Five ways to use Fowl Livers and a soup recipe

Sometimes the day after a butcher, you want to really show off those wonderful fresh organ meats, and some days you don’t.. you still need to use them and they are so good for you.. but sometimes its nice to hide it.. Truly you could serve this as Curry Potato Soup and no one would know from the taste about the extra’s.

I have made this recipe for a number of years, myself, I like liver and onions and I am good to go but my beloved hubby, not so much.. this is a favorite way to serve him live in a way that will eat..  I was looking in my freezer this weekend, and found a number of organ meats that need to be used up in the next few weeks as I don’t want them to get to much older as they were butchered in the past three months.

Curry Chicken Liver and Potato Soup Recipe

  • 1 Chicken liver, heart and Gizzard -All cleaned, trimmed and diced very fine.
  • One small onion-Peeled and diced fine
  • 2 cloves garlic-Peeled and diced fine
  • 1 stock of celery- Trimmed and diced fine -or a tablespoon of diced dried celery
  • 2 large potato’s-Peeled and Diced
  • 1 heaping tbsp of curry mix, salt, pepper to taste.

I cooked the meats, onion and garlic first, took it out of pot, and put the potato’s and celery in and covered with just enough  water to cook, and spices, when they are cooked, add the meat mix back into the pot and allow to meld, then take the blending stick and blend into a thick smooth soup, serve with a dollop of fresh yogurt in the middle with a bit of fresh diced green onions on top with a crack of fresh black pepper.

Lets step back to this wonderful mix of organ meats, onion and garlic shall we.. here are just a few ways I have taken this and used it in meals.

  1. Add sour cream or heavy cream , some wilted greens or veggies of choice and serve up over top of cooked rice or mashed potato’s or cooked pasta
  2. Mix with bread cubes, spices and bone broth, make a wonderful  baked stuffing.
  3. Add to scrambled eggs for a hearty breakfast.
  4. Mix in with stew meat or ground meats into pot pies.
  5. Grind till smooth, add salt/pepper to taste and chill, use in sandwhichs with fresh greens.

What you make if this was your start?

Posted in Soups and Stews | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments

Reuse and Recyle- Sheep Feeder

This pen normally has hay net feeder and or a single corner hay feeder.. neither of which worked for the ewe sheep that are using my big back corner stall as the nursery pen at the count down to lambing..

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 A little extra muscle, a crow bar an hammer and some time with a plan and we put together a nice sheep feeder that holds ten eating at the same time.. Saving costs on re-used wood, and more important, saving on hay by having a proper head space for them to eat into. Make sure if you are reusing wood, that you take out all nails or screws from the wood before working with it.

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We put this at the front of the pen, this means that we can haul our hay to the front of the pen and fill this over the top, the whole thing takes 4 full chips of hay, which is right around hundred pounds of hay per fill.  As long as its kept topped up, the ewe’s can take their turns at the feeder with ease.

The ewe’s have hit the point that they are getting a bit of grain each day, just a light feeding because some of them are big enough that even with free hay in front them, they are needing the extra calories.  I also have a nice salt block right by the rubber water trough, because I know that if they take in more salt, they will drink more water.. win-win.

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The ewes range in how close they are to being due and they sigh as I stand and lift tails to see bags on each one..  Its like a game.. Can I see your bag please.. no bag, little bag, getting there.. filled up..

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This ewe is just starting to go from no bag, to a tiny wee bag.. We have the jugs ready for when we need to move them, I normally would not have all the girls in lock down, just the ones getting close but they say that we are going to have a big storm coming in so for this week, we will keep the girls in the big nursery loafing pen, moving as needed to the little jug and then moving to the bigger baby pen. I have learned the hard way to keep the girls in safely when we are going to have very bad weather when I have them close to their new date..  After this big storm passes, I will check each ewe and about half of them will go back out to have 24 freedom and the big lean too to coming and out of at will.. The closer ones or any that have their lambs, will be staying in for longer.

I can not imagine lambing in the deep dead of a canadian winter without having the big barn to keep everyone safe.

Farmgal Tip of the Day – For the average size sheep you want your head opening to be 9 inches.

Posted in sheep | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Homestead Pantry Log 2017

p1040939This post is going to ramble a bit LOL.  I was enjoying doing some pinning on Salted Egg Yolks, seeing if there was anything new and funky looking at it from a world wide point of view..  which lapsed me into looking at food and pantries..

Which lead me to Deep Pantry posts.. O my, why O WHY does everyone think they need to put a new label on something that has been used for hundreds of years, its called a fully stocked larder, a full stocked Root Cellar or more modern a pantry..

