Category Archives: Cooking

cooking moose steaks

Cooking Moose Steaks

Moose steaks are one of the simplest wild game meats you can prepare. Following these steps will take your steaks from the fridge to the plate in less than 30 minutes. You’ll need:

  • One serving of steak per person
  • fresh mushrooms
  • scallions
  • salt and pepper
  • butter

Take the steaks from the fridge and unwrap. Place them in a single layer on a plate. The single layer is important; you want the steaks to warm up. Very cold meat will constrict when it hits a hot fry pan and become tough. Salt and pepper each side to taste.

cooking moose steaks

Delicious moose steaks

Clean the mushrooms with a dry paper towel. Avoid washing as water causes mushrooms to become soggy. Wash and chop scallions.

Melt butter in a medium-hot fry pan. Don’t let the butter smoke. Sear the steaks in butter, turning only once, approximately 60 seconds per side. Remove the steaks from the pan and set aside. Add a little more butter if needed and saute the mushrooms until almost done.

Return the steaks to the fry pan to finish cooking. Moose steaks are typically cut thin. I turn our steaks after three minutes, cook another two to three minutes and remove. The biggest mistake you might make is over cooking. Over cooking lean meats such as moose can make it tough.

Toss the scallions on top of the steaks a minute before removing them from the pan. Remove steaks, top with mushrooms and scallions and enjoy!

These steaks were cooked in a workshop I taught at Winter Skills Weekend for Becoming an Outdoors-Woman. They were so tender we cut them with our forks.

Tips and Hints for Campfire Cooking

Cooking over a campfire has the same effect as having someone else cook a meal for you – the food tastes better. That little bit of change is nice. The combination of cast iron, wood smoke in the air and the great outdoors naturally go together.

Campfire Cooking, making Maine Guide Coffee

Photo courtesy of Maine Inland Fisheries & Wildlife

Everyone can learn to cook on a campfire. Start simple and add new dishes as you get comfortable. Can’t build a campfire in your yard at home? That’s ok! You can cook in your driveway using charcoal briquettes.

Hints & Tips

You can duplicate the oven temperature called for in recipes by using the proper number of charcoal briquettes on top of and beneath your Dutch oven. Each briquette adds 15* to 25* of heat. If the breeze is blowing you’ll need a few extra briquettes.

It’s better to cook with lower heat for a longer time than to use too much heat and burn your food.

This chart gives you the number of briquettes needed on top and under the Dutch oven to hold the temperature for approximately an hour. Warm/hot days will extend the time, cool/windy days will decrease the time.

Have hot briquettes ready to add at the right time if necessary, or add cold self-igniting briquettes to the hot briquettes at the 45 minute mark.

Campfire cooking

Baking the frittata on charcoal.

This chart includes temperatures and methods for using charcoal with a Dutch oven.

For roasting, use half on bottom, half on top.

For stewing, use one-quarter on bottom, three-quarters on top.

For boiling, all heat on bottom.

8” Dutch oven

350* – 10 on top, 6 on bottom
375* – 11 on top, 6 on bottom
400* – 12 on top, 6 on bottom
450* – 14 on top, 6 on bottom

10″ DUTCH OVEN:

350* – 14 on top, 7 on bottom
375* – 16 on top, 7 on bottom
400* – 17 on top, 8 on bottom
450* – 19 on top, 10 on bottom

12″ DUTCH OVEN:

350* – 17 on top, 8 on bottom
375* – 18 on top, 9 on bottom
400* – 19 on top, 10 on bottom
450* – 22 on top, 11 on bottom

Moist meals are usually the easiest for beginners. Before you bake bread in your Dutch oven, try a soup, stew or chili.

Hot coals are easier to cook over than an open flame.

Choose Dutch ovens with legs. They’re stackable. Legs allow air flow below the oven so that the coals don’t suffocate.

When cooking over an open flame, use a grate supported on rocks or bricks, or a tripod. The tripod allows the pot to hang over the flames.

Unless you’re searing or sauteing, start with a cold pan or oven. Food is less likely to stick and will warm up evenly.

When stacking, put the meal that needs the least heat on the bottom. Desserts are usually fine cooking longer at lower heat. Use your center oven for roasts. Place soups and stews that can take extra heat without burning on top. Get used to cooking with one oven, and then add a second. Got that figured out? Add a third. If necessary, move your ovens around half way through.  I add two or three extra briquettes or coals to the top of an oven before adding the next oven. It takes extra heat to warm the cool cast iron before cooking starts.

For messy meals like sticky desserts or breads that might not lift out well, line the oven with foil. Use one large sheet of foil so that liquids don’t get lost between the foil and cast iron.

Flip the lid over and you have a skillet.

Use heavy duty foil for foil packs.

If you don’t have a gravel driveway or safe ground surface for charcoal briquettes, burn the briquettes on an old cookie sheet. Raise the cookie sheet up on bricks to avoid charring wood or leaving marks on concrete. Convenient, and cleanup is easy.

Want to grill but don’t have a frame? Build a stone frame that is narrower than your grill. Build the fire inside the stones. When the coals are ready, place your grill on the rocks. No need to carry extra equipment when nature will provide it for you. I prefer perking coffee on the grill so that I don’t let it boil over and put out coals.

SAFETY:  If the wind is blowing enough to blow a spark, get out the Coleman stove.

Easy Fruit Cake

2 cans of sliced fruit with juice
1 cake mix, your choice of flavors

To ease cleanup, line the Dutch oven with foil.

