Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Finished...and not

Here are the two shelves in the basement that I've appropriated for canning storage.From left to right on the top shelf we have:
  • Crab Apple Sauce
  • Crab Apple Jelly
  • Rhubarb Vanilla Jam
  • Strawberry Rhubarb Jam
  • Blu-barb Jam
  • Raspberry Jam
The bottom shelf holds (again, left to right)
  • Rhubarb Chutney
  • Corn Relish
  • Dilly Beans
  • Pickled Jalapeno and Serrano Peppers
  • Peaches
  • Tomatoes (two pre-spiced as per a recipe in my Bernardin Canning book)
I've canned over 5 dozen jars of food this year, all in small batches. I was done, finito, all ready for fall (along with all the freshly frozen veggies in my deep freeze and my carrots and potatoes from the garden - most of the carrots are still there in fact). I've washed all the canning equipment, save the pot since I'm using the water in it to water my houseplants and then dad called to ask me to can him some pickled beets.

I'm too nice.

Skillet Delicious

It definitely doesn't have to be fancy to be delicious. That was the lesson learned after eating this amazing Friday night dinner. Everything in the pan came out of our backyard garden except for the sausage and the the salt and pepper. Plus I'd dug most of it up that after noon so there was no arguing freshness.

It started with the final potato harvest. I'd already dug up 4 of our 11 plants over the last 3 weeks but with all the frost hitting now I wanted to get some progress done on the garden clean up. (That and I was planting garlic bulbs in the front potato patch and needed to harvest the potatoes and do a quick weed and rake first.) The smal bowl of potatoes on the right was used for dinner (with leftovers of course). I washed them well and then diced up the larger pototoes so that all the pieces were the size of the tiny ones.

I'd cooked the sausage (sweet basil italian) about 3/4 of the way through and removed them to a cutting board to slice. Giving the skillet a quick wash and oil I added some oil and the potatoes and cooked them at medium-low for about 20 minutes. Once cooled, I sliced the sausage and added it back to the skillet. I cooked the sausage and potatoe for another 5 or so minutes before adding all the veg, which in this case was one zucchini, the handful of green beans I got (cry), 5 small carrots, 3 mini bell peppers, and two diced serrano peppers. A touch of salt and pepper and another 8ish minutes to cook the veggies through.
I call it Skillet Delicious - because it was

Monday, September 20, 2010

Fresh Eats

I went out and yanked up all my bell peppers and cucumbers this afternoon. While I was at it I grabbed a handful of purple carrots and the last of the dill. These will be for dinner tomorrow along with some fish and a spinach salad.


I also grabbed the three (cry) ripe cherry tomatoes off the plant in the garage. Ty and I shared them - I cut the third one in half. I've killed off virtually all the aphids on it. A couple more days and I'll bring it into the house proper. We'll get those 30 odd tomatoes on it to ripen if it kills me.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Busy Busy

Note to self: never buy 40 lbs of food that must be dealt with immediately (or almost immediately) when working 6:00 am start times. Coming home after an 8 hour shift when you're exhausted and having to cook for 2 or 3 hours each day is draining.

First off, it screws up your math skills. For some reason I had convinced myself that I had bought 5 lbs of lean ground beef. When I was carrying it through the store it seemed heavier than that. When I was portioning and wrapping it the blobs seemed bigger than usual. But no, it took me until yesterday (coincidentally my first day off after working 6 in a row) that when beef costs $1.99/lb and you pay $20 that in fact you get 10 lbs of meat, not 5 lbs. No worries though, I can always chop a hunk in half while frozen, but my large batches of chili take 2 lbs as does a meatloaf (which I'm making tonight along with a zucchini potato casserole)

The 10 lb tube of ground beef I bought

In addition to that I had 10 lbs of zucchini that I had received from a coworker in exchange for some jam. Well I insisted on the jam, she was just offering up zucchini. I have zucchini growing in my garden, but I bought and planted the seeds late so while we have enough to eat as a vegetable (though did you know that technically it's a fruit) I didn't have enough to bake with, and I've been dreaming about carrot zucchini muffins and chocolate zucchini loaf since I planted the seeds. We've since eaten one loaf and 8 muffins and I froze the second loaf and 4 muffins. I totally forgot to take pictures of that production however I'll now entertain you with a shot of one of the zucchini along with the jalapenos (pre-pickling) and peaches (pre-canning)



