Monday, August 30, 2010

Winter Preparations

As the summer begins to wind down, we are overrun with tomatoes, cucumbers, basil, and fruit. I find this time of year so comforting because I know that my freezer and pantry will be full when the darkness of winter sets in. While I am not able to fill the freezer as full as I would like (we are still debating the potential merits of a small chest freezer in the West household), I have started an annual routine that means we will have some tastes of summer in January. To date, I have made pasta sauce, oven-dried tomatoes, pesto, ratatouille, pickles, and frozen fruits.

Dill pickles from Waltham Fields cukes.

Makings of pesto - I blend Waltham Fields basil with olive oil to freeze.
I can add the garlic, salt, and other ingredients fresh when I use the pesto.

Freezing pesto in a muffin tin makes the perfect serving size.
I pop these out and keep them in Ziploc bags.

Making Susan's marinara sauce with Waltham Fields garlic, onion, basil, and tomatoes.

We got 7 pounds of tomatoes one week! Some went in to sauce, the others
I skinned and froze whole...or enjoyed juicy from the vine.

WHEAT WHEAT WHEAT!

Baker Andrew is *still* on hiatus, unfortunately, but I have tried to lure him back into the kitchen by buying Massachusetts-grown wheat! (And maybe when temperatures drop below 90, we will be willing to turn on the oven...) The girls at Boston Localvores recently volunteered to drive to White Oak Farm in Belchertown, Massachusetts to pick up shares of organically-grown grains. On a crazy whim, I ordered 25 pounds of unground wheat, and immediately had buyer's remorse! During the weeks before the wheat arrived, I had time to research storage, grinding, and baking with this stuff, and ordered a small hand grinder from a shop in Utah. By some divine coincidence, the wheat and the grinder arrived within days of each other, and Susan and I set to caring for our wheat immediately. The first task was to store it properly: it needs to be kept cool and dry so it won't mold or sprout, so we bought large glass jars with seals and tucked it in the pantry.

Next, it needs to be ground, so we tried out the grinder - it's a bit of an arm workout, but produced several fluffy cups of flour in mere minutes!

Now, it needs to be eaten...Susan and Tim have already made homemade pita bread on the grill, and I will attempt my no-knead recipe today. Hopefully the smell and bliss of homemade bread will help quell my fears about keeping all this grain!

Chestnut Farms Meat Share

I am not a vegetarian, have never been one, and never intend to give up meat. However, after watching Food, Inc. and driving through Fresno, California where I saw meat lots with my own eyes, I have been torn about how to work healthy meat in to our diet. We have been buying meat at Whole Foods and cringing at the price, but happy that our Cambridge store sells New England-sourced beef - but what about chickens and pork? We were never really sure where they came from or how they were raised. The solution came through our vegetable CSA, Waltham Fields Community Farm, which is the drop-off site for the Chestnut Farms meat CSA. After seeing happy customers walk away with a cooler of meat each month, we were intrigued and put our names on the wait-list. We are now, happily, off the wait list and are eating meat guilt-free! Chestnut Fields is a family farm in western Massachusetts, and they raise pasture-fed pigs, cows, chickens, turkeys, and lambs without hormones or antibiotics. They share pictures of the farm and invite us to visit, and keep us updated about farm activities through their website and newsletter. As Andrew said when he ate his first bite of Chestnut Farms' chicken: "BAM!" It is succulent, flavorful, and lovingly raised. What more could we ask for?

Chestnut Farms chicken tacos with farm-fresh corn, homemade
tomatillo salsa, and Cabot cheese. Perfection!

Susan and I enjoyed some of the chicken breast this week, which I rubbed lightly with olive oil, salt, and pepper and roasted in the oven. I always use a thermometer to judge my meat's done-ness now, which works really well for me. After these cooled, I shredded them for the tacos and filled steamed corn tortillas with the shredded chicken, corn cut from the cob, shredded Cabot cheddar cheese, and our homemade tomatillo salsa. You can see how we make this in an earlier post, but it's simple: I fill a dry cast-iron skillet with cut tomatillos, husk cherries, jalapenos, and garlic cloves and put these on the stove-top until everything has a bit of a blackened crust. Then I blend them with a bit of salt for a very flavorful salsa.

Susan enjoying our Mexican meal!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Quahogs!

Freshly gathered quahogs.

Talk about local. I am completely amazed by my mother: she now has a shellfishing license and digs for quahogs! This word is pronounced "co-hog" and it's a hard-shell clam that is found in the coastal Northeast. With her license, Mom can gather 10 quarts of these shellfish, which she stuffs and serves with yummy butter dipping sauce. The method for collecting quahogs, as I understand it, is to check the shellfishing warden's report on the health of the shellfish and the ocean waters, then to head out with your gathering equipment. You tie a 10-quart basket around your waist and it floats by your side as you wade through the water, scraping at the bottom of the ocean with a special rake. Mom says it's quite an arm work-out and I am dying to see her in action - her next goal is scallop gathering! These are my favorite seafood, so I am eager to taste the results.

Wonder where I get my enthusiasm for food?
Mom and Uncle Bob with the results of their shellfishing!

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Toronto

This weekend we visited the city of Toronto to celebrate Robyn and Matt's wedding. We had a wonderful time seeing friends from California, exploring the city, and enjoying the friendly Canadian people. We discovered the lovely St. Lawrence Market in downtown Toronto, mere blocks from our hotel. This is a wonderful public market, much like those in Seattle, San Francisco, and Philadelphia, where local cheeses, breads, meats, and other specialties are available. These are among my favorite places to visit in other cities, and we are very hopeful that Boston will have one soon...there has been talk of this for some time, and the Globe reports that donors have pledged millions to make this happen!

Catherine enjoying fresh-baked bread in the St. Lawrence Market.

While Andrew was involved in wedding preparations, Catherine explored the city on her own. After a visit to see China's terracotta warriors at the Royal Ontario Museum, I took a hike into Chinatown. It's not the biggest Chinatown I've seen, but it was one of the busiest places I've been! I was pushed down the sidewalk in a tide of people while I examined the produce in the many groceries. While the produce was likely not local, I was happy to experience the sights and smells of traditional Chinese cooking.

Views of Chinatown.

Squeezing sugarcane to make a drink.