Monday 6 April 2015

Back to the Blog

Howdy Folks!

     Well it's been over a year since I've blogged on here and several things have changed on our little urban farm.

     We sent our ol' laying hens to freezer camp after they stopped laying for several months.  I made some really good chicken soup out of one so far, but I had to cook her for over 12 hours.  I've since learned that pressure cooking is the way to go for tough old birds.  Our seven new ready-to-lay pullets are arrived two weeks ago and we're already getting an egg from each almost every day.



     The other big thing that happend on "the farm" was the addition of a pair of meat rabbits, Stew and Dumpling.  They arrived in September and they've been huddled up in the backyard all winter, waiting for spring.

Stew as a wee babbie


Dumpling as a wee babbie

Stew & Dumpling, all growed up!


     Hopfully Dumpling is bred and will kindle (give birth) this week, beginning our journey of being meat self-sufficient.  They have been eating rabbit pellets and hay and baby greens, but I am planning to start growing fodder for them and our laying hens.  Fodder is sprouted barley or other grains that grow to a few inches.  There are many benefits to a fodder diet for livestock including financial and nutritional.

     Chris also built a small teepee-style greenhouse in the backyard this spring.  We were planning on using it to start seeds early, but that has not happened so far in the midst of many other plans.



The temperature in the greenhouse is 10-15 degrees higher than outside.



     Another big change will be taking place in our homesteading ventures this year, but more on that later!

Thursday 16 January 2014

Homemade Happy Christmas





Un-decorating the tree

-




"The stockings were hung by the natural gas fireplace with care, in hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there!"

Can you guess what it is?

My recipe book stand, made by Chris, and Chris's "French press cozy" that I somehow managed t whip up in 2 days.  Not too bad for my very first knitting project, I'd say!

Thursday 19 December 2013

{pretty, happy, funny, real}

~ Capturing the context of contentment in everyday life ~
- See more at: http://ourmothersdaughters.blogspot.ca/2013/12/pretty-happy-funny-real-christmas.html#sthash.cEobHUO1.dpuf
 ~capturing the context and contentment in everyday life~
~ Capturing the context of contentment in everyday life ~
- See more at: http://ourmothersdaughters.blogspot.ca/2013/12/pretty-happy-funny-real-christmas.html#sthash.cEobHUO1.dpuf
~ Capturing the context of contentment in everyday life ~
- See more at: http://ourmothersdaughters.blogspot.ca/2013/12/pretty-happy-funny-real-christmas.html#sthash.cEobHUO1.dpuf
~ Capturing the context of contentment in everyday life ~
- See more at: http://ourmothersdaughters.blogspot.ca/2013/12/pretty-happy-funny-real-christmas.html#sthash.cEobHUO1.dpuf

I'm linking up with one of my favorite blogs, Like Mother, Like Daugher today.

{pretty}

        The top of our new living room dresser is the prettiest part of the house right now, especially with the low morning winter sunshine on it.








{happy}

        In a fit of Pinterest inspiration and preemptive Christmas planning, I made all forty of my Christmas cards in November.  Alas, they have still not made it into the mail.  Next year I'll have to make them in October so I can get them in the mail on time to actually reach their recipients BEFORE Christmas.  Thankfully Christmas does not end on Boxing Day as most people these days think, and the cards will get to their people before the 12 days of Christmas are over.  Grandma's vintage buttons made super cute Christmas balls on some of the cards, and my thrifty genius led me to cut up all our Christmas gift bags to make the other two sets.




{funny}

Rowan pulled a cream pie (which wasn't any good anyways) down off the counter.  Chris mourned the loss of the pie and I rejoiced at a great photo op.  Rowan was a bit shocked and perhaps worried that he'd done something bad, but when he saw how much it made me laugh, he gave a little chuckle too. 




{real}
   Somebody let Rowan have a moment's access to the Advent wreath, and he got his daily dose of beeswax.


