Friday, March 31, 2017

Friday, Mar 31

Breakfast smoothie. 

Only one strawberry was still good to eat, so I ate that one and threw the rest outside for the bunnies. 

I juiced the remaining grapefruit and oranges and got 2 quarts of juice. I might make jelly from that or I might just freeze it for later use. 

Lunch was Chipotle, my usual carnitas with lettuce, salsa, and cheese. 

Didn't have dinner. :-( 

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Thursday, March 30, 2017

Thursday, Mar 30

Brunch smoothie, with added strawberries!
Dinner was McDonald's, 20 piece chicken McNuggets and a large Diet Coke. 

Other things I did today:
  • harvested my green leafy sprouts 
  • Put the finished carrot & daikon ferment in the fridge - it tastes great! - and poured the extra brine in with my sauerkraut
  • Transferred the grapefruit curd from the bowl into four baby food jars - it tastes great, too!
 

I took 3 of the jars of curd and 3 of the jars of chutney to bell rehearsal tonight and gave them away! I kept one jar of curd (and we still have the sorbet in the freezer) and the 4 oz jar of chutney (so I can make the cheese spread!). I need to get some low carb crackers or something for that. I know the Wasa brand of crispbreads are delicious so maybe one of the lower carb varieties would be good with this! 

I think I'll end up just freezing the strawberries and juicing the oranges tomorrow morning. No time this weekend to do anything else. 😞
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Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Wednesday, Mar 29

Breakfast smoothie. 
Lunch was a low carb tortilla with cream cheese and the last of the tuna salad I made Saturday, plus some leaf lettuce I bought at the farmers market on Monday. 
For dinner I had some of my red lentil and green & yellow split pea soup at our church's Lenten supper. It turned out really well!

I started the ham bone cooking last night in some chicken broth with onions and garlic and some salt in my big slow cooker. This morning when I went to pick up the ham with some tongs, the bone fell straight out of the meat! I fished the bone out of the broth and shredded the ham, then put the meat back into the broth. I added 3 cups of a mix of red lentils, and green & yellow split peas, plus a bit of konbudashi and some more water. I stirred it every once in a while then just before we left I threw in some of Penzey's Bouquet garni mixed herbs and some fresh ground black pepper. Yum! 

After we got home from church, I cycled my kefir, watered my green leafy sprouts, and checked on my ferments. The carrots & daikon will probably be finished tomorrow & so will the green leafy sprouts. I really need to use up the rest of those oranges and grapefruit, plus I need to do something with the strawberries I got at the farmer's market on Monday before they go bad. 

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Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Tuesday, Mar 28

Breakfast smoothie. 

No lunch because I got distracted doing other things. As a result, about 5 minutes after we left the house for our usual Tuesday rehearsal in Pasadena, my blood sugar dropped like a rock. We stopped at CostCo to put gas in the car & I ran in and bought some macadamia nuts and some unsalted mixed nuts to snack on during the drive. That helped. I need to be more conscientious about eating lunch. 😞

Dinner was the usual Chipotle. 

I'm taking soup to church tomorrow night for our Lenten supper, so when we got home tonight, I put a (frozen) ham bone into the slow cooker on low with some onions and garlic. When I get home from school tomorrow, I will add some red lentils and yellow & green split peas (of which I have plenty!).

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Morning weight, Mar 28

The official count as of today is 20.2 pounds lost! 

 

Monday, March 27, 2017

Monday, Mar 27

Breakfast smoothie, then after our theater lighting class we stopped by an Asian grocery to pick up some dried konbu seaweed. Way better price than buying the same thing at Amazon!

Also stopped st Stater Bros to pick up some more Hershey's cocoa for my morning smoothies -- I'm almost out! -- and some ground ginger, ground cumin, & cinnamon sticks so I could make some Orange Cumin Chutney with some of the oranges I got from Vickie last Friday. More details about that down below. 

We had lunch at Subway. I had a coupon for a $6 Italian Hero footlong, so Brianne had that, while I had a chopped salad with rotisserie chicken, provolone cheese, tomatoes, cucumber, pickles, lettuce, spinach, Oregano, Parmesan, & oil and vinegar. Yum!