So I did a little more digging on this “new Term” and I finally got why the split..

a) Deep Pantry -is somehow connected to the prepping world, it means that you are stocking extra food for in times of need to come. I am honestly not sure why they felt they needed their own lingo or name for this.

b) Stocked Larder is more based on history and more about putting away in the good years to have stocks and stores in the lean years.. (ok, that’s been a goal for leaders, countries and anyone who could afford to do so for a few thousand years!)

Which brings me to Homesteaders, the permaculture movement, the community garden’s, to the massive green-growing-local food movement..

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We talk about canning pantry’s, we talk about root cellars, and root clamps, we talk about food forests and swells and how to collect and clean our rain water, we teach classes, share seeds, share garden projects, we teach how to do hand on in so many ways, we build and help bring gardens to schools and more..

But what do we call a “stocked or deep pantry”..   I really needed to think about this.. we typically call it our pantry, or root cellar or to tell the truth many of us do use the terms Larder but others say just say cellar

Bottom line those of use that live on the land, work the land and who truly make a massive effort to feed ourselves year round know that we need a min of two years worth of food basic’s put up.. because at any time, on any year crops can and will fail..

Our Pantries look so different what I see on the net, no pretty rows of buckets, no shelves full of colorful cans and rows of store got paper towels and so forth on the top rows..

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We are much more likely to have large jars full of dried goods, freezers full of meat-veggies and fruit- shelves full of colorful canned goods, everything from grape juice to apple sauce to all kinds of veggies and pickles, jams, jellies and rows of canned meats, soups, stews and so forth..

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We are likely to have stacked milk crates and old slapped together wooden box’s for all kinds of root veggies, we will have old onion bags hanging off the roof, we will have squash tucked away in all kinds of crazy places in our house, and we will slowly eat them, and we will dry or can or freeze the leftovers when we cut into and open a big squash and after its been held for 6 to 9 months, we will see how it held, taste it and decide if its worthy to pass its genetics on to the next generations.

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yes, we will still buy things from the store, but only after we have looked for local u-picks, local farm gate sales but we will work each year to do so less and less, and we will find ourselves giving things up when they finished and moving over to something else in the lauder to use up, because after all the time, effort, work we have put into it, why would we want to waste.

I am mulling over it, I have a lot of data over the years on what to grow for X amount of return and how it can be used in my more closed loop homestead system, I am not going to even consider adding in a “stock” the lauder weekly recommends but I think I will consider adding comments to the planned monthly garden round up posts, as well as the canning log post.. and we will see what the monthly results round up to in order to give us info in regards to the full year.

Are you old school, do you split the different things into what they are in fact called, do you use a general name to cover them all, do you use a older more history term for it, or do you just call it the pantry or the cellar or do you use the more modern terms.. Deep Pantry?

 

 

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Saturday Flash Back- Chili Recipe and Ways to use it

When its a  busy day on the farm, (like today is) its a lovely thing to put a chili into the crock pot and just let it cook away so that your house smells awesome when you come back in and there is a hot bowl of stick to your ribs goodness waiting to served up.

So someone asked me for a recipe for Chili, but instead of one recipe, I have decided to cover the basic’s and provide extra idea’s to boot.

There are many kinds of Chili, and a ton of recipes but there are a few things that are needed to make a chili so that list comes first.

Ground meat-Most of the time Chili is made with ground Beef, but don’t stop there, you can make Chili, with ground Chicken/Turkey/Deer/Elk/Bison/Pork/Lamb/Goat..If its ground meat, you can use it.

For a typical large pot I like to use a min of two pds of meat, but some folks and recipes call for one pd(I consider that skimping on the meat but that is just my call), The key to the meat, is that you break it up while its cooking, as you want meaty bits in each spoon.

Onion- I like at least two large onions diced-I typically do the cheap white ones, but you are welcome to use whatever kind of onion you want, I have been known to mix and match depending on what is growing in the garden.

Garlic-Lots of Garlic, at least six cloves or a heaping diced tablespoon, I like to cook that with the meat, depending on how lean the meat is, you might need to add a little oil to cook in, Beef and Pork most likely won’t need this but lamb/Goat or Game meats most likely will.

Beans-Brown Baked Beans, Kidney Beans are the two I considered most needed, once you have those two, you can play to your heart content in regards to what to add or try in regards to other beans.

Tomato’s- diced Tomato’s are a requirement, now you can use tomato juice if you want, or crush tomato’s for the extra but I like V8, I use the whole can that comes on sale for a dollar about 4 times a year, and one small can of tomato paste for thicking.