Pour both cans of fruit and all of the juice into a cold 10” to 12” Dutch oven. Evenly pour the dry cake mix over the fruit. Smooth out, pushing a little more cake mix to the edges than the middle for even cooking.

Place the lid on the oven, the oven on the coals, more coals on top, and bake for 30-45 minutes.

Vegetable, Beef & Barley Soup

Choose and prepare your vegetables. Solid vegetables such as carrots should be cut into bite sized pieces to ensure thorough cooking.

Brown beef in a hot Dutch oven. Drain the fat. Be sure to put the fat in a safe place to avoid attracting bears and other wildlife. If you’re using lean meat like venison or moose, there’s no need to brown first. Cooking the meat with the other ingredients helps add flavor you’d lose to browning.

Mix ingredients the same as when you’re cooking on the stove at home. Preparation is the same; the cooking method is the only difference.

 

Campfire cooking

Campfire Cuisine

Campfire Cuisine. Is it as fancy as it sounds? Yes and no. It’s time consuming but simple once you get the hang of cooking on a fire. And it’s delicious. The same meal cooked indoors just isn’t as tasty as food cooked outdoors. The combination of cast iron, fresh air, wood smoke and atmosphere can’t be beat.

I was privileged to work with a Maine Guide and Lou Falank, an outdoors and primitive skills educator at BOW’s (Becoming an Outdoors-Woman) Introductory Skills Weekend. We led a workshop on campfire cooking early Saturday morning. We finished at 11:30 am and lunch was served at noon. I was so full I didn’t make it to lunch.

Campfire Cooking, making Maine Guide Coffee

Maine Guide coffee: Mix coffee grounds with an egg… Photo courtesy of Maine Inland Fisheries & Wildlife

The morning started off by meeting Steve in the parking lot at 6:45. We carried our equipment up the rocked stairwell to our site under a tipi. With a few minutes to spare, the three of us had time to talk. If I have half of Lou’s knowledge and woods wisdom in my lifetime I’ll be satisfied.

We started with Maine Guide coffee. I looked forward to this coffee for weeks. The grounds were measured out then mixed with an egg, including the shell. The shell eliminates some of the acidity. When the coffee is done, the grounds and egg are removed in one piece. I had the last of the coffee and was amazed to find only a few grounds in the bottom of my cup. Honestly, the mass of egg and grounds is unappetizing to look at but you quickly forget about it after one sip of coffee. It’s worth mentioning so that nobody is turned off by the grounds when they make it the first time. Do it! It’s excellent coffee. If you’re buying a pot, get one with a metal handle to avoid melting it the fire. We used my pot on the Coleman stove to keep it whole.

Making Breakfast Fritatta over a campfire

Eggs, onion and seasoning were on the ingredient list for breakfast frittata. Photo courtesy of Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife.

About half of the class baked a frittata for breakfast. We (I say “we” lightly. Participants did all the work.) used moose breakfast sausage, onion, bell pepper, seasoning and a dozen eggs. The meat was so lean it didn’t need to be browned prior to mixing the ingredients together. Good flavors aren’t lost to browning and make the frittata that much more delicious.

Moose sausage, ready for the rest of the ingredients.

Moose sausage, ready for the rest of the ingredients.

It’s impossible for everyone to build a campfire at home. With that in mind, it is possible to cook outdoors using charcoal. We placed charcoal briquettes on a cookie sheet to keep the lighter fluid and flames off the dry pine needles and leaves. The top of the Dutch oven has a lip perfect for holding briquettes. The number of briquettes under and on top of the oven to reach 350* depends upon the size of the oven. A 10” Dutch oven needs 14 briquettes on top and seven beneath to reach 350*. They’ll last about an hour, more than enough time to cook our frittata. The frittata was done in 25 minutes.  There wasn’t a photographer at class when breakfast was ready and we ate it so quickly I don’t have a picture. Sorry!

Baking the frittata on charcoal. Photo courtesy of Tammy Lea Photography.

Baking the frittata on charcoal. Photo courtesy of Tammy Lea Photography.

The other half of the class made baked beans. The beans were precooked to give them a head start. Our workshop wasn’t long enough to keep them at the fire starting with uncooked beans. The mixed beans, molasses, dry mustard, two pounds of pre-sliced salt pork, onions and other ingredients. They filled the Dutch oven and placed it beside the coals.

Next on the menu, soup with moose burger, seasonings, a few bouillon cubes for added flavor, carrots and barley. The ingredient list was limited for simplicity. At home I add corn, green beans, onions, garlic and anything else that sounds good at the time. I’d give you the recipe but I don’t use them. Some of this, a little of that… We didn’t brown the burger. Everything went into the Dutch oven; we added water for broth, put the cover on and nestled it against the coals.

Lou Falank taught us about hemlock and balsam teas.

Lou Falank taught us about hemlock and balsam teas. Photo courtesy of Maine Inland Fisheries & Wildlife.

Lou taught us how to make hemlock (no, not the poisonous kind) and white pine needle tea. He put water on to boil before showing us the proper way to harvest from the trees. The hemlock tips and pine needles steep in hot but not boiling water. I was surprised at how good both teas taste. I expected them to be bitter but that wasn’t the case. This is so simply and tasty that I’ll be making it here at home often. I can steep the tea in a pot on the back of the wood stove to have it ready all winter.

Lou Falank taught us about hemlock and balsam teas.

Hemlock twigs and pine needles steep in boiled water.

Back at the work table, participants kneaded bread in plastic zipper bags. They wrapped the dough around sticks and cooked it over an open flame. Delicious! Steve formed the extra dough into cakes and cooked them on a griddle, also delicious. They used a basic dough recipe that can easily be adapted to add different flavors.