 

After lunch, I met up with our neighbor Debra to get some more jars, then I bought some strawberries, some leaf lettuce, and some pickles at our local farmers market. 

When we got home, I resumed the chutney. I started it last night because the first step is to zest 2 lbs of oranges, salt the zest, & let it sit overnight. Here's the zest last night:

 

And here it is after we got home about 3pm:

 

I then rinsed the zest and tore it into little pieces into a 6 quart tall pan. 

 

Here it is with the rest of the ingredients thrown in. I used the half grapefruit I had leftover, too. 

 

After stirring:

 

The recipe called for dried cranberries and/or cherries, so I used some of the dried cranberries I have been soaking in port wine. 

Here's the finished chutney:

 

I picked out the cinnamon stick and then poured the chutney into jars. 


I intend to use the little 4 oz portion to make the cheese spread that's at the bottom of the recipe page!


The rest of it will get eaten here and/or used for more cheese spread, or given to friends. 

After the chutney, I got busy doing other stuff and do didn't eat anything else today. πŸ˜•

I still have four grapefruit and about a dozen oranges left!

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Sunday, March 26, 2017

Sunday, Mar 26

Guess what? I did NOT have a smoothie for breakfast today! Instead, Brianne made some scrambled eggs, so I asked her to make some for me, too.

The first thing I did after breakfast was check on the jar lids that I had left soaking overnight. (Oh yeah, after I wrote last night's post and before I went to bed, I added a bit of bleach to the soaking water.) I scrubbed each one inside and out with a soapy dish brush, rinsed them, and laid them out to dry on some clean towels. After a few hours, I dried each one with another towel and am storing them in a basket I keep by my sprouting supplies.


I decided to get started on doing something with the fruit Vickie gave me on Friday. I had seven green apples, so I peeled & cored them (saving the skins and cores to make pectin), then sliced them into wedges and now have three jars of apple slices. One is soaking in rum, the other two are soaking in honey mead. All three are now in my fridge. These are not being fermented; they're just soaking in flavored alcohol in the hope they will taste yummy soon!


I have to admit that when packing the jars I had a couple of slices that wouldn't quite fit in the jar, but had already gotten covered in alcohol. They were delicious just like that - I can't wait to see how yummy they are when they've soaked for a while! :-)

I also tackled some of the grapefruit. I used one and half grapefruit to make a vanilla grapefruit curd. I used this super easy recipe from the "Faithfully Gluten Free" blog. I went with the option of using whole eggs rather than just yolks plus my eggs didn't seem "large" so I used four rather than three. Here's the curd covered in plastic wrap, sitting on the counter cooling. (It's now in the fridge to cool more before I spoon it into jars for storage.)


Some of the grapefruit curd recipes I saw online recommended putting in a drop of red food color to simulate the color of pink grapefruit, but I think this curd is a lovely yellow by itself, so I didn't bother to color it at all.

I used another two grapefruit to make a grapefruit sorbet using this recipe from Spoon University. I did make one change to the recipe in that I added one tsp of vanilla extract to the grapefruit juice before blending it together with the syrup. Here's the sorbet in a container waiting to go into the freezer. Once it's firm but not frozen solid, I'll mix it up again and then let it freeze solid.


After the sorbet, I decided to stop with the fruit for the night because I was hungry for dinner! I cut up the beef tri-tip I had in the fridge and braised it in some konbudashi and Worcestershire sauce with some onions and garlic. I added the rest of my garbanzo bean sprouts, as well as two handfuls of my mixed bean sprouts, a couple spoonfuls of the pickled mushrooms & onions, and some sesame seeds. Yum!

I still have four and a half grapefruit left, plus 27 oranges of different sizes. I am hesitant to make marmalade simply because these homegrown fruit don't really have attractive rinds, so I'm still pondering what to do with them.

Another thing I did last night after I posted was to start 1/4 cup of green leafy sprout seeds to soak. This morning, I put them into the tray sprouter. They should be ready in a couple of days.

ADDENDUM: Back on Mar 18, I put some purple cauliflower to soak in the dill pickle brine I still had from that giant jar of pickles. Today, I took a picture of the jar because the brine has turned a lovely shade of purple!

