Garden

Independence Days – Week 6

Short and sweet today…

Plant Something – I planted a lot of mellons on the farm this week.  Otherwise, I didn’t plant anything here in our garden.   

Harvest Something – Spinach, lettuce, a radish, eggs

Preserve Something –  Strawberries are on the docket today.  I bought a bunch, and if I don’t eat them all first, I’ll try to make some jam.  🙂

Reduce Waste – The usual… chickens, compost, recycling, etc. 

Preparation and Storage – This week I signed up for a veggie canning/jam making class in July.  I’m actually going to get to go for sure (not just on the waiting list), so I’m very excited about that!

Build Community Food Systems – still spreading the word about the Englewood Farmers Market.  Otherwise, nil. 

Eat the Food – The stuff we harvested, plus pork as usual.  We also used some more of the anchos left in the freezer.  Here’s a quick recipe for green chile mayo, tasty on burgers:

In a food processor, put 1 cup of mayonnaise, 4 (or so) garlic cloves, 2 roasted, peeled and chopped ancho chiles, and a tablespoon of lime juice.  Process until smooth.  Taste, and add more of anything you think it might need.  Yum!

Also, a side note, my ‘Independence Days – Week 4’ post was generating a lot of spam for some reason, so I took it down.  If you want the recipe I had posted (a pasta sauce), just send me a note!

Categories: Food, Garden, Independence Days, Recipes | 1 Comment

Independence Days – Week 5

These last few weeks I’ve been a bit distracted, and not really posting as much as I was.  I’ve missed two Thrifty Thursdays in a row now!  Yikes!  I promise to get back on the wagon next week (but Katie Jean had a great tip this week about paper products). 

I’m officially 36 weeks pregnant (almost 37), and come Tuesday, when I hit that 37 week mark, I could have the baby anytime.  So I have anywhere from one to seven more weeks to be pregnant (but only the high end if I go past my due date).  I had Henry 3 days before I was due with him, so I don’t think it’s likely that I’ll go far over this time, but you never know.  🙂 

In the mean time, I have tried to keep up on the Independence Days post to share with you…

Plant Something – Saturday, Rick planted more spinach, radishes, kale, Swiss chard… I think  that’s all.  🙂  It’s been so cool and rainy, we’re hoping to eek out a little extra time with our spring greens this year! 

Harvest Something – Spinach and radishes and lettuce all ready almost every day now.  It sure is nice to go pick a bowlful of spinach for lunch.

Preserve Something–  This week, I didn’t really do any preserving, but I DID start making kombucha for the first time (fermented green tea).  We’ll see how it goes – it takes two weeks!

Reduce Waste – The usual… chickens, compost, recycling, etc. 

Preparation and Storage – We didn’t do anything really in this category this week either, but I did hear recently that Colorado is now allowing rain water collection, so we are talking about rain barrels and where and when we want to go about doing that! 

Build Community Food Systems – Well this week we finally made it up to the CSA!  We planted a musk melon field and cucumbers.  The pick your own strawberries were ready, but I was pooped at the end of the day, so I didn’t pick any.  Please cross your fingers for me that there will still be plenty of strawberries next week… I really want to make lots of jam and other yummy goodies!!  Also, I do post weekly ads on craigslist and other sites for our city’s farmers market.  I’ve gotten a couple of responses from potential vendors in the last couple of weeks, so that is good! 

Eat the Food – This week was a tight week, so we ate mostly from the freezer.  Lots of pork on these kinds of weeks.  😉  We did BLT’s with our bacon and lettuce from the garden, and spinach a few times as well.  Here’s a recipe we had last night (based on one from Everyday Food magazine), called Ham & Egg Fried Rice. 

