We used to work on the Orchard Ranch out of Tensleep, Wyoming. When we were there, they had a handyman named Jim Bricker. He was a big bear of a man, and as kind as can be. Always with a twinkle in his eye and ready with his big booming laugh. My boys loved him, and so did we. He had a weiner dog female named Killer that was his constant companion.
Bricker lived on cabbage soup. My friend Amanda reminded me about cabbage soup, and it made me think of Bricker. Built like a brick house, and always healthy. He was a bit windy to be around, so that might have contributed to his good health a bit.
Bricker Soup
1 onion diced
2 T minced garlic
2 T olive oil
big pinch of red pepper flake
whole head of chopped cabbage
bunch of fresh chopped spinach
1 diced zucchini
2 peeled and diced carrots
1/2 C diced celery
1 whole jug v-8
1 quart of diced tomatoes
1 tsp dried basil
1/2 tsp dried thyme
In a large stockpot, brown the onion and garlic in oil with the red pepper flakes. Add the rest of the vegetables and stir until they are opaque. Add the juice, tomatoes and herbs. Bring to a boil and salt and pepper to taste. If you plan on eating, not canning, simmer until vegetables are soft, and serve.
This soup makes a ton, but if you live on it like Bricker did, it will go fast. I will just can this soup in the pressure canner. Yes you can pressure can cabbage. It is a green, and processes for 75 minutes for pints, and ninety for quarts. It is not usually recommended, as it gets strong tasting when canned, but like turnips, and collards, we like them the way they come out, and can them anyway. I use fifteen pounds pressure, but you will need to check the pressure for your own elevation.
Recipes, tips and tricks for surviving and thriving on what's on hand. Practical guide for planning menus, and recipes for the home cook who doesn't want to, or can't, go to the store more once a week (or month). How to keep a well stocked pantry, and the advantages of "turbo cooking".
Friday, November 15, 2013
Friday, September 13, 2013
Canned Corn, Corn Syrup, Apple Cider, and Apple Juice
The more foods I make for our family rather than buy, the more I find that I can cheaply and easily make at home. I canned corn yesterday. I just canned it plain, and in water, no added salt. I like canning corn. It's easy and straight forward. Shuck the corn, blanch it three minutes, cut it off the cob (my favorite part) and shove it in the jars. When all the corn is shucked, blanched and in the jars, then pour boiling water over it and wipe the rim of the jars. You have to vigorously stir it around with a chopstick to get the air bubbles out, and then you can add a hot lid and ring, and process it. 85 minutes for quarts. From my four dozen ears, I got a thirteen quarts of corn, and a pint to add to the chili that was cooking in the crockpot.
I had done some pints of corn earlier with red and green sweet peppers, celery and vidalia onions. I have about forty pints of this calico corn. So we can have corn with our meals at least once a week for a year, and then some.
So today, I have all these cobs that are left from cutting the corn off. I am going to make corn syrup with them. The season of making candy is approaching, and homemade corn syrup will come in handy! I will use my pressure canner as a pressure cooker and quickly make a bunch of stock from my cobs. In my canner, I'll add the jar rack so the cobs don't scorch to the bottom of the pan. I'll add a dozen or so cobs, whatever will fill the canner about half way. I'll add water to cover the corn, and then put on the lid, and process this stock for twenty minutes at fifteen pounds of pressure. Viola! In half an hour, I'll have loads of corn stock.
Once the canner cools to room pressure, I'll take off the lid, and strain the stock through a cloth lined colander. Now I can measure how much stock I have, and figure out how much sugar to use. For each cup of stock, you will use half a cup of sugar. So, for eight cups of stock, I'll use four cups of sugar. I'll bring this to boil in my stockpot, and let it cook until it's thick and syrup-ey. I'll put it into quart jars, and process in a boiling water bath for ten minutes. Homemade corn syrup can be used in place of store bought syrup in candy making recipes. It can get crystalized, like honey does, and will turn back into syrup if you place the jar in a saucepan with some water, and gently heat it.