 

I haven't tasted them yet, but they sure are purty, aren't they? 😊

In other news, I've switched to using the big jar from Chrissy for my tea. This frees up my quart canning jars for other things. I may even switch to the giant jar from the pickles whose juice is now soaking the cauliflower and green beans. Hmmmmm....

 

Oh, and I'll be getting more jars tomorrow from our neighbor Debra. I need to check with Michael, too, to see when I can get his. The Buy Nothing group is awesome! πŸ‘

ADDENDUM, THE SECOND: At 7pm I checked on the sorbet. It had started freezing around the outside but the middle was still liquid, so I stirred it all up, put it back in the freezer, & set a reminder to check it again at 9pm. At 9pm it was mostly frozen all the way through, so I stirred it up again and put it back in the fridge. Here's a pic from after the 9pm stirring:

 

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Saturday, March 25, 2017

Saturday Sundries, Mar 25

Our local waste collection facility had a free e-waste collection event today, so we took in the bag of household e-waste we had been collecting. We didn't have much, just one fluorescent light tube, some batteries, an LED aquarium light, an electric wine bottle opener, and various bits and pieces of small household appliances.



There were lots of people lined up to discard stuff when we were there and lots of tires were being turned in. This is GOOD because tire disposal is a BIG problem up here in the High Desert - many many tires end up just dumped on vacant lots because it costs money to take tires to the dump and some people don't want to pay the fee. Dealers and garages bundle the disposal fee into the cost of changing your tires, but some people who do it at home just dump them in the desert rather than paying to take them to the waste facility (ditto for used motor oil and other such things). Today's event was free for e-waste (which usually commands a small fee) and tires were only $2 each to dispose of, so it was good to see lots of people taking advantage of the opportunity to properly dispose of them.

After dropping that stuff off, we went to collect some glass baby food jars and horse manure from our neighbor Maryann, and some more glass jars from our neighbor Chrissy. I had posted a "wish" for these items in our local Buy Nothing group on Facebook. Our neighbor Michael says he's got some more jars for me, but won't be able to gather them up until Monday, so I'll get them later this week. The jars are for storage and the manure is for my compost bin's springtime kick-start. Maryann helped me fill a 30 gallon steel garbage can with horse manure and load it into the back of our pickup. I put about a quarter of it into the bin and will add more later this week after it's had a chance to work its magic for a bit.

Our next stop was at PetSmart and PetCo to get some small crickets and flightless fruit flies for my pet green tree frog. Her name is Shug, which is short for "Sugar". She is named after Shug Fisher, who voiced the character of Uncle Pecos in the classic Tom & Jerry cartoon "Pecos Pest", where he sang "Froggy Went a-Courtin'". It's always been one of my favorite T&J episodes!

She loves her some crickets and flies, let me tell you that! The crickets cost 15 cents each & I got 10 of them, so that's a really inexpensive meal for her, especially because it will take her a couple of days to eat them all. The flightless fruit flies are a bit more expensive, costing $10 for a small "peanut butter jar" full of their food, eggs, larvae, pupa, and adult flies. Of course, this jar will produce literally HUNDREDS of flies that will take a couple of weeks for her to eat, so it's not a bad value at all. I'll take the lid off the jar & put the jar into her tank in a day or so.

On the way home, we stopped at Stater Bros and I bought a bottle of lemon juice. I was looking for some ponzu sauce, but all they have is the kind with chili peppers in it and I just wanted plain ponzu. One can make a reasonable facsimile of ponzu by mixing soy sauce and lemon juice, and I have a large bottle of soy sauce in my fridge, so all I needed was the lemon juice (because the bottle I had was nearly empty). It's way cheaper this way, too!

I also checked to see if they had any dried konbu seaweed so I could make some more konbudashi pickled onions and mushrooms, but they didn't have any, so I didn't buy any mushrooms. We plan to check out an Asian grocery store on the way home from school on Monday & they will most likely have some so I'll get some then. If not, there's always Amazon, though I prefer to support local business owners. (Local pet stores are a dying breed - they just can't compete with the big chains - and we haven't found any that stock crickets or fruit flies, which is why I go to PetCo & PetSmart for those.)

