Monday, March 17, 2014

Rain + Warm Days = Mushrooms

I admit that Mushrooms are not everyone's cup of tea, but I love them.  Fried....on toast....as soup....mushroom sauce on steak.....mmmmmmm

Today I set out to my secret mushroom collecting spot and cut these beauties with my little knife.  A whole bucketful.  I have not weighed them, though that would be an interesting exercise. I'll do that in due course.

As for know, I have to set to cleaning the grass off and grading them into 'shrooms to be dried, and 'shrooms to be eaten straight away!

Guess what I am having for dinner :-)

Sunday, March 2, 2014

"Canning" our Autumn produce now

I have started the process of canning our extra veges for use over the winter.  This is not "preserving" a la NZ Kiwi (overflow method for fruit), but full-on pressure canning a la American style doomsday preppers!


Basically, the process of preparing the fruit/veges/meat is pretty much the same as for the overflow method.  Or you can cook your soup/meatballs/stews etc.  But from then on, rather than putting into hot jars and putting the lid on, and hoping like hell you don't get botulism, you pop them into a huge pressure cooker, rack up the pressure to the one specified for the type of food you are preparing, and keep it there for x many minutes.

Things that are great to make: meatballs in sauce, spagetti  in sauce, pasta sauces, pureed apple, tomatoes with garlic, soups etc.

The one thing you can't can is Pumpkin, which is a real shame because it is the one thing we often have heaps of.  It's puree and flesh is so dense that obtaining a high enough temperature is difficult, so it is not recommended.

So, the benefits are what?  - well, canned food keeps longer than frozen.  It does not require electricity to keep it ready to eat.  It is easier to heat up and use (there's no defrosting).  The only thing it is suseptible to is falling off the shelves during an earthquake.

STEP ONE: buy your canner.  It is just a big pressure cooker, with the addition of a pressure meter on the top.  You need the pressure meter, for different foods require different pressure.  I got mine off Amazon during a sale for US$65.00.

STEP TWO: prepare your fruit, make your soup, cut up your veges, following the instructions in the booklet that comes with the canner, or found online! (this is a useful link http://www.http://www.provident-living-today.com/Pressure-Cooking.html#ProcessingTimes)

STEP THREE: fill your AGEE jars up to 1 inch from the top, put on the lids and screw down to hand-tight.

STEP FOUR: heat up 2 inches of water in the canner.  Put in the rack, put the jars in and put the lid on.  Let steam come out the vent for 10 mins, then put on the weight.

STEP FIVE: bring up to required pressure (11lbs per square inch for pasta sauce)...keep it there for the times in your booklet.

STEP SIX: turn off the heat and let it cool completely till the valve goes down.  Then take off the lid and put the jars on the bench, being very careful not burn yourself on the jars, as the contents will still be boiling inside the jars.

This should bring all contents up to 240pressure, which is required to kill all bugs.

Your food will then keep well in the pantry.  Make sure you label and date!

Today I made Pasta Sauce with all the aubergines, courgettes, basil and tomatoes from our garden.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Mozzarella Magic

For the past month or two I have had access to raw milk from a local farm, at $1.50 per litre.  I have been busy skimming cream, etc etc.  And, I have had a few disasters, but today I am going to share with you a complete SUCCESS!

I used this receipe here: http://www.motherearthliving.com/cooking-methods/homemade-mozzarella-recipe-zmrz12aszdeb.aspx

Here is my finished product, looking wonderful.

To make these shiny balls of yummyness, I used 7.5litres of milk as per the recipe above.  I followed all steps to the letter, and I am so pleased with the results.  Guess who is having pizza for dinner tonight?
I will share below some photos showing some of the steps.  You need to be at home for the afternoon (or morning).  The steps themselves are not difficult, but there is a lot of "sitting" time, and waiting around between steps.  These photos go backwards from the end to the beginning.
You need the pink gloves to protect your hands from the high heat at the "stretching" and "kneading" stages
Stretching the cheese till it is shiny and melted
The curds draining
Cutting the curds







Tuesday, February 18, 2014

A delight!

This has got to be the cutest jug ever! dont you just love the "Kina" shaped bottom? the silver detailing? the beautiful cranberry colour?
Just occasionally Trademe is a wonderful place!

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Potato Glut - help and advice please!

The glut has started
These are Jersey Bennes, which are not good keepers.  In fact they are already starting to go a bit rubbery and a couple had shoots on them.  I really need to either make them into something for the freezer/canner/dehydrator, or find a way to store them well.  

All suggestions for receipes, soups, and frozen things would be very welcome as I am stumped!

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Winning "Best Dressed" !

We spent today at the Waipara Springs Festival....music by The Eastern and others, great food, wines to taste and drink, Masterclasses in wine and more.  It was a great day in the sun, and we have had a ball.

I was so amazed to be selected to take part in the "Best Dressed" competition.  I was given a number and at about 3pm went up with the other 9 competitors to be judged.
The female entrants in "Best Dressed" - there's me in the hat!

In the end I won! the prize a $100 voucher for dining at the restaurant there.

Definitely a highlight of this year. 


Saturday, February 1, 2014

The School Lunches dilemma strikes again

School lunches are so tricky. I don't know about yours, but my kids want wrapped "fruit bars" (baked muesli slices), yoghurts and small packets of chips etc.  I want them to have healthy, homemade things, and its not very often that our tastes meet in the middle.

Today I made this, http://instagram.com/p/j2VSVRgdKK/
a muesli slice.  No raisins or dried fruits (because young miss won't eat them), no nasty hard bits like nuts or pumpkin seeds (cos you master won't eat them).  No condensed milk, because I think they dont need the sweet stuff.  Hopefully we will all be happy.

I am going to wrap them, and I might even print a wrapper to paste on outside to make them look authentic! (I'm willing to try anything to get the kids to eat them).

BAKED BARS

50g butter
Half cup sugar
Quarter cup honey
put the above into a pan, and heat gently to dissolve the sugar.  Set aside to cool a bit.

3 Weetbix, or similar
Quarter cup Rice Bubbles
Quarter cup choc chips or bits
Half cup rolled oats/porridge oats
Half cup Self Raising Flour

Pour the wet ingredients onto the dry ingredients and mix well.  Press into a sandwich slice tin, bake 170C for about 20 mins till golden.

Let cool completely before cutting into slices or squares.