Practical farmers, practical beekeepers – and the first giveaway!
August 4, 2011 § 5 Comments
Two things I want to share with you all:
1. Practical Farmers of Iowa. This is a great nonprofit where I worked as an intern a few summers back, and in addition to feeling even more a part of the Iowa agriculture community, I learned a whole lot. Here’s a statement about/by the organization:
At Practical Farmers of Iowa, we come together every day to advance profitable, ecologically sound and community-enhancing approaches to agriculture through farmer-led investigation and information sharing.
We are working toward the day when:
- Farms are prized for their diversity of crops and livestock … Their wildlife, healthy soils, innovations, beauty and productivity …Their connection to a rich past and a fulfilling present where individuals and families earn a good living.
- Wholesome food is celebrated for its connections to local farmers, to seasons, to hard work and good stewardship.
- Communities are alive with diverse connections between farmers and friends of farmers … Places where commerce, cooperation, creativity and spirituality are thriving … Places where the working landscape, the fresh air and the clean water remind us of all that is good about Iowa.
Practical Farmers of Iowa is also a gathering place — a place for all types of farmers who want to be better stewards of their land while making a good living farming. As members, they become a part of something bigger than themselves — They become part of a network of individuals sharing information with and supporting each other.
They’re just great. Check ’em out. Attend a field day. Meet new friends! Support and learn. And join the movement! Practical Farmers of Iowa also recently asked me to review a book for their quarterly newsletter. Which leads me to:
2. Honeybee: Lessons from an Accidental Beekeeper by C. Marina Marchese. This is the most warmly-written, engaging, straightforward, informative book/story on beekeeping that I’ve read. In addition to sharing the author’s personal journey into beekeeping, the book includes helpful illustrations. recipes, and appendixes. It makes the whole process seem like yes, an adventure, but one you can take on and enjoy. You can learn more about Marchese and her bees at her website, www.redbee.com.
If you become a member of PFI, guess what? Among other benefits, you get the newsletter. Which means you get to read things like my book review. And then maybe you could purchase the book . . . and get some hives . . . and make some honey. If you do, please send me some!
Just joking. (Kind of.) Right now it’s my turn to do the giving. Comment on this post by telling me (a) your favorite honey recipe and/or (b) one of your favorite farms or farmers, and you’ll get your name in a drawing to receive a copy of Honeybee: Lessons from an Accidental Beekeeper. The drawing will take place one week from today, so be sure to comment before then. Looking forward to hearing from you!
Collard fritatta and a clafoutis calamity
July 21, 2011 § Leave a comment
For some reason I wanted to bake with eggs today.
I got up early and had a quick breakfast and cleaned and ran errands. Poor Miss T. has been limping for the past few days so she is not getting the walks and outside playtime that she likes to have. She keeps standing at the door and looking at me.
You need to rest, honey. If only she understood. At least I could take her in the car with me as we went about town. Sometimes it’s nice to just get out.
We went to pick up my milk share and get some eggs. I have not settled on a source for local eggs yet; the ones on the farm where I work are spoken for. I’m happy to know, though, that I can get good brown eggs from Organic Valley at the grocery store. Those eggs are so pretty. I was smitten with brown eggs as a little girl and I am still. That color!
The collards from the farm had been sitting and I needed to do something with them. So easy to throw together garlic, onion tops, collards, eggs, milk, and cheese – with of course some salt and pepper – to make a fritatta. Nice for lunch today . . . and easy to put into containers to bring to work for the next week!
And then the clafoutis. Well.
I had never made it before and was eager to try this traditional Limousin French treat. Especially with the Rainier cherries I’d gotten at the market. Colorado cherries trucked over the mountains from Palisade. Such a cheery yellow.
I used a gluten-free baking mix in place of all-purpose flour, just because I think it’s good to mix up your grains. Guess what? (Silly me.) The baking mix has baking soda and baking powder in it. And guess what else? Those are not ingredients in clafoutis. It had been my understanding that this was simply a mix of various flours to use in place of wheat flour. Not quite. (Always read ingredient labels.)
So . . . my clafoutis bubbled up to rise rather than settling into a smoothly dense golden-brown custardy flan sort of thing.