Once home, I put all 46 of the baby food jars from Maryann into the dishwasher. Their labels had already been removed, so I didn't have to pre-soak them or anything. The 15 larger jars from Chrissy were mostly from dill pickles and pickled peppers and did have labels, so I soaked them for an hour in hot soapy water in the sink until the labels peeled off. After the baby food jars came out of the dishwasher, in the pickle jars went.

Here's a pic of the baby food jars when they came out of the dishwasher:


That's a lot of baby food jars! :-) (Also included in the pic is a pint jar and a 1.5 pint jar that I already had.)

All of the jars I got today had lids attached. Lids are a lot harder to get clean than are jars! I ran all the baby food jar lids once in a special dishwasher basket I have for small things and again in a mesh bag. The pickle jar lids soaked in hot soapy water for an hour with the jars, so they only need once through the dishwasher. The dishwasher is running right now as I write this, so once it's done, I'll inspect the lids and re-wash anything that needs it. If something is beyond salvaging (such as the one old rusty canning jar band that was in the box with the jars), I'll toss it into the scrap metal recycling bin.

And, NO, I don't intend to use any of these jars for canning. The USDA recommends that jars from commercial foods NOT be used for home canning. Part of the reason is that the glass may not be sturdy enough for multiple passes through the canner, and part of it is the lids are for one-time use only, even if the jars are multi-use jars. They also recommend discarding the lids (but not the bands) from home-canning jars (such as Ball & Kerr brands) after one use, too. These jars will be for my own use for storage of ferments and other small batches of things I make, or for the storage of sundry dry goods. Having these jars frees up my real canning jars for things that require actual canning!

Today's food:
Breakfast = smoothie.
Lunch = nothing. I really do need to make a more concerted effort to eat lunch. I just get distracted and forget! :-(
Dinner = Brianne had the last of the mustard-pesto baked pork tenderloin and I had a tuna salad sandwich.

I opened a can of tuna and mixed in 3 Tbsp of Marzetti Simply Ranch dressing, which only has 2g of carb per 2 Tbsp serving. I added some sesame seeds, pumpkin seeds, and sunflower seeds, as well as granulated garlic, dried dill, and fresh ground salt and pepper. I spread some cream cheese onto a low-carb tortilla, spooned about half of the tuna salad onto that, and added the last of my green leafy sprouts. Yum!



Addendum: Here's a pic of the jars from Chrissy as they came out of the dishwasher:



The jars are all squeaky clean, but some of the lids still smelled like pickled peppers, so I put all the lids (baby food lids, too) into a dishpan with some white vinegar and hot water & will let them soak overnight. PLUS, I found one lid that had fallen into the sink's disposal opening, and so didn't get into the dishwasher. It is soaking now, too. Sigh.

I still haven't done anything with the grapefruit, oranges, and apples that Vickie gave me yesterday. I'll definitely get them done tomorrow, now that I have jars into which to put them. :-)

Oh, I almost forgot: I had a dark chocolate-covered macadamia nut today. Truth be told, I have one probably every day. I let the chocolate melt in my mouth, then crunch on the nut. Yummy and not too many carbs. The perfect treat! πŸ‘

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Friday, March 24, 2017

Hard Workin' Day, Mar 24

This week, our neighbor Vickie posted to our local Buy Nothing group on Facebook that her recently-bought property had some dead trees on it. Some were still standing and others were already cut down. So, we made arrangements to go over there today with our chainsaw and our F-150 and get a bunch of firewood. 

We spent about 3 hours cutting trees into pieces small enough to fit into the back of the truck, then our neighbors offered to let us borrow their trailer to take even more home, which was helpful because we had a couple of larger chunks of trunk from a tree we cut completely down. 

Here's a pic of all the wood in our backyard. The new stuff from today is behind the chopped wood we already had. It's probably about $250 worth of firewood! Thanks, Vickie!

 

Vickie also gave me a couple bags of fruit she'd gotten from a neighbor's tree. Grapefruit, oranges, and apples!

