Irish Lamb Stew

“Irish stew is a celebrated Irish dish, yet its composition is a matter of dispute. Purists maintain that the only acceptable and traditional ingredients are neck mutton chops or kid, potatoes, onions, and water. Others would add such items as carrots, turnips, and pearl barley; but the purists maintain that they spoil the true flavour of the dish. The ingredients are boiled and simmered slowly for up to two hours. Mutton was the dominant ingredient because the economic importance of sheep lay in their wool and milk produce and this ensured that only old or economically non-viable animals ended up in the cooking pot, where they needed hours of slow cooking. Irish stew is the product of a culinary tradition that relied almost exclusively on cooking over an open fire. It seems that Irish stew was recognized as early as about 1800”

Lamb Stew (my favorite lamb stew recipe over the years)

1 tsp duck fat (can use whatever oil or fat you want to start your dish)
One Large Onion
6 Large Mushrooms-Diced
2 cups of chopped greens (a mix of spinach, kale, horseradish and Beet Greens, frozen for winter use)
1 tsp of minced garlic
1 tbsp of green onions and leeks (white and green parts), I used a cube of each frozen in water
2 Large Carrots-Peeled and sliced
3 Med Potato’s -Peeled and diced
1 pds of small diced lamb stew meat*
Salt, pepper, Keens Mustard, Turmic, Basil and Ginger to taste
1 quart lamb bone stock, with 1 quart water (this was a very light broth, if you want darker/heavier use a second quart of lamb stock or veggie stock to go with)

I cooked the onions, mushrooms and lamb till onion clear, and meat browned, then I added in the rest and simmered for around 40 to 50 min at a low-med heat, till the veggies were tender and done. Simple, easy and all done in one pot, a good hearty but very healthy winter soup..

* This was young tender spring grass-fed lamb, Its worth noting that this meat was from when I butchered out lamb legs, and that I had made sure to remove all silver skin from the pieces(which can make them tough, and is often left on by butchers) as well as cutting off all extra fat bits, which I used to render into tallow, and I cut the pieces into about 1/3 of the size typically seen in a store if you are buying beef stew meat.. this means that the meat pieces were right around equal to the size of the carrot and potato pieces.

If you are using older mutton or yearly lamb, or from the butcher lamb stew meat, I would recommend simmering for about another hour or so, till the meat is tender.

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The River is Open..

The farm has two creeks an a big river within easy walking distance..

Love this photo taken off our local one lane old bridge.. it showed more pink-orange to the naked eye but came out more pink-purple in photo.. o well.. its still lovely either way I think.

As the recommendation came out for this year for how many fish of what type per person per month can eat for our local river, it got me thinking that I have never done a post on what kind of fish are our most common locally here on the blog..

Black Crappie

Size

  • length: 18-25 centimetres (7-10 inches)
  • weight: 0.23–0.45 kilograms (0.5–1.0 pounds

    Angling tips

    • move in schools
    • bite during the day, especially during overcast weather
    • bite most often during low light periods (dawn and dusk)
    • best fishing in April and early May as the ice clears, and crappie follow schools of bait into warmer, shallow water
    • eyes are positioned to see upward, so work bait slightly above them
    • use light spinning or fly-fishing tackle and 6-pound or less line

Brown Bullhead

Size

  • length: 20-36 centimeters (8-14 inches)
  • Slow calm waters

Channel Catfish

Size

  • length: 36-53 centimetres (14-21 inches)
  • weight: 0.9-1.8 kilograms (2-4 pounds)

  • Habitat

    • warm-water habitats in lakes and streams
    • cooler and swifter water than most other Ontario catfish
    • fast water downstream from power dams

Common Carp

Size

  • length: 30-75 centimetres (12-30 inches)
  • weight: 0.2-3.5 kilograms (0.5-7 pounds)

Smallmouth Bass

Size

  • length: 25-50 centimetres (10-20 inches)
  • weight: 0.5-1.6 kilograms (1-3.5 pounds)
  • Habitat

    • clear, rocky lakes and rivers
    • shoreline rocks and points, offshore shoals, deep water
    • similar to trout habitat but with a wider range of temperatures

Walleye

Size

  • Typical length: 35.5–58.4 centimetres (14-23 inches)
  • Typical weight: 0.68–1.36 kilograms (1.5-3 pounds)

Yellow Perch

Size

  • length: 15-30 centimetres (6-12 inches)
  • weight: 0.35 kilograms (0.75 pounds)

There are a number of more that can be found now an again but these are the most common.. A good selection, some that like the more open water, some that love the murky creeks, some that love the wide slow swings of  the river..

