Sunday, March 23, 2014
Gardening and Food
I started with a boatload of seeds, mostly from Baker Creek, which specalizes in heirlooms, but also picking up a couple of packets from Kitazawa Seed Co., who specalze in Asian seeds and are located in Oakland. I'll upload or attach a spreadsheet of the plants at some point.
The first thing I did was plant seeds in a dedicated seed-starting system adapted from my Aerogarden Spacesaver. You can get a special seed container with room for 36 seeds, and there's a water reservoir, some liquid fertilizer (not organic--their excuse is it's not in soil--not sure I buy that), and grow lights you can adjust in height.
I planted these seeds on February 17, and the picture shows their progress on 3/6. It took me almost a month to plant the second batch, which I did the same day I actually felt compelled to transplant some of the bigger plants from the Aerogarden. The second seed starter is a big tray with a heat mat undernedath and a simple hardware store shoplight above. It's supposed to be on a timer, but the stupid timer has one of those old two-pronged outlets, so I'm doing it manually until can pick up an adapter. Sheesh.
Not all the seeds in the Aerogarden have germinated, and some--namely cabbage, some of the squashes, and the lettuce, got so huge I think they are shadowing the other strugglers.
I guess I did the transplanting and finished filling the bigger seed tray on Wednesday or so, so March 19. This tray includes my serious quantities of tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers, and according to the UC Davis calendar, I should have started them earlier. I'm wary, though, since, although it's been a warm spring so far, the nights still get pretty cold, and those nightshade type plants really don't like having their little roots cold.
At this point, I guess I'll give the Aerogarden plants up to another week or two, then transplant the ones that made it and start fresh with some succession plants.
As for direct planting, I should have already planted peas (I have two kinds of snap peas but no regular ones and no snow peas, which I really dislike). I'm behind on my garden organization, though, so I really don't have a place to put them. We'll see how that goes.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Oh, dear! Is it October already? Off-topic post on websites
This blog was supposed to be about cooking what comes in my weekly CSA box, but life happened, my kitchen is too messy to take pictures in, my brother died, I quit and started and quit drinking, it just was not to be. I'll be back on track again soon, I hope. So this completely off-topic post is about websites.
In 2003 I went with a friend to New Orleans. We attended the Jazz Festival (including a cool jazz shabat at a temple on Charles Street, complete with Ellis Marsalis and a kletzmer band). I took a ton of pictures with my new digital camera. When I got home, I wanted to share the pictures with friends and family, and I knew just emailing them wasn't a good idea. I messed around with AOL's drag-n-drop web page creator for a bit, but in the end I bit the bullet, went to the library and checked out 5 web design books, and spent the next weekend never getting out of my pyjamas. Coincidentally, at the same time, a friend who has a vacation rental house in the Dordogne told me she needed a website to showcase her house. I'm not saying I'm that proud of the site I "designed" for her, but I did figure out how the whole things works. And over the years I tried to keep up (using CSS to style and getting away from table construction, etc.). It's occasionally been additional income to my day job, and I've been able to do things for free or cheap when it's been a worthy cause.
On of my other obsessions (besides food and cooking) is reading, mostly mysteries. I subscribe to a listserv devoted to the topic (though there is more emphasis than I like on TV shows), and it's pretty exciting to read posts by people whose books I admire...like chatting with celebrities.
I think a lot of authors, though, are a bit like my clients. They know they want/need a website, but their main focus (in addition to their day jobs, if they haven't made enough by writing yet to give those up) is writing their books. This can be a big mistake, though.
If you have a website, let me ask you this: who is the host? Who is the domain registrar? When do your hosting/registration expire? If it is set to auto-renew on the expiration date, are you the one who receives the frantic emails notifying you that your credit card has expired? Do you have a user name and password to access this information? Or did you leave all that to your web designer? Let me share with you a quotation from a support person at Dreamhost, where my biggest client is hosted and where a much admired author who posts to DorothyL also has registration and hosting:
Note that access is provided only to the DreamHost account holder, so if you as "the site owner" are not the "account owner" you *will not* be granted access to the account.
