Sunday, November 21, 2010

Living 12 by 12

Just read this inspiring book on living "12 by 12" meaning the house, not the size of your master bath...
Here's the author, William Power's blog:  
http://williampowersbooks.com/blog/
Enjoy.

Continuing with my Thanksgiving week long feast

Today I got my pumpkin quota filled.  I had a pumpkin apple soup.  It also had butternut squash and veggie broth.  Unfortunately, I can't take credit for it myself or provide the recipe, because I just bought a cup at my local food co-op.  I think it still counts though.  For Thanksgiving we are just planning on mashed potatoes, stuffing with lentils, and slow cooker applesauce.  Simone also wants cranberry chutney so we may make that too and have some Thanksgiving and make some Indian food later that weekend to have it a second time.  Oh, and pecan pie for dessert.  I guess I'm still missing turkey, but I'm not a big turkey fan anyway.  I may forgo that altogether.
Hmmm, what else are we missing?

Friday, November 19, 2010

Spreading Out The Thanksgiving Feast

I love Thanksgiving.  Well, I love to eat in general.  But, I like all the Thanksgiving dishes, side dishes, and desserts.  Unfortunately, I seem to have been the only one in my family that loves it enough to actually cook it.  So, over the years I have worked really hard to produce a wonderful Thanksgiving dinner.  The girls pick at it.  We have tons of leftovers and well to be honest I end up kind of pissed.  So, it is time to get over it.  Newly single, I don't even have my spouse to at least appreciate the food. 
So, I am spreading out some of my favorite parts of Thanksgiving over the next week or so.  Last night, we had sweet potato coconut curry.  It satisfied my sweet potato requirement for Thanksgiving and it was easy to make.  Here's the recipe:
2 sweet potatoes cubed
1 can light coconut milk
1 cup frozen peas
1 cup vegetable broth
1 Tablespoon green curry paste
1 Tablespoon oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
Saute sweet potatoes in oil for a few minutes, add vegetable broth and cook until almost tender.  Add peas, coconut milk, curry paste and salt.  Heat through.  Serve over rice, rice noodles or as a soup.
A great way to get my sweet potato fix early, eliminate that dish from the Thanksgiving repetoire, take advantage of sweet potatoes on sale and get rid of that whole nasty, whipped sweet potatoes with marshmallow thing. 

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Thanksgiving Fun for Kids

This is one of my favorite Thanksgiving activities -- an orange pomander.


I remember making one for my Great Aunt Doris, keeper of the turkey, when I was a kid.  Last year we made a few and just kept them around the house to make it smell like yummy winter holidays.  Pomanders are fragrant mixtures of spices and fruit.  Historically, pomanders were fragrant spices kept inside a metal or ceramic ball.  These were worn on a chain around the neck or waist to ward off bad smells and disease.  The most common in the U.S. today, the orange pomander, is very simple and smells absolutely delicious for weeks.  Though, I would not recommend wearing it and would not suggest it would ward off disease (but who knows).  However, it is cheery and easy to make with kids of different ages!  

To make your orange pomander, you will need:
·        An orange
·        ½ cup of whole cloves
·        24 inches of ribbon
·        a poker (a nail, a skewer, a pencil, etcetera)
·        a thimble (optional)

Directions:
·        Wash your orange to remove any fruit wax
·        Mark a line around your orange as if to cut it into quarters
·        Poke holes about ¼ inch deep into the orange either randomly or in a pattern
o   Do small sections at a time.
o   Keep the holes close enough together so that the cloves will almost touch when inserted stem side down into the holes.
o   Do not poke holes into the lines you made – this area is for the ribbon.
o   If you have very young children, you can do the poking for them.  Older children, of course, can design their own and make the holes themselves.
·        Push cloves into the holes stem side down
o   This leaves the sharper parts out so you may want to use a thimble to keep your fingers from getting sore.
o   Any child old enough not to consume or stick cloves up their nose can push the cloves into the orange.
·        Wrap the ribbon around the orange both ways, tie in a knot at the top then make a loop and tie a second knot if you’d like to hang your pomander, or a bow if you’re going to set it on the table.

Orange pomanders take time to dry so if you’re going to try to give one of these away for an upcoming holiday make it a couple of weeks earlier than the holiday itself.  The orange will turn brown and kind of appear to be rotting – it is NOT rotting.  The oil from the cloves spreads throughout the peel making it brownish orange.  The entire orange will eventually dry and become very light weight.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Selling at UI Womensworks

Hello to all my local friends...
Yesterday I debuted my food microbusiness at Womensworks and I had a great time and got great feedback.  I also nearly sold out of soup mixes and seriously lowered my stock of baking mixes.  I will be back today at the UI Student Union Building ballroom for another day of selling.  If you would like to try my sustainable-local-organic mixes stop by.  I'll be sampling out Comfort Cornbread, Turkish Mocha Brownies and Red Lentil Curry today.  Yum. Yum.  And, in keeping with the blog -- the prices are reasonable, I think, at $5 per mix. 

Below is a blurb about the new business.

At Fast Foodie, LLC in Moscow, Idaho, I strive to use the best and most sustainable ingredients to prepare mixes like no other.  Organic and local contributions to these mixes are common.  In a region rich with wheat varieties, lentils, and local small-scale organic agriculture as well as wild-crafted ingredients from the Inland Northwest, it is a pleasure to bring out the best in these ingredients through delicious, wholesome and quickly prepared soups and baked good mixes.  10% of my profits are donated to the following charitable organizations: Safe Passage in Guatemala City, Sojourner’s Alliance in Moscow, Idaho and Village Bicycle Project in Boise, Idaho. 

 See you there!

 

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

On Peckers and Oatmeal

I am sitting in our sun room looking out on the chicken yard and enjoying watching the young hens scratch through the leftover oatmeal I put out for them.  It reminded me to write that although backyard chickens are a source of entertainment and fresh eggs, they are not very economical.  Once you build or buy a coop, put up a fence, by chicken food, a chicken watering dish and a pair of boots to walk amongst the chicken droppings, you would have to have chickens for about 100 years to have their eggs pay off.  Maybe if you start with a fence, you might be able to make the math work.  The non-monetary value of backyard chickens is great though.  Just last week my two young daughters, Indigo and Antonia, were in the chicken yard (with their boots on) picking up and playing with the chickens.  I was moving firewood back and forth from the barn to the side porch for easier access.  As I walked back and forth, I overheard the girls talking.  Indigo said "Look, Tonia, this one has bumps on its pecker."  Antonia replied "This one has bumps on its pecker too."  Preoccupied, I kept loading wood without processing this much.  I walked by again and heard Indigo say "This one has a yellow pecker." I stopped, thinking "Wait. What?"  I went over to the side of the fence to observe.  Antonia looked up at me "Look Mommy, this one has a black pecker and that one has a yellow one."  I said "You're right, Antonia, but let's call those beaks."
That incident alone may be worth the price of the fence.