Archive for the ‘farm kitchen’ Category

Plum Onslaught Continues

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Today, Dave climbed up the ladder and harvested plums from the nether regions of our Methley plum trees. He harvested, and harvested and harvested.

All in all, he picked about 40 pounds of the tasty little plums and he estimates that he only picked about 30% of the plums on the tree. All this after I have spent the whole week eating about 50 plums a day (no I’m not exaggerating).

As I write this, I have a dehydrator full of plums, plum crisps baking away in the oven, and plum sauce simmering on the stove.

Later, I’ll enjoy wiping oodles of sticky red plum juice off of my stove, counter tops, kitchen floor, etc.

Sometimes it’s hard to say whether we peacefully coexist with our produce, or we’re fighting a battle against it. And the onslaught continues. . .

Methley Plum Overload

Sunday, June 13th, 2010
Methley plum trees are extremely productive fruit trees and are well suited for orchards in the Southeast.

Methley plum trees are extremely productive fruit trees and are well suited for orchards in the Southeast.

As I write this, I am kicking myself for not being a neater eater. I have eaten dozens of plums today, fresh off of our Methley plum tree, which is loaded with fruit.

In the process of eating all of those sweet, red-fleshed fruits, I have gotten plum juice everywhere, including on my computer keyboard. But I just can’t stop eating them. . .

Just call me a Methley addict.

Still Life With Eggplant

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Eggplant and Peppers About to Become DinnerThese Eggplants, peppers and tomatoes are about to become dinner!

The summer garden is in full swing, producing more tomatoes, peppers and eggplants than we can handle. This year, we are doing a pretty decent job keeping up with the bounty: we’ve succeeded in eating or canning a large percentage of the garden produce (hundreds of pounds worth so far).

Almost every meal we’ve eaten lately has featured fresh peppers or tomatoes, which are delicious grilled as well as in sauces, casseroles (enchiladas are a favorite), and cooked into omelets or scrambled eggs.

Not only is our organic garden produce abundant, fresh and delicious, it’s pretty to look at too!

Why So Blue?

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
blueberry bar pic.JPG

North Carolina’s blueberry season has been a delicious one, but I’m singing the blues because it’s wrapping up for the year. The blueberry bushes on our farm produced prolifically for a month or so starting in mid-June and, during those much-anticipated weeks (we fantasize year-round about bountiful blueberry harvests) we ate our fill of fresh berries. We also baked them into treats such as blueberry pancakes and our favorite baked blueberry confection: blueberry-walnut breakfast bars.

I love these blueberry-walnut breakfast bars so much because they make a wholesome and delicious breakfast (or mid-day or midnight) snack and have the added advantage of holding their flavor and quality flawlessly in the freezer. Since freezing blueberry-walnut breakfast bars is such a great way to be able to enjoy blueberries all year long, I was really upset this year when I realized that I hadn’t managed to get any into the freezer this summer. My family had eaten every single batch up!

Fast forward to the farmers’ market, where I gleefully bought quarts of locally-grown blueberries. I promptly transformed them into enough breakfast bars to make my family’s blueberry wishes come true for months to come!

Blueberry-Walnut Breakfast Bars

Time Required: 15 minutes active, 1 hour total
Yields 12 generously-sized bars
Bake in 9” X 9” baking dish

Ingredients:

For the filling:
2 Cups blueberries
2 TBSP sugar
2 TBSP water
1 TBSP lemon juice (either fresh or from concentrate)
1/4 tsp corn starch for thickening

For the crust and topping
1 Cup all-purpose flour
1 Cup rolled oats (I use Quaker Old-Fashioned oatmeal, but quick-cook oats would work too)
2/3 cup dark brown sugar
1/3 cup chopped walnuts
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup melted butter

Directions:

For filling:
1. In medium saucepan, combine blueberries, sugar, water and lemon juice.
2. Bring to a boil at medium heat, then reduce heat and simmer filling mixture until thickened, about 10 minutes.
3. Remove thickened filling from heat.

For crust/topping:

1. In mixer, combine flour, oats, brown sugar, cinnamon, baking soda and walnuts.
2. Add melted butter to dry ingredients and mix until ingredients are thoroughly combined.
3. Set aside one cup of the mixture to use as topping for the bars and press the rest into a 9” X 9” X 2” baking pan. Bake for 20-25 minutes, until crust is lightly golden.
4. Spread blueberry filling onto baked crust and sprinkle with topping, pressing the topping into the filling slightly.
5. Bake at 350 degrees F for 20-25 minutes, until topping is golden brown. Cool in pan.