Sunday, July 21, 2019
SWEET CORN!!!!
First of the season purchased today from the Harrington pick-up truck in the old K-Mart parking lot.
I don't need to say anymore. You can imagine!
A fine reward for picking up four bags of branches knocked down by the horrific wind storm yesterday afternoon. We were lucky. There are trees and substantial branches down around town. The yard waste site was pretty busy yesterday evening.
Happy summer foods.. not so happy summer extreme weather.
The Recipe --
boil or grill.. slather on butter.. and eat!
Friday, July 12, 2019
Even Better... the Glorious Fourth -- with freezer raiding treats and tasty leftovers
Perfect--Iowa-- weather filled the days during the week surrounding the Fourth of July celebration. We had two super steamy days, then more moderate temperatures with a "scurry up the dock steps" threat of thunderstorm. Rain delayed the fireworks until Friday, but the display was well worth the wait. All of us on the deck declared "the best ever!"
There were other shows, too, including causal air show fly-overs beginning with the B-17 on Saturday and Sunday from the real air show at the airport. The sea plane made several landings and take-offs at our end of the lake, and on the Fourth the biplanes flew over in formation. Quite a sight to see!
All manner of boats, including some woodies from the 1940s and 50s, a very large inflated flamingo and an even larger inflated pelican--this one towed by a jet ski-- filled the lake. At times it seemed as though one could walk across the boats rafted up at State Park Beach.
I had the freezer well-stocked,. Or so I thought until the hungry -- growing -- boys arrived.
Loaves of zucchini bread, sweet-potato cinnamon rolls, and the Berry Bread disappeared before the week's visit was completed. But that is, after all, why they were there.
We had enough good food to last the week and we had planned well enough so we didn't have to go to the store too often. We grilled meat from Louis Fine Meats, enjoyed meal out at PM Park, crafted the left-overs into sandwiches, pizza, and quesadilla. Gobbled our Farmer's Market vegetables and fruits while we looked longingly at the too-slow progress in our vegetable garden and berry patch.
With the company headed home, time to tidy the cottage for the next round of guests, do the laundry, and convert the bits of leftovers into unexpected delights. Ham bone in the freezer for winter soup. Yogurt Cheese: I spooned the plain and vanilla yogurt into a coffee-filter-lined sieve and let it drain overnight. Then put the thickened almost cheese in a thin cotton dish towel and hung it up over a bowl to drain for a few more hours. Plunked the cream cheese like mixture in a container and back in the fridge. Berry Bread: I took the leftover strawberries, cherries, and eggs and made another batch of Berry Bread. Tasted great, but as the strawberries faded a bit it isn't as pretty as the original loaf made with blueberries. I made more of that, too. Here's the recipe.
Always good to have this terrific Berry Bread in the freezer.
Berry Bread (Adapted from Dorie Greenspan's Roman Breakfast Cake in the New York Times)
1 1/2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
6 large eggs, separated
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons, loosely packed, finely grated lemon zest
from one huge or two regular lemons
1/2 cup vegetable oil -- such as Wesson
3 tablespoons lemon juice -- more or less depending on what you get from the zested lemons
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups blueberries -- you can also use raspberries, very firm diced peaches, and / or blackberries.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Prepare the baking pans by greasing them well and dusting with flour. OR use the "baking spray" right before putting the pans in the oven. Loaves can have an tendency to stick, so be generous. I bake this in three loaves -- the foil kind roughly 7 x 3 x 2 1/2. You can use any pan you like and adjust the baking time.
Combine the flour and baking powder and set aside. Have the rest of your ingredients measured out and at hand. You don't want to shilly-shally mixing this up.
With an electric mixer beat the egg whites until stiff and set aside. Combine the sugar and lemon peel in your electric mixer bowl and knead with your hands until the lemon aroma fills the room! Or so it will seem. Add the egg yolks and beat on medium speed for 3 minutes making a thick, pale batter. Add the oil and continue mixing for another 3 minutes. Then stir in the lemon juice and vanilla. Stir in the dry ingredients until well blended. Next, using a rubber spatula, gently fold about a third of the egg whites into the batter to lighten it. Then fold in the rest, adding the berries just before the egg whites are completely mixed in.