Large Zucchini, Jalapeno Peppers, Peaches

The zucchini in the above picture was grated and I froze two packed 2 cup portions for future baking and will be using the remainder for my casserole tonight. The peaches were canned in a light syrup and I've got about 8 servings for later in the winter (first time trying to can peaches - didn't want to go overboard). The peppers were either sliced into rings or diced and pickled and canned along with the serrano peppers from my garden. I have two half pints of jalapeno slices, 1 of diced jalapenos, 2 of a diced jalapeno/sliced serrano blend, and one 1/2 cup jar or sliced serranos.

I had also bought peas (shelled, blanched, and frozen), green beans (I have enough for one meal in my yard - god this has been the shittiest summer for vegetable growing) and while I blanched and froze the bulk I used the brine from the peppers to jar 2 half pints of dilly beans (dill from the one plant that survived summer of fail) and a bunch of green Roma tomatoes at $.99/lb. I'm ripening them in shoe boxes with bananas (speeds the process) and will quarter and jar those next week. Tomatoes ripened off the vine are nowhere near as good as on the vine of course, but with my plants producing enough for one jar at the moment, beggars couldn't be choosers (and the green tomatoes fit my budget.



Tomato + banana (close box) = ripe and decent 10ish days later

Monday, September 13, 2010

Weekend Food Purchases To be Dealt With

5 lb package lean ground beef
  • package into 1 lb portions and freeze
  • upload funny picture of tube of beef to blog
Huge bag of peas
  • shell, blanch, freeze
Jalapeno Peppers (and Serrano Peppers from Garden)
  • wash
  • slice or dice
  • pickle and hot water bath
Zucchini (two extra large ones received in trade for Bluebarb Jam)
  • grate first zucchini
  • make carrot zucchini muffins
  • make two chocolate zucchini loaves
  • grate second zucchini ***totally haven't needed it yet
  • make zucchini fritters to go with dinner
Peaches
  • blanch, skin, and section
  • can with light syrup and hot water bath
Green Roma Tomatoes
  • stash in cardboard boxes with a banana in each to ripen
  • blanch, peel, halve, and hot water bath
oh dear lord I may never be done.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

me and the man


Circa 2008

...

bored
bored
bored
bored
bored

making soup soon
still bored
bored

got an invite to a cocktail wedding celebration party thing...cool

it's in November...sigh

bored
bored now


crappy weather
bored

sigh

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Some garden shots


Zucchini


Serrano Peppers


Purple Bell Peppers


Green Bell Peppers


Green Beans - come on guys, you're almost there


Cherry Tomatoes - so close to ripe


Carrots

Monday, September 6, 2010

A Special SYTYCD Canada Performace

This performance is nearer and dearer to my heart than any other. I love Stacey Tookey for expression the emotional journey of one of my closest friends.
zSHARE video - Episode 9 - Part 4.avi.flv

Pizza Pizza Pizza

The husband and I were recently both in the bridal party for the wedding of two dear friends, though in a slight twist, we were both standing up for the groom (I was the best man (woman, whatever). The lovely couple went off to the Bahamas for a honeymoon as now, upon having returned to Calgary came over Saturday evening for beer and pizza.

The pizza prep began Friday evening with a trip to Lina's Italian market for cheese and meat. Holy mother of something, the pizza pepperoni from there is the best I've ever eaten. For pizza I picked up the pepperoni, some prosciutto, a hot pepper, fresh basil, mozzarella, and Parmesan cheese. Then because I was there I also bought dried porcini mushrooms, three different types of dried pasta (cheaper and better than Safeway people), pancetta, and some hazelnut chocolate cookie tart things from the bakery (I have no self control in an Italian market).

I should have made my pizza dough Friday and tossed it in the fridge but Saturday was fine...just a touch stickier to work with.

