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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: Canning & Preserving

AUGUST MASH-UP–PART TWO

12 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving, Harvest, Ornamentals, Uncategorized, Vegetable garden

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Tags

camping, canning, garden chores, harvest



BY THE THE BEGINNING OF AUGUST
there is plenty of deadheading to do. As I started this tedious chore I felt inspired to create a bouquet using the more interesting deadheads (August 18th above) and have continued to add to it (as of September 8th below).

The same day that we dug the iris I enlisted the extra hands to help clean the garlic. With three pairs of hands we cleaned four varieties in no time. Yesterday I cleaned the remaining 25 heads. Total garlic harvested: 142 heads.

CANNING began in earnest with cherries, apricots and zucchini in late July.

Since spring-like weather persisted well into June the cherry and strawberry harvests were late. I put up five half pints each of strawberry and cherry preserves in the last week of July. These were modeled on a low sugar preserves recipe from Eugenia Bone’s blog post of July 18th.

PEACHES started showing up in the markets mid-August so I made peach preserves (seven half pints) and froze sliced peaches in half pound bags (5). At the end of the month on our way home from Palmer Lake, I bought more peaches (fifteeen pounds) and about four pounds of the last (!) bing cherries at Lone Pine fruit stand in Wenatchee. The cherries were wonderful and I put up 8 more half-pints of preserves. The lovely looking Glowstar peaches however had a difficult time fully ripening. They became 6 pints of what I am calling Ice Cream Peaches; kind of like a loose, syrupy preserve flavored with vanilla beans and Calvados brandy. They taste yummy!

The bulk of tomatoes remained firmly green even with the red plastic mulch until the last week of the month. And at that, only a handful or two had ripened.

We spent the week of the 22nd happily lazing about at Palmer Lake in northeast Washington. The DNR campground is small and was surprisingly short of visitors for a change. The water was warm, the weather was warm, we paddled around the lake, and I caught up on my travel journal. There is good birdwatching habitat around the lake; cherry and apple orchards to the east and some walnut orchards and open pastures to the north. Tom saw an Indigo Bunting! We have been ‘bunting hunting’ all summer on our trips to eastern Washington–too bad I missed seeing it. We saw a muskrat one morning in Palmer Creek and a beaver in the water at our campground on our last morning.

I LOVE FINDING something new and unknown to me. On one of our walks we spotted a hatching of Box Elder bugs, boisea trivittata. I snapped this photo so I could identify them when we got back home. Apparently they are a nuisance in most areas, but we had never seen them before. According to Wikipedia “They may form large aggregations while sunning themselves in areas near their host plant (e.g. on rocks, shrubs, trees, and man-made structures).” That is just how we saw them.

Time to move on to Septet

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CHERRIES & APRICOTS—OH MY!

27 Wednesday Jul 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving

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ON SUNDAY MORNING WE WALKED TO THE WEST SEATTLE FARMER’S MARKET in the ‘Junction’ to see what kinds of fruit was available. I found these lovely Gold Rich apricots, bought 4lbs. and decided to put them up poached in wine (using this 2009 NYT recipe; it appeared along with this recipe too ); I had a bottle of Riesling that was deemed too sweet and donated by some friends, so I used it for this recipe substituting 2 cups Riesling for 2 cups of water and left out the brandy. I also added a stip of lemon peel, one whole star anise and a few whole allspice to each jar.

While the apricots processed, I prepared Rainier cherries for a variation on Eugenia Bone’s Cherries in Wine ( she calls for Bings); in place of the red wine I used Rosé and Moscato, and added 1/4 tsp. each of whole coriander seed, white peppercorns, and whole allspice.

They are quite a lovely color. The cherries are late, large and sweet this year.

I might have to make some more zucchini pickles by the weekend–zucchini must be among the fastest growing vegetables!

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GARLIC & PICKLES

22 Friday Jul 2011

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving, Vegetable garden

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

garlic, harvest, pickles

AFTER 18 DAYS AWAY FROM HOME we returned to garlic ready for harvest and zucchini ready to be pickled.