The solution for this common scenario is very simple: As site owner you should also be the DreamHost account owner for the account under which your domain is registered/hosted. To set this up any other way (such as with your site being hosted/domain registered under your web developer's account) is not wise, for the very reasons you have seen.
Account ownership has *no relationship" to "site" ownership, and even if you are the "site owner" you will not be given access credentials by DreamHost to any account that you do not own.
So, as you see, if your web designer lives next door, you may be fine, but he or she could be hit by a bus, or just drop out of sight. You need to have control of your website, even if it's only to hand it off to yet another person who knows how to write html. It doesn't matter if your website is www.marysmith.com and you are Mary Smith. If your name is not on the account, it's not your site.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Is it Tuesday already?
Speaking of butternut squash, and this probably won't be an issue again before the fall, that sucker was hard to peel. Usually I chicken out and roast it halved in the oven, then scoop out the good stuff. But encouraged by a few internet videos, I decided to halve, scoop, peel and cut prior to roasting this time, and all I can say is, if a serrated peeler is what it takes, then I'm going to have to get one. What an ordeal! But it smells really nice now, and I am looking forward to all that coconutty and spicy, creamy goodness.
Yesterday made quite a bit of progress in the kitchen, and I was able to fix brown basmati rice and the lamb and fava bean stew. The stew, in spite of its relatively simple preparation, was delicious. I left out the sugar, not on purpose, but the tomatoes provided enough sweetness, I think. The fava beans, after I had parboiled them and tediously peeled them out of their tenacious little skins, constituted such a tiny pile that I can scarcely credit them with contributing to the flavor of the lamb. I am running out of mealtimes to eat all this stuff, so they may very well go into the freezer; after all, it will be nice to have a healthy meal ready to nuke when I get home Sunday night!
Sunday, May 2, 2010
TJ's Soy Chorizo and other vegetarian things
A much more interesting vegetarian item is this recipe for vegetable stock "base" found on another food blog, crediting in turn a book by Pam Corbin. Heidi Swanson's blog has a lot of nice lentil recipes; tempted to try the red lentil one.
Having a lazy day today--was not in the plan, but I did work really hard yesterday, so I guess it's okay. Something about a snoozing cat on your legs. Will roast the chicken for dinner and then pack some of it for the freezer. All the stuff I am making, actually, will go at least partly in the freezer, as I'm spending the (long) weekend at a meeting in Reno. This also means I'll have to prep and do something with next week's box, which per the email I received Friday will contain:
carrots
baby spinach
fresh onions
green garlic
sweet potatoes
asparagus
strawberries
dried peaches
French Breakfast radishes
chard
rosemary
Fava beans OR sugar snap peas
I'm looking forward to the sweet potatoes and the rosemary. Guess the spinach and chard will just need to be sauteed and stuck in the freezer; everything else should keep okay in the fridge for 4-5 days.
Per Eatwell's newsletter they are having a hard time with the rain, which is having a particularly brutal effect on the strawberries. I've eaten up this week's already, mixing them with some kiwis I found at Porter's market, along with slightly sweetened Greek yogurt. Yum. Also finally squeezed a bag of limes and 4 Meyer lemons and froze them in ice cube trays yesterday--I'll move them into ziplocs then.
Since I struck out on the organic bacon, guess I will use the salt pork I bought a couple weeks ago instead--vagulely thinking of some kind of bean soup when I bought it. Might as well use it up in the dandelion dish; might need to be parboiled first if too salty.