Regular Extra’s in our house

Mushrooms-Sliced, fresh , canned or dried, does not matter, I Like Mushrooms in the chili

Green Peppers-Diced-Fresh or Dried, I like both of these, sometimes I like to add all four different colors in, Green, Yellow, Red and Orange..Again, alot depends on what is growing in the garden and what I have lots of dried in the cupboard in winter.

A can or bag of Sweet Corn Nibblets is a good thing to add now an again.

Some folks like to add Celery Diced up and cooked with the Meat/onion/Galic, sometimes I do this and sometimes I don’t.

Chili Powder, the backbone of that “taste”, its made out of Chili Peppers, Cumin, Coriander, salt, oregano Garlic and Cloves.

Now the above will look like this when done..

Now that you have this, you can serve it in so many ways, Yes you can just serve up a big bowl of it and enjoy but here are few ways to try it.

  • Chili in a bowl plain
  • Chili in a bowl with a spoon of sour cream on it with a bit of grated Cheese melted on top.
  • Chili in a bowl with Grated Cheese an Fresh Diced Green Onions
  • Chili over top of Mashed Potatos
  • Chili over top Homemade Oven Fries-Make it a deluxe, add the cheese and sourcream.
  • Chili over top of Nacho Chips  or Nacho Chips on the side to dip in.
  • Chili/Cheese/Greens and a little sour cream in a flat bread-rolled up, with a side of green salad.
  • Chili Hot dog anyone
  • Serve it in a homemade bread bowl, kids love to be able to eat the bowl, and can be made as small or as big as required for the folks you are planning on feeding.

So there are some idea’s for you.. Now are you wanting to make some Chili?

  • 2 pds of Ground Meat
  • 2 Large Onions-Peeled and Diced
  • 6 Cloves of Garlic-Peeled and Diced
  • 2 Stocks of Celery- Diced
  • 1 Liter of V8
  • 1 Quart Jar or 1 Extra Large can of Diced Tomato’s
  • 1 small can of tomato Paste
  • 2 cups of fresh sliced mushrooms or 2 regular cans of sliced mushrooms
  • 1 large can of dark baked beans or at least 4 cups of homemade
  • 1 large can of kidney beans or at least 2 cups of homemade
  • a min of 1/4 cup of Chili powder, but I always use at least 1/2 or more myself, if I making for me, more like a cup.. throw in DH, and its half a cup. (remember it will get hotter as it cooks an sits, so don’t go by the taste when first added in)

Cook the meat, onions, garlic, mushrooms (if fresh) and celery together, then add the rest and simmer for 20 min to blend the flavors and serve in many ways.

Chili freezes very well, and can be canned if you have a pressure cooker, follow the directions provided for the longest ingredent given.

So anyone want to share their favorite extra in regards to their version of chili, do you serve it in a new and creative way that I don’t have listed? Please feel free to share.

Found this amazing Recipe for White Chili  on Thy Hand Hath Provided and its looks so good, and would work for anyone that does not want a tomato based Chili..

Posted in Food Production and Recipes, Soups and Stews | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Pansy Shortbread Cookies

How lovely, I will have to make this once pansy’s are back in season on the farm.. perfect for a delightful summer afternoon tea visit!

Skipping Stars Productions LLC's avatarBaking Gifts from the Oven

Source: http://www.stonegableblog.com/

StoneGable offers some of the best ideas I’ve ever seen…

Don’t you love having creative friends? At a recent bridal shower at StoneGable the mother-of-the-bride broughta plate offabulous pansy cookies to share. Of course I thought they were the prettiest cookies I had ever seen! Everyone ooooohhhed and aaaaaaahhhhed over them. And not only were they beautiful to look at… they were wonderfully delicious too!

I just had to try to make them myself. Shortbread cookies are quite easy to make andfixing the pansy on top was and fun. Very impressive for the little work they take. They taste buttery and sweet, and the pansies have no taste to interfere with the lovely shortbread flavor. I would have to call this a WOW factor dessert.

I hope you will try these little bites of nature.
Pansy Shortbread Cookies
1 1/4 cups flour
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup room…

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Posted in Life moves on daily | 1 Comment

Canadian Northern Spruce Tip Salt

Cow%20Moose%201[1]I adore my spruce tips, I use them in many ways.. I always make spruce tip salt and spruce tip sugar, I make a full pint of each every year for cooking though out the year to come.

While the timing is a touch off per the Food in Jar’s Challenge as the tips are only available in the spring, I had to lead with them 🙂

I first started working with spruce tips at “the office” in Yellowknife. NWT Canada, we used them in a number of ways.  I have continued to explore them and expand how they are used here on the farm.

