Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Peaches and Traveling Chickens

Ah, peaches! Is there a fruit that is quite as fragrant, sweet and delicious as a fresh picked peach? I think not. You might disagree, but this week, peaches rule, with strawberries running a close second.

Last week Barry went to divest the larger peach tree of a few green peaches so the rest of the fruit would grow better.

He came back with a pail of the little round golf balls, which didn't taste much like peaches yet.

What to do with a bucket of green peaches? Well, after much googling and recipe book plundering, I decided on the easiest recipe I could find (and there aren't many for green peaches, I tell ya): Pickled Green Peaches. I used a mix of cider vinegar, sugar and spices. The house smelled great all day. Then I canned up a few jars for later in the summer. I also pickled a few of the small onions from the garden. I really enjoy doing it, and it always reminds me of my mother who canned like crazy every summer. We were eating her jams, pickles, tomato sauce, peaches and watermelon rinds until January.


Chickens on the Move

Last Friday was the Day We Moved the Chickens. Remember Barry had built a chicken tractor for the new laying hens (a chicken tractor is just a movable chicken pen, no tractor required, but a good lawnmower is helpful). So in the morning before letting out the little chickens we hooked up the lawnmower to the chicken tractor and took off through the field to it's new home. We'll move it every week so they have new pasture to mow down, and when they are big enough they'll get the run of the field.


Step one: pull it through the first gate. Oh, don't forget to lock up the dogs or they'll run amuck.










Step two: don't hit the turkey tractor on your way by.












Step Three: Go all the way to where you want to drop it off, then stop.





Step four: Make sure you have enough muscle to haul the outdoor cage area over to in front of the house. Barry loves building things that last. Forever, and ever. This thing is HEAVY!














Step Five: Release the chickens! Oh, and close the door, fast!

They are getting so big, these once small chicklets.









Here is Barry ploughing the field for our potatoes and corn that we have since planted. He loves playing on his tractor. It is a Massey-Ferguson, 1959.









Random photo of Lysander eating the tall grass. I have no idea why he does it. After he eats a few blades he'll pee on the bottom of it. Nice.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Evening with Friends

The other evening we were pleased to entertain
our friends Susan and Mary at the Farm. I fired up the grill and made some spice and dark sugar-rubbed true country ribs, Vidalia onions and carrots. Mary brought potato salad and watermelon. We had a great time drinking Firefly Iced Tea with lemonade, playing with the turkeys and having a grand old time. I also tried out a new recipe for Sweet Potato Biscuits.

I'm not normally a biscuit kind of girl. I'm from Iowa, and biscuits are nice, but not a religion like they are here in the south. However, since I'm a recipe tester for a cooking magazine and this month's test recipe was Sweet Potato Biscuits-re do, I decided to make them for our discriminating Southern-born friends. They received four human thumbs-up reviews, and several paws-up reviews from the dog audience gathered in the kitchen. Later that evening Mary's dog, Dudley the Deadly Dachshund, pinched and ate every biscuit I sent home with them. That was okay as he needed to gain a few ounces, anyway, but here's the recipe so Mary can make some more, and you can too. And yes, I do cook with lard. If you haven't heard, that solid vegetable shortening can kill you. Non-hydrogenated lard is wonderful stuff. 'Nuf said.
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Sweet Potato Biscuits
Makes 16 biscuits

2 1/2 pounds sweet potatoes (4-5 medium)
2 T cider vinegar
3 1/4 cups cake flour
1/4 cup packed dark brown sugar
5 t baking powder
1/2 t baking soda
1 1/2 t salt
8 T (1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into 1/2 inch pieces, chilled
2 T unsalted butter, melted
4 T lard, cut into small pieces

1. MICROWAVE POTATOES: prick potatoes all over with fork. Microwave until skin is wet and potatoes are very soft, 15-20 min., flipping enough to handle, scoop flesh into bowl and mash until smooth. (You should have two cups. If you have excess, reserve for another purpose.) Stir in vinegar. Refrigerate until cool, about 15 minutes.

2. MAKE DOUGH: Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 425 degrees. Line rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Pulse flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt, chilled butter, and lard in a food processor until mixture resembles coarse meal. Transfer to bowl with cool potatoes and fold with rubber spatula until incorporated.

3. FORM BISCUITS: Turn dough out onto floured surface and knead until smooth, 8-10 times. Pat dough into 9-inch circle, about 1-inch thick. Using a 2 1/2 inch biscuit cutter (or glass) dipped in flour, cut out biscuits and arrange on prepared baking sheet. Pat remaining dough into 1-inch-thick circle and cut out more biscuits.

4. BAKE: Brush prepared biscuits with melted butter. Bake until golden brown, 18-22 minutes. Let cool 15 minutes. Serve slathered with butter or jam or sandwiched with ham and mustard.