Oh, dear.
Despite how it looks, it really wasn’t that bad. I’m happy to say it still tastes pretty good.
And when I get it right, next time, I’ll let you know! And post a recipe. For now . . . well, waste not, want not. At times we all have to eat, or look at, or revise our mistakes. In doing so, we might even find that they are not so terrible, after all.
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COLLARD FRITATTA RECIPE
Ingredients:
2 Tbs. olive oil
2 cloves garlic
10 collard green leaves
7-10 onion tops
3/4 cup whole milk
7 eggs
1/2 cup cheese, grated (I used Organic Valley Raw Mild Cheddar)
salt and pepper to taste
Directions:
Mince, crush, or press the garlic into the oil in a medium skillet, and being heating at medium heat. Remove the stems from the collard greens and cut into strips, then into halves. Slice the onion tops into 1/2 to 1 inch pieces. Toss collards and onion tops into skillet and sautée until collards have softened.
Beat the eggs with the milk. Add the cheese, salt, and pepper. Fold in the greens and bake in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for 40 minutes.
E&E’s Hearty Sweet Granola Bars
July 16, 2011 § Leave a comment
These are days of getting-up-and-going. Work starts at 7:00 a.m. most days for me. I like working early and ending early and having a long time of afternoon-into-evening.
My body would love it if I would rise early enough before work to prepare a hearty breakfast of eggs and cheese and swiss chard and a cup of coffee. My body would also, however, enjoy lying longer in bed. I almost always choose the latter. This means jumping up at the last minute to throw on clothes, put in a ponytail, grab a cap, and find something to nourish myself with before spending many hours working in the heat, the rain, the mud, the dry dust.
I’ve eaten my share of granola bars and there are some good ones out there. But none as good as the recipe my sister discovered a few years ago. She and her husband have made batches and batches of them ever since, playing with variations and usually packing them with different combinations of dried fruit. In graduate school we would go to each other’s houses and have granola-bar making evenings in between the stress of studying and working and job-searching. (Such good memories!)
After graduate school ended, I guess I set aside the recipe and forgot. I found it again when I moved into this new apartment and stuck it to the fridge so I’d remember to make the bars. Months later? I still hadn’t.
And then I wanted to with enough determination to quit imagining that it would happen later. It would happen now! But I am watching the pennies and so this time instead of going out to buy what I didn’t have – which, actually, was a good chunk of the ingredients – I substituted with what I did have. I am happy to report that they are just as tasty!
So, though my original recipe is entitled Elena’s Granola Bars, these adaptations make the new one both of ours. E&E’s Hearty Sweet Granola Bars. (And next time, I might add peanut butter! Or finely chopped espresso beans. Ooh.)
For those of you who also have get-up-and-go mornings.
And remember: it’s nice to share with your siblings.
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RECIPE
Ingredients:
2 cups mixed nuts
1 cup oats
2 cups hearty cereal (I used muesli)
2/3 cup brown sugar
2/3 cup honey
4 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 dark chocolate bar
Directions:
Put mixed nuts in a food processor or blender and pulse to chop. Mix the nuts, oats, and cereal, then toast in a 400-degree oven for 10 minutes, stirring every few minutes. Line a glass baking dish with wax paper (I also found that a nonstick baking dish worked fine, without the wax paper). In a saucepan, bring the brown sugar, honey, butter, vanilla and salt to a simmer. Mix everything together except for the chocolate. Dump granola into the baking dish. Put wax paper on top and press down hard (I skipped this step, but it’s a good idea of you want to make sure the bars are dense and hold together well). Chop or break up the chocolate bar and, after the bars have cooled some, press the chocolate pieces into the granola. (Doing so sooner would cause them to melt.) Press down on the bars with the wax paper again, if desired. Let chill for several hours, then cut and serve! If you want a more concise way to store them, you can layer them in a container with pieces of wax paper in between. Feel free to make variations – and let me know how they turn out. (Coconut? Coconut and apricots? Cranberries and white chocolate chips. Blueberries and dark chocolate. Go on!)