Pour the batter into prepared pans filling them about 2/3 full. Place pans on baking sheet and bake until firm in the center, about 35 minutes for the loaf pans. Remove from oven and put the pans on a cooling rack on their sides for about 10 minutes, flipping them to the other side once. Remove loaves from pans and place breads on the cooling rack. You may find it useful to run a dinner knife around the edges if necessary to help loosen. Continue to cool on their sides
Note: fruit frequently sinks to the bottom third of the loaf. That's just fine!
Makes 3 loaves approximately 7 x 3 x 1 1/2
Loaves keep well in the refrigerator for a week, OR in the freezer for months.. I wrapped them in Press-N-Seal, returned them to the foil baking pans and put them in a heavy freezer zippered bag, pressing out as much air as possible.
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Best Memorial Day Ever? Sure Seemed Like It
Saturday and Sunday could not have been more perfect. Temperatures in the high 70s, light breeze, fulsome sun all day. Delicious bbq aromas wafted through the neighborhoods. Driveways were filled with parked cars as folks arrived to open up cottages and entertain guests.
Jet skis, sail boats, motor launches--several pulling water skiers and floaties filled with thrilled children yelling their delight, and even the Lady of the Lake took full advantage of the beautiful CLEAR water. Many fish were caught. Some tossed back in, some brought up to be dinner guests.
Monday's weather was not as fine, but even that provided a chance for folks to clean up, pack up, and depart for the shortened work week ahead.
The back-and-forth winter-to-spring temperature rollercoaster weather this year had me with a mix of seasonal foods to use up for the weekend entertaining. So I pulled out my copy of Potluck Paradise for a favorite recipe and made---
Waldorf Sweet Potato Salad
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Sweet potatoes, apples, and walnuts are a perfect combination. |
1 cup sliced celery
1 cup cored and chopped apple
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons sugar
1/2 cup, or more, mayonnaise
1/2 cup chopped walnuts for garnish
Gently mix the potatoes, celery and apples in a large bowl. Squeeze lemon juice over and sprinkle with salt and sugar. Stir in mayonnaise to taste. Chill for at least half an hour before serving.
Serves 6 -8 and will keep in the refrigerator for up to three days.
Monday, May 20, 2019
Rhubarb!!!!!
Between cold temperatures, being new plants, and the deer nibbling. my garden rhubarb crop is slow...and, let's face it... sparse.
So Thank Goodness for Clear Lake Farmer's Market Opening Day!
The market was filled with great foods! Especially rhubarb. I came home with three pounds of beautifully packed stems from Red Shed Gardens.
Now I could have made pie, but my new favorite rhubarb recipe is a rhubarb preserve. I discovered it in an issue of The Homemaker from 1900. The key to success is taking your time and careful measuring. The reward--tangy sauce with nearly candied pieces of rhubarb. Tasty by the spoonful, delightful warmed over ice cream, scrumptious drizzled over cake, or just dandy dabbed on a simple saltine with a bit of cheese -- perhaps from Lost Lake Farm who will be back at the Market on the first Saturday of each month.
1900 Rhubarb Jam
1 pound rhubarb (about 4 cups when sliced into 1/4-inch slices)
1 pound granulated sugar (2 cups)
It is best to make this measuring your ingredients by weight. But it will work if you do just measure by cups. I've found it best to make no more than a pound at a time.
Slice the rhubarb across the stalks into 1/4-inch pieces. If the stalks are wide, slice them in half lengthwise as well. Mix the sliced rhubarb and sugar. Let the mixture stand for at least 8, and up to 24, hours in a cool place. You can put it in the refrigerator, especially if your kitchen is warm. Give it a stir now and then as the rhubarb juices are released. Or, if you put the mixture in a zippered freezer bag, you can just smoosh them with your hands.
When it is time to make the sauce, pour the rhubarb, accumulated juices, and any remaining undissolved sugar into a heavy pot or pan with a 10- to 12-inch bottom. A frying pan with sides at least 2-inches high works well. You want the mixture to come into even contact with the heat. Begin cooking over medium heat, stirring frequently. DO NOT walk away from the stove. As the juices begin to thicken, they bubble up and could overflow or stick. This can happen as fast as it takes to look at a text. So don't do that either. Continue cooking and stirring until the juices have thickened and the pieces of rhubarb look translucent. When you pull a silicone spatula or spoon across the bottom, the jam moves to the sides and you can see the bottom of the pan. Remove from heat. Cool and enjoy. Store in the refrigerator for up to two weeks. Serve at room temperature, or slightly warmed. NOTE: I have been known to keep this in the fridge for longer than 2 weeks. If it thickens, add hot water by the tablespoon, and stir carefully to loosen it up.