 

I'm busily perusing my recipe books to get ideas for what to make. Current favorites are Brandied Apple Rings, Grapefruit Segments in Mint Syrup (or Grapefruit Curd), and Orange Marmalade (possibly with Rhubarb). I need to ponder a bit and see what fancy strikes me. 

Food today:
Breakfast smoothie. 
Lunch was a low-carb tortilla with cream cheese, sliced turkey, and green leafy sprouts. 
Dinner will be leftover pork tenderloin. 

Other stuff I did today:
I cycled my water kefir. 

I started a new ferment today: sliced carrots and daikon radish in a 5% brine. I've got a pint-and-a-half jar topped with a "Pickle Pipe" airlock, and a pint jar topped with a Re-Cap and a water airlock. 

 

I checked in on my sauerkraut. Look how much more brine there is in it today!

 

I need to keep the weighted jar in the fermenter for another day or so, but it looks like it'll be ok after that. We'll see. 

In other news, I asked my German cousins for our family sauerkraut recipe to see what other ingredients I should try next, and it turns out that my family doesn't make fermented sauerkraut! Instead they make a boiled cabbage seasoned with herbs and spices (such as juniper) and served with bratwurst or ham. My mom's generation lived in Emsland, but my generation mostly lives in East Frisia, both of which are part of Lower Saxony. (East Frisia is north of Emsland.) My cousin Harald says he uses a traditional East Frisian recipe. And this does explain why my mom never made fermented sauerkraut but ALWAYS made boiled cabbage, other than just for the sake of convenience. 

At any rate, I really can't stand boiled cabbage AT ALL 🀒, so I'll just keep experimenting with the fermented kind - I think I want to try the Lemon-Dill Kraut recipe in my "Fermented Vegetables" book next. 

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Thursday, March 23, 2017

Making Sauerkraut, Mar 23

Slept in, so my breakfast smoothie was more like a brunch smoothie. 

Early dinner because we have an evening bell rehearsal at church. I didn't have any meat thawed so when I went into town today to get the mail, I also bought a pork tenderloin roast. I slathered it with the mustard pesto sauce and baked it for about 75 minutes. 

While it was baking, I got started making sauerkraut, following the instructions in the book "Fermenting Vegetables" by Kirsten and Christopher Shockey. I got one medium head of cabbage at the grocery store today, rinsed it, reserved some of the outer leaves, cored it, and sliced it into my big salad bowl. I sprinkled one Tbsp of Morton's Pickling Salt over it and massaged the salt into the cabbage until it had gotten pretty wet. Then I covered the bow with a kitchen towel and let it sit. 

While it was sitting and wilting, I made our vegetable side dish to go with the pork. I heated up about 1/4 cup of konbudashi and added some dehydrated diced onions and granulated garlic, then spooned in some of the seasoned chicken broth from when I made chicken with the mustard presto sauce. I added a couple handfuls of garbanzo bean sprouts, and a few handfuls of lentil and mung bean sprouts. I also cut up two medium carrots and one small zucchini and added them in, too, as well as a couple spoonfuls of the pickled mushrooms and onions. I seasoned it with fresh ground pink Himalayan salt and black pepper, plus an Italian Seasoning mix I picked up at our local Farmer's Market. 

 

The veggies and pork turned out really well! And there's still about half the tenderloin left over for future meals. 

After eating, I turned back to my sauerkraut. The cabbage had actually wilted quite a bit. 


I transferred the cabbage into my E-Jen Fermentation Container which I got from The Crazy Korean:


 

Then I pounded it a bit with my cabbage pounder and covered the cabbage with the outer leaves I had reserved earlier. This helps keep the bits and pieces under the brine, which is really important because fermentation is an anaerobic process. Any bits that stick out of the brine are affected by aerobic bacteria and spoil. Yuckiness ensues. 

 

After that, I put the inner lid in the fermenter and pressed down really hard until the brine was over the top of the lid, then put the plug into the lid. 

 

Look how much brine there is! I didn't add any water; this brine comes from the liquid inside the cabbage, brought out by the salt. It's like magic!