As for the amounts that are allowed per my fishing permit.. more then I have time to fish an catch lol..  Different ones are better at different times of the year an even different parts of the day.

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Second Hand Shops

I would love to tell you that I am a tidy person but I am not, I am more of an organized craziness..  LOL  Honestly, I can tell you if I have it, and 98.9 percent of the time I can find it in quickly and its right where it should be.. and I do two deep cleans on the house, barns, buildings and yard twice yearly..

The rest of the time.. we get it done.. there are only so many hours and so many hands on the farm, and things get ranked on what must be done, an sometimes that includes riding your horse or taking that hike or going camping because those times might never come again.

My house is filled with second-hand belongings.. I mean that in totally, It’s a very rare thing to buy something new..  Looking in my living room at the moment, I have original artwork, I collect ravens, I bought the amazing seed starting wooden shelving new, but it was a custom-made support a local buy and I bought my seed starting soil and the lights for that, and other than that.. nothing I see. in any direction  of me looking was bought new.. it’s all second-hand, farm actions, gifts, or hand-made by myself or hubby.

From curtains to couches, to table, chairs, benches and bookcases and more.. all got locally at a fraction of the price of new..

Now just because they are got second-hand does not mean that they are not nice.. I thought I would share some of my finds so far in 2017. I adore finding things that are Canadian made or very well made or handmade with history.

I think I might have to admit that I am getting a slowly growing collection of soup or stew tureens. Not that I mind at all, they are such useful items to have on the farm.. This lovely big handmade one from Quebec, that I am dating from what I can track down from the 1970’s was gotten for 3 dollars..

This was a matter of being at the right place at the right time.. This is another Quebec handmade hand loamed item that was found for a mear 2 dollar.. I expect that this set of three that I got must have come from the same home, I can only assume that someone was downsizing and didn’t understand the value of these table cloths, I got the handmade one (which per their website, is around a 300 hundred dollar value if got new), a handmade one from Spain for a 1 dollar and I got this amazing lace for another dollar. the lace was made in Italy..  Stunning! (they are in the special guest drawer, not the every day or time table cloth drawers, I love table cloths and use them all the time!

Last but not least in any way is a new sweet teapot to add to my fun little collection 🙂

In today’s world, its nice to slow down and take the time to shift though the clutter and find what I consider to be the winning items that make their way into my home. I am grateful for the history that each item has!

The sun is shining today and the temps are going up slowly but surely.. with a high of minus 7 today, compared to the past week, it feels down right warmish out there. I am looking forward to farm sales starting up this spring 🙂

 

Posted in At the kitchen table | Tagged | 6 Comments

One More Storm to go! This and That Post.

Sunny Cat’s look sums it up so nicely.. its snowing again mom. We had a blast of winter come in.. first we had brutal cold, the deep full moon cold, the sky’s were clear and the cold pressed down onto the farm in breath stealing deepness.  Despite many layers it was the type of cold that you felt in your bones after time outside and that you needed to take breaks between chores to warm up.

Then came the winds-cutting into cheeks and bring redness and blinking watering eyes, double layered hands and three layered bodies, but the real fun was still on the way.. SNOW!

It shut down the State below ours, it turned our area in to a deep snowy mess, those that were on the roads took the brunt of it.. 30, 40 or 50 car pile ups, sadly deaths are being reported, vehicles sliding off roads, a chemical spill that sent people involved to the hospital and 15 of the first responders had to get medical help as well.   In the city up the road from the farm..  people were stranded in their vehicles for up to 13 hours.

