Category Archives: putting by

Putting Em Up with Sherri Brooks Vinton

The Summer 2008 issue of Edible Nutmeg included an article on putting by written by Sherri Brooks Vinton. that’s the first I’d heard of her. I tried her Spiced Carrots Ice Box Pickles recipe and they were absolutely delicious and a big hit with friends and family.

hot spice carrots ice box pickles
Collection AFTER being wiped out by friends and family!

I’ve been making this recipe ever since, well worth sacrificing prime real estate in my refrigerator (along with some other spicy ice box pickling projects).

But I’ve been wanting to find a method of making this so that I could store it outside the refrigerator. I don’t can much, but when I do, I only use tested recipes from the experts.

Serendipitously, I saw an announcement at Sport Hill Farm for a Sherri Brooks Vinton food preservation demo with a book signing of her new book, Put ‘Em Up.

Sherri
Sherri, just getting started

Up in the loft of Patti Popp’s new barn, Sherri shared the secrets and safety measures for home canning.

Pickled Asparagus was the cold-pack demo. Cold-packing is when the food goes into the jar raw. Classic Strawberry Jam was the hot-pack demo. Hot-packing is when you cook the food before canning. The strawberry Jam was made in the old style, with no pectin. You need to cook it for a long time, to let the sugars thicken the jam. You can also use a commercial pectin or you can make your own pectin.

class in the loft
Class in the loft at Sport Hill Farm

Like baking, canning is more about chemistry. The ratio of ingredients is paramount. Luckily for us, the recipes have all been worked out and we just need to follow them exactly and faithfully for safe results.

The book is fantastic. Sherri takes you through the various food preparation and preservation techniques. It is chock full of advice for economics, time savings, and safety. It reads well and you feel like the author is in the kitchen with you. (A trait I have previously admired in Julia Child!) It is organized by food for the purpose of making it easy for those who may have come home from the market with too much of a good thing. Sherri suggests having canning parties to make it more interesting.

The book, like Sherri, is centered around locally-sourced foods. She says, “For home food preservation, sourcing local food really is the only choice.” I guess you could preserve food from the Big Y, but why would you? Almost everything they sell, they sell year round (it’s always in season somewhere in the world) and it was grown by a stranger.

I made the scapes in olive oil (preservation method is freezing) and I am looking forward to getting a crock and trying out fermenting vegetables.

You can catch another demo and signing at the Westport Farmers Market on June 24,2010 from 11 AM – 1 PM. The market is at Imperial Avenue, Westport CT.

Thanksgiving 2009 (DDELC 09/10 #2)

Happy Thanksgiving to all!

cornucopia

I love this holiday—the connection and celebration between the farmers, eaters, and Providence.

Doing a local Thanksgiving in New England should be like fishing in a barrel since Thanksgiving was invented in New England as a way of celebrating the bounty. This year, I was only slightly tempted to send the men-folk out with their muskets for wild fowl and game.

This year’s menu was incredibly similar to last year’s menu because it’s a tradition!

Appetizers

Soup

Chicken soup with bow-tie pasta and/or brown rice

Main Course

Dessert

  • Apple Crumb Pie: Northern Spy apples from Shenandoah Farms, Easton, CT, flour from Wild Hive Farm, butter from Ronybrook Farm. Brown sugar, cinnamon, sugar, salt, nutmeg from away.
  • Pumpkin Pie: pumpkins and eggs from Cherry Grove Farm, maple syrup from Bluestone Farm, heavy cream from Trinity Dairy, Ensfield, CT, butter from Ronnybrook Farm, and flour from Wild Hive Farm. Salt and pumpkin pie spice from out there.
  • Fresh whipped cream: heavy cream from Trinity Dairy, Ensfield, CT. Vanilla extract and confectioner’s sugar from the world.
  • Ice cream: Vanilla and Black Raspberry from Rich Farm.
  • Caramel from the Groovy Baker (no HFCS!!)
  • Fresh fruit: Macoun and Cortland apples from Shenandoah Farms, Easton, CT, and Bosc pears from Rose’s Berry Farm and figs, likely from CA.
  • dried pears, from Rose’s Berry Farm dried by me.