Bread on a stick, baked beans and soup cook around the campfire.

Bread on a stick, baked beans and soup cook around the campfire. Photo courtesy of Maine Inland Fisheries & Wildlife

Campfire cooking is simple. Nothing has to be fancy or contain a long list of ingredients to be tasty and nutritious. It’s easiest for beginners to start with moist meals like soup and baked beans because they don’t burn. You Tube has a lot of instructional videos online.

I’ll post the handout on tips and hints tomorrow. It includes how many briquettes to use to create oven temperatures in the Dutch oven.

Time Saving Tips for Food Preservation

Posted December 15, 2011 in the old blog.

Ien van Houten commented on an entry where I said putting up food for four takes no time. I started to reply in the comments section but thought more people would see it if I added a new entry. I haven’t written anything here in months so I’m long overdue.

Posted by Ien in the Kootenays

“It takes next to no time to grow and put up food for a family of four. ”

Are you kidding? You must be one of those hyper-organized superwomen. More power to you, but I don’t find it easy at all…

When I started to reply I said my organizational skills are lacking. Then I realized that when it comes to food preservation, I am fairly well organized.

Freezing Vegetables:

My mother gardened and canned vegetables, made jam and jelly, etc. when I was a kid so I’ve been doing this for 40 years. My kitchen has 100 year old drawers that are very wide, very deep and very tall. All of my canning lids and rings, the grabber, funnels, etc. fit in one drawer. They’re always handy.

Green beans, blanched, drained, bagged and ready for the freezer.

I’ll use green beans as an example. I pick the beans that are ready, up to a bushel at a time.The water goes on to boil. I usually blanch things in the pressure canner because it’s heavy and holds heat well. While the water heats I snap the beans, filling the tall colander first so that it’s ready to go into the water.  One side of the sink gets scrubbed and filled with ice water. The other side is scrubbed and empty so that cooled veggies can drain. The beans go into the colander, then into the water, then get pulled out all at once, dumped into a colander that fits the sink (I have only one that fits the canner and have to keep reusing it) and taken to the ice water in the sink. Not scooping beans out a few at a time saves a lot of time.

When the beans have drained well they go into freezer bags, the air is pulled out, the bag sealed and it’s tossed into the bushel basket I picked the beans in. When I’m done the basket goes to the freezers in the basement. I stay in constant motions and get it done from start to finish before moving on to something else.

Making Jam:

I pick all of the strawberries, blackberries, blueberries or whatever is in season at the time, all at once if possible. Picking a year’s worth of blackberries saves me a trip back to the canes. I have cultivated raspberries so picking those at once isn’t possible.

If I’m going to make jelly I usually freeze the berries I’ll use and make it during slower times. It’s nice to have the smell of fruit in the house in January and nice to have a little extra warmth in the kitchen from the stove. Frozen berries will release a lot of the juice while they thaw and save you time. I don’t like little tiny seeds of raspberries and blackberries so I make jelly. Family members like strawberry jelly better than jam so I freeze some of the strawberries, drain the juice for jelly and use the berries for a thicker jam than fresh berries make.

Wash the jars ahead of time. I use the dishwasher and keep them hot in there until I’m ready for them. Put the water on to boil for the hot water bath. Measure out each batch of berries into pots. Measure out the sugar into separate containers. If you’re using pectin, open/measure it and have it ready to go. Get out your funnel, spoons, spatulas, clean and wet cloth to wipe spills off jar rims and anything else you’ll need out and in reach. Make one batch, jar it, wipe the rims clean, put the lids and rings on and get them into the hot water bath. While they’re in the bath, clean up the mess. Repeat repeat repeat until done.

Months before the beans are ready to pick, I’m organized in the garden. I plant pounds of beans using a seeder. They’re properly spaced, it takes 5 minutes to plant a pound of beans and have them covered, and I’m done til it’s time to start weeding. Corn, beets and almost every other seed I plant is done with the seeder.

Chickens take 10 minutes a day to raise. We no longer gut chickens unless we’ve raised a few roasters. We don’t eat the organs so there’s no need to gut. We kill, pull the skin back from the breast, remove each half of the breast individually. Peel the skin back from the legs, remove. I take the skin off chicken before I cook it so we eliminated plucking, saving us hours during processing. We do the same thing with the turkeys. If it’s my turn to host Thanksgiving we pluck and gut one bird. Steve splits the birds into pieces to conserve freezer space.

I do very little canning now. It takes a lot of time and propane and adds a lot of heat to an already hot kitchen in the summer to can seven quarts of beans. It’s very inefficient. The freezers use very little energy because they’re always full and are in an always-cool basement. They run twice a day for a few minutes. As I empty space using food I refill it with containers of water for ice. If the power goes out they won’t start thawing for at least 24 hours if you keep them closed. There’s minimal thawing after 48 hours. If necessary we can run a generator once a day to keep everything frozen.

I store a lot in the cellar. The old part of the house sits on a cellar (dirt floor, field stone walls). The edition is on a full basement. There’s very little time tied up in wiping dirt off winter squash, pumpkins, garlic, onions, leeks, etc. Carrots are stored in dry sand. We didn’t grow potatoes this year but when we do, they’re in the cellar too.

I make one trip a week to the basement to bring up meats, fruit and veggies for the small freezer over the fridge.