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In the spring when the spruce are budding out, you can wild forage for them or in your own yard, make sure you space them nicely as you pick them off as when removed, it will affect that year’s growth on the tree’s, picking cleanly will help a lot but you will still need to sit and take the little paper husk off any tips that she have them. They should be still tightly together ideally for most of them..

I like a straight 50/50 but I have friends that prefer a 1 to 4 ratio of spruce to salt.. your call on that one, depends on how much depth of flavour you are after..

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Lightly chop them and then measure them out and put equal amount of salt to tips, then put all of it into your grinder and grind together till very finely done. It will be wetter when done..

Spread it out to a single layer in a large baking pan and pop into a slow low oven, or into your dryer.. at herb setting if you have it.. let them go for 20 min at a time in the oven and then start stirring them up and laying them back down, until they are perfectly dry to the touch,  allow to cool, then bottle and store..

You will find this in taste to be a mix of Rosemary-lemon in taste, if you were going to make it with basic herbs to try to get the same taste, I would mix rosemary, a dried lemon rind and grind it with your sea salt.

This blend works like a dream with all wild game or deeper flavours off the farm, wild like Canadian Goose or Moose. From the farm, Goose, Duck, Lamb or Goat.

Here is a lovely Moose Stew Recipe for you, using my Spruce Tip Salt along with Spruce syrup…

So here is a lovely Moose Meat Stew Recipe (the flavors where picked to work well with the lovely wild game flavours)

  • Take 1 to 1 and half pds of stew moose meat, trim any silver skin or tenders out of the cubes, allow to thaw in the fridge if frozen.
  • Make Two cups of very strong coffee, ideally add in 1 cup of spruce syrup or half a cup of raw local honey or 1/4 to half a cup of brown sugar
  • 1/ 4 cup of good quality olive oil.  Mix the coffee, sugar or spruce syrup and oil together and allow to cool, pour it over the moose meat and allow to sit in the fridge covered for at least four to six hours.
  • In a different pot cook up at least half a large rhutabag (the yellow turnip), peeled, cut into cubes and cooked in water till done, then mash
  • In your cast iron pan heated to med, add in a tiny bit of olive oil, one extra-large or two small peeled and diced onions, 2 ribs of diced celery and simmer till the onion starts to go clear, then add the meat cubes taken out of the dunk (but keep it in the bowl, we are going to use it) and simmer them with the onion, celery till brown up a bit.
  • then pour the coffee, sugar mix into the pan and allow to come back to a simmer, allow the flavours to meld with the meat and veggies mix..
  • Ideally at this time, your turnip is done, mash it and add it to the pan and stir it in..
  • A finishing touch of Spruce Salt and Fresh Cracked black pepper is all that is needed.. this is a very wonderful combo of moose flavour, sweetness from the sugars and the turnip combined with the depth of flavour that the coffee (red-eye gravy) brings.

This is a delightful way to serve up a very yummy bowl of Moose Stew, my hubby for what its worth, said he would like it put over a bit of hot mashed potato’s, and of course that would work as well, as it’s a built-in gravy.

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Posted in Charcuterie, local food, Recipes from the Root Cellar, Spice Rack | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Food in Jar’s Challange -February -Salt Preserving

It’s the first of February and that means it’s time to take on the second project in the Food in Jars Mastery Challenge. This month is all about salt preserving. For the purposes of this challenge, we’re going to focus on dry brining or curing. Think salt preserved citrus, salt preserved herbs (herbes salees), gravlax, cured egg yolks, sauerkraut, infused salts, and kimchi. We’re going to stay away from meat and wet-brined ferments.

Remember that the goal of this challenge is to help you expand your skills while creating something that you’ll actually use. So choose a project or recipe that will satisfy both your own learning and help you make something delicious.

Let me first say, just how sad I was to see that she removed meat and wet-brined ferments, I had planned to work a full lamb for you and do bacon, salt cured leg of lamb and so much more..  in fact I still think I might just stay with my plan and share them with my readers while doing the other Salt preserving running side by side with this challenge..

Perhaps she plans on doing a wet or dry meat cure later in the year 🙂 That would be fun, and I am quite sure I can find ways to do more at that time.

I have been curing meats on the farm for many years now. I will do one salt preserving recipe that DOES meet the Food in Jar’s rules per week for this coming month.. two out of four posts are already done. and ready to go up 🙂

Here is a link to the full months worth of round ups for the Marmalade Challenge, there are so many amazing different ones made by the awesome bloggers that are part of the challenge..

http://foodinjars.com/2017/01/mastery-challenge-january-round-marmalade/

I was very pleased to see that my kumquat Marmalade made the list 🙂

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Posted in Canning | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

In Memory of Maeve

As crazy as it seems to me, my daughter would be turning 17 today.. 17 years old, and my son Nat would have been 11, the years are flying by. Maeve would be driving? She would be starting to be more interested in boys then her horse, she would be fighting to grow up, and I know I would both so proud of her and wanting just a little more time, Nat would be at that teen stage, I am betting, he would have taken a touch after hubby and be a thinker, a bit more wild like mom with amazing depths, folks would call him old souled, but at home or around friends, sharp as a tack and witty..