 

Friday 13 December 2013

Sweet Potato Parsnip Lentil Soup with Warming Spices & Sage

        Last night I made the best soup I think I've ever made.  I have no pictures because it didn't last long enough to get any!  Plus it wasn't the most beautiful colour, but it was the most beautiful taste!  I used homemade chicken broth from a home-grown chicken we got from my in-laws.  I only had about half the carcass and it made about 12 cups of broth which I froze in 4 cup portions.  I didn't use a recipe, but here's roughly what I did:

2 med. onions, chopped
1 tbsp butter
1 large sweet potatoes, chopped into bit-size pieces
4-5 parsnips, chopped
4-8 cups broth (I used 4 c broth and added 4 c water to stretch out my tiny broth stash)
2 cups red lentils
2 tbsp dried sage
1 1/2 tbsp cinnamon
1 tbsp sea salt
2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp ground cloves



  1. Sautee onions in butter till translucent.
  2. Add sweet potatoes and parsnips.
  3. Cover with broth.
  4. Add lentils and spices & sage, bring to a boil and then simmer till veggies and lentils are soft, about 25 mins, longer if you want a thicker, stew-like consistency.
        We just ate this by itself, mainly because I didn't get my act together far enough ahead of time to make anything to go with it, but it was definitely hearty enough to stand on it's own as a main course.  We each had a second helping, though not because were still hungry, but because it was so good!

        Usually my food turns out pretty well when I just "wing it," but the patron saint of soup makers must have been praying for me yesterday because it turned out better than I ever could have hoped for!
Our newest furniture installation.  We found this beauty on the side of the road, but it was not so pretty till Chris scraped several layers of ugly varnish and paint off it.  He finished it with an olive oil & beeswax mix.  The bottom drawer is for Rowan's toys, and the others are home (finally) for our table cloths, napkins, crafting supplies and board games.  It's also where we keep the Advent wreath during non-dinner time so Rowan can't dismantle it.

Sunday 1 December 2013

Sunday Traditions


        In the last couple weeks I've really been trying to make Sundays a day for R&R and family time.  We've had an insanely busy spring/summer/fall this year and were feeling like we hadn't had a weekend just for us, with no obligations or events in months (because we hadn't!)

At the wedding of friends.  One of our many weekend adventures this summer.  Rowan got his fancy clothes all messy at dinner, so we changed into more casual attire for the dancing.
        So after reading this post on one of my favorite blogs, I started making more of an effort to get projects done and the house cleaned during the week, if not by Saturday night in order that we could actually make the Sabbath a day of rest.  In the past, it seems that we were burned out from our week, so Saturday was laze around day, and then Sunday would be the day we frantically tried to get weekend projects done and have the house cleaned to some semblance of order to start the week.

        One of the things I'm starting to do to make Sunday special is to bake some kind of treat for us to have Sunday morning for breakfast/brunch.  I don't normally bake anything during the week other than healthy muffins and very, very rarely, bread.  This Sunday I didn't bake anything the night before, I make a pineapple upside down cake from my Mennonite Community Cookbook for a church potluck we were going to in the afternoon.  It was delicious and everyone there enjoyed it.

       Last Sunday I made this:

Ugh, my camera is so crappy.  We are getting a new one, that's all there is to it!
Lemon pound cake!  I'd never made a pound cake before, and my first attempt turned out nothing short of amazing!  I used this recipe which was easy and quick to make. It was delicious, moist, and had the perfect hint of lemon.  I made a blueberry sauce to go with it out of frozen wild blueberries.  It was heavenly.  Here are some of my other inspirations for future Sundays.

       The other new Sunday tradition we started yesterday was playing a board game and drinking tea before bed instead of watching a TV episode or movie.  Chris actually drank some of his homemade apple wine/cider.  We played snakes a ladders with a board I picked up at a thrift shop a while back.  It was the first time we'd used it and I was pleased to find it had cute little vintage looking illustrations of children doing good things getting rewards at the top of the ladders and ones doing bad things having bad repercussions at the bottoms of the snakes.  For example, the child saving money in her piggy bank at the bottom of the ladder got to buy a toy at the top, and a child who pulled a cat's tail at one of a snake got scratched at the other end.  Neither Chris nor I had played the game since we were children, and it took longer than we thought, but I won!  Maybe he'll win next week when we play Scrabble.