For Four:

1/4″ thick by 8″ (or so) cured ham steak, cut into bite size pieces
One bunch of scallions, one shallot, or half an onion finely chopped (the real recipe calls for the scallions, but I always use whatever is handy)
3-4 cloves of garlic, pressed or minced
1-2 inch piece of fresh ginger, finely minced or grated
2 cups cooked rice, rinsed and drained (we use brown)
2 TBS soy sauce
2 TBS rice vinegar
4 eggs
salt & pepper

In a large skillet or wok, heat 1-2 TBS vegetable oil over medium high heat.  Cook ham, onions (or white parts of scallions), garlic, and ginger until ham is nearly cooked through, onions are soft and garlic & ginger are fragrant (you could also add red pepper flakes if you like it spicy) – about 4 minutes.  Add the rice, soy sauce, and rice vinegar (also, if you used them, add the green parts of the scallions).  Season with salt (if needed) and black pepper to taste.  Cook stirring frequently, about five more minutes, until ham is completely cooked.  Put into serving dishes.
Wipe out the skillet with a paper towel and add a little more cooking oil.  Fry the eggs, seasoning with salt and pepper.  Top the rice bowls with the fried eggs and serve. 

This goes great with steamed bok choy or spinach as well.  It’s quick and tasty!

Categories: Food, Garden, Independence Days, Recipes | 2 Comments

Urban Homesteading – Denver’s New Trend?

A few weeks ago, I was contacted by a writer for the Denver Post.  He was doing an article on Urban Homesteading.  Cool!  Yes I was interested in talking to him (and thrilled he might be interested in talking to me, just based on my blog here).  After a few emails back and forth, he ended up not being able to meet up with Rick and I as scheduled… his deadline was too close. 

However, I wanted to share the article with you all.  Looks like there’s a trend going here in the Mile High City.  Glad to say we’re more than three years into it ourselves… And cool to see others in Englewood (my town) and other places in the Denver-metro area that are doing it too.

Check out the article: Green (1/8) Acres Sprout in the City by Douglas J. Brown.

Categories: Chickens, Garden, Recommended Reading, Urban Homesteading | 4 Comments

Independence Days – Week 3

Plant Something  – Rick planted more radishes (those darn chickens!!).  But they grow fast and we had the room!

Harvest Something  – So far Rick has harvested two radishes – they were sweet and spicy and we can’t wait for more!  We also got a good deal of spinach this week… Yum!  😀

Preserve Something– I didn’t really do much in this category…. thinking of picking more raspberry leaves to dry… does thinking about it count?  LOL!

Reduce Waste – I bought a bunch of raspberries on sale last week.  Unfortunately, we didn’t get to the last ones before they started going bad… but the chickens sure enjoyed them!

Preparation and Storage – I put the dried raspberry leaves from last week into a baggie?  But they will be used up quickly, so it’s not really long term storage or anything. 

Build Community Food Systems–  I worked on getting more vendors for our farmers market here in Englewood.  It’s neat to see the market grow!

Eat the Food – Spinach!  And pork and corn and tomatoes!  The corn and tomatoes were from the freezer, from last year’s CSA harvest.  Still great! 

I’m thinking, so this doesn’t get boring, of putting a recipe in this section each week.  So for this week, since we harvested spinach, I’ll share my favorite dressing recipe to top fresh spinach with:

  • 1/4 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 1/3 cup rice vinegar
  • 1 tsp toasted sesame oil
  • 1-2 tsp freshly grated ginger
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced or pressed
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 envelope onion soup mix (or use dehydrated onions and a good measure of salt or soy sauce)

Mix ingredients well and pour over a big spinach salad topped with sliced almonds, and mandarin oranges.  We usually throw red bell pepper, thinly sliced red onions and cucumber into the salad if we have them, but use what you like!  You can even throw in cooked pasta and grilled chicken and make it a whole meal.  We took this salad (with pasta in it) to one of the BBQ’s we went to this weekend.  This dressing is for a big salad, so you can use less if you’re not making it for a crowd or as a meal.

Categories: Food, Garden, Independence Days, Recipes | 2 Comments

Thrifty Thursday: DIY Garden Gate

http://www.gardenplans.com/50gardengate.html

Since I’m still on the DIY kick, I thought I’d share about one of our most complimented DIY projects, our garden gate.  Our veggie garden is technically in our front yard.  Rick wanted to put up a fence so that people couldn’t just come steal our veggies, so of course, I insisted it be cute.  🙂

I looked all over the web for designs I liked and came up with this one, shown on the left, from this site: http://www.gardenplans.com/50gardengate.html The plan cost $3.95 to download.

gardenWe bought it, and the supplies we needed.  Rick made a few modifications to the plan to accommodate the tools he has in the garage.  This is how it turned out (note that this pic is from August 2007, and I was too lazy to go take a fresh picture).  As you can see it’s a bit different than the plan, but I love how it turned out, and it looks really great from the curb.   I think Rick built it that summer, or maybe the summer of 2006?

