I have the answer! Whoot! Whoot! Drum roll please...... Fruit Butter! HAPPY DANCE!
So....apparently you can take certain fruits and make fruit butters. Everyone knows about Apple butter. But what about Strawberry, Blackberry, Blueberry, Peach. Me thinks aside from my yearly batch of beet jelly, I think I am going to simply do different varieties of fruit butters.
Berry (any type) Fruit Butter
1 quart of berries
1 cup sugar
1 TBS Lemon Juice
Simmer your berries just until soft. Strawberries take very little time. Once soft, mash with a potato masher or pulse in a food processor. Put in a food mill if you want to get rid of seeds. Then take your fruit pulp, the sugar, and lemon juice and mix them together in a sauce pan. Just let it all simmer until it thickens enough to mound on a spoon. Voila!
For Apple, Pear, or Peach butter
2 cups pulp (unsweetened apple, peach, or pear sauce)
4 cups sugar
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp cloves
*** for the peach butter try 1/2 tsp nutmeg.***
Put it all in a pot and let it simmer until really thick.
Now if you want to can this up; it is possible. You have to sterilize you jars, heat your lids rings, put the hot butter into the jar. Wipe the rims, put on the lids and rings and process 10 min ina water bath canner. However, I just stuck mine in a Tupperware dish in the fridge cause I am sure it will go fast. And it has.
Now to tread into dangerous territory......
Fruit Bars (I wouldn't recommend this for dieters FYI)
1 1/2 cups Quick oats
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1 cup packed brown sugar
1/2 tsp baking soda
dash salt
3/4 cup butter (or margarine, but butter is better)
1 cup fruit butter (you can use preserves, but I like the fruit butter better)
Mix up all of your dry ingredients. Cut in butter/margarine well. Press 2/3 of the crumb mixture in a 9x13 pan. Spread the fruit butters over it all then sprinkle the rest of the crumb topping over the top. Bake 350 for 25 min.
Fair warning...these are really addictive and don't think you can freeze them to stay out of them.
Yea... I thought that and found out they are really good straight from the freezer. YUM!
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
always look for the silver lining
Those of you who are facebook friends know that when I came home this evening I found, to my dismay, the freezer door cracked. AGH! Real quick I went thru the freezers contents pulling out what was thawed. Fortunately no meat had thawed. What had thawed were 4 loaves of bread, 6 quart size bags of squash, 5 quart size bags of blueberries, 3 quart bags of black berries, 4 quarts of beets, a container of mashed bananas for bread, 1 pkg of grated zucchini, 1 quart broccoli,1 quart green beans, and 1quart of strawberries. Once all was removed I quickly shut the freezer and have left it alone all night giving it ample time to get back to where it needs to be.
So I'm moving up my preparations for the food I put up. I can live with it. Pulling out my trusty and falling apart Ball canning book (seriously the free advertising I give on this blog for items should warrant a coupon or something!)and begin perusing recipes for the items now needing attention. All the containers of squash were dumped into a deep pot. I added a large chopped onion and some salt and cooked it up. Once cool I loaded it back into freezer bags to freeze for later use in casseroles. Half of the blueberries were added with sugar, cornstarch and lemon to make blueberry pie filling. Umm yea, its good. I can attest. I licked the spoon when it was done. Hey Quality Control! The other half of blueberries were cooked, strained, added with sugar and lemon and blueberry syrup was made. The strawberries were simmered with lemon juice and sugar to make strawberry butter. Yea I hear some biscuits calling my name. The blackberries have been cooked and I will make jam with them or juice for fruit tea. I haven't decided yet. If you want the fruit tea recipe check it out here. The beets are going to a friend. Hope she likes them a lot cause she is gonna be sick of em. Lol. The bread is in the fridge and we will be having lots of toast (and jam), French toast, sandwiches, etc. The broccoli is a side tomorrow night and the green beans the next night. Bananas and zucchini are for bread. I will make that tomorrow. Too tired tonight.
So why the title to my post? Well. Todays adventure showed me a couple of things. First of all it doesn't matter that my food mill is missing that little screw on thingy at the bottom. While messier than it probably would have been with the part, I was able to use the mill for the strawberries without it. In other words in times when you may not have everything you need, you make do with what you have. Secondly, it opened up freezer space making room for other gardeny things, and third, it was a challenge. Loves a little challenge.
Next day....
