice. Top with remaining sauce, Swiss, and parmesan cheese. Bake, uncovered at 350* for 35-40 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before serving. Yield: 8 servings.
2 C. long grain white/brown rice
1 head lettuce, chopped
3 lb. ground beef, browned
(this can be halved, and substitutions like turkey or chicken used)
2 C. chopped onion
1 qt. milk
1/2 lb. process cheese
taco sauce or salsa
Variation: Delete rice (very economical when bought in bulk) and replace with slightly crushed tortilla or corn chips.
I like to have special meals every once in a while to encourage my men that work so hard on the farm. Here is one I'm going to try this week from the Practicl Produce Cookbook that uses the fresh basil, tomatoes, and onions from our shares. It directs me to broil the fish, but I may try grilling or baking them as I have a CREW to feed and we've outgrown our broiler.
1 medium tomato, peeled and chopped
1/4 C. finely chopped onion
1/4. t. basil leaves
1 1/2 lb. fresh fish fillets
(They suggest flounder or haddock but use what you have.)
olive oil
salt and pepper
The Lord often gives me Scripture to encourage me in my calling. When my spirit lags He brings them back to my remembrance...one such verse is Proverbs 31:25...as I put my apron on I remember "Strength and honour are her clothing; and she shall rejoice in time to come." As mothers we don't see the fruit of our labors immediately...just like in our fields. The harvest comes months, and with children even years later! The Holy Spirit is my strength in these times and I see my apron in the verse that says, "She girdeth her loins with strength, and strengtheneth her arms." Proverbs 31:17. By remembering my high calling as a wife and mother the Lord "strengthens my arms" to serve Him in my home. Is there an apron hanging in your kitchen? Why not put it on and let the Holy Spirit remind you where your strength comes from..."my strength cometh from the Lord." Then proudly go about your day renewed, and knowing you are in the perfect will of God serving your family.
The Farmer's Wife