Thursday 28 November 2013

Homemade Spelt Bread

Breakfast yesterday morning
       There are few more comforting "comfort foods" in the world than fresh homemade bread.  It's one of the rare foods that your enjoyment of is not diminished because YOU spent all day preparing it.  Maybe it's just me, but I never seem to enjoy the food I make nearly as much as my husband.  But maybe it's just like one of my sisters-in-law says, "hunger makes the best cook."

        Homemade bread is special though.  Maybe simply because it's a "treat" for us.  I definitely don't make it every week, or we'd be even more spherical in physique than we are now.  I think there's something more to bread though that gives it is special powers of wonderfulness.  It is the food through which God made Himself present to mankind in all places for the rest of time, after all.

        Anyways, that's enough heady talk for one post.  On with the "method!"  I don't use a recipe to make bread, I just go by eye-balling it and seeing what looks/feels right.  One of my lovely sisters-in-law taught me how to make bread over 6 years ago now when I was a nanny for her and my husband's brother on their farm.  I learned many homesteady things that summer on Two Trees Farm, like how to milk a cow by hand, how to muck out a chicken coop and sheep barn, how to trudge through a pigpen with four big, hungry pigs swarming around my legs, how to make soap, how to cook up a gourmet meal from an empty pantry (although I've not mastered this yet,) how to be an unconditionally loving, gentle parent, and many other things.

        Without further ado, here we go:
Pour 4 cups warm water into a large mixing bowl.  You want the water temp to be something comfortable for the yeast to live in, not too hot, not too cold. 

Sprinkle in enough yeast that it would about cover the top of the water.  It will sink, but just sort of sprinkle over the area of the surface, it's probably about a tablespoon and a half or so. 

Add 1-2 tbsp of sugar (you can use brow or white, honey or maple syrup) for the yeast to eat.  (I'm sorry I don't have any pictures of this part, as I didn't think to post about it till half way through making it.) 

Let the yeast "awaken" in the water for about 10-15 mins, or until the surface of the water is covered with the puffy yeast. 

Add "a couple glug glugs" of oil (approx 1/4 cup,) an egg, about 1 tsp salt and 1-2 tbsp more sugar.  Mix this all up with the yeasty water using a wooden spoon.

The blue egg is from one of our Ameraucana chickies, Libby

I estimated I used close to 10 cups of flour in this batch which made four long loaves. Start with a bit of white flour because it works up the best gluten. 

Put about 2 cups into the liquid mix and start mixing and stirring it in with your wooden spoon, once that's mixed, add about 2 more cups.  You might have to put a bit of elbow grease into your mixing to work up the gluten till it's got a sort of elastic consistency. 

The dough will be fairly wet at this point and now you can start adding whole wheat flour if that's what you're choosing to use.  I use organic all-purpose and organic whole spelt flour from a local farm.  You can also do all white flour.

Add another couple cups of your whole wheat flour and mix it in.  You may want to start using your hands. 

Once the dough has enough flour to handle without it sticking all over your hands, turn it out onto a well-floured surface.  Start kneading the dough out into a long blob horizontally, put down more flour vertically and turn the dough onto it and start kneading the top down towards the middle and out longways horizontally again.  I hope that is not too obscure sounding and you can picture what I mean.  In any case, just knead your bread so that you're kneading in about 3-4 more cups of flour till you get a nice, springy ball of dough.

Pour a bit of oil in the bottom of your mixing bowl, plop the dough in and cover with a towel.  Let it rise to about twice the size, maybe a bit bigger.  Depending on the temperature of your house and where you place it to rise (will go faster in a warm place like near a fireplace/wood stove) it will take 30 mins or so, maybe longer. 

I hate blog posts with too much writing and no pictures, so since my bread pictures were not very high quality, here's some gratuitous cuteness to break up the post.  Please ignore the table covered in laundry.