Yesterday, Joel and I juiced about three bushels of tart Northern Spy apples. We canned this apple cider in my big half gallon jars. We drink a lot of spiced hot apple cider in the Wintertime. I have an old glass percolator that we use for that purpose. It not only tastes wonderful and warms you up when you are chilled, it makes our house smell like home!
I saved the pulp from the juicer, and will add water to cover that, and cook this to extract the apple juice from it. Once it's simmered about twenty minutes or so, I'll strain it through a cloth lined colander, and bottle it in quart jars. This apple juice processes for five minutes in a boiling water bath.
Once I'm through extracting the juice from this pulp, I'll feed the stuff that I strain out of the juice to the chickens.
This morning, I'm pulling out a fresh tablecloth, and scrubbing my apple sticky floor. When my husband comes home from his trip to Montana today, we'll have a sit down supper with cloth napkins, and the good dishes. I'll put out the jelly into a pretty glass bowl, and pull out some bread and butter pickles, and put them in a refrigerator glass square dish with a pickle serving fork. I'll get out the glass pitcher, and fill it with tea and ice, and warm the rolls to put into a wicker basket with a cloth. I already have these nice things, and they should be enjoyed! It doesn't cost money to live a rich life.
I had done some pints of corn earlier with red and green sweet peppers, celery and vidalia onions. I have about forty pints of this calico corn. So we can have corn with our meals at least once a week for a year, and then some.
So today, I have all these cobs that are left from cutting the corn off. I am going to make corn syrup with them. The season of making candy is approaching, and homemade corn syrup will come in handy! I will use my pressure canner as a pressure cooker and quickly make a bunch of stock from my cobs. In my canner, I'll add the jar rack so the cobs don't scorch to the bottom of the pan. I'll add a dozen or so cobs, whatever will fill the canner about half way. I'll add water to cover the corn, and then put on the lid, and process this stock for twenty minutes at fifteen pounds of pressure. Viola! In half an hour, I'll have loads of corn stock.
Once the canner cools to room pressure, I'll take off the lid, and strain the stock through a cloth lined colander. Now I can measure how much stock I have, and figure out how much sugar to use. For each cup of stock, you will use half a cup of sugar. So, for eight cups of stock, I'll use four cups of sugar. I'll bring this to boil in my stockpot, and let it cook until it's thick and syrup-ey. I'll put it into quart jars, and process in a boiling water bath for ten minutes. Homemade corn syrup can be used in place of store bought syrup in candy making recipes. It can get crystalized, like honey does, and will turn back into syrup if you place the jar in a saucepan with some water, and gently heat it.
Yesterday, Joel and I juiced about three bushels of tart Northern Spy apples. We canned this apple cider in my big half gallon jars. We drink a lot of spiced hot apple cider in the Wintertime. I have an old glass percolator that we use for that purpose. It not only tastes wonderful and warms you up when you are chilled, it makes our house smell like home!
I saved the pulp from the juicer, and will add water to cover that, and cook this to extract the apple juice from it. Once it's simmered about twenty minutes or so, I'll strain it through a cloth lined colander, and bottle it in quart jars. This apple juice processes for five minutes in a boiling water bath.
Once I'm through extracting the juice from this pulp, I'll feed the stuff that I strain out of the juice to the chickens.
This morning, I'm pulling out a fresh tablecloth, and scrubbing my apple sticky floor. When my husband comes home from his trip to Montana today, we'll have a sit down supper with cloth napkins, and the good dishes. I'll put out the jelly into a pretty glass bowl, and pull out some bread and butter pickles, and put them in a refrigerator glass square dish with a pickle serving fork. I'll get out the glass pitcher, and fill it with tea and ice, and warm the rolls to put into a wicker basket with a cloth. I already have these nice things, and they should be enjoyed! It doesn't cost money to live a rich life.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Halloween Homemade
I *gasp* make homemade treats at Halloween. I only offer them to kids who are with thier parents, and ask if it is OK for their child to have a homemade treat. I have never had someone turn me down. We can't possibly make enough homemade treats for all the kids who come on Halloween, we have several hundred trick or treaters, but I do make some just the same.