 

Just to be on the safe side, I decided to add a weight on top of the inner lid to help keep everything submerged. It turns out that one of my wide-mouth pint-and-a-half jars fits perfectly inside the fermenter! I didn't want to fill he jar with water because I don't want it to leak and dilute my brine, so I put some pie weights into a ziplock bag and stuffed it into the jar. 

 

It then occurred to me that people used to use dried beans as pie weights, so I also poured some dried beans into the jar.  

 

And then put the filled jar (with lid) into the fermenter. 

 

Then put the lid on it. 

 

I'll need to check it tomorrow to make sure everything is still submerged in brine. I may be able to remove the weighted jar in a few days, once enough brine builds up to keep it all reliably covered. 

On our way to rehearsal, we stopped by Juliette's house to deliver her jar of mustard pesto sauce. I love giving these food gifts to people and donating them to the church bell choir bake sale. I find it so soothing to make this stuff and I'm just glad people seem to like it!

While we were eating, I pondered out loud to Brianne if I should try making this sauce with my fermented honey mustard rather than store-bought Dijon. She thought for a bit and then said that part of her thinks that sounds amazing, another part thinks why mess with perfection? Lol! I might try it anyway just to see. And maybe I'll make my own Dijon and see how that turns out! 😊


Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Wednesday, Mar 22

Breakfast smoothie.

No lunch because we had an early dinner due to a 4pm meeting at church. I took two chicken thighs (bone in) and rubbed them with olive oil, then rubbed in a nice "bouquet garni" mix from Penzey's Spices, which is a mix of savory, rosemary, thyme, Turkish oregano, basil, dill weed, marjoram, sage, and tarragon. Baked them for 50 minutes at 350ΒΊ.

Meanwhile, when there was about 15 minutes left in the chicken baking time, I heated up the last of my store-bought beef broth in a high-sided fry pan and added some dehydrated onion flakes and some granulated garlic. Once the dried onions had re-hydrated, I added a 1/2 cup of garbanzo bean sprouts and 3/4 cup of lentil & mung bean sprouts, plus 1 cup of diced tomatoes from the #10 can I divvied up and froze back on Feb 13. I then decided to add a few spoonfuls of the konbudashi pickled mushrooms and onions I made on Sunday, plus a few tablespoons of the konbudashi liquid I had left over. I also sprinkled in a pinch of so of the bouquet garni, and let it simmer for about 8 minutes.

The chicken and the veggies were both SO GOOD! Definitely something I will make again!

Oh, and during the first 30 minutes or so of the chicken baking time, I made a double-batch of the mustard pesto sauce we like so much. I promised Juliette that I'd give her a 4 oz jar of it, so that's now ready to go, plus I have some for us, too.

After I got home from my meeting, I just had some kojak cheese and some pork rinds with salsa as a snack.

I am now reading "Fermented Vegetables" by Kirsten and Christopher Shockey.

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Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Tuesday, Mar 21

Breakfast smoothie. 
No lunch. 
Dinner was at Coco's Restaurant in Pasadena. I had the Parmesan-crusted chicken with grilled zucchini & tomatoes, with an arugula salad with balsamic vinaigrette. Yum!

This morning I cycled my kefir & harvested all my beans. 

Addendum: when harvesting my beans, I used to leave the finished beans out on the counter for a few hours to dry after I rinsed them. Putting wet beans into the fridge just increases the chances of them getting moldy. Yuck. But now I use three 12-inch square towels (2 under the beans and one on top) to dry then after I rinse them. Additionally, I put in a half/sheet of paper towel into the container below the beans and sticking out the top of the container to help wick any residual liquid away. 

 

Seems to do a good job keeping the sprouts crisp and fresh. Yum! 

Monday night, Mar 20

Smoothie for breakfast. 

On the way home from class, we stopped by our friend Juliette's house and the three of us went to lunch at a breakfast and burger place in town. I had a bacon & cheese omelet with a side of fruit. 

That was so filling that I didn't really eat dinner. Instead, I smacked on a few pieces of Kojak cheese and finished the rest of the dilly beans. 

I also rinsed and refreshed the water in all my beans. 

