Monday, November 7, 2011

Frida Lays an Egg

Formerly the shy one, Frida has been acting really strange lately. Even the other four chickens think she has been possessed by an alien being. Then last night Shaun found this in their nesting box.


Perfect! Our first egg.

Shaun has raised three of these chickens since they were 1 day old (Zelda, Frenchie, and Abigail). Frida is one of two chickens we got partially grown from Dare 2 Dream Farms in Lompoc. We were warned that we might not see any eggs until the days begin to get longer. Apparently Frida didn't get the memo.

Breakfast this morning was an exciting event.


We gathered for the egg opening.

It was everything we'd hoped.

Good color, thick shell, standing yolk.

These chickens spend their days in Shaun's side yard where they wander around eating bugs and the plants Shaun grows for them. They have intimidated the local cats into becoming vegetarians and managed to elude the raccoons a few nights ago who discovered before we did that the chickens weren't safely bedded down in the coop for the night.

Yes, Frida's egg was delicious!

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Martian Bread

On a visit to Martian Ranch and Vineyard to learn more about their farming methods, I tasted the syrah grapes still hanging on the vine, sweet, ripe, and ready to pick. Winemaker Michael Roth let me bring a cluster home to make a wild yeast starter.

Wild yeast cells cling to the waxy coating on the outside of the grapes at this time of year. These particular grapes are grown in Los Alamos, so this yeast is a variety that grows in that orchard on that variety of grape. Yeast on the nearby Mouvedre grapes might produce a starter with different characteristics.

At home I rinsed the grapes lightly and put them into a thin mixture of flour and water. I covered the container with plastic wrap and let it sit until the yeast began to bubble up in the flour mixture. This took less than 24 hours.

I strained the starter, purple with grape juice, and added more flour and water. I repeated that process until my starter was bubbling up within a couple of hours after being fed.

Last night I mixed up a batch of bread to rest overnight and then baked my bread in the morning.

Here's my first loaf.


I'll be making more of this!

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Cornish Pasties!

I promised I'd go back and blog about some previous kitchen adventures, so I'll start with our Pasty Party last August.

I'm lucky to have friends who are great cooks. Bob and Dianne Armitage used to own a restaurant in Iowa. One of Bob's specialties is Cornish pasties. His grandma used to make them. Bob says the miners in Wales took pasties to work for their lunch. Sometimes the pasty was divided... half meat and half fruit.

For those who haven't had them, a pasty is a meat-filled turnover, sealed so the filling doesn't fall out. They are usually made with a meat and root vegetable filling. The secret ingredient is suet (the fat that surrounds the beef kidney). The first time we made them together, we couldn't find suet anywhere. Bob searched all over town. We had to settle for another type of fat for our filling and pastry.

Then when I was interviewing John de Bruin for my grass-fed beef article, he told me that Dey Dey's beef sells suet. I quickly made a mental note to rush to the computer when I got home to email Bob that I'd found it!

At the next Sunday Farmer's Market I ordered a lot of beef suet and explained to John's wife Nadine what I was planning to use it for. She offered to bring the suet to my house and make pasties with us.

We all agreed that we should make a LOT of pasties. That meant peeling a lot of potatoes, parsnips, and turnips.


Once they were peeled we cubed them and added minced garlic. Hmm, not enough garlic. Bob sent Dianne out to buy more garlic. There's also some parsley in this mix and a lot of diced (she wipes away the tears) onions.



We used pork and Dey Dey's beef with the turnips, onions, and potatoes for one batch.



We diced our meat about the same size as the vegetables.


We also made lamb pasties with parsnips and mushrooms.

I made the pastry dough ahead of time and chilled it.

The next step was for Bob to show us how to roll the dough and form the pasties.

Nadine made the first pasty.

Beautiful!

Bob told us that the folded edge around the pasty was traditionally made wide and thick so the miners could hold onto it while they ate the center of the pasty. The miners probably didn't have clean running water to wash their hands before eating. They didn't eat the edge... unless they were really hungry.


We had to figure out how to distinguish the lamb from the beef/pork pasties so I used my alphabet cookie cutters to put an "L" on each lamb pasty.


We baked the pasties until the tops were nicely browned and the juices were flowing from the cooked meats. It took about an hour. The final step was to brush the top of each pasty generously with melted butter.

Dianne said that back in Iowa, Bob's pasties sold out quickly as news would pass though town that they were available. We were not surprised.

A recipe? Bob doesn't need a recipe. Use your favorite unsweetened pastry dough and design a filling based on your own tastes. I've made pork pasties with butternut squash, potatoes, and kale. You could also make a vegetarian pasty, but use plenty of oil or a sauce in the filling so it doesn't taste dry.

Bob came up with some great ideas for a Thanksgiving pasty. We'll keep you posted.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Candy Houses

I figured since it's almost Easter, we should make bunny houses. The graham cracker version of a gingerbread house looked pretty easy in the photos on the Internet. So I gathered together some ingredients and a couple of extra kids to work with us on this project.


Sticking together the graham crackers wasn't as easy as I'd hoped. Trying to avoid canned frosting, I used melted chocolate for the wall cement. That required putting the joined walls into the freezer to harden the cement. We used white chocolate sprayed with green food coloring on the cake boards and added green sprinkles for the grass. Then we put our houses onto the grass.

Fortunately my daughter-in-law Kris decided to run to the store for cans and bags of prepared frosting, throwing all hopes of these being "healthy" candy houses to the wind.

As you can see the shingles are Necco wafers.

Building houses takes a lot of concentration (and finger licking). Here Kris helps to apply a baby chick to the roof of Fifi's house.

Success!


Meanwhile, Aliyah added some flowers to her roof.


Saraphina was happy to have these lovely princesses helping her with the candy house project.


Phina's house came out quite beautiful. She was especially fond of the pink pearls and her rabbits seem quite pleased with their new home.

Catching Up

I'm a bit behind on blog posts. This, of course, doesn't mean that there hasn't been a lot of cooking in my kitchen, just not enough time to write about it.

I'll backtrack a little after this post to post some photos of previous cooking adventures.

But first I want you to see Sunday's bread harvest:


These are made with the sourdough starters I developed for my Winter Edible Santa Barbara article on making bread with wild yeast. Two of the starters are made with grapes from Alma Rosa Winery, two were made with yeast from a locally grown wheat. None of these breads have commercial yeast in them, just wild yeast starter.

Yes, there were actually four loaves, but one didn't last long enough to be in the photo.