Archive for July, 2008
I am mobile!

I have other interests in life besides food and football. I am also really into technology. It is a bit weird considering my ideas on how life should be, but I reckon everyone has a vice or three.

Due to my unbridled infatuation with technology, last summer I stood in line for an iPhone. Thanks to Apple and WordPress I am now able to blog from anywhere in the world. Especially the garden. I am very happy to have this ability as I often wanted to write a note to everyone, but couldn’t.

I think that I will enjoy being mobile and I hope you enjoy my newfound ability also.

…and the moment I’ve been waiting for…

For over a year now I’ve been planning and dreaming of making my own fermented pickles. Last fall I came across a recipe to make pickles, but it was for fresh pack pickles. After I tasted them, I knew something was wrong; this isn’t how the good pickles are supposed to be. So my adventure began…

I found out what I actually wanted was a fermented pickle. After searching across the internet, and finding new and interesting sites, I came to find out that pickling crocks are not Dollar Store items–especially if you have to have the heavy things shipped across a few states. I thought for sure that my dream was gone.
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Sauerkraut: Day 6

Nothing much going on in the sauerkraut world… every other day it’s: unfold cloth cover, pull out weighted jar, pick off floating “stuff,” wash off jar, put back in, push down kraut, cover.

It smells, but almost in a good way, something like sauerkraut. I’m guessing I’m doing it right, since I’ve read that if it’s done wrong, it will just plain old stink like rot.
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“Sunday is the golden clasp that binds together the volume of the week”

We had another small harvest today! Submitted for your reading pleasure, our lovely story about pulling weeds, re-caging tomatoes and tying up limp peppers after a storm, and trying to figure out how exactly composting is supposed to work.

Saturday evening we had a little rain; from what I can tell via the internet, about four inches in two hours. This compounded with rather high winds and heavy green tomatoes proved that gravity is a force to be reckoned with.
We had our work cut out for us Sunday–well, it wasn’t too bad actually. There were perhaps seven plants that had fallen down with their cages. The bell pepper plants were all laying down (cage-less), and we had to put some steaks in the ground and tie them up.
After that we went ahead and did some regular maintenaince: pulled weeds, put down mulch, moved vines around, etc…
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Sauerkraut schmeckt sehr gut!

SauerkrautYou guessed it!  It’s time to harvest some cabbage!  Like I’ve said before, I want to give fermenting a try this year.  Our cabbage has come of age, and it’s time for it to take it’s place in my stomach the world.

Matt wants to take a few heads and boil them down with some sort of pork-like meat–we’ll have to get with him to find more out about that.  I am going to make sauerkraut out of some of it.  I’ve never done this before, but I’ve been reading up on it via that dangerous internet thing (I’ll share some of my more favorite sites on the subject at a later date).

So it beings: Diary of a Kraut; for the next two weeks (or however long the fermenting process takes) I will be documenting my prodigy as it zombifies into an undead treat for me.

The first thing I had to do was take five pounds of cabbage (it only took one head!) and slice, dice, and rip it up into a respectable size.  After that, I added three tablespoons of salt to the shredded cabbage.  I have to admit, I tasted it at this point and it was good enough to eat already!

As the water started seeping out of the cabbage, thanks to our friend osmosis, I transported my mess to a pickling crock.  Then I placed a plate on top of the mix and added a mason jar full of water for weight.  The plate and extra weight are there to push down and squeeze the water out of the cabbage.

The next 24 hours are very important to this process.  If enough water isn’t suqeezed out of the cabbage to cover it, then I will have to add a brine mixture to it so that it will halt the microbial action that I don’t want;  this will make a great home for Leuconostoc, Lactobacillus, and Pediococcus.

Stay tuned for the next update and we can watch this sauerkraut bloom together!
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Getting Ready for the Fourth

Our town REALLY takes an interest in Independence Day. We supposedly have the largest parade in the state. So in order to get City Farm ready for the big day there was mowing to do and and alot of mulching around all of our tomatoes.  Thankfully we got it all done. Our tomatoes look really nice now that they are all mulched.