Some had a winter kit in their car (as anyone in the north should!) and so had sleeping bags, socks, hand warmers, candles and more.. but many did not, they had no gear, they had little gas (always have as close to a full tank as you can get if you are heading out into a winter storm), no drinks and no food.  So those that ran out of gas, had no way to warm the vehicle.

They went up and down the highway bringing drinks and protein and fruit and nut bars, they brought gas to fill them enough to get the closest gas station. Schools, roads, bus and more are all shut down.

Here on the farm, we had lots of time to know that it was coming, so we prepped, we put out extra hay and bedding, we hauled extra water an we filled two days more water for in the house.. my one area is filled in with many 6 gallon buckets of water.. just in case.

We backed the truck into the very end of the lane, and when morning came, it was dug out and drove in 4 by 4, as hubby is acting manager this week and so he was very determined to get to work today.

Yesterday was a crazy busy day in the barn for me..  Storm babies where coming!  I had taken photo of Jayda for you, but when I was down for my morning check, I had a ewe in labour, it was her first lambing season, and so I wanted to be around for her, a lovely big strong mainly black and white ram lamb that is doing very well.  Then in the afternoon, Mocha one of my oldest girls who is coming ten this year, delivered a massive ram lamb, another brown and white pinto..  and then less then three hours later another girl went, so we delivered a smaller but strong and active white female ewe lamb, again from another first time mom.. she did outstanding.. I am so pleased both of the first time moms bonded really well..

But then we had a touch of confusion, Mocha wanted to steal the new little lamb.. so we have to split them up and move them into different jugs, so that mocha as the older bigger more bossy ewe could not steal the female lamb.

Man are we ever having a ram lamb year.. 13 ram’s born and one female so far.. well two if you count the goat kid.. and we are now more then 50% done lambing..

Last night and todays checks and chores show us full-bellied babies all snugged up with their siblings or their momma’s. Just what you want to see.

Its hump day.. for those that keep track of the week in that work day way.. for me, its the coming tail end of a storm, they say light snow today and tonight but then it will slow down and the temps are coming back up to more normal..

By the weekend, we might?? have a sugaring weather.. if they get it right, the sap will be running and I have tree’s to tap and sap to boil down..

 

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Baked Stuffing -Mushroom

Now sometimes when we make everything at home, we can have lots of leftovers or maybe we had a opps,  in this case, I made a double batch of bread dough, got busy and forgot that I had not added the salt, so flat bread..

Not that big of a deal really, depending on what you put on it, it tastes good but its not really up to standard.. so what is a girl to do with a full loaf of 3 day old bread with no salt in it.. Make dried bread cubes or crumbs, make bread pudding or make stuffing.

Bread Stuffing-Mushroom
Livingmydreamlifeonthefarm

Stuffing for the win.. I have a steaks pulled for supper and so I am going to make a Mushrooom-Onion Stuffing to go with the steaks for supper, I will figure out the veggie at a later point.

Step one- cut up the bread into cubes and then put them into a low oven (275) to help dry them out, then allow them to cool before use. This gave me around 12 to 14 cups approx. It will fill a small cake pan nicely.

Step two-

  • 1 large onion, peeled and diced
  • 6 large mushrooms -diced
  • 2 ribs of celery sliced in half and diced (including the half a cup of the middle green leafy tops)
  • 2 to 3 cups of mushroom broth (depending on how wet you like it and the amount of bread cubes you ended up with)
  • 2 heaping tablespoons of a mixed herb seasoning of your personal choice, but not poultry as it will not go well with the mushroom.. think more like the herb blend for a good salad and you have it.

Cook the onion, mushrooms and celery together in a good pat of butter at a med-low heat till the onion is clear.. add your broth and allow it to get warm (not hot) and in your mixing bowl, drizzle about a cup of it, then sprinkle your dried herb mix and give it a light stirring so that the herbs are well mixed over the bread crumbs..

 Then drizzle and stir the rest of the broth over it.. you want it damp but not wet and then put the whole thing back into the cake pan, cover with foil and bake for around 40 min at 350, take off your tinfoil cover for another ten to twenty min for a lovely browning on the top and its ready for serving!

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Introducing Jayda, A lovely little Doeling.