I dreamed of  them last night.. its both a sorrow an a joy to hold them in my heart, as I did so briefly in my arms.

I am blessed with a husband who’s love and kindness humbles me daily.. and I have many things I am grateful for..

Normally I post a photo of a angel or picture that moves me, and I have tried over the years to have them mature and grow with her, sometimes she is angel and sometimes she is a fairy.

This year though I am changing it up.. I am going to post photo’s of her and a few of us together..  she was so tiny and such a tough little girl, she held on as long as she could.

So today, lift a glass in their memory, Happy Birthday Maeve Arlene Sharp, always remembered by you mom, dad. grandma’s and your aunty Hill an more..

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Posted in Family, Life moves on daily | 12 Comments

Canada 150 Food Blog Challange -Feb 2017- Doing Without

Canada 150 Food Blog Challenge for February 2017: Doing Without

Because the winter larder has traditionally been lean for so many Canadians, the February topic is about doing without food (or specific foods). Some possible angles:

-Meatless, eggless, gluten-, sugar- or dairy-free dishes from the past
-Clever food substitutes, like apple pie made with crackers and lemon juice
-Wartime rationing
-The Irish Potato Famine
-Privation in early settlements or remote areas
-Fasting observances like Lent or Ramadan

We’re looking for blog posts of any length, in either French or English, that relate to the topic. To enter, simply publish your entry within the month of February and post it here on the CHC Facebook page

There is a list of all the blogs that have posted to date on the main site which is linked above

But here are my two favorites so far

Backyard Farms Year of the rooster

urbnspice potlatch salmon

fish

But this months challenge certainly got me thinking about my own wartime challenge I did in march of 2015.. For all my new readers, who are interested in those type of food and recipes an history.. I will put links in this post if you might like to have a read on any of the subjects 🙂

March War Challenge overview

Didn’t quite get the full month done.. short by four days.. but it was a great blog challenge for me 🙂 I look forward to taking my books, and the history learned and working out a single post to be submitted into the 150 year blog challenge on Wartime food and making due.

 

 

 

Posted in Canada 150 Birthday Events, canadian wartime recipes, Life moves on daily | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Traveling Seed Box

In my local big City and the outer area’s, there is the most amazing community of gardeners and lovers of all things green.. We have so many amazing grass roots groups that have grown up into amazing programs over the ten plus years we have lived in this area.

Just a few Examples, Hidden Harvest a program that matches local folks with fruit producing tree’s on their property with local folks interested in picking, 1/3rd goes to the land owner, 1/3rd goes to the pickers and 1/3rd goes to hidden harvest that gifts to local shelters, food banks and more..

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Deep Food Hub which has a number of projects going including workshops of all kinds and a new project that gets fruits and veggies at low-cost into local corner stores in “food deserts” and more..

But the project we are going to talk about today is the “Traveling Seed box” program

The OGF Travelling Seed Box consists of two boxes, one for Ottawa East and one for Ottawa West. The box is meant to be kept within the main city, which we consider anywhere that receives regular (NOT rural) OC Transpo bus service. We do allow people from outside the city to participate, provided they can both pick up AND drop off the box in the city.

Ottawa West covers Nepean, Richmond, Kanata, Stittsville, and anywhere west of that.

Ottawa East & Gatineau covers Downtown, Gatineau, Ottawa South, Gloucester, and Orleans

So I signed up into the program and the seed box was dropped off at hubbies work address in the proper city main..  it’s about the size of a shoe box and the idea is brilliantly simple.

Take out a small amount of seed that interest’s you and add a package or two or more of extra seed that you have collected, dried and are not going to use in the coming year or two.

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Share the wealth, share the open pollinated seeds that have been grown in our local area and in our local soils! All very good things indeed. Its nice to give back some of my seeds to the community.

The only downside I can see, is that you will not know until you grow out your plants if they are F1 crosses 🙂 but that is just fun in its own way..

For a new gardener, it might be harder that so few come with anything other then a name, no instructions of any kind come with the seeds themselves

Do you have a program like this in your area? Might be worth checking it out to see if you do..

Posted in Garden | Tagged , , , , , , | 4 Comments