I always make homemade hot cider, too. It isn't so much about the drink itself, but it is the smell of the cider that makes it seem like Halloween. I have an old glass stovetop percolator that I fill with cider and add five or six cinnamon sticks, five or six cloves, and five or six allspice berries to it. Once it comes to a simmer, I turn it down on low and leave it on the simmer burner. It is a wonderful welcoming smell for our visitors.
We made Grandma Jenny's caramel corn this year. It is a simple brown sugar caramel poured over popped corn. I added some dried fruits and nuts, and we packaged it in zip lock bags and put a glow in the dark Halloween sticker on it.
Grandma Jenny's Caramel Corn
2 C packed brown sugar
1/2 C water
2 T oil (I used grapeseed oil, but any light oil would do)
Combine all three ingredients in a large saucepan. Don't stir, just put on high heat until it boils. Let the mixture boil for fifteen minutes on high heat, and then pour over corn. Spread out onto nonstick baking sheets to cool and add dried cranberries and pumpkin seeds. After it cools and hardens, bag it up. Grandma Jenny said to use it for a large bag of popped corn. She bought hers already popped, but we popped our own in our Whirlypop. It is a stovetop popcorn popper that has a crank handle on top to keep the corn stirred while it pops. It is great fun to use. I have seen similar models at the Big R store for less than ten dollars. It sure beats having to buy microwave popcorn, and put up with all the salt and preservatives.
We also made caramel apples. I haven't made caramel apples in years. We put one of my glass mixing bowls over a pan of water that was boiling on the stove to heat the caramel. I ended up adding water to the caramels to get them to a consistency that would coat the apples. They sort of slumped, and were too sticky to give out to the kids, so Don will end up taking them to share at work. We had bought some cut little Halloween sprinkles to decorate them in.
I always make homemade hot cider, too. It isn't so much about the drink itself, but it is the smell of the cider that makes it seem like Halloween. I have an old glass stovetop percolator that I fill with cider and add five or six cinnamon sticks, five or six cloves, and five or six allspice berries to it. Once it comes to a simmer, I turn it down on low and leave it on the simmer burner. It is a wonderful welcoming smell for our visitors.
We made Grandma Jenny's caramel corn this year. It is a simple brown sugar caramel poured over popped corn. I added some dried fruits and nuts, and we packaged it in zip lock bags and put a glow in the dark Halloween sticker on it.
Grandma Jenny's Caramel Corn
2 C packed brown sugar
1/2 C water
2 T oil (I used grapeseed oil, but any light oil would do)
Combine all three ingredients in a large saucepan. Don't stir, just put on high heat until it boils. Let the mixture boil for fifteen minutes on high heat, and then pour over corn. Spread out onto nonstick baking sheets to cool and add dried cranberries and pumpkin seeds. After it cools and hardens, bag it up. Grandma Jenny said to use it for a large bag of popped corn. She bought hers already popped, but we popped our own in our Whirlypop. It is a stovetop popcorn popper that has a crank handle on top to keep the corn stirred while it pops. It is great fun to use. I have seen similar models at the Big R store for less than ten dollars. It sure beats having to buy microwave popcorn, and put up with all the salt and preservatives.
We also made caramel apples. I haven't made caramel apples in years. We put one of my glass mixing bowls over a pan of water that was boiling on the stove to heat the caramel. I ended up adding water to the caramels to get them to a consistency that would coat the apples. They sort of slumped, and were too sticky to give out to the kids, so Don will end up taking them to share at work. We had bought some cut little Halloween sprinkles to decorate them in.
Sunday, October 14, 2012
So here it is, my pantry. Don calls our pantry the vault. It is a good description, because we have a lot invested in it. Besides the investment in food that will cost me the same to serve six months from now, as it did the day I grew it or canned it, we have a large investment in time. Time to provide for ourselves healthy nutritious food with no preservatives or added salt, and time to preserve the traditions that made the homesteader's and pioneers thrive! It is a proud tradition, and I am proud of the vault. I have canned more than I ever have in my life this year, and have learned so many new things!