Juno has a big long legged and very strong lovely brown little female waiting for me, all dry and full in the belly when I went to do a late afternoon check..

she is just a touch on the cooler side and so she now snuggled up in her coat and will be checked a few times to see if she needs to come in for a bit in the coldest part of the night.

Glad she had her today when it was only -11 out of the wind, as its to down back down in mid -26 tonight and tomorrow.. and below 30 with the wind..  but the baby is in a draft free area, but still she does not have a sibling to share her space with. she will need to snug up to her momma.

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Stress-Free way to move the Ewe-Float the lamb..

Todays post is short but sweet..

How to move a mother sheep from the  holding, expecting pen with the least possible stress to her own jug.. pick up baby and “float” the lamb in a slow way about four inches off the ground, stop every few feet and let her lick it, as you move, baby and mom will talk but she will follow that floating baby though gates, down walkways and into new pens.

Farmgal Lambing Tip of the Day.. Float your lamb to move the mom..  keep that baby in mom’s natural eye line, keep it just slowly moving and she will come right along.

 

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Cranberry Sauce for Roasted Pork Ribs

This recipe did three good size Pork Spare ribs of 4 to 5 ribs each.

  • 1 80z jar of Cranberry Jam ( As you can this was a full berry jam)
  • 2 oz of Soy Sauce
  • 2 oz of the mustard of your choice
  • Pinch of Black Pepper

That’s it.. its so simple but o its good~ Mix it all together and spread it over the pre-cooked ribs, they need to be very slow roasted in my case I did with in the oven with water, onion and garlic with a bay leaf to add flavour to the pot and with enough moisture that they never got the chance to dry out at all.

Into the oven on their foil bed, oven or BBQ at 350 till they are baked on with sticky goodness! I served these with a fresh bun and coleslaw.  A lovely Sunday Feast indeed!

 

 

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from miss c

What a beautiful post and such words.. words worth sharing..

Cecilia Mary Gunther's avatarThe Kitchen's Garden

I am popping in for a wee hullo. To share a cup of coffee with you.

Just to let you know that while we are warm and still here in California. (No wind – what a joy.) At home on the farm back in Illinois it is freezing – literally.  But all is well – Jake took over for  few days and he says everyone is OK – even the chicks, who I worry about the most. And John is back at the helm today. 

The days will race past here I think.

When I set up this blog I gave myself three challenges. one: Create a page a day and images each day from the farm, only the farm- just my acres.  My idea was to push my mind to find new things to see and comment on from one small space. To extend my photography to see the smallness…

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Baked Squash Soup

Like many fellow gardeners, we have squash on our counters that need to be used up or for the more frugal folks, a good winter squash is a outstanding way to make a thick meaty or not stick to your ribs soup!

This soup has ended up as one of my go too for left over roasted squash, I grow bigger squash and I am sure that there must be others that get really big ones in the garden, this is a outstanding way to use up leftover.. you can cut the soup in half and only need 2 cups or you can make the whole batch and use up to 4 cups..  you can also mix and match sqush with cooked turnip, carrot and sweet potato.. just as long as it adds up to the total amount.

1 Large onion-Peeled and Diced
1 TSP of Olive Oil
1 Clove of Garlic-Peeled and Diced
2 Stock of Celery-Diced
6 cups of veggie Stock
4 cups of Squash baked in the oven first and then added cooked to the soup.
1/2 cup of diced Cabbage
1/2 tsp Salt, Pepper, Ginger

In a pot, cook your onion, celery (if you don’t have celery, use half a tsp of celery seed instead) and garlic and cook together till the onion is clear.. then add your veggie stock, your left over mashed squash (if its oven roasted, it will add a lovely sweetness to the soup) and your diced cabbage, simmer till cabbage is just tender, salt and pepper to taste at the end.

Now this soup can be made just like that and its good but add in a rich smokey type sausage in bits and it takes it to whole new level.. again.. using leftover meat is fine, or scramble in loose sausage bits in the pot at the same time as the onion, garlic and celery..

This soup in the above photo is from a post I did many years ago, and I love it, but I have also re-worked it a touch over the past years and wanted to give you the newest version today.. Enjoy.. its a awesome soup..

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