So got everything taken care of. Still need to bake some banana bread, but all in all everything was used. In addition I was able to put up an additional 8 pints of salsa. Yay! Caught up! Then this evening I went out to the garden and TADAA! More Tomatoes, Peppers, Squash, and Blackberries. Thank you Lord! So all's well that ends well!
So I'm moving up my preparations for the food I put up. I can live with it. Pulling out my trusty and falling apart Ball canning book (seriously the free advertising I give on this blog for items should warrant a coupon or something!)and begin perusing recipes for the items now needing attention. All the containers of squash were dumped into a deep pot. I added a large chopped onion and some salt and cooked it up. Once cool I loaded it back into freezer bags to freeze for later use in casseroles. Half of the blueberries were added with sugar, cornstarch and lemon to make blueberry pie filling. Umm yea, its good. I can attest. I licked the spoon when it was done. Hey Quality Control! The other half of blueberries were cooked, strained, added with sugar and lemon and blueberry syrup was made. The strawberries were simmered with lemon juice and sugar to make strawberry butter. Yea I hear some biscuits calling my name. The blackberries have been cooked and I will make jam with them or juice for fruit tea. I haven't decided yet. If you want the fruit tea recipe check it out here. The beets are going to a friend. Hope she likes them a lot cause she is gonna be sick of em. Lol. The bread is in the fridge and we will be having lots of toast (and jam), French toast, sandwiches, etc. The broccoli is a side tomorrow night and the green beans the next night. Bananas and zucchini are for bread. I will make that tomorrow. Too tired tonight.
So why the title to my post? Well. Todays adventure showed me a couple of things. First of all it doesn't matter that my food mill is missing that little screw on thingy at the bottom. While messier than it probably would have been with the part, I was able to use the mill for the strawberries without it. In other words in times when you may not have everything you need, you make do with what you have. Secondly, it opened up freezer space making room for other gardeny things, and third, it was a challenge. Loves a little challenge.
Next day....
So got everything taken care of. Still need to bake some banana bread, but all in all everything was used. In addition I was able to put up an additional 8 pints of salsa. Yay! Caught up! Then this evening I went out to the garden and TADAA! More Tomatoes, Peppers, Squash, and Blackberries. Thank you Lord! So all's well that ends well!
Friday, July 4, 2014
Here we go!
So the garden is coming in full force now. I have canned green beans, pickles, relish, and banana peppers(the kind you put on pizza). I have the juice to make my beet jelly, but haven't made it yet. I have frozen quarts of beets, broccoli, squash, blueberries and blackberries. I have cooked tomatoes and put them in the freezer to wait until I accumulate enough to make sauce. That is becoming easier and easier as the tomatoes start to really roll in. Unfortunately this year, my sauerkraut died (Grrr) so I will replant cabbage later for fall and try again. That was painful let me tell ya. But all in all it has been wonderful to watch my shelves fill up will all the wonderful goodies. My Dh and I worked together to add some shelves to our walk in bedroom closet in order to store the things I can. We had some heavy duty shelves in there, but they were bulky and had a lot of wasted space because although you had the room between shelves to stack the jars, the shelves couldn't hold the weight. Last year one of the shelving units collapsed under the weight. I lost a lot of jars and food. I was just sick. What we have installed instead are shelves that are a little more than 1 quart jar in height. I have four on either side of my closet and then below that are my bulk food items such as flour, wheat berries, sugar, etc. It is wonderful to be able to walk into my walk in closet. That wasn't the case before. It is amazing how what fit on 2 sets of the plastic shelves(6 shelves total), only partially filled one side of my closet shelves(4 shelves that weren't even as deep). There is something to be said for good use of space.
Chicken wise we ended up with 14 babies which gives us a flock of 18. We plan on keeping 6 layers which is twice what we have currently, and using the rest for meat. That should fill the freezer pretty good. Out of 15 eggs we had 14 hatch. Not too shabby. Mama hen sat on 9 and the others we incubated 5 thanks to a loaned incubator from a friend of ours. I have to say watching a chick hatch is not something I have ever seen up close and personal. It was cool to be able to experience that 5 times. We integrated the last two into the flock of baby chicks last night; again thanks to our chicken guru and incubator loaner, Jimmy (Thanks Jimmy). He helped us get them in without the mama hen losing her mind on one of them. So every one is where they need to be. That is for now until we divide the flock into layers and meat birds.
I love this time of year. Watching my shelves fill up. Watching the garden produce all its goodness; the sun, the sounds. Now in August I may be telling the plants they have done enough they can die now, or I might be saying I am never gardening again, but for now I am lovin it and I guarantee you when January rolls around I will be itching to get back out there and do it all again. Once that bug bites you, it is hard to go back.