I use the dough recipe from The Pioneer Woman which is both delicious and easy as hell (virtually no working the dough at all - yay).

Pizza Crust (makes two pizzas)
4 cups flour
1.5 cups water
1 tsp instant dried yeast
1 tsp salt (Pioneer woman says Kosher, mine is a fine sea salt)
1/3 cup olive oil (plus extra)

Sprinkle yeast over 1 1/2 cups warm (not lukewarm) water. Let sit there while you do everything else

In your beloved KitchenAid Artisan stand mixer (or is that just me)with paddle attachment combine flour and salt. With the mixer running on low speed (2), drizzle in olive oil until combined with flour. Next, pour in yeast/water mixture (that you gave a quick stir to and mix until just combined, and the dough is a sticky mess.

Coat a separate mixing bowl with a light drizzle of olive oil, and form the dough into a ball. Toss to coat dough in olive oil, then cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and set it aside for 1 to 2 hours, or store in the fridge until you need it. I highly recommend making it at least 12 hours in advance otherwise it's still pretty sticky when you try to stretch it out. Just keep it in the bowl (covered with plastic wrap) in the fridge. I've had some in there for 2 days and it really does get yummier with time. That Pioneer Woman knows her stuff.

My pizza sauce is made from scratch and is easy as sin.

Pizza Sauce (Makes enough for two pizzas)
7 normal sized tomatoes on the vine
half a bunch basil
3 cloves garlic
1 tbsp-ish olive oil

Peel and seed tomatoes (easiest if you first blanch them) and then rough chop them into 8 or so pieces. They'll cook down, it's not an exact science.

Peel and mince garlic and rough chop the basil.

Add tomatoes, olive oil and garlic to pot. Cook on medium for 10 minutes. Add half the basil, cook another 10-15 minutes. Mash tomatoes down with potato masher, keep cooking. Add rest of basil, cook to desired consistency. Feel free to puree with an immersion blender if you're not into rustic looking chunks (I am).



Okay, pizza time. Preheat oven to 500 degrees.

Stretch or roll out half the pizza dough into a large rectangle (the size of a cookie sheet) This takes a couple of minutes.

Be patient.

Once dough is laid out on the sheet, apply toppings. For the pizza in the following picture I used sauce, then grated fresh mozzarella, then pepperoni, ripped up prosciutto, grated Parmesan cheese, and then the hot red pepper. Mon's half of the pizza on the right has only mozzarella, cheddar, and parm cheese (she's picky)

For best results bake one at a time on a low rack for 11 minutes each.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Lattice Top Peach Raspberry Pie


Raspberry season is dying down right? Or at least it seems to be everywhere but my backyard. After making raspberry jam, raspberry tarts, blueberry and raspberry sauce and just plain eating raspberries I was running low on ideas. The internet of course provides suitable inspiration and I've altered up this following recipe based off of finding on allrecipes.com.

We served this for dessert last Sunday when my mom and dad came over. Dinner was a grilled splatchcocked Rosemary-Garlic chicken, potatoes from our garden, and green beans from the Farmers Market.

Peach Raspberry Pie
4 cups fresh peaches (peeled, pitted, sliced)
1 cup fresh raspberries
3/4 cup sugar
3 tbsp flour
1 tsp cinnamon
2 deep dish pie crusts (recipe of your choice or store bought - I'm not here to judge, and I totally use store bought pie crusts half the time)

Preheat oven to 400.

Place peaches and raspberries in a large bowl. Add sugar, flour, and cinnamon. Mix gently to blend flavours.

Using a spoon, transfer mixture to pie crust. Now as you can see from the picture I made a totally podunk lattice top for my pie. Feel free to
a) do a better job yourself
b) copy my not quite right but rustic stylings, or
c) top with the other pie crust.

If taking route c) wet the pie edges gently and crimp top and bottom crusts together with a fork. Don't forget to slice a few vents in the top as well.

Bake for 45 minutes, let sit on your counter taunting you all afternoon, and devour with family after applying a small dollop of ice cream to slice.