Makes about 2 cups of delicious preserves.
Copyright 2019 Rae K. Eighmey all rights reserved.
Thursday, May 16, 2019
Summer's Bounty is Starting and So It's Time to Finish Up Last Year's Crops
From the sound of it today -- Summer is here! The dock crews have been busy on our shore all day today. The installed docks are quickly supplied with boat hoists. Just in time to be ahead of the predicted five days of rain.
The past few days have finally felt seasonable for yard work, too. Managed to get inside the garden fence to do some digging. This year I hope to stretch the sunny garden space by putting planter boxes and even pots along the edge. That's where the spinach, lettuce, and lunch-box peppers will grow. I've also tried some green beans. It will be much easier to walk around the growing tomatoes to the cucumbers without risk of stepping on those ground-level crops. Tripods are set up to support the pole beans and the peas are getting ready to climb up their own supports.
If you look closely at the full garden picture you'll see the holes in the background ready for the heritage variety tomato plants and the watering jugs I bury next to them so I can get liquid fertilizer directly to their roots. Six small plants from Seed Savers are hardening off on the back porch ... but I got impatient. So.....
This patio tomato plant, complete with flowers, just happened to fall into the cart while we were shopping at the garden center. Some hearty, yet leggy, basil plants came home with us too, to join the already potted up parsley, rosemary, and lemon thyme.
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Some hearty, yet leggy, basil plants came home with us too, |
Friday, April 19, 2019
For the Birds
Geese try to take over our dock! They did skedaddle when I opened the door and stepped out on the deck.
The birds are flocking through these days. I've seen the usual
Saturday, April 6, 2019
ICE OUT!!! Warm Day and Summer Salads from the Winter Pantry
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April 5, 1919 Ice Out. Ice In was November 13, 2018 |
Well, it seemed as though I just turned my back and Bingo! The ice was gone. Seemingly all at once, the lake was back. Last year the dock crews were pounding posts on the on the south shore near town while our shore was trapped behind tens of feet of still-thick ice.
I've heard that dock guys are looking for their season's supply of dock posts and boards. I saw one barge out and three fishing boats passed by while I was raking yesterday afternoon. Amazing!
So the stew I had planned for supper seems just plain wrong.
Time for summer salad. I scanned the pantry and fridge and discovered ingredients to be seasonally repurposed. Harvested a few fresh chives from the herb planter at the edge of the garden. Thawed some already grilled burgers and we were ready to sit down to a summer supper, even though it is just April.
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Harvested a few just emerged chives from the herb pot. |
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Black Bean Salad, Quick Corn Relish, and Pickled Carrots share the salad dish with a few corn chips. |
Black Bean Salad
Instead of going into the taco or chili, these beans combine with the chives to make a delicious salad.
1 can black beans
1/2 cup diced celery
1/4 cup diced cucumber
1 tablespoon diced chives
1/4 cup mayonnaise
Drain the beans and rinse. Combine with rest of ingredients and chill for an hour before serving. Salad will keep in the refrigerator for two or three days.
Quick Corn Relish
What could be easier that this?
1 small can corn
3 tablespoons salsa
Drain and rinse the corn. Mix and chill. Salad will keep for two or three days in the refrigerator.
Pickled Carrots
A long-time family favorite.
1 pound carrots, peeled and sliced
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup vinegar
1/2 to 1 teaspoon cumin
1/2 to 1 teaspoon dried dill weed
Cook the carrots until just tender. Drain. Combine the sugar and vinegar in a small pot and bring to a boil. Add the cumin and dill weed to the carrots. Pour the boiling sugar vinegar mixture over the carrots, stir, and set aside until cool. Salad may be stored in the refrigerator for three to four days.
Copyright 2019 Rae Katherine Eighmey. All rights reserved.
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