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Wayne

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Posts posted by Wayne

  1.  

    If you are following Hwy. 6 through Arthur I'd suggest a stop at http://www.goatmilkproducts.ca/index.php

    They are a short 2-3 minute detour east on Hwy. 109 and are a working farm with a retail shop so I usually give them a call

    to insure the shop is open.

    They make some nice cheeses (their website is hopelessly out of date) and allow sampling.

    Their 'Like Stilton' and 'MD' (Mason's Delight) are my favorites.

     

     

     

     

    • Like 3
  2.  

    The season is coming to a close. Cold enough overnight Monday and Tuesday to kill my basil plants. Still lots of tomatoes and peppers (started pinching off new growth two weeks ago so the plants can put their energy into existing fruit) and zucchini.

    A late planting of bush beans is showing lots of flowers so if the frost holds off I may get a final harvest of beans.

    Still have lots of kale, collards, chard, winter radishes, bok choy, lettuces, and herbs which thrive in this weather.

     

     

     

    • Like 6
  3. 47 minutes ago, Anna N said:

    Definitely not a colloquialism. 

     

    "In Eastern Carolina we favor a variety called the cabbage collard. Until recently, your only chance ....

     

    Thanks for the info. A quick search didn't reveal any Canadian sources however I have a friend with Seed Savers Exchange Canada and is a Test Planter so I'll see what she says. Sounds like a great varietal.

     

    • Like 2
  4. 7 hours ago, blue_dolphin said:

    Yes, do this!  For me, the contrast of flavors and textures from the roasted and fresh tomatoes stands out the most when it's hot.  When cooled to room temp, they were more melded together, and the sum seemed greater than the separate parts.  The bottom crust was still crispy for several hours, though it got pretty mushy after an overnight in the fridge.

     

    Today, I made the Elbow Lick Tomato Sandwich and it's also a keeper.  The smoked corn mayo is a delicious accompaniment to the tomatoes.  On A Chef's Life, she made the sandwich on one of the big round, doughnut-shaped loaves of Sweet Potato and Onion Bread and cut it into individual wedges for serving.  I have not tried making the bread yet so I used a loaf of multigrain bread I picked up today at Sprouts.  

     

     

    Hopefully I have the time next weekend to attempt the tomato pie.

    That smoked corn mayo looks intriguing. Fresh corn is long over here however next time I use the smoker I'll piggy-back some corn alongside and give it a try. Nice photos.

     

     

    • Like 1
  5.  

    @Anna N

    The variety I grow is Champion, an open-pollinated hybrid resistant to bolting. I'd be interested in knowing what cultivar she describes. 'Cabbage collard' may be a specific cultivar or it may be a local colloquialism xD.

     

    @Shelby

    I do try to harvest the leaves young but doesn't always happen. Cabbage rolls soon. Maybe caldo verde with collards. I'm learning.

     

     

    • Like 2
  6.  

    I still have not had a look at the book however I went online to re-watch the collards episode.

    To make a long story short her use of blanched trimmed collards as a wrap for dolmades piqued my interest and I ended up using them as a substitute wrap for lotus leaf wrapped sticky rice with a chicken, pork, mushroom and greens filling. The collards were trimmed, briefly blanched, shocked then used to wrap the parcels. Parcels then steamed 15 minutes to finish.

    Results: The collards looked great however I did find them still tough. In the episode the dolmades were steamed for even less time yet seemed to be an easy bite.  I wouldn't do it again however I think substituting collards for cabbage in a braised cabbage roll would work quite well. I've got a lot of collards.

    I plan on trying the tomato pie as I'm still pulling lots of tomatoes from the garden. Looks great from up-thread photos.

     

     

    • Like 3
  7.  

    @Bhukhhad

    The first does appear to be lemon thyme and the second oregano.

    They are both hardy.

    I have both and they've survived and thrived through 8 winters (regularly get -20 C. days and nights) and I had a lemon thyme in the north that thrived through many a -30 C. winter. My main problem with them was keeping them cut back.

    If I needed the herbs during the winter I'd just dig them out of the snow.

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 2
  8. 2 hours ago, djyee100 said:

    Wayne, I can't help you with collards, except to say I really like to eat them. They are sturdy greens, with a strong flavor, and I expect that if you blanche them they will freeze well. I like to cook Kim Shook's recipe for collards that she gave on the Dinner thread. Here, Kim's post 6/22/2010:

    https://forums.egullet.org/topic/143505-dinner-2010/?page=26

     

    Yesterday was pickage and clean-up day in the herb garden. Our warm weather is supposed to continue, even hit 90+ over the weekend, so I decided to trim back plants and clip basil flowers to encourage more growth.

