Monday, June 30, 2014

Kohlrabi, carrots & mint

Wow ... so our last post was two and a half years ago ... clearly we've been too busy to blog! We've done OK keeping up on Facebook and we've been marginally active on Twitter but the blog, well, we pretty much forgot about it. We make no promises with this post that the next two years will be any better than the last two, but we will give it a shot.

So, the topic today is vegetables! We have so many great veggies from our Prairie Sun Farm CSA and we've talked to many of our subscribers, friends, and family members who are loving their veggie CSA's as well. There are always items in the box that are a little unfamiliar though and we found a couple great ways to use them. Here's a picture of our dinner side dishes last night (served with our delicious duck breast ... mmmmmmm):



Mint-Infused Carrots and Kohlrabi Fritters

Neither mint nor carrots are unusual, but we've heard people may be getting more than they know what to do with. Here's a great way to use both. The kohlrabi is not an every-day item and is something we've always just eaten it fresh. We haven't tried cooking it yet! The fritters were an easy and super tasty way new to eat kohlrabi; they got thumbs up from all of us. Here are the recipes if you want to give these a try:

Mint-Infused Carrots:
Put a big sprig of mint in a little water in the bottom of a pan. Put your carrots on top in a steamer insert. Bring the water to boiling and steam carrots until your desired level of cooking - we did about 10 minutes for soft carrots that still had a little bite.

Kohlrabi Fritters:
Take the leaves and the end off of 1 big or 2 small kohlrabi. Shred the kohlrabi (we used a food processor). Mix shredded kohlrabi with 1 egg, 2 T. flour, 1/4 t. ground cumin, and salt to taste. (All measurements are approximate - if it needs more flour or something go ahead and add it in). Heat some oil on a hot skillet and spoon mounds of the kohlrabi mixture on, flattening slightly. When browned on the bottom, flip and cook the other side.

Friday, January 6, 2012

The allure of our garage…

I opened the garage the other day so I could bring the welding machine to the barn yard area where we have our hay feeders setup for the winter.  I needed to do some quick repairs and adjustments….  As the door was opening, I looked out across the driveway to the barn and saw a chicken and a barn cat running towards me as if their lives depended on it.  The chicken was in the lead, but the cat quickly passed her (the hen must have just had a head start).  The sight of a chicken in a full sprint is a rare sight since most are kept in such cramped conditions they can barely walk around – it also is something you probably have to see in order to truly enjoy the humor of.  

Our cats are super sweet and really helpful in keeping field mice populations under control – but they are obsessed with our garage.  I didn’t want the cat rummaging through our garage, so as she crossed the threshold of the garage, I scooped her up and carried her back to the barn – passing the chicken along the way who was still running for some reason.…   Here is a photo of the cat as a kitten:

I left the cat by the barn in the futile hope that she would stay there (maybe the walk was an excuse to enjoy the nice January weather and pet a sweet purring cat, nobody knows for sure).  As expected, the cat made a B-line back to the garage the moment I set her down.

What I hadn’t noticed was that apparently there was some sort of garage love potion in our water and the chicken had found a wonderful corner to sit down in as well.…  So now I had a cat and a chicken both insistent that the garage was the place for them to be at the exact moment.  I realized I needed to get the welder out first, so I could close the door and let them out via the side door.…  Anyhow, a fun day watching the chicken and the cat race towards an unattainable glorious goal of visiting our garage for the afternoon.  

Nice to see they the animals are able to find really enjoyable ways to live their life….

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Sunrise & Moonrise

Every morning I get up before sunrise and head out to milk the cow and start chores.  We've been working such long hard days that waking up this early is, well... less than desirable.  However, I am often rewarded with a really neat sunrise or wicked looking fog and colors over the pasture.  Some how, the cool crisp air and quiet beauty of nature puts me in a good mood and reminds me of how lucky we all are to just be alive.