This freezers are storing 25 chickens, three turkeys, moose, a small pig, shrimp (Steve’s brother is a lobsterman who shrimps and scallops), scallops, trout, partridge, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, blueberries, broccoli, cauliflower, beans, tomatoes, green peppers and things I’ve forgotten. I have wild mushrooms, peppers, summer squash and grape tomatoes dehydrated and in jars. We eat very little beef, usually only if we’re out. Neither of us got a deer this year so there’s a only bit of venison we were given by a very generous friend. The same friend gave us the moose meat. In return, he gets shrimp and scallops in season.

Forty years of food preservation has given me plenty of time to create habits, work out routines and make the most of my time.

Cooking with Kale

Kale is one of my favorite vegetables to grow and eat. It’s an easy plant that’s great for beginning gardeners, nutritious, versatile and tastes great. Kale is attractive in the garden. Leaves vary from long, flat and thin to wide and ruffled. Shades of red, green and purple add to its appearance.

Redbor

I start seeds in the house in mid-March to have transplants ready at the end of April. Seeds germinate quickly without bottom heat. Kale is cold hardy and can be planted four to six weeks before the average last frost date. I guesstimate when to plant them based on the weather. Heavy rain or spring snow in the first week they’ll be in the ground are cause to keep them in the house. Frost and cold spells give the leaves a sweeter taste. With an early start and hardiness that keeps it producing until the temperatures hit the teens overnight, it’s one of the longest growing plants in my garden.

 

Winterbor

In warmer areas or with protection such as a low tunnel, cold frame or hoop house, kale is a biennial. In spite of that, I start fresh seeds each to be sure I’ll have a good supply all year. I grow Red Russian, Winterbor, Redbor and Lacinato (also known as Nero di Tosca, Tuscan Black and Dinosaur). I start pinching seed stalks off the plants approximately six weeks into the second growing season. I’ve found that flavor starts to decline about midway through the second season and doesn’t improve. The plants’ goal is to make seed and they work hard at doing so. The flowers are pretty and edible.

Lacinato

If you have a fertile spot in the garden with full sun the plants will grow large and bushy. If you can’t spare that spot, kale will grow well in partial sun. It won’t be as productive but it will still do well. It’s not a fussy plant.

Flea beetles and cabbage worms are kale pests. I’ve found that curly/ruffled kales are less likely to be bothered by pests than flat varieties. I like the flat varieties as well as the ruffled so I grow it and deal with the pests by using an organic pesticide containing spinosad.

Kale is full of vitamins. One cup of chopped kale has 206% of the recommended daily amount of Vitamin A, 134% of a day’s Vitamin C, 684% of a day’s Vitamin K and contains thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, Vitamins B6 and B12 and folate. It’s also rich in calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, zinc, copper and manganese. A single cup of kale takes care of 5% of our daily fiber needs. All this goodness and only 33 calories per cup is hard to beat.

We were eating less kale in the summer so a lot of it was going to the chickens and turkeys. I add it to salad during the summer but one leaf in a salad for four people is enough. My favorite snack food is potato chips and they aren’t the healthiest choice I can make. I’ve replaced them with kale chips. They’re surprisingly delicious and it’s a great use for a lot of summer time kale.

Kale Chips

Pick one pound of kale as early in the day as possible for best flavor. Wash if necessary, dry completely. Moisture on the leaves will lengthen the amount of time the chips have to be baked.

Cut kale, including tender stems, into bite sized pieces. Coat the chips with three tablespoons of olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt. Bake at 350* for 12 to 18 minutes, checking every two minutes starting at the 12 minute mark. The chips are done when they are crisp. Serve hot or cool.

Kale and Potato Soup

1 onion, chopped
8 cups chicken or vegetable stock
8 medium potatoes, scrubbed and diced
6 cloves garlic
1 pound of kale, heavy stems removed, chopped into small pieces

salt and pepper to taste

To add a little zing, I add a half pound of Chorizo or Linguica after browing it in a little olive oil.

Sautee the chopped onion in a tablespoon of olive oil until it is soft but not caramelized. Using the same pot, add the chicken or vegetable stock and minced garlic. Heat to a boil, reduce heat and simmer until the potatoes are tender. Don’t cover the pot. You want some of the stock to evaporate during the cooking process, creating a more intense flavor.

If you want your soup to be creamy you can transfer it a little at a time to a blender or use an immersion (stick) blender to puree the soup. For a rustic, chunkier soup, remove the potatoes and garlic, mash by hand and stir back into the pot.

Stir the kale and Linguica or Chirizo in and simmer until the kale is tender, approximately five minutes. This soup is best served hot.

 

Chandler’s Sugar Shack, LLC

Originally published in Lancaster Farming.

TOPSFIELD, Maine — Making maple syrup has become a tradition for the Chandler family in Topsfield, Maine.

Bob Chandler is a retired forester. Marge retired from teaching a multi-grade classroom of kindergarten through second grade in a nearby three-room elementary school. Retirement goes by the wayside in late winter and early spring when their sons, Bobby and Bart, and Bart’s wife, Jamie, pitch in to tap trees, collect sap and make maple syrup.

Bobby has moved away from the immediate area and, like his father, is a forester. It’s fitting that a forester is making maple syrup; he obviously enjoys the work. He’s working six days a week, but he’s home on Sundays to help. Bart and Jamie, high school sweethearts, recently bought a house and moved back home to Topsfield. Bart is an engineer whose skills are put to use in the family business. Jamie is the new “Mrs. Chandler” at the three-room elementary school, replacing Marge when she retired.

Chandler's Sugar Shack

Chandler’s Sugar Shack is anything but a shack. Stop in to visit!