GARLIC HARVEST was later than normal but there were still plenty of green leaves left on most of the stalks to  insure good wrappers when dry and only one variety had started to fall over. I harvested Inchelium (26), two types of hardneck (50), an unknown softneck variety from friends (28), and a dozen Itlaian White, which after three generations are finally to golf ball size. Still left to harvest is Chesnok, (another hardneck type) that looks like it needs another week or so. I lay the garlic on the potting bench for about two weeks to cure before completing the cleaning and trimming for storage. The potting bench is on the north side of the house and protected from rain by wide eaves.

Here’s a look at the vegetable garden; the lettuces and zucchini plants seem to be most vigorous, but everything is doing pretty well in spite of the mixed-up weather.

This is where the zucchini pickles begin. Yesterday I picked enough zucchini from three plants to make the first batch of Bread & Butter style pickles. The variety is Costata, a firm fleshed, ribbed type that held up well for pickles last year.

Step one is the sliced zucchini and onions, salted and covered with cold water and ice cubes for two hours.

This little slicer is the simplest form of a mandoline and is still sharp after forty years of use and a must have to make quick work of slicing zucchini and onions.

I found a use for the garlic scapes: I peeled them and placed one ‘head’ into each jar of pickles.

Five pints of pickles, the first of the season. Now the wait for the cucumbers to really come on so I can make my friend Betty’s dill pickles.

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WHAT I CANNED THIS YEAR—THE FINAL TALLY

27 Wednesday Oct 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving

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DESPITE THE UNSEASONABLY COOL SUMMER HERE I was able to put up quite a bit of produce from the vegetable garden. The paltry crop of peppers–seven pounds of mixed green (read unripe) peppers, Anaheim/long green, anchos, sweet Italian/pimento types, and jalapeno were combined with ripe, slightly ripe and green tomatoes, and became Tomato-Chile Salsa a week ago. The tomato plants came out of the ground to make way for fall planting of garlic on Wednesday of last week and five pounds of green tomatoes were turned into Green Tomato Chutney.

Most of the fruit was grown in other parts of Washington. Strawberries from the Skagit Valley; red plums from West Seattle; apples, cherries and peaches from Eastern Washington; and tomatillos from California. The bulk of the apples were grown right here at what I call Backyard Farm© (ha! ha! tongue planted firmly in cheek).

THE NUMBERS:

JUNE
13 pts Pickled Cauliflower

JULY
8 half pints Red Plum Preserves
10 half pints red Plum Jelly w/lavendar
3 half pints Red Plum & Port Syrup
9 half pints Balsamic Strawberry Preserves

AUGUST
7 pts Cherries In Wine
6 pts Apple Maple Preserves
17 pts Peaches
5 pts Brandied Peaches

SEPTEMBER
3 pts Dilled Beans
6 pts Dilled Green Tomatoes
6 pts Applesauce

OCTOBER
5 pts Pickled Purple Cauliflower
11 pts Tomatillo Salsa
3 pts Bread & Butter style Zucchini Pickles
11 half pints + 3 pts  Apple Chutney
11 half pints Brandied Apple Preserves
8 pts Tomato-Chile Salsa
13 halfpints Green Tomato Chutney
4 qts Tomato Sauce
3 qts Tomato Broth

The only canning left on my agenda is Cranberry Wine Jelly to serve with Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners and to give as gifts. So that, should wrap it up for the year. Much of what I have preserved will be given away to family and friends over the next year.

Has anyone thought about or  participated in a Canning Exchange (modeled on a cookie exchange)? I’m thinking that could be fun!

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WHAT TO DO WITH ALL OF THOSE TOMATOES…

11 Monday Oct 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Canning & Preserving, Tomatoes

≈ 3 Comments

THIS IS THE LAZY WAY to turn a lot of tomatoes into sauce for the freezer. Cut up all the split and imperfect tomatoes; place them in a very large roasting pan and toss with chunks of onion, whole garlic cloves, some sprigs of thyme, oregano, parsley, salt, pepper and fruity olive oil. Roast at 300° for about two hours or so.

This is the result: nicely softened tomatoes, onions and garlic with deep flavor. Since these are not really sauce tomatoes, there is a lot of juice. Next step is to put the solids (strain off the juices) through the Foley food mill.

I started with about twelve pounds of tomatoes which yielded two quarts of sauce and two quarts of tomato broth. I can always add some fresh herbs and a little onion when it comes time to use the sauce later on for a little fresh, bright flavor. The sauce will be a little bit of summertime in the middle of winter.

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