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Kitchen and veggie progress
Lamb with fava beans
Dandelion salad w/hot bacon dressing
Chick peas and chard
Brine for roast chicken
Unfortunately, the kitchen is taking longer to clean than I expected; I've done two loads in the dishwasher and have the prepped vegetables in the fridge, the TJ chicken is brining there, but I've not done any actual cooking yet. A couple more hours tomorrow morning will do it, though, and then I can probably cook everything but the lamb in the afternoon; I plan to cut the young onions and the carrots, coat them in a little olive oil, and roast them alongside the chicken. The spinach can be a side dish to the lamb, just steamed w/olive oil and parmesan or butter and raspberry vinegar.
Yesterday was kind of a wash as far as cooking/cleaning. I ended up spending most of the day shopping. I had discovered some inexpensive baled glass storage bottles at Ross on Wednesday ($7 for 3), so I decided to check out a couple other local Ross's. They also had some amazing prices on small ceramic baking dishes, so I picked up a couple of those, too.
I failed to score at the store that was supposed to have the organic pork. They do have organic chicken, though, and decent-looking seafood, so it wasn't a complete waste. Then a trek to Grocery Outlet, where I got 15 tins of the yellowfin ventresca. I put gas in the car, too, so all in all it was semi-productive but didn't get kitchen clean or food cooked.
The good news is that by tomorrow the kitchen should be clean enough that I will be able to take pictures of what I am cooking.
Friday, April 30, 2010
What I am doing with the veggies
It doesn't take deep thought to realize a lot of this week's box consists of similar things. Chard, dandelion greens, and spinach look alike and for the most part cook alike. I could saute any of them in olive oil with a bit of onion and garlic, and the optional sprinkling of parmesan, and they would be delicious side dishes. My goal here, though, is to make them the star of the main course, with enough non-meat protein to make them nourishing as well as delicious. Obviously one way to do this is by adding high-fat elements such as eggs and cheese (the egg-and-chard bake I found at the Sunset magazine website called for 18 eggs!). I don't really want to go there, though, and at least initially I'd like to avoid hunting down exotic ingredients such as farro. I have so far found an intriguing-sounding recipe for chard that uses chick peas (garbanzo beans) and tomatoes, so I will probably try that.
Yesterday I was rushing to finish a project at the office, so I actually worked on it in the morning instead of spending time fixing lunch, so all I did was grab 4 of the small carrots and 4 spears of asparagus, along with an organic avocado I'd picked up at TJ's on Tuesday. At lunch time I was going to buy a side salad from the cafe downstairs, but when I went to the kitchen to wash my salad bowl, I found the leavings of what had obviously been a salad tray for some sort of meeting--happens a lot where I work. So I took the remaining lettuce and cut veggies, including a few olives, and put them in my bowl with a can of yellow fin ventresca tuna (note to self: must see if there is any left at Grocery Outlet--the stuff was a steal and is so good!), the sliced avocado, and a little container of vinegar and oil dressing that had also been sitting with the salad remains. I steamed the asparagus spears in a damp paper towel in the microwave for about a minute and a half and put that in the salad, too.
The peas, in case anyone is wondering, ended up being about a half a cup worth after I hulled them--I popped them in the microwave with a little water, salt, and brown sugar and ate them on the spot.
Last night I didn't use any of the veggies--bad girl! But, anyhow, I hope to get the remaining stuff prepped and put away properly today. I have a chicken from TJ's that needs to be roasted, so will probably just do a side-dish kind of prep tonight: maybe that's a good time to make a lovely salad with the lettuce, with some canned beets and artichoke hearts. I could stuff the chicken with some sherry-and-onion sauteed rice. I will report.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
First Eatwell Farm CSA Box
I think I'll use one of the green garlic bulbs to replace the shallot in Mark Bittman's basic vinaigrette recipe.
Except that I hope to track down a local source of organic bacon Friday to try a Pennsylvania Dutch vinegar dressing for the dandelion greens, I don't really have a plan yet, except that I need to eat at least 2 kinds of veggies every day and have either eaten or prepared and frozen everything before the next box arrives next Wednesday. All suggestions welcome!