Chandler’s Sugar Shack LLC started as a hobby five years ago. The goal was to tap 100 to 150 maple trees. They sold 40 gallons of syrup the first year. Now in their fifth year, they have 1,300 trees on tubing and 200 buckets hanging on trees.

“They’re young and they have the energy to do all this,” Bob says. “There’s a lot to it. It’s not a weekend project. It takes a lot of time to get the flagging tied to the trees to lay out a level path for the tubing. You can’t have sags in it. Then they (Bobby and Bart) put up 12-gauge high tensile wire. The tubing is tied to the wire to keep it in place.”

The Chandlers recently built a pump house for the new vacuum pump and moisture filter. The building sits just off the side of the road at the bottom of two hills. It also houses a 500-gallon stainless steel milk tank and other equipment.

“You can tell where the sap is coming from,” Bart says, “by looking at the hoses. This one’s coming in from trees behind the cemetery.” There are five hoses coming into the tank and he knows where each one originates.

While Bart explains the tank, hoses, moisture filter and vacuum pump, Bobby takes a hose from the tank in the pump house to the pickup truck. A plastic 375-gallon portable tank is strapped down in the back of the truck. The pump moves 30 gallons of sap a minute from one tank to the other.

“This is a lot easier and takes a lot less time than emptying buckets,” says Bobby.

You can’t help notice the tube that comes down the hill and crosses the road far above your head. “It fell down a few times,” explains Bobby. “It’s on that big ash tree that moves in the wind. We left it down after a few times and just put it back up when the sap started to run.”

On a recent warm morning, it’s already 40 degrees at 9 a.m., and the road is getting muddy. A truck slides around and makes ruts in the road on the way to the sugar shack. The warmth and sun make for a good sap run. Steam rolls out of the opening in the roof and the air smells faintly of maple syrup.

Gordon and Eva Severance stop by. Eva says, “We came out today because who knows what the road will be like for Maple Sunday.”

Rick Whiting, a neighbor who lives just up the road from the sugar shack, pulls in on his ATV. “A few days ago I had the snowmobile, but the road’s all mud now,” he says.

Conversations carry on about ice fishing and the nice fish being caught, questions and answers about the syrup operation, mini-tours of the equipment, what everyone’s kids are doing and the ever-changing weather. The sugar shack is a meeting place this time of year.

The next truck coming up the drive is Bart and Bobby with the freshly filled tank of sap. Bart backs into a small space between the building’s porch and the firewood. The sap is pumped out of the portable tank and into another 500-gallon stainless steel-lined tank. It goes through a cone-shaped filter before pouring into the tank. They filter it twice to make sure it’s clean, they say.

Back inside, Bob opens a closet door. “Take a look in here. This is new this year. It’s RO, reverse osmosis. That filters the sap,” he says. “The refractometer showed the sap had 1.8 to 2.0 percent sugar when it came in. It’s gotten sweeter as the sap started flowing well. After the sap goes through the reverse osmosis equipment, the water is reduced and the sugar content goes up to 6 or 7 percent. The permeate (distilled water) goes into another 500-gallon tank outside and the concentrate is pumped up to a holding tank above the ceiling. From there the concentrate feeds down into the evaporator.”

When the boiling liquid reaches 219 degrees F, it is ready to be poured off and bottled. The sugar content is now 66 to 68 percent. The Chandlers have designed their own syrup containers this year. Their name is on the container along with labeling requirements and their website, chandlerssugarshack.com. They offer one-half pint to one-half gallon containers for sale to their customers.

When Monday morning rolls around, Bob and Marge are on their own and will be for the entire week.

“It’s not too bad,” Bob says. “Marge tends to the evaporator, grading and bottling by herself when I pick up sap. It doesn’t take too long to fill the tank and drive back.

“This isn’t the hardest part. The stuff that takes the most time is done before the sap starts running. We could use an animal control officer,” Bob says with a slight laugh. “Moose could be a problem in the tubes. We knew we had a leak some where because the amount of pressure didn’t match the amount of sap coming in. We didn’t find the leak until the sap was running good. The boys had to cut out a length of tube that a bear chewed and replace it with a new piece.”

Around noontime, Bart heads for the door with a piece of high tensile wire he and Bobby cut earlier. A piece of wire kinked and snapped, letting the tubing sag.

“Stop at the house and tell your mother I’m ready for lunch now,” Bob says. He started boiling at 6 a.m., and boiling will continue until around 6 p.m.

Bob occasionally rises from his chair by the evaporator to skim foam from the boiling sap or add a drop of organic canola oil to reduce the foaming. When the door to the firebox of the evaporator opens the loud boiling sounds are replaced by the roar of the fire. When the door closes, it’s quiet for only a few seconds. The sap quickly returns to a hard, noisy boil. They burn approximately six cords of wood. Some of it is slab scraps from Bob’s custom sawmill and the rest is hardwood they cut, split and stack.

The Chandlers don’t advertise for Maine Maple Sunday, which will be held this weekend, because they don’t know what the dirt road to the sugar shack will be like. They don’t want anyone to make a long trip and find out that the road isn’t easily passable. As long as the sap is running, though, they’ll be there and people are welcome to stop in. They had so many visitors last year that they had to buy more vanilla ice cream to serve with the fresh syrup. Visitors have come on Maine Maple Sunday from as far away as Texas and Kentucky.

Bob doesn’t know exactly how many gallons of syrup he expects to make this year. “They told us when we bought the RO and vacuum that this would be a transitional year. We tapped more trees, but we’ll boil less sap to make more syrup. How much we make depends on the weather and how the sap runs, and how it goes with the new equipment. We’re learning a lot this year.”

