Category Archives: putting by

Cut and Dried

I bought a dehydrator simply to make yogurt. Sure, I told myself at the time, I could dry berries and cherries and make healthy chips out of root vegetables. But the main driver was that I needed a reliable incubator for my yogurt and that was all. Sure, I’ve tried a few vegetable experiments, previously mentioned, and not worth mentioning further. So here’s the thing–my friend Sr. Catherine Grace is a dehydrating overachiever.

I bartered an Excalibur dehydrator for many lovingly cultivated vegetable seedlings and seeds. Instead of going to a retail nursery, I went to the Sisters where they know their plants and their plants know them. These seeds and seedlings are decendents of plants right from Bluestone Farm. There’s something very special about knowing who your plants’ parents and grandparents were. Anyway, back to Sr. Catherine Grace’s adventures with the dehydrator…

On Day 1:

The dehydrator arrived yesterday afternoon, and of course I whipped it into service. What a fabulous piece of equipment, and it’s going to get a huge amount of duty around here! So far I’ve finished drying some Borghese, cherry and Sun Gold tomatoes and the first Boldog peppers of the year!

It holds as much as both of the old dryers we were using, and best of all, I can set the timer and the temperature!!! No more guessing! The drying is even, the shelves are exactly the most useful distance from each other (no more tomatoes stuck almost permanently to the shelf above the one they started on), the screens are smaller so I can dry small stuff safely, and the three different surfaces are really, really useful. I can even tuck full dill heads into the basic shelf so the seeds dry more quickly, and they don’t get blown away by the fan!!

The square shelves make soooo much more sense; more food in less space, and so much easier to lay out.

The Excalibur people might want to consider using her in their next advertisement.
On Day 2:

Here is just one hour’s worth of work (if you can call slicing “work”), to load up the dehydrator! With room to spare, this is five large tomatoes, a load of Sun Gold and Borghese tomatoes (small ones), two huge pattypan squash, two yellow squash, three and a half green zucchini-like squash (one huge), and one long light green squash. Probably would have taken me about six hours to process all this into something I could freeze.

Are you Excalibur people getting all this?

On Day 3:

Today it’s more tomatoes and a lot of apple rings with cinnamon. I’ve decided to dry tomato slices rather than can or freeze them; no electricity to run them in the freezer all season, they maintain much more of their healthful goodies when dried rather than cooked, canned, and/or frozen, and this is much less dangerous than canning. (I’m really, really, really careful when canning low-acid food, but still …)

At the moment I’m finding everything is taking longer than even some of the long-end-of-the-range that’s in the book; probably because it’s still pretty humid. With the timer, though, who cares?!

I think dryers are a fabulous boon to the food preserving process. I especially like this one; it’s easy to use, really easy to clean, things dry evenly, and you can leave a shelf out if you’re drying something chubby or fluffy — or making yogurt. By the way, the yogurt leather (yogurt with strawberry jam) and the applesauce leather came out beautifully.

I really can’t thank you enough for this. I think the rest of the sisters believe I plan to be dried in there myself when my Great Transformation arrives.

Okay Excalibur, you could not get a better endorsement than that!

And I think I need to get slicing and drying…

Putting By in Fits and Starts

I just got the Summer 2008 Edition of the Edible Nutmeg (at New Morning Natural Foods). It’s probably been out awhile…I need to subscribe already.

Anyway, what caught my eye in this issue was an article called Putting By. I have to admit, I’m slowly warming up to the idea of food preservation, and not only because I get to buy new kitchen gadgets. (I am gadget girl to some.) What with making my own yogurt, butter, pasta, and a living, who has time for this too? However, I missed having local vegetables over the winter and felt lucky to find hydroponic lettuce (thank you Perry Hack), but sometimes I wanted something besides salad. Especially in the winter. I had a few items in the freezer, but certainly not enough for a winter. It’s time to bite the bullet and move beyond the freezer.

In this article, Sherri Brooks Vinton touches on each of the various methods for storing foods, pickling, freezing, drying, root cellaring, and canning. She offers some suggestions for further reading. The article is good and it’s worth going out and finding the magazine. By the way, Sherri Brooks Vinton is also the co-author of The Real Food Revival.

For my putting-by education, I purchased The Busy Person’s Guide to Preserving Food, by Janet Chadwick. It’s easy to follow and has good practical suggestions. So far, I have tried drying blueberries, basil, and zucchini. The basil worked out. I won’t go into the sordid details of the other two failures learning experiences, but I do have a new plan for the next attempts.

This issue of Edible Nutmeg also features a directory of all the Connecticut Farmers’ Markets. If you haven’t been to one yet this year, it’s not too late. In fact, we are in prime time. And then you’re going to want to preserve all this bounty for the upcoming cold, dark days.

Bluestone Farm

To cap off a perfect day, we spent Saturday evening with the Sisters at Bluestone Farm, where we sampled many of their delectables as they were puttin’ ’em by.

The Sisters had harvested some Nero Italian kale and some rutabagas. I learned that rutabagas can be cut into strips and deep fried, like French fries. I also learned that Sister CG makes an excellent Habanero hot sauce (not to mentioned those pickled jalapenos).

I got to witness the great wall of garlic and regret not having the foresight to snap a photo of it. Numerous varieties of garlic (all neatly labeled) cover about 10 linear feet of wall space, from top to bottom. They need to dry out before they can be braided.

I also got to have a visit with the duckings, who are currently at the adorable stage. And I had the opportunity to admire their prolific fields.

The Sisters sent us home with Italian Kale (nero), Bok Choy, Habanero hot sauce, and pickled jalapenos.

CSA, Week 5

July 22 (today) is the fifth week of our CSA (Waldingfield Farm, pick-up point Sandy Hook Organic Farmer’s Market). Our bounty included:
– mixed salad greens
– sugar peas (or are these snap peas?)
– kale
– Swiss chard
– yellow summer squash
– patty pan squash
– broccoli

Our local dinner (no challenge) was Stuarts beef filets, tossed salad with Waldingfield dressing, and Brussels sprouts. The wine: McLaughlin.

We also put by the Swiss chard, sauteed with olive oil and garlic scapes.