It’s made from cedar, and because we built it so long ago, I can’t remember the cost at all.  But I do know that it was WAY less expensive then anything we could have bought pre-fab at the store.  And it was built to last.  Here’s a picture of the gate from May last year.

It still looks great.  This year, I plan to add another coat of stain, just for added protection, and one of the balls on the posts is cracked and may need to be replaced.  But over all it was a great project, and simple to do yourself.

If you’re landscaping or doing any kind of home improvement, don’t be afraid to go searching on the web for instructions on how to do it yourself.  Sometimes the payoff is great!

Check out what Genny & Katie Jean are posting about this week.

To see more of my Do-It-Yourself projects click the DIY category on the right.

Categories: DIY, Garden, Thrift | Leave a comment

Independence Days – Week 1

AsparagusPlant Something  – this week a lot of planting happened.  We planted our ten tomato plants and all the squash, turnips, carrots, onions and cucumbers.  🙂 

Harvest Something  – Asparagus!  Rick estimated that I grabbed twenty pounds from the CSA…

Preserve Something – Um… asparagus.  It’s mostly all in the freezer now.  After weighing it all out, it was 20 lbs, 8 ounces!  Good guess by Rick!

Reduce Waste – 6 pounds of that asparagus went into the compost pile… it was the woody parts that you have to pick so the patch keeps growing, but that are too woody to eat!  We also put some leaves from the neighbor’s tree last fall into the chicken coop this week instead of using new shavings. 

Preparation and Storage– Rick defrosted the big freezer in the garage.  We kept the meat in coolers while we let it go, and then back into the freezer it went.  It was a good time to inventory what was left… green chiles any one??

Build Community Food Systems – This week I did some work for the Chamber of Commerce to spread the word about Englewood’s new Farmer’s Market! 

Eat the Food– ok… asparagus again.  But we also have been eating our way through our hog, and getting the freezer emptied for the coming harvests!

Not bad for the first week.  But I’m not sure how the next few weeks will go as the garden is getting going.  For now, I think I’ll post my updates on Fridays.  This way I’ll have the weekend and the whole week to get something from each category done.  Stay tuned!

Categories: Food, Garden, Independence Days | 3 Comments

Asparagus & Independence!

Well… asparagus season is upon us!  Today I drove up to the CSA farm to pick asparagus!  Yum!  I picked two rows, not sure what that equates to in pounds of asparagus, but I will find out as I put most of it up for storage tonight (and I’ll probably report back as well).  But, oh!  The sweet green shoots just called my name as I picked!  And I happily munched as I went along filling my big bags.  Henry enjoyed munching behind me as we went too!  Thanks to the Monroe’s who can sell their spears for $8/pound at the market for letting us take all we wanted! 

I read a couple of cool blogs today and wanted to share quickly:  the first was found on Hen & Harvest, called Convenience Store(d) Food. Wendy shared some great recipes for pudding mixes.  I had done a Thrifty Thursday post about making your own mixes a couple months back, and thought this would be a great addition to it. 

Then I followed the link to Wendy’s blog,  Home Is, and saw she was doing something called the Independence Days Challenge.  This led me to another blog, where it seems the challenge (at least on the web) started.  Check it out: Sharon’s Independence Days Challenge.  I really like the idea, and I’m going to try my hand at participating.  I hope you all find this interesting, and that I do as well.  🙂

The basic idea of the challenge is to do something each day or week or weekend that gets you closer to your goals (for example #91 on my 101 in 1001 list).  Basically, that big change can come from little things.  I like how Sharon put it:

It is easy to forget how important this “little stuff” is – easy to think that your little garden doesn’t matter very much, or that your preparations won’t be enough.  But we should also remember the exponential power of saying “no” and doing for ourselves.  The corrollary of the fact that every calorie of food takes 10 of fossil fuels is that every stir fry or salad you eat from your garden saves 10 times the oil as the calories contained within it.  The fact that almost every packaged ingredient uses 7 times as much energy to create that packaging means that your choice to buy bulk oatmeal just saved 7 times as much energy as the package contains.