One hundred fifty taps in the beginning has increased to 1,500 taps this year, and they’re not done yet.

“The boys want to increase to around 4,000 taps next year. We’ll lease a lot with around 2,300 trees next year,” Bob said. “This evaporator isn’t big enough for what they want to do next year … but that’s a conversation for another day.”

Garlic Scapes

Previously published.

There was a surprise waiting for me in the garden this morning. Long and thin, a sharp curl, light green — garlic scapes!

I wasn’t expecting to have scapes for several more weeks. They are coming out on what seems to be an early variety of garlic called Phillips. I planted only a pound of cloves from this variety so there aren’t a lot of scapes to use yet. This is an unexpected treat. I’m going to make garlic scape pesto to serve on penne rigate pasta.

There was a surprise waiting for me in the garden this morning. Long and thin, a sharp curl, light green — garlic scapes!

When growing garlic you either can, must or do not have to cut the scape from the plant. It will either not make a difference, drastically stunt or only marginally affect the size of the garlic cloves. I’ve been told each of these pieces of advice by people who have a lot more experience than I.

I haven’t been growing garlic for long. This is the second successful year after a few years of miserable failure caused by planting the cloves in the spring rather than the fall. In my defense, I’d never seen a healthy garlic plant in person until I finally had them growing in the garden last year. I really had no idea what I was doing wrong.

I was told I could plant the cloves early in the spring and have beautiful garlic in late summer because Maine summers are so cool. The people who told me this must have thought Maine borders Siberia rather than Canada. Now I know. I plant in late September, water well, mulch heavily with oat straw and forget about it until spring.

This afternoon I’m going to cut a dozen scapes for tonight’s pesto. Pesto can be simple or, well, complicated isn’t the right word. It can have two ingredients, pulverized scapes and olive oil, if you want to keep it very simple. If you have time, a few more ingredients make a fantastic pesto. Here’s my recipe.

1 cup of chopped garlic scapes. (8 to 10 scapes, depending upon size)

1/3 cup Parmesan cheese

1/3 cup almonds or walnut halves

½ cup extra virgin olive oil

Salt to taste

 

Place the scapes and nuts into a food processor and pulse until both are in small pieces. Now pour the olive oil slowly into the scapes and nuts with the food processor pulsing. When the combination of oil, scapes and nuts is smooth pour it into a bowl. Fold in the Parmesan and add salt to taste.

Garlic scapes are much milder in flavor than garlic cloves. It won’t be overpowering for bruschetta. I cook a pound of penne rigate and use at least a half cup of garlic scape pesto. When using basil pesto, which is much stronger in flavor, I use only 1/3 cup for the same pound of pasta.

If you’re making homemade bread you can replace some of the water and the oil or butter with pesto. The scapes lightly color the bread and lend a great flavor. It’s great to use for a grilled cheese sandwich.

If you like big flavor, you can double the recipe offered here with a small change. Rather than doubling the scapes, use a cup of pulverized scapes and a tightly-packed cup of basil leaves.

Last year I froze pesto in ice cube trays. It sounded like a very small amount but it did turn out to be practical. When I made soup over the winter, I could take out a cube or two to add flavor. A cube per serving of pasta was perfect.

According to the University of Maine Cooperative Extension, we shouldn’t can pesto at home because it contains oil. I did can pickled garlic scapes that turned out very well. This year I’ll try another recipe for pickled scapes and a few twists in the pesto recipe. I think sunflower seeds would be good, rather than walnuts or almonds.

When the rest of the garlic produces scapes, I’ll be trying my hand at humus. I’m still learning about garlic and scapes. It’s nice to have something new in the garden.

 

Robin Follette and her husband, Steve, operate Seasons Eatings Farm in Talmadge, Maine.

 

I’m becoming hard hearted

I’m becoming a bit more hard hearted each year that I farm.  There was a time when I was going to be a veterinarian and save all the animals from dying. When I learned how horrendous those adorable raccoons are on poultry I agreed to hold the flashlight while Steve shot them.  I got working dogs to help keep the riff raff away so that we didn’t have to deal with these problems as often.  It bothered me.  I lost sleep with visions of dying coons falling out of trees.  I felt terrible for a long time after the bobcat growled at me and had to be shot even thought it wasn’t long from starving to death anyway. It met a much more humane death with us than Mother Nature was delivering.

I’m over it. I don’t feel bad about shooting a raccoon in the pen of Jan’s hen house this afternoon.  It had to be done. He’d been warned.  I’m sorry it didn’t die instantly but not sorry that I contributed to its death. He was grazed for raiding the hen house two nights ago. I didn’t have the best shot but considering neighboring houses and the possibility of kids in the area, I took the safe shot I had.  It wasn’t good enough. Harold came to finish the job with a .22 because I couldn’t shoot blindly under the hen house with a shotgun.  He came with gun and flashlight in hand.

Scooter is better. I think his shoulder was out of joint but is back in place now. We’re still going to the vet in the morning to be on the safe side.

Two loaves of bread are rising. I’ll make cream of broccoli soup with the stems left over from freezing broccoli this afternoon.

Did I mention I broke the truck yesterday?  I don’t get along with brakes lately.

The Pumpkin Patch

Excedrin at 4 am will do wonders for the amount of work I get done.  I got up with Steve this morning and couldn’t get back to sleep when he left at 4 am.  My head hurt so I took an Excedrin and drank a cup of coffee.  It doesn’t look like a lot yet, it actually looks like I’ve made a bigger mess.