This morning, I could tell it would be a good sunrise.  It got me thinking about how our animals often wake up for breakfast and take in some of the most amazing visuals I've ever seen.  I thought about how most of the hens who lay eggs for our breakfasts aren't able to see much more than her neighbor hen's feathers a few centimeters from her beak.  They never see the light of day, much less a sunrise like this.  I took this photo of today's sunrise as a reminder of how lucky our animals are and how I feel great knowing this is how the hens who gave me my breakfast woke up!


Later that same day I was out collecting the last of the day's eggs and noticed the moonrise was going to be specular as well!  I grabbed the camera, but I was unable to figure out how to do the sky justice.  I still managed to get this cool photo of a turkey who had decided to roost on a fence post for the night.  The moon was huge an really neat looking, but the camera just couldn't capture it (or rather its operator didn't know how)

Anyhow, I hope you enjoyed seeing my photos from the first and last chores of the day.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Sausage!

Wow!  It has been a busy summer as you can tell by our lack of posts since April!

We'll get back to updating this regularly once we catch up on our projects... but really quick:  We had a subscriber write and ask for suggestions for how to use the paprika sausage.  Another subscriber suggested that we post the answer so everyone can benefit... so here goes:

We've used it as taco filling, grilled in patties like hamburgers served in a bun or on top of garlic mashed potatoes, as an egg scramble or burrito for breakfast and as a meat for a tomato based spaghetti sauce.

We also had another subscriber use the sausage to make stuffed poblano peppers and posted his recipe here:  http://bit.ly/hckitchen

A basic spaghetti sauce in our house is:

1) Brown the sausage in a stockpot or a large sauce pan
2) Add
  - a couple large cans of Muir Glenn roasted basil tomatoes
  - consider adding a can of tomato paste if you like thicker and more tomatoey sauce
  - add a bunch of fresh chopped basil (dried is OK if you don't have any fresh)
  - add any other 'italian' herbs that you'd like -- dried or fresh oregano, a small amount of thyme, parsley, etc.  Some stores sell good dried 'italian herb mix' that has a bunch of those herbs.  I would think oregano would be the first one to add. 
  - a bulb of chopped fresh garlic or garlic powder
  - salt to taste
  - pepper to taste

3) Simmer everything on low heat for about an hour, at least 30 min.  If it it is too thin, add more tomato paste or simmer longer.  If too thick, you can add some water to cut it.
4) Consider adding a cup or two of cedar summit cream towards the end if you'd like a cream sauce (I think this is super good -- they have the best cream in the region)  You'd want the sauce somewhat on the thick side before adding any cream or else cook it down a bit to the desired consistency. 

5) Cook up some noodles, ones with some sort of shape to them might work well to pick up the sauce, but plain spaghetti would work well.  I prefer noodles that aren't fully cooked so they have a little bit of a bite to them.  If you're gluten free, we have found the ones with the bunny on the front of the label that says 'not mushy' are actually possible to cook not mushy.  The others are hard to get to have any texture after cooking.

6) Top noodles with the sauce, more fresh chopped basil and grate some fresh grated hard cheese.  The best tool we've found for grating fresh cheese is a microplane

This sauce will freeze really well -- so we like to make up a large of batch and freeze half.  That way we have really good tasting sauce for a busy night's dinner ready to go.  

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Logistics for our new chicks!

We've never picked up our chicks from the airport before.  Normally our chicks have come via US mail.  However, since we ordered so many chicks it was better to ship them via Delta Airlines.  The chicks were less than a day old by the time I got them back to our farm.  They were so healthy and active that it was hard to walk around in the brooders -- they just kept running up to our feet or to the sound of our voices! 

Check out our new chick videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TrueCostFarm


We were planning on having our new laying chicks outside before the 1040 broilers showed up yesterday.  Last year at this time there was green grass and the farmers had planted most of the corn!  This year it is snowing and sleeting, so we thought it might have been less than a good idea to move them outside in the cold wet weather.

Instead we decided to move the older chicks across the barn into the horse stalls that had previously been occupied by the laying hens.  The idea of picking up 300 some chicks and putting them into boxes only to carry them 40 feet across the barn into a temporary space wasn't too appealing.  After some brainstorming, we decided to have a 'running of the chicks event' Monday night.