In 1944, American Victory Gardens grew as much produce as did every vegetable farm in the country – fully half US produce came from home gardens. And while no one was sufficient, all together were something big.  Every bite of food you grow, every bite you preserve, every bit of waste you reduce is a contribution to a larger project – keeping everyone fed.  Every bit of compost you add to your soil, every bit of organic matter, every tree you plant is a contributor to a larger project – storing some of our emissions in soil, so we can have a future.  Small things are the roots of vast and powerful ones. 

Every kid who tastes a cherry tomato or a strawberry from your garden comes away with something that they take back to their homes and forward to the future.  Every neighbor who stops to chat as grow on your lawn or water the peppers in containers on your stoop is a new connection in your community, and a potential future gardener.  Every seed you plant multiplies and produces a hundred, or a thousand more seeds for next year (not to mention the food).  Every dollar you save you save on groceries that goes to the food pantry means your plot feeds not just you, but others.  Every time you point out that you are storing food and preparing for a different future, even if people don’t get it, a seed is planted somewhere in the back of their heads, where they realize…people kind of like me think about this stuff.  The future depends on a whole lot of little things.

I’m excited about it, though I’m starting the challenge a bit late.  🙂  But here goes!   There are seven categories in the challenge, and you are supposed to do something in each one.  The categories are:

  1. Plant Something
  2. Harvest Something
  3. Preserve Something
  4. Reduce Waste
  5. Preparation and Storage
  6. Build Community Food Systems
  7. Eat the Food

Make sure to read the challenge for details on each category if you’re curious or you decide to join the challenge too.  I’ll report in weekly… Wish me luck!

Categories: CSA, Food, Garden, Independence Days, Recommended Reading, Urban Homesteading | Leave a comment

Honey-Do Weekends (Part 2)

Moms day burgerWell, not surprising, this weekend, the honey-do list continued.  Friday, after Rick got off of work, we hit the garden center with the shortest list we’ve ever had at the beginning of May: tomato plants.  There were a few varieties we like from previous years that we wanted to get, and we picked out a few new things as well.  We took home a Super Sweet 100, Lemon Boy, Health Kick, an heirloom Roma, Brandywine, Cherokee Purple, Sun Gold, Mr. Stripey and Black Krim.  We got ten plants all together.  Actually, half the plants we got were heirloom.  We are going to try our hands at saving seeds from them this year to start ourselves next year.  🙂  These, along with all our seeds were scheduled to go in the garden this weekend.

Saturday morning, Rick took his mom out for Mother’s Day.  They went to Celestial Seasonings to do the factory tour.  From the sounds of things, they had a great time, and Rick brought home a few boxes of tea, along with some farmer’s market spinach from Boulder, since he took his mom there as well. 

When he got home, he cleaned out the chicken coop, while I washed all the walls and trim, as well as all the windows, inside and out.  We didn’t plant anything since we thought it was supposed to rain.  Well… it did rain, but not until the night time.  So it was too wet Sunday to plant.  Instead, we sanded and painted over all the nail hole patches Rick had done last weekend, as well as re-started the refinishing of the trim around the door frame in the living room.  This project is such a bear, since there are so many layers of age-old paint to get through.  Rick worked on it for a good three hours, and got one side and the top done.  Just one more side to go before we can repaint it. 

So yes, for my Mother’s Day, we did projects.  🙂  But this is what I wanted.  Rick made a yummy breakfast for us (french toast with strawberries) and he also cooked what I wanted for dinner: antelope burgers on the grill with green chiles, tomatoes, pepperjack cheese, lettuce and avocado.  Yum!   They were awesome.

The columns will be painted today and the garden will be planted today or tomorrow.  🙂  Those were the outside projects on the list for this weekend.  As well, we have recaulking the bathroom, hanging a shelf, and more weed pulling on the dockett for the week. 

Rick pointed out to me that most women nest when they are pregnant by mopping the floor or cleaning out the closet.  I nest with power tools I guess.  Next weekend there are more projects to come… stay tuned.

Categories: Food, Garden | Leave a comment

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