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Dinner, Sun Mar 19

For dinner, I reheated the leftover beef and cauliflower from Saturday night, adding in the almond Sprouts I had that I hadn't used yet. I also ate most of the dill beans. 

I started a bunch of beans, too. 

 

Left to right: 1/4 cup green peas + 1/4 cup Lady Cream peas. 1/2 cup garbanzo beans. 1/4 cup mixed beans + 1/4 cup soybeans. 1/4 cup lentils + 1/4 cup mung beans. 1/2 cup almonds. 

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Sunday, March 19, 2017

I Got A Wild Hair, Sun Mar 19

I've recently been reading two books on preserving food. One is "Asian Pickles" by Karen Solomon, the other is "Beyond Canning" by Autumn Giles. A have a few others along the same lines, but those are the two I was reading last night. A couple of the recipes caught my eye, so  on the way home from church, we stopped at the grocery store so I could pick up some mushrooms, carrots, daikon, & garlic. 

Then once we were home, I got a bit of a wild hair and decided to use up some stuff we had in the pantry and some of my non-standard glass jars - meaning jars I can't use for canning because they're from stuff like honey, spaghetti sauce, etc, and so my two-piece canning lids don't fit them. The USDA recommends not using those jars for home canning, so I use them for other things. (For example, I store my raw sesame seeds in the fridge in an old Ragu jar.)

So, here's what I made:

 

  • Pears in port with Rosemary. I saw the pears at the grocery store and so I bought a couple of them. We've had this bottle of port for a while and never seem to want to drink it, so I figure I'd use it for this. I cut the pears into wedges and put them into a large honey jar, then added some rosemary I'd been keeping in the freezer, then poured the port over top of it all. 
  • I had port leftover, so I cut some whole (seedless) dates in half and put them into a medium honey jar and covered them in port. 
  • Still had some port leftover, so I put some craisins into another medium honey jar and covered them in port. 
Here's the port I used:

 

After that, I still had dates and craisins leftover, so I made:

 

  • Dates and Craisins in Moa "Breakfast ale" from New Zealand that's been in my fridge for a long time, with a dollop of honey. I think the beer was left over from a party we threw and we've never been brave enough to try it!
  • I found some flat ginger ale in the fridge. It had been made with our SodaStream device and went flat before we could drink it. So I sliced up some nectarines, added a dollop of honey, and covered them with ginger ale. 
I figure those will either be awesome or awful. I'm not really emotionally vested in them, so if they're horrible, I'll just put them into the compost bin! 🀷‍♀️

Here's the label of the beer:

 

 

Then I decided to actually make one of the recipes from the books! Both books had recipes for Pickled mushrooms. The one in "Asian Pickles" has a recipe from Korea that includes chili pepper flakes and ginger, neither of which I like (and I'm allergic to most vegetable peppers). The "Beyond Canning" recipe was similar but didn't have the pepper flakes or the ginger, and did have konbu seaweed, which I happen to have on hand. So that's the one I made:

 

I tried one after they were finished and they are really good! πŸ˜„

I had a lot of the konbu dashi pickling liquid leftover, so I put it into jars, too, and will use it when making things that I would flavor with vinegar and soy or ponzu sauce. 

 

Bonus: I used up a couple more non-canning jars too! πŸ‘

The seaweed gets picked out of the pickled mushrooms before the mushrooms go into the fridge, but I didn't want to just throw it away - it seems so wasteful! So I spread it out onto a cookie sheet and stuck it in the freezer. Once it's frozen, I'll put it into a container and feed it a piece at a time to my pet Mangrove Tree Crabs. πŸ¦€ I've done this with salmon skin that I trimmed off of some salmon fillets we had a few months ago and my crabs (and crayfish, and fish) love it. 

Oh, and before I forget: 
  • Breakfast was a smoothie, as usual
  • For lunch, we stopped at Freddy's Steakburgers, where I had a double cheeseburger with no bun, wrapped in lettuce. Instead of French fries, I had fried pickles, which were really good! They were breaded, of course, which is not great for the diet, but I had limited choices. 
  • I did have one chocolate brownie today, too, from our church bell choir's bake sale. 
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