Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Garden's Harvest Begins
I don't like paying pepper prices thru fall/winter/spring and no longer want to risk being poisoned by mass produced and distributed fresh off season produce. Keeping it local. Planning also to take advantage of the late summer harvest of others' gardens to lay in alot for the winter. Potatoes, onions, carrots, squashes.
If all goes as planned I will have plenty of local healthgiving food for the winter. Fish too, and game this fall to harvest and store. I will be providing recipes and ideas as I proceed.
Anybody else doing more of this kind of stuff this yr?
Monday, July 28, 2008
Summer Grilling
Imagine it on chicken or shrimp or pork cooked on a wood fired weber and have a beer like a Blue Moon Belgian Style Ale w/ it. A little bitter, a little sweet, along w/ the heat.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
The St Croix Open
Exceptional eating was involved as well. Pizzas and Porterhouses off the grill, a cuban style paella w/ black beans and rice, onions, bell and jalapeno peppers, grape tomatoes cut in half ( sweet and luscious), cilantro, plenty of garlic, and lime juice( v-8 juice, too) - w/ largemouth bass, a crappie, and a walleye poached in the bouillabaisse like liquid. We served the rice on the side, so it wasn't really a paella.
I picked a quart of wild blueberries up there too, and today made a galette( a rustic free form tart - a lazy cook's fast pie) which was sweet and tart w/ lime juice and sugar and cinnamon. It's almost gone and it's just me.
Sink your putts.
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Better Not Bigger
It's a twofer when it comes to fishing. You get to catch your trophy fish and let them go, and you get to catch and keep the little ones to eat.
Not so with hunting big game. You have to decide, usually ahead of time, if you are meat hunting or trophy hunting. Ten points or bigger, though, and ego wins out. It's the hunter /warrior part of our past.
A rainy day after a few perfect sunny summer days is a good day to make soup. I got a 16 bean soup mix, just the legumes - don't buy the kind w/ the seasonings included because they cost more than twice as much - and added chicken base, garlic, bay leaf, crushed red pepper, gently boiled for an hour and a half , and added tomatoes, carrots, onions, and celery and cooked for another hour. Add bratwurst or Italian sausage or chicken( already cooked - we are using leftovers from supper for this) for the last 15 minutes. Just before serving add fresh herbs like parsley( for sure)and thyme or sage or basil. and probably more garlic. It has great depth of flavor and nutrition which is to say it tastes good and is good for you. Love those legumes. Most soup bases generally have a lot of salt, so don't add salt of your own.
Saturday, July 12, 2008
A Small Matter of Life and Death
Grow your own or get it from local growers - friends, neighbors, farmer's markets, co-operatives. Those of us in rural Mn do have a real advantage. Turns out that bigger isn't better, huh, just like the hippies were proclaiming back in their day. Off season will be the challenge. My new small garden of this yr will certainly be bigger next yr.
Catching, shooting and growing works for me. How about you?
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Shore Lunch Continued - The French Way
This is more of the shore lunch - sweet corn, spinach sauteed in olive oil w/ plenty of garlic, and baked beans w/ jalapeno peppers.
My kids just love the sauce of the fish - scatter fresh ( or dried as necessary)herbs( chopped parsley and tarragon) over fish for the last minute of cooking. Remove fully cooked and browned fillets from your frying pan and plate. Pour excess oil out of pan - don't scrape, as all the stuff( debris) left and stuck in the pan impart flavor to your sauce. Add a cup of white wine( chablis, sauvignon blanc, pinot blanc, chardonnay - any dry white) to the pan, strew lots more fresh herbs, reduce by half, and stir in 3 or 4 pats of cold butter. Remove pan from heat and swirl pan until butter is melted, and then pour over fish.