I walked through the pumpkin patch this morning.  This is Jarrahdale.  It’s my favorite for “pumpkin” pie.

Jarrahdale squash is one of my favorites for “pumpkin” pie.

I lost all of the pictures in my blog when I changed domains. I’ll replace them as I take new photos.

New England Pie.

I don’t remember. Someone gave me seeds. It’s at least 20 pounds now and still has time to grow.

Immature butternut squash.

Another Must Read

Cathy at Maternal Gardens has a through provoking blog today.  I’ve paid close attention to Cathy’s entries because she’s accomplished so much in so little time.  She is one very determined woman.  When the idea of ducks came up the ground was frozen.  Bill thought she should wait on the ducks until she could set fence posts.  Frozen ground?  Big deal.  Cathy got the posts and sledge hammer and went to work.  A few days later Cathy and Bill and their daughters were here to get ducks.  Not long after that the first of the ducks were butchered and into the fridge.  Soon after that all but four of the remaining dozen met the same fate.   Her food bill is great.

Cathy’s light bill is great too.  With a little effort she knocked $79 off the bill in one month.

If you’ve ever wondered how a family of six eats and lives very well with a stay-at-home mom and only one income, spend some time in Cathy’s blog.

Sweet Dumpling Squash

 

Sweet Dumpling is a small winter squash. It stores well and is easy to cook. I’m baking several tonight. There’s no need to peel these squash. They’re small and ribbed. You’ll waste more time than it’s worth. After cooking, the flesh will scoop out easily. I cut the top off below the lowest point of the stem and scoop out the seeds. I use a solid ice cream scoop to clean out squash and pumpkins.

 

Add a half inch of water in the bottom of the baking dish and cover. The odd squash is a Zeppelin Delicata, Steve’s favorite winter squash. It’s the last one. I didn’t grow nearly enough. The pan goes into the oven (with chicken breasts tonight) at 350* for 4o minutes. You can add a little brown sugar, butter or maple syrup to each squash if you’d like. I’ll add butter (Houlton Dairy) to mine after it’s cooked.

You can bake all winter squash this way. Poke the squash with a knife to judge when it’s done. If the knife passes into the flesh easily it’s done. If you want to cook a larger squash such as Butternut you can peel and steam or just steam until done. Winter squash can be boiled but it’s easy to over cook, it becomes too wet quickly and it destroys a lot of nutrition.

Organic Rant

Batter Blaster – screw the environment, the ridiculous throw-away packaging and common sense. The USDA will certify anything as organic these days.

How does anyone get so lazy that they need to squirt pancake batter from freaking can?  Bowl, whisk, flour, milk, eggs, salt, vanilla, pinch of baking soda – pancakes.

(I’m not in a bad mood but after finding this while blog hopping this morning I’m thoroughly disgusted.)

Bread Machine

Isn’t this great! A friend told me about her bread machine last week. She brought it to me to borrow!

It’s a Universal Bread Maker. The instructions are on the lid. Add water first, then flour, crank for three minutes.

Snowy Sunday

I survived the mall yesterday.  The shopping is done.  Thirty seconds into the mall I saw my friend Barb. She was on her way out as we were going in.  She made my day.  It was nice to catch up – which takes all of 20 minutes when even though there are changes in our lives, everything is still very much the same.  After parting ways with Barb we shopped, went to lunch, to the feed store, shopped a little more and I inadvertently insulted someone, and headed for home.

While we were looking at digital cameras what I thought was a Circuit city employee asked if I had questions about a particular brand name of camera.  Steve said he didn’t think so because “she doesn’t really like them.” The man was shocked.  Me, in my infinite ability to stick my foot into my mouth said, “I really don’t like them.  I can wear one out in six months. They’re just too wimpy.”  Honestly – I had NO idea he works for the company.  I really did think he works for Circuit City.  The poor man half whispered, “sorry you’ve had that experience,” and walked away.  As though I didn’t feel badly enough about this when I realized what I’d done, Steve’s felt the need to remind me of how brutal I was.  Ugh!  Obviously, I should not be taken out in public some days.  I was busy.  I was on a mission.  I was comparing cameras.  I wanted to get out of there and out of the city.  Steve and Taylor were between me and him.  I couldn’t see (truth be told, I couldn’t see because I didn’t bother to look up).  Obviously, I shouldn’t be taken out of the woods and into large crowds.

The nor’easter has started.   It’s 5*.  The snowflakes are tiny and the breeze is blowing them around, making it look like there’s a lot more snow falling than there is.  It will pick up soon.  I hope we’re not in the area that will get sleet and ice.

I’m going to work more on the seed order today, bake bread, roast a moose sirloan for supper and we’ll decorate the tree.  Later on I’ll clean snow off the greenhouse and seedling house just in case we do get sleet and ice.

Stuffing. Or is it Dressing?

Fair warning – I seldom follow a recipe and this is no exception.

Like everything else, I make stuffing from scratch.  There’s no recipe for my stuffing bread. Make the bread no less than five days before you’re going to make stuffing. I make a normal white/wheat bread and add:  sage, thyme, rosemary, salt and pepper to taste.  I’m heavy on the sage.

Bake as normal and let cool completely.

Cut into cubes.  Mine are around an inch wide.   That’s it for a few days.  The bread will go stale.

Stuffing Day!

