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Eggplant stuffed peppers

This year wasn’t a particularly “great” year for eggplants but there were a few harvested just before the first predicted frost.  So, I have a bag of eggplants in the fridge–what do I do with them?

Last year, or maybe the year before (time gets away, doesn’t it?) I made eggplant “meat” balls with marinara sauce and spaghetti.  They were totally edible and actually pretty good.  So, I took the eggplant–the skinny Asian eggplants–peeled them and sliced them into about 1/4″ slices or so, sprinkled them with salt and put them on a paper towel for about 20 minutes or so.  This draws the moisture out of the eggplant.  Then I pat them dry and roasted them for 20 minutes or so until they seemed kind of done.

At this point I put them in the food processor and processed them until they were ground up like, well, hamburger.  I added garlic and some onion (I need to go to the grocery store so its flakes, okay?)  Mixed this up with about 1/3 package of an 8 oz pack of cream cheese, about 1/3 cup shredded cheddar cheese, and 3 pieces of sun dried tomato that were chopped up.  Oh, I also chopped up a jalapeno pepper that was laying on the counter, just for a little heat.  Mix all that together and stuff it into the pepper.  Oh yes, the pepper.  As I was harvesting all the eggplants before the predicted frost, I harvested all the peppers as well.  I had a couple of “Sweet Diablo” peppers which are just a sweet pepper that is about 5-6 inches long by 2 inches wide at the top and sweet, but not hot.  I slit the pepper, removed the pith and seeds, and stuffed with this mixture.  Then sprinkle with Panko bread crumbs and bake at 350 for 20 minutes or until they start to brown a little.  Yum, yum!

Turnips and Rutabagas

Last year, while in the produce section of the local supermarket, I purchased a rutabaga.  I did a blog about how wonderful it tasted and made a note to grow them this year.

In mid-July I planted three rows, each about 180 feet long.  The seeds germinated, I dutifully thinned them to 5″ apart, the cabbage worms came, I sprayed Bt, and I kept watching and waiting—man do they grow slow!

Botanically speaking, a rutabaga is a cross between a turnip and cabbage.  I’d say culinarily speaking it tastes like a cross between white potato, sweet potato, maybe a tad of cabbage, and a faint hint of turnip.  It’s a great taste, anyway.  They kind of look like turnips but they aren’t colored as brightly, have more roots on them, and they are harvested at a much larger size than turnips.

 

The last CSA delivery of the season was last Friday.  I ventured into the rutabaga patch to see if there were any “early birds” fit to put in the day’s delivery.  I was pleasantly surprised!  There were just enough large ones to fill the shares on Friday AND I got 2 monsters to try meselfeee.  One of them is about the size of a cantaloupe and the other was about 5″ in diameter. (The big one just to the left of the middle is the cantaloupe size one and it may be like cutting a pine knot.)   I cut the second-to-the-largest one up and roasted it with some sweet potatoes and again, YUMMEEEE!  I peeled and chunked the veggies up into 1″ squares and tossed them in a baking pan.  Then I mixed up 2T olive oil, 2T