     

     

    @djyee100

    Thanks for the info and link and I do agree that although they may not be to everyone's taste I like them.

    A side note: when I was visiting my brother and sister in law this summer, in central Ontario, a dinner guest (friend of my SIL) and originally from Kentucky was over and she, over a gardening discussion, pretty much gave me the same recipe that you've linked from Kim Shook. On the list of things to do.

     

    • Like 2
  9. 31 minutes ago, Shelby said:

    Ok jelly makers.  Did I miss a step?  How do you disperse the jalapeño throughout the jelly?   Or is this normal?  After the jars came out of the water bath I swirled them around but it made no difference.  

     

    It took forever to de-seed and chop up 2 3/4 cups of jalapeños.  And I was nervous.  I'm a very new jelly maker.  But it set up nicely and it tastes really good.  I decided to skip the adding of the green food coloring.   Also, I was consulting two different recipes--that were ultimately the same.  I followed the directions precisely but they both said I would come out with 6 1/2 pints of jelly.  I got 3 with a bit in a 4th jar.  

     

    Anyway, I have used up all those peppers so I'm happy.

     

    PA051321.JPG

     

     

     

    Hot pepper jellies are the only kind I make and I puree the de-stemmed peppers in a food processor or blender with liquid, leave it steep for awhile, strain through cheese cloth, then add the pepper 'tea' to your sugar as the recommended liquid component.

    Works for me.

    How did that Cowboy Candy work out? Like a hot pepper version of bread and butter pickles?

     

     

     

     

    • Like 4
  10. 17 minutes ago, Kerry Beal said:

    That picture reminds me of the west side of my friends island (her family owns the largest single family owned island on Georgian Bay) - it was a Thanksgiving weekend camping out in tents - snow fell - there was not enough booze to keep us all warm!

     

    Lots of good food and plenty of wine can make even rotten weather and minimal amenities enjoyable xD.

     

     

    • Like 5
  11.  

    If I may I'd like to expand this a little further into how to deal with a large quantity of greens, such as chard, kale and collards after the first killing frost of the season.

    Generally I trim, blanch, shock, squeeze then package in an appropriate size for a pot of soup, a lasagna, a filling or some other application.

    This will be my first year dealing with collards and I plan to trim out the stems, blanch the leaves, dry them and package them flat.

    This summer I experimented with using the above treated leaves in the manner of Hawaiian Laulau which worked quite well and plan to use the frozen ones on a variation of cabbage rolls.

    Any suggestions from anyone with experience using collards would be most welcome.

     

     

     

     

    • Like 3
  12. 13 hours ago, heidih said:

     

     

     

    http://awaytogarden.com/how-to-freeze-parsley-chives-and-other-herbs/@Tere  This post on Margaret Roach's site has the interesting frozen parsley logs   

     

    I use this technique for basil, tarragon, dill, parsley, cilantro and chives. I remember seeing it demonstrated on a PBS cooking program (which one I don't recall) in which basil was first briefly blanched, shocked, water squeezed out, the basil formed into a log with cling film then frozen. When needed a portion can be sliced off (much like a log of herb butter).

     

     

    • Like 3
  13.  

    Returned yesterday from a five day fishing trip of which four were spent in pouring rain and to put icing on the cake not a single fish caught. Still have lots in the freezer from the last outing.

     

    Chinook.JPG

     

    The garden is thriving:

     

    Cocozelle.JPG

     

    Fall plantings of kohlrabi, lettuce, daikon and watermelon radish.

     

    Large Bed.JPG

     

    More lettuces, cilantro and dill.

     

    Herbs and Romaine.JPG

     

    And finally this morning's pickage.

     

    Morning Harvest.JPG

     

    Cocozelle zucchini, beet greens, jalapenos, dill, parsley, garlic chives, tomatoes, watermelon radishes, daikon, mouse melons, beets and in the center hot peppers (aji limo, habaneros, cherry bombs, hot portugals and a lone red jalapeno).

    Those are the end of my beets and I have to admit I'm not a big fan of beetroot and grow them for their greens.

    Over the next few days I'm going to start doing some serious preserving.

     

     

    • Like 11
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