Chicken wise we ended up with 14 babies which gives us a flock of 18. We plan on keeping 6 layers which is twice what we have currently, and using the rest for meat. That should fill the freezer pretty good. Out of 15 eggs we had 14 hatch. Not too shabby. Mama hen sat on 9 and the others we incubated 5 thanks to a loaned incubator from a friend of ours. I have to say watching a chick hatch is not something I have ever seen up close and personal. It was cool to be able to experience that 5 times. We integrated the last two into the flock of baby chicks last night; again thanks to our chicken guru and incubator loaner, Jimmy (Thanks Jimmy). He helped us get them in without the mama hen losing her mind on one of them. So every one is where they need to be. That is for now until we divide the flock into layers and meat birds.
I love this time of year. Watching my shelves fill up. Watching the garden produce all its goodness; the sun, the sounds. Now in August I may be telling the plants they have done enough they can die now, or I might be saying I am never gardening again, but for now I am lovin it and I guarantee you when January rolls around I will be itching to get back out there and do it all again. Once that bug bites you, it is hard to go back.
Friday, June 27, 2014
Ode to the Apron
I have aprons. I have three that I made a few years ago and once in a blue moon I will wear it when I am baking something and can't dirty my clothes. But it isn't a habit. I don't wear it when I clean which I really should because I end up ruining my clothes. Insert Duh moment here. I never really think about it. I am not used to it. But I am believing that is changing.
There is a great article written by a woman I admire, who is affectionately called "Miss Maggie". She is formerly the Hillbilly Housewife, but now has a website called www.frugalabundance.com. While still The Hillbilly Housewife, she wrote an article called "Apron Evangelism". You can read it here. I went back and re-read this article because lately I have been using my aprons in my garden. Handy things, aprons in gardens. My aprons have pockets for pruning shears or other hand held gardening tools, my gloves, etc. They cover my clothes while working so I don't end up with red mud stains on shirts that could still be presentable. In addition, when I'm picking, I can take the skirt of the apron, tuck it under the waist tie of the apron and make an easily accessible picking basket that leaves me two hands free instead of having to carry a basket around with me. Not to mention I just look so cute with my gloves, apron, and hat. Or as my mom would say "Bordering on cute".
Due to its handiness in the garden I am thinking of the wild idea that it could be handy indoors as well. What is so funny is that this realization is something women in general knew 50 years ago. So now my aprons hang in my kitchen readily accessible for the next project, The plan is to get into the habit of using them more often. Try it yourself! Who knows you might like it.!
There is a great article written by a woman I admire, who is affectionately called "Miss Maggie". She is formerly the Hillbilly Housewife, but now has a website called www.frugalabundance.com. While still The Hillbilly Housewife, she wrote an article called "Apron Evangelism". You can read it here. I went back and re-read this article because lately I have been using my aprons in my garden. Handy things, aprons in gardens. My aprons have pockets for pruning shears or other hand held gardening tools, my gloves, etc. They cover my clothes while working so I don't end up with red mud stains on shirts that could still be presentable. In addition, when I'm picking, I can take the skirt of the apron, tuck it under the waist tie of the apron and make an easily accessible picking basket that leaves me two hands free instead of having to carry a basket around with me. Not to mention I just look so cute with my gloves, apron, and hat. Or as my mom would say "Bordering on cute".
Due to its handiness in the garden I am thinking of the wild idea that it could be handy indoors as well. What is so funny is that this realization is something women in general knew 50 years ago. So now my aprons hang in my kitchen readily accessible for the next project, The plan is to get into the habit of using them more often. Try it yourself! Who knows you might like it.!
Thursday, June 26, 2014
SUCCESS!
We have 10 new baby chicks.
They started hatching 2 days ago. Just had the last one hatch in the last hour. The mama hen sat on her nest and managed to get 9 of them hatched, but then she left her nest yesterday afternoon. Fortunately I had the presence of mind to plug in the incubator yesterday morning "Just in case". I am glad I did. I got home from work yesterday afternoon and went to check on the babies. She left the nest as I went out to check on them. Because I was there when she decided to leave, I was able to grab up the remaining 6 eggs and immediately put them in the incubator. When we got home from church last night we could hear a "chirp, chirp" coming from the incubator, but no eggs hatched yet. I was a little concerned this morning because the temperature in the incubator had fallen a few degrees and I didn't hear any chirps. I adjusted the temp and have been watching it like a hawk (not a chicken hawk). After a bit I hear chirping again and then notice a small hole in one of the eggs. This egg is rocking back and forth too. Einstein and I were able to watch as the little one hatched and made it into the big world. It looks to be a solid golden color. Very pretty. Needs to be a girl to be that pretty.