Here is the rest of it. The dry goods things are stored in another cabinet. We will have to replace the shelving in the first picture this year. It isn't big enough for what I want to do, so we will be exploring storage options to get the most use of our small space.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Making Tomatillo Apple Salsa
I am still cannning like a madwoman trying to get the garden all put by. Counting down the crops until they are all either in the freezer, or the new dehydrator, or in jars in my pantry. So here is the process for tomatillo salsa. Tomatillos are a gooseberry relative, and makes it's contribution to the culinary world mainly as salsa and a sauce called salsa verde that is used in green chile, posole and other Mexican food delights.
I am making both tomatillo salsa and salsa verde today. The tomatillo salsa is a water bath canning method recipe, and the salsa verde requires a pressure canner, because it contains chicken stock.
When we harvested the four tomatillo plants, we came up with three flats of tomatillos. To use them, the papery husk must be removed. Here is a photo of the tomatillos in the sink full of cold water. Besides being enclosed in a husk, they are sticky little buggers, so water is a must.
So here they are, Some of them are dinky, and some didn't fill out their little papery husks, but trust me, they will all be delicious! It takes a little time to get them all ready for using, but they are worth it. We buy canned tomatillos, and use them for posole mostly. It is a delicious pork stew with hominy and green chiles. The tomatillos make a wonderful tangy broth to simmer the meat in.
After you are all done de-husking, you should rinse the fruits in cold water again. Like I said before, these little buggers are sticky.
For my canning today, I used the recipe from the Better Homes and Gardens' book You Can Can. It interested me because it added apples to the tomatillo salsa, and I had lots of apples that needed used. The recipe called for a Granny Smith apple, but I used MacIntosh, because that's what we had on hand. Here is what they look like when you get them all cleaned.

Pretty huh? So I used my food processor to pulse/chop the tomatillos. Also the onions, the jalapenos, and the peppers. It is just easier, and my chopping thumb is still sore from the tomatoes I canned diced last week! I am cooking my salsa in the oven in my huge roaster pan. I am a notorious scorcher, so I am taking no chances of ruining all my hard work. The salsa will come to a boil and simmer in the oven before I can it in the water bath canner. I have about eighteen pints of salsa in the roaster. Here's what it looks like, and may I just say, it tastes delicious.
I am making both tomatillo salsa and salsa verde today. The tomatillo salsa is a water bath canning method recipe, and the salsa verde requires a pressure canner, because it contains chicken stock.
When we harvested the four tomatillo plants, we came up with three flats of tomatillos. To use them, the papery husk must be removed. Here is a photo of the tomatillos in the sink full of cold water. Besides being enclosed in a husk, they are sticky little buggers, so water is a must.
So here they are, Some of them are dinky, and some didn't fill out their little papery husks, but trust me, they will all be delicious! It takes a little time to get them all ready for using, but they are worth it. We buy canned tomatillos, and use them for posole mostly. It is a delicious pork stew with hominy and green chiles. The tomatillos make a wonderful tangy broth to simmer the meat in.
After you are all done de-husking, you should rinse the fruits in cold water again. Like I said before, these little buggers are sticky.
For my canning today, I used the recipe from the Better Homes and Gardens' book You Can Can. It interested me because it added apples to the tomatillo salsa, and I had lots of apples that needed used. The recipe called for a Granny Smith apple, but I used MacIntosh, because that's what we had on hand. Here is what they look like when you get them all cleaned.
Pretty huh? So I used my food processor to pulse/chop the tomatillos. Also the onions, the jalapenos, and the peppers. It is just easier, and my chopping thumb is still sore from the tomatoes I canned diced last week! I am cooking my salsa in the oven in my huge roaster pan. I am a notorious scorcher, so I am taking no chances of ruining all my hard work. The salsa will come to a boil and simmer in the oven before I can it in the water bath canner. I have about eighteen pints of salsa in the roaster. Here's what it looks like, and may I just say, it tastes delicious.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Fast food, Country Style
Well, I am still in the canning "weeds" as it were, and am canning almost every single day, if not doing the prep and soaking portions of the canning process. Besides sixty pounds of tomatoes, today I have a canner load (eight quarts) of chicken stock that I need to do something with. I can't decide if I want to make: chicken soup or just can the broth. I am leaning towards the soup, even though it requires more effort and processing time.
