Sunday, October 24, 2010

Super Sunday (cooking) Slam

This evening, after I put Joey to bed I:

Pasteurized the milk
Made yogurt
Made bread this way
Made granola
Setup the slow cooker for tomorrow dinner
Blanched tomatoes for Tuesdays dinner

And I finished this book.
Then I had this beer.

And now I'm going to bed.

Friday, October 22, 2010

{This Moment}

{this moment} from Soulemama- A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember. If you're inspired to do the same, leave a link to your 'moment' in the comments for all to find and see. 
Wishing you a wonderful weekend!
 

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Yeah, There's an App for that

 Not much to say about this other than, why didn't I think of that.  The Pickin' Chicken app for the iPhone and iPad will help you select the breed that best fits your needs.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Pasteurization, Pasteurizaaation (a la Carly Simon)

 One of the few things we still buy from the grocery store is dairy. I'm interested in changing that, but it's a little bit of a hassle at present. We got our milk from Miller Farms in La Costa, TX. It's a bit of a drive, but there are several groups that do local milk coops. Raw milk is legal in Texas and these folks are licensed for sale.

A couple of thoughts on raw milk: many people advocate drinking raw milk as is, unpasteurized. I'm not down with that. Call it paranoia if you like, but a safe milk supply was a huge stride in public health. I'm rather unwilling to give my family unpasteurized milk unless I milked the cow myself. Since that's not happening, we are only using the milk after being pasteurized or cooked in some way.  I'm not a food safety nut, but I have a healthy respect for the germs that used to take people out on a regular basis. Plus, all my epidemiology classes used food borne illness outbreaks as our sample data. It makes you aware.
Making yogurt
We made the most fabulous yogurt from this milk. Admittedly, I usually make our yogurt from 1% milk and this was seriously whole milk, but the yogurt had a cream layer on top like the fancy organic brands. Oui la la. The way I make yogurt requires heating it to close to 180 degrees anyway, so we didn't need to pasteurize it ahead of time.
Cream top yogurt
Rigged double boiler
 With all the kitchen equipment I have (yogurt maker anyone?) you'd think I would have a double boiler but I don't. This is what I've been using to make yogurt - our big cast iron dutch oven with a smaller pot inside and a cookie cutter jammed between the two handles.
 It works. To pasteurize, you either heat the milk to 150 for 30 minutes or 165 for 15 seconds. I can't ever hit the temperature quite right so I overshoot and it ends up at 165 for much longer than 15 seconds. Milk boils at 174 degrees so you have to watch it pretty closely and use a double boiler to help ward off scalding.
After you heat it all the way, you need to cool it down quickly. I put the whole pot in a sink full of ice. Notice that I use a thermometer this whole time. You are aiming to get it down to 40 degrees quickly, but that doesn't usually happen until I stick it in the fridge. Tasty, tasty. And local goodness.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Tales from the Coop: Cleaning Day

Cleaning day is the chickens favorite day!

About every two weeks I clean out the old hay, clean the coop, and add new hay.  The rest of the day, the chickens spend their time straightening and organizing the straw.





Happy chickens are the best chickens.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Evening Routines

The initial frantic rush of projects, due dates, cranky mornings, and  forgotten tasks that accompany the beginning of a new school year has passed so Mr J,  Jenny, and I have settled into our fall evening routine.  Jenny and I do not live or die by the routines but we try to keep to a similar schedule most days because it a) helps Mr J calm down for bed and b) keep me from plopping on the couch and turning on the TV.  Most importantly it keeps us active together as a family and keeps us happy.


Here is our typical evening.

3:30-5:00  Everyone arrives home from our various schools.  Mr J goes straight to coloring and we tend to do straightening and decompressing.

5:00-6:00  Chuck and Mr J play in the yard, care for chickens, water the garden, and chase eachother/dogs with the hose.  Jenny cooks dinner and joins us outside the pots are simmering.
6:00-6:30  We all eat dinner as a family around the table.
6:30-7:30  We have family time.  It usually involved dancing to the iTunes library,  puzzles, me acting like the youngest member of the family, and Jenny saying "Be Safe".  As a side note,  if you ask Mr J what a cow says, he states, "Moo".  If you ask him what Mama says, he states, "Safety First".  Go Figure.

7:30-8:30  We go for an evening walk. This helps us fight the urge to turn on the TV and it winds Mr J down for bed.   Sometimes we scoot this time up a little to make time for baths.  He is related to me, so we don't stress too much about baths.
8:300-on  Jenny and I get back to work grading papers, writing lessons, and reading journals.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Farm Update: Eggs

Its been far too long since I've updated about the chickens.   I am checking for eggs two or three times a day: the pre-dawn check never yields eggs but I am feeding anyways, the home-from-work check is most fruitful, and the evening check will occasionally have an egg. 
On average,  we receive three and a half eggs a day.  Once in a blue moon, we will have a five-egg day.  Since the eggs are slightly undersized, we do a good job of eating all of them.  Every once and a while we will send half a dozen or so to a neighbor or friend.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

More, more pumpkins




While running errands this weekend, we drove past a pumpkin patch. Guess who insisted we stop to get a "Really, REALLY, really big pumpkin."

Yes, it was Chuck.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

O October, how I love thee

Just when you've started to develop an unforgivable grudge against Texas for hot weather, it gives you October.










Hot enough for a brief swim, cold enough for a sweater in the morning. 
At last.