  • chestnuts, from a resident of Woodbury, via New Morning Natural Foods
  • roasted pumpkin seeds, from the pumpkin pie pumpkin, from Cherry Grove Farm
  • mixed nuts, from I-don’t-know-where

Beverages

Whew! Took almost as long to make this post as it took to prepare the meal!

hspc01.jpg

P.S. At the end of the day, when all the guests had left, I did not finish cleaning my dishes and kitchen. Instead, I watched Food, Inc. I highly recommend this film though it can be particularly upsetting for those who get their food from the corporate industrial complex.

One Local Summer 2009, Week #5

This week’s One Local Summer Challenge meal has been a year in the making!

I put by the main ingredients for Eggplant Parmigiana last season, thinking it would make a nice meal over the winter, but the winter came and went.  I finally got around to making it this weekend.

eggplant_parm

The eggplant was from Waldingfield Farm, dipped in beaten eggs (from Ox Hollow Farm) and pan fried in non-local canola oil, then frozen last September. (I drained the fried slices on paper towels, then layered them between sheets of parchment paper in the vacuum seal bag, and presto.)

eggplant

The marinara is constituted as follows:

  • carrots and fresh garlic from Missy’s (from the Brewster Market), caramelized in olive oil (from Italy).
  • pan deglazed with Vista Reposa wine from McLaughlin Vineyards.
  • plum tomatoes from Don Taylor (from the Bethel Market), canned by me last September.
  • plum tomatoes, from Waldingfield Farm, dried and vacuum packed by me last year. To make the tomato paste, I ground them to a dust in a coffee grinder then added a tiny bit of boiling water and stirred.
    dry_toms
  • dried thyme, from my garden from last year.
  • fresh oregano, from my garden this year.

The mozzarella is from Calabro in East Haven, CT.

I have to say, I’m not as impressed with my own canned tomatoes as I am with Progresso. I usually use these:

I cooked my marinara down for quite a bit of extra time, yet it still had an acid-y taste. It’s as if the citric acid (required for canning) never quite cooked away. It wasn’t horrible; it just wasn’t the same. I didn’t get any complaints—in fact, I got a few compliments, but then again, these folks never had the other kind for comparison. Still, it was an interesting dish to bring to a brunch with local organic farmers!

Local Meal of the Week (#17)

This is the last week of the Dark Days Eat Local Challenge meals.

First, there was beef tenderloin from Stuarts Family Farm and broccoli from Waldingfield Farm (courtesy of the freezer).

ddelc_17a

Then there were ribeyes from Stuarts Family Farm, with potatoes from Riverbank Farm and sauteéd fresh spinach from Starlite Farm.

ddelc_17b

But the best was the macaroni and meatball meal. I’d been meaning to make a local version of my Sunday meatballs and gravy since the challenge began, and finally, I did.

ethan

I made the meatballs using ground beef from Stuarts Family Farm dried parsley and basil from my garden, and eggs from Four Mile River Farm. I did use Progresso bread crumbs and imported Parmigiano Reggiano (mea culpa). I’ll save trying to reformulate the breadcrumbs with local ingredients for another challenge.

I made the gravy using my home canned tomatoes (originally plums from Don Taylor’s farm), paste I made from reconstituting dried tomatoes (originally from Waldingfield Farm), pork chops and sweet sausages from Ox Hollow Farm, thyme from my garden, and the meatballs.

The salad was from a red leaf lettuce bouquet from Two Guys from Woodbridge. The bread was from Wave Hill Breads (where else). Ziti were thanks to the folks at Barilla. And the wine was from Vista Riposa from McLaughlin Vineyards.

And the nephew is local too.