It’s time to make broth.  I’m going to use celery and onions in the stuffing.  I’ll  add the scraps to the turkey to make broth.  You’ll need several cups of broth to mix with the bread.  If you have other vegetable scraps you can add those to the broth too.  Simmer until the neck is cooked.  Drain the broth into a bowl and cool.  My father will eat the neck and the vegetable scraps (except onions) will go through the Magic Bullet and be fed to the red wiggler worms.

Combine the bread, celery and onions in a large bowl.  Let it set for an hour or so and taste.  Does it need something?  Add it now.  I stuff the bird.  Extra stuffing is put into a buttered baking dish.  Add a couple of pats of butter and bake at 350* until nicely browned.

Mincemeat

I put up the mincemeat this afternoon. It’s very good! Next time I’ll use a little less molasses. I cut the sugar to a little more than half of what was called for and am glad I did. Biting into an apple or raisin is sweet enough. I’ll definitely make this again.

This is ground venison. I roasted a shoulder first, let it cool then cleaned the meat from the bones. It went through the old grinder.

Cold Cellar Soup

A recent search looked for soup that can be cooked on a woodstove.  This fits the bill.  When you want to reduce the heat you move the kettle to a corner.  I called this Cold Cellar Soup because most ingredients are found in my cold cellar.

Cold Cellar Soup

4-5 carrots, washed of sand they were stored in
1 small rutabaga, peeled and cut into bite sized pieces
1 med onion, sliced
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 leek, washed and sliced
A few small potatoes, washed well, unpeeled
2 celery ribs
A pound of beef or chicken, cubed

Sautee everything but the beef or chicken in two tbl olive oil.  Deglaze the pan with 1/4 wine.  Add enough water to cover all ingredients.  Add:

2 bay leaves
2 tbl Italian seasoning
Freshly ground pepper to taste
Sea salt to taste

I simmer a pot on the back of the woodstove.

Recent Searches

frost and carrots

Carrots are hardy.  The tops will tolerate a lot of frost.  The root should be dug before the ground freezes.  I leave mine in the ground until the ground is cold.  The carrots are sweeter.

chicken litter “hormones”

It’s illegal to raise chickens on hormones.  Chicken factories can use antibiotics to increase the rate of growth.  This sounds ridiculous doesn’t it?  It works.  Antibiotics suppress the bird’s immune system.  The bird’s body doesn’t have to work to stay healthy so its energy is put into growth.  You are what you eat, even if you’re a chicken.

what food isnt processed

If it comes straight from the garden instead of a box or can vegetables haven’t been processed.  Fresh meat that hasn’t been turned into flavored meats, injected with brine, water and other liquids aren’t processed.  Again, if it comes in a can or box, is jerky or some how cooked, it has been processed.  An apple isn’t processed.  Applesauce is.

what do cows eat naturally

Plant matter, especially grass.  If a pasture is healthy and has all the vitamins and minerals the cow needs grass is enough.  Grass is considered grass even when it’s hay.  Some breeds of cattle are browsers.  In addition to pasture they’ll eat brush.  We’ve raised Dexters and Scottish Highlands for this purpose.

what kind of insects do cows eat?

None intentionally.  They’ll pick up insects in the grass their eating.

woodstove soup

I have a recipe for one of my favorite soups in my column at Maine Nature News.  I’ll find it and add it.

growing tomatoes in low tunnels

Low tunnels give a head start in the spring.  The soil under a tunnel warms earlier.  As the days get longer you’ll notice faster growth.  Using low tunnels gives you the opportunity to get your plants in the ground and past transplant shock sooner.

In the fall you’ll gain additional warmth and frost protection.  By the end of September I find tomatoes disappointing.  They don’t have the excellent flavor homegrown tomatoes should have.  The shorter days effect flavor.  I pull them up and use the space for greens.

Harvest Moon & The Work to be Done

Tonight is the Harvest Moon. This is the moon that allows farmers to harvest into the night thanks to the bright light. I’m harvesting today. I’m taking a break from apple picking while a work crew grades the road by my favorite tree. I’d be fine but I don’t want them to have to think about where I am while they work. And it’s muggy and I could use a break. They’re doing a good job. We haven’t had the sides of the roads cleaned for a couple of years so the sand used in winter has added up. They’ll clear some of the brush that blocks a clear view and will make it easier to see wildlife on the side of the road. The same crew did the neighboring town first and did a god job there too. Nice, local men. There’s a huge dump truck backing into my drive as I type. It’s full of soil from the side of the road. I wish it were usable. I’d happily have them dump it here. I could use some fill to level out parts of the lawn. Nothing here is level.

I’ve picked two bushels of apples so far. There are at least two bushels on the tree that I can’t reach. I’m quite happy with this. Three bushels will get us through winter with sauce, pie filling and storage apples. I don’t know what kind of apples I’m picking. They’re very high pectin. Sauce can be sliced. They have an excellent flavor both raw and cooked and they store very well. I’ll try a low sugar apple crisp to have for dessert for tonight.

Pumpkin Recipes

When I’m going to store pumpkins I make sure they have no soft spots, no signs of spoil, and are clean. They go into the cold cellar for the winter. I choose a variety that stores well and tastes good. Taste is abstract. What I like you might not. What my soil produces might not be as good as what yours will produce. Soil does influence taste!

I take a lazy woman’s approach to pumpkin. I cut it up, scoop out the guts and roast it in the oven. If your pumpkins are hard to cut into take them outside, drop them on something solid and crack them to get a head start. I roast the pumpkin pieces without a cover at 350° until done. If your pumpkin flesh is watery you can finish it off by simmering it on the stop top without a cover. Have you seen the thick consistency of commercial canned pumpkin/squash? That’s your goal.