A quart of chicken soup is a platform for so much yumminess you can't even imagine! My husband likes me to add chopped cabbage and ramen noodles (the real noodles, not the soup mix) to it. The day care babies like it that way too. I can put dried mushrooms and rice, or frozen tortellini and spinach, or add a C of buttermilk mixed with a couple of T of cornstarch to thicken it, and finish with a C of cream for cream of chicken soup. I can add tomato paste, roasted green chiles, some roasted garlic and thicken it with masa for a terrific chicken enchilada soup. It is our fast food of choice, so I guess I'll make more while I can.
That is the wonderful thing about home canning. I have a whole shelf to choose from full of fast food. I can pour out a jar of Chicken Cacciatore, and boil some noodles, and have supper in less than twenty minutes. I can start a gravy in the pan, with butter and flour cooking together, add the liquid from the canned pork loin chops, and some buttermilk to make a killer pork gravy, to which I'll add the pork loin chops in to warm. Less than fifteen minutes, and I have hot pork sandwiches on the table. In the time it takes to boil the egg noodles, my hamburger stroganoff gets heated and sour cream added for another fast food meal. There are the ultra fast pea and ham and bean soups, the chicken enchilada soup, the tomato bisque soup, all right there, homemade and seasoned to please our own pallets and accommodate my dietary restrictions.
We bought a new car this last month. My old Sable was pretty sad. The paint job that they put on vehicles in the nineties didn't last, and the windshield was going to cost more than the car was worth. We got a beautiful used Lincoln Town Car, with all the bells and whistles. We learned a long time ago, that it's better to buy the best used car you can find than to buy new. I could never have afforded this car new, but it is like new still. It even smells like a new car inside. That beautiful smell of new plastic and leather. I bet no one has worn their poopy chore boots in it ever. Not that they will get the chance to now either, it is kind of MY car, and hopefully, I'll not be warming any newborn lambs, or hauling feed in it like my last car. That's what I keep telling myself anyway.
There is great joy in driving a big Lincoln. It is like riding a marshmallow down the road. It has dual controls for the air conditioning, which should improve my marriage. The only thing we really ever fight over is the temperature. I'm a hot momma, and Don is always cold. He actually wears a t shirt under his shirt 365 days a year! He says it causes evaporative cooling in the summer.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
No Salt No Sugar Bread and Butter Pickles
I do a lot of home canning, but this is a project everyone can try. It is a project for the fridge, so there is no canning involved. It does help, however, if you have a canning jar to pack them into, but it is certainly ok to use another similar sized vessel.
I just harvested the first of the cucumbers from my garden, and this is how I used them. We have had to do several things to prevent the deer from eating our plants and fruit. The last of which was an electric fence around the top of the fence. It seems to be working so far, so maybe I'll actually get a harvest out of all my labors!
You will note, the jar is not totally full of pickles. We had some quality control checks before I took the picture.
I just harvested the first of the cucumbers from my garden, and this is how I used them. We have had to do several things to prevent the deer from eating our plants and fruit. The last of which was an electric fence around the top of the fence. It seems to be working so far, so maybe I'll actually get a harvest out of all my labors!
You will note, the jar is not totally full of pickles. We had some quality control checks before I took the picture.
No Salt No Sugar Bread and Butter Pickles
for the fridge
5-6 pickling cucumbers, sliced in 1/4 inch rounds
2 C white vinegar
11/2 C stevia in the raw
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/4 tsp celery seeds
1/4 tsp mustard seeds
pinch of red pepper flakes, or a squirt or two of tabasco
1/4 tsp pickle crisp
Slice cucumbers and pack into a quart jar. Add pickle crisp to the jar. In a small saucepan, heat the vinegar, stevia, turmeric, celery, mustard, and red pepper flakes until boiling. Pour over pickles. Remove bubbles by running a chopstick down into the jar to release them. Let cool. Refrigerate for 48 hours, or until colored all the way through.
These pickles have 2 calories per serving, for six or seven pickles, and one g carb, no fat and no protien.
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