Not a great picture yet. He is drying out still, but he is on the right. Hard to see cause he is about the same color as the eggs. He keeps looking up at me like "little help?". Meanwhile I don't need to worry about turning the other eggs in the incubator cause he seems to be herding them around the place. We will see over the next week if anymore hatch, but 10 out of 15 aint to shabby.
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Mountain Vally Farms
Dh and I are on a little mini vacation, just the two of us. Of course when you are an "I love all things garden, farm animal, pioneering", where else is there for you to go but a cabin in the Blue Ridge mountains. We got all things gardening caught up as much as we could and took off for the hills on Thursday. Now when we go back today it will be time to address the garden again. The beans cucumbers, and squash are coming in. I have made 9 pints of beans, 3 quarts of squash (frozen) and 8 quarts pickles so far. I know when we get home it will be time to start harvesting Blueberries(YAY). In addition to that we should have (hopefully) some baby chicks hatching in the next couple of days. So needless to say we will be busy picking, canning, hatching, and all other things farm related in the next few days, but for the last few days we have just enjoyed the wonderful mountains of Ellijay Ga. The visions of the surrounding mountains has been worth the trip in and of itself, but during this time we have seen some other nice things such as Antique shops, The Tabor House and Civil War Museum, and a wonderful restaurant called Cider Ridge (Good food and service I must say). But the one thing that has been the most unique and fun is Mountain Valley Farms.
This is Miss Sam. Hi Sam! She is pretty much indicative of the Farm. Loves the animals, very friendly. She let me take her picture. She is just a constant smiling presence.
It is a wonderful farm where not only can you go get free range meat, eggs, raw milk (For pet consumption of course), etc, but adjacent to the store are the "Babies".
Rabbits pretty much go where they want throughout the farm. They are all over and in every color.
Then there are the new calves, goats, and pigs in some pretty nice digs. These are spoiled little babies that will come up to the fence and, like a dog, will want you to pet them as long as you are willing to.
There is also this very friendly horse, but I didn't catch her name. But she just loves to be loved on.
This little goat was very happy to get some lovin, but the white one on the roof was more focused on the branches above him, Every time the wind blew, the branches above him would lower and he would try to reach them. No luck for him by the time we left.
This is Miss Sam. Hi Sam! She is pretty much indicative of the Farm. Loves the animals, very friendly. She let me take her picture. She is just a constant smiling presence.
It is a wonderful farm where not only can you go get free range meat, eggs, raw milk (For pet consumption of course), etc, but adjacent to the store are the "Babies".
Rabbits pretty much go where they want throughout the farm. They are all over and in every color.
Then there are the new calves, goats, and pigs in some pretty nice digs. These are spoiled little babies that will come up to the fence and, like a dog, will want you to pet them as long as you are willing to.
There is also this very friendly horse, but I didn't catch her name. But she just loves to be loved on.
This little goat was very happy to get some lovin, but the white one on the roof was more focused on the branches above him, Every time the wind blew, the branches above him would lower and he would try to reach them. No luck for him by the time we left.
There was a milking cow you could pet. Her name is Tanya, but we forgot to get a picture of her. Sam informed us the milking cows are named for the female workers on the farm. She told us there is a "Sam" somewhere around there.
The farm store itself is small but cute as a button. Mountain Valley sells their meat, eggs, and milk, but for other things they have partnered out with other local farms. We picked out a jar of vegetable relish and two types of cheese; smoked cheddar, and Italian pesto. Both of which were unique and GOOD! Should be for $11lb (Gulp), but we were on vacation. It was in our vacation budget. Good stuff.
So guys if you are ever in Ellijay Ga, head up that way. Ellijay is real big for apples so go in Sept when the apple festivities are going on, or you can do like us and get a cabin in the mountains in the summer and enjoy all the green! Whenever you go, travel by Mountain Valley Farms. The kids and adults will love it!
So now I am off to get coffee, pack up and head home to start my own farming stuff again. Have a great day.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
HAPPY FATHERS DAY!
Yes my dad looks like this at just about all family functions. Love you Daddy!
And to my Knight in Shining Armor, Happy Fathers day! I love you!
And to my Knight in Shining Armor, Happy Fathers day! I love you!
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