Once your dough has risen to approximately twice it's original size, turn it out on your counter.  It doesn't need to be floured since your dough will have the oil from the bowl on it.  Preheat your oven to 350 F.  Twist the dough in half, do NOT pull or tear it apart.  Then twist each half in half again so you have 4 balls of dough.  One at a time, flatten the balls out into a rough square shape, about half and inch thick, maybe less.

Please forgive the terrible quality pictures...I really need a new camera.  And a new kitchen with better lighting.

At this point you can sprinkle any extras you want in your bread onto the dough.  This batch is current spice bread, so I made a mix of about 1 1/2 tbsp cinnamon, 1/2 tbsp cloves, 1 tsp nutmeg and 1 tsp ginger, and I soaked the currents while the bread was rising so they were plump and juicey.  I also sprinkled a bit of brown sugar with the spices and currents.  You could substitute raisins. 

You could also make cheese bread and put shredded cheese in.  If you wanted to do something like sunflowers or sesame seeds or add oat or wheat germ or flax meal, I would do that as you're mixing in flour, before you start kneading the bread.


Once you've put your extras in, start rolling the dough along the top, tucking it in as you go.



Once it's all rolled up, pinch along the seam to close it up.






Then pinch your ends closed and fold over and pinch to the inside so your ends are rounded.





Place loaves, pinched side down on lightly greased cookie sheets, two to a sheet.  You can let them rise a bit more on the sheets, or bake them right away.  You can also bake them in loaf pans, just squish them up till they are short enough to fit.  Bake until just browned on top.  I usually bake for about 30-40 mins.  My sister-in-law taught me to tap the bottom of the pan and you can hear when they are done.  It's hard to convey that sound through writing though...

If you want to get extra fancy you can give the loaves an egg wash to get that shiny top.  Just mix an egg in a little bowl with a bit of milk or water and brush over the loaves before you put them in the oven.  I just use my fingers for this.  You can then sprinkle sesame or sunflower seeds on top if you like. 


I didn't get any pictures of the finished product (other than my breakfast shot) because I probably got distracted by Rowan or something.  I should tell you that this is artisan bread, it's not light, fluffy bread like the crap you buy in the store which is full of extra gluten and other chemicals to make it perfect and fluffy.  This bread is dense and hearty and satisfying.

Happy baking!





Wednesday 20 November 2013

Urban Farming 2013

As the 2013 harvest season has come to a close (except for kale, we've still got scads of it in the gardens that will hopefully be around till January, if it's like the kale last year) I will share some pictures of what our urban farm looked like this year.
Our glorious magnolia tree in the front yard
Pretty baby in a pretty tree


Camo boots!

Rowan "helping" his Papa plant seeds

Most of the "helping" consisted of eating compost
A few weeks later, the baby greens started growing

Squash leaf

Cilantro

Guerrilla mint plant    

Borage for the bees, tea from the leaves is also supposed to be a good adrenal tonic
Bee collecting pollen

Gardens getting a drink


Cosmos and basil in the failed baby greens garden
Pretty old birdhouse we found on the side of the road

Rainbow swiss chard

Ruby red swiss chard

Baby tomato
Pink Brandywine (I think)

Gorgeous Lacinato (Dinosaur) kale

Shoo Fly flower

Shoo Fly, a little birdie must have "dropped" a seed at the edge of our garden fence and this beautiful plant popped up, uninvited, but very welcome
Chicken coop in spring.  Two of our red hybrid chickies disappeared this fall :'(

So we got some new ones!  Molly in the foreground, Persephone in the back
Libby the fierce looking Ameraucana.  She'll lay turquoise eggs...if she ever starts laying

Ruby the gentle looking Ameraucana
We also have Nellie the Naked Neck (Turken) and Minnie the Buff Minorca chickens, but they were moulting badly and not looking their best on picture day.

Our square foot gardens also yielded an abundance of six or seven types of tomatoes in all colours, dill, basil, cilantro, Red & While Russian kales and Fordhook Giant Swiss chard.

We bought most of our seeds this year from Hawthorn Farm Organic Seeds.