Wednesday, August 29

Chile Dilly Beans

As I was hoping, I made the pickled green beans that my mom used to make last week. Sofia and I picked green and yellow beans from the garden and I supplemented with some green beans from the produce stand down the hill.

I followed the old recipe from The Oregonian (by Jan something) but ended up with 6 jars rather than 4. The last jar (of the tops and ends) didn't get quite enough vinegar so it went straight into the fridge after processing. We opened them last night and they were still a bit too crunchy - I'm not sure if I didn't let them sit long enough before opening? Will have to try another jar in a few more weeks. I'm still hoping to try canning tomatoes if I can find some at the farmers market this week or next. And maybe put up some more peppers in the freezer and nay more fruit. 

The Garden
Our tomatoes are starting to get hit hard by the powdery mildew and I just picked off a green tomato with the blossom end rot. I'm hoping that this is a solitary problem! Still no red tomatoes, but lots of orange cherry tomatoes and the large tomatoes are getting big - but still green. Next year we just have to start plants earlier and probably keep them covered longer. It's only getting up to the mid 60s, low 70s during the days now and chilly at night. Not the best tomato weather. The beans are still producing and happy, and the hot peppers are going gang busters. There's one lonely eggplant on the eggplant plant, almost as big as the plant itself. And the sweet peppers have a few fruit, but not much. I'm going to try to winter those over and see if that helps. Carrots and beets are doing fine when they aren't being dug up by the neighboring cat. And I planted a second crop of potatoes because we had some sprouted potatoes in the house - don't know if they will actually do anything this late in the year. The figs are almost done - we've enjoyed those greatly. And, well, that's the garden! 

Thursday, August 16

Putting things up

I've been enjoying being back in the Northwest and using my "free" time to start putting things up. Last week saw the addition of 10 new jars to our cupboards. I made 7 1/2 pints of blackberry jam (and have now given 2 away), one jar of brandied cherries, one jar of blueberry-basil vinegar, and one jar of blackberry infused gin!

In addition, the rest of the flat and a half of blackberries is resting the freezer along with about a quart of frozen blueberries, 3 or 4 containers of red beans, and 2 containers of chicken broth. Oh! and also 2 portions of carnitas. And rosemary salt!

On my putting up wish list...
- apricot-rosemary jam (using our rosemary outside)
- pickled dilly beans (at least one whole batch, maybe 2)
- huckleberries if I can get them
- peaches? plums? either to freeze or turn into jam
- limoncello (we gave away all of our before moving away from Iowa) I have 2 bottles of Everclear waiting so maybe also an arancello?
- bags of frozen shredded chicken for enchiladas etc
- bagels (frozen)
- par baked bread (frozen)
- yogurt (I guess you don't really put this up... but I miss the taste of homemade yogurt)
- marmalade (I keep reading recipes for this and want to try)
- dried hot peppers from the garden, and maybe a small batch of hot pepper jelly?
- something with the massive quantity of tomatoes soon to arrive... freezing? drying? canning? tomato jam?

Wednesday, August 15

Crockpot/Slowcooker Beans

Crockpot/Slowcooker Beans

This is my general recipe for slowcooker beans. I rarely cook them on the stove anymore and I try to buy them in the can infrequently (both for reducing our BPA exposure and to save money). The whole family loves beans and could eat them many nights a week.

General directions
Pour beans into a colander and rinse under water. Pick out any weird ones, rocks, or random objects (my beans seem to generally be fine, but occasionally there is a stone). Dump into crockpot. Add water to cover by at least an inch. Choose seasonings. Turn on. Cook.

Seasonings
I usually include an onion (shallot, leek, garlic), some kind of pepper (black, red flakes, fresh hot peppers), and herbs (thyme, oregano, basil, cumin, coriander, a little cinnamon, paprika). I also always add salt initially even though all of the cookbooks tell you not to. I don't find my beans tough or the skins hard and this way I don't forget!

Freezing
You can't can beans without a pressure cooker, so I freeze mine. I actually freeze in rather large containers, because when we have beans we generally are making soup, chili, or fillings for things. So having 20-32 ounces is about right. I'd love to freeze in all glass, but don't currently have the supplies for that. I always cover with the leftover bean water to reduce freezer burn.