Megan made a plywood alley that mostly restricted the laying chicks from running all over the barn -- The plywood almost looked like the buildings in Pamplona! (Not really so much).  We opened the doors to the laying chick brooders and expected them to rush out just like a pack of 300 bulls...  Instead they looked up at us and then went back to eating, scratching and pecking at the ground. 

After some coaxing we shooed them in batches down the alley with the cats perched above on the hay bales curiously watching the festivities.  I had planned on taking a video of the running of the chicks to post, but then there were the escapees!  I ran around catching chicks and plugging holes in the plywood that had been so small you'd have to be a chick to even see it -- much less go through it! 

All in all there were only about a dozen chicks that had escaped into the grater barn area.  Finding the escapee chicks was easy enough because they were chirping -- We managed to quickly get them all rounded up... well except for the one that we noticed peeping outside of the new home the following morning!  She sure was excited to run in and re-join her flock!


After a long night of herding chicks, moving laying hens and preparing the brooders for the new 1,040 broiler chicks, we finally and gratefully hit our pillows around midnight. 


The new chicks are doing really well.  It was fun to have baby chicks again, one forgets how small they are when they first hatch.  Hope you'll come visit them soon!

Our next round of chicks will be hatched on the farm -- that should make some fun video too!

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Steak!

One of the hardest parts of our job is taste testing steaks from other farmers we are considering including in our subscription.  Today after a long day's work of doing chores and building chicken houses, we continued to slog away by eating a perfectly cooked sample steak, some homemade sweet potato fries with from scratch aioli and homebrewed IPA.  You can be sure that this dinner will be featured in our newsletter later this summer...  Some parts of our job are pretty sweet!

Tonight we sampled a steak from a new farm that specializes in slow growth, small framed cows. We both were in love with this particular steak.  It was so tender that we almost wished that it was a little tougher so that we could have eaten it slower!  Each bite was a buttery luxurious beefy unforgettable moment in our lives...  Ok, that might be a little over the top, but it really was quite good. 

One thing that was interesting was that even though the steak was so rich with plenty of marbling, it really tasted wholesome and healthy.  Other rich dinners we've had sometimes feel a little more like dessert, but it was clear that this steak was healthy and nourishing for us...  the contrast of such a rich butter flavor and the sense of being good for us was really quite profound and interesting to observe.

Needless to say, we're going to include this farm's beef in our subscription.  The beef is all pasture raised and 100% grass fed.  The hay the cows are fed in the winter comes from the same farm, so there isn't any transporting of nutrients from farm to farm.  Our steak tonight was missing something compared with supermarket beef: It didn't have any residual growth hormones that have been proven to stimulate human breast cancer or cause early onset of puberty in adolescents.  Instead these lucky steers are healthy and don't need antibiotics or other unnatural treatments.  Our country is the only industrialized country that allows the cancer growing hormone Zeranol to be injected into beef, pork and lamb.   For citations and more information about this chemical used in our meat supply, visit our website and click under products. 

We are really happy about the beef farmers we are working with for our subscriptions.  It has taken a lot of time and hard work taste testing, but we think the effort was worth it!  Each of our partner farms have a unique take on beef and we are excited to showcase the results from different types of cattle raised with different management styles. 

For those of you who are interested in learning more about the not so subtle nuances of raising high quality beef and how to taste test, check out the book Steak linked on our website.  It is a funny short book, well worth anyone's time. 

Friday, April 8, 2011

Chicks!

So I actually intended on posting an update about the chicks today, but the pigs got to the blog first. 

The chicks are doing really well -- I still get amazed how fast they grow!  Here is a photo I took today of one of our future layers -- just over three weeks old.   
 One of the things I like about our flock is that we have so many breeds... watching them all run around with their different coloring is really fun.  Most commercial birds have had their ability to grow full coverage of feathers bred out of them -- I guess some people think that feathers are a waste of protein.  I think chickens without feathers are abnormal, I much prefer our chicks! 

We should have these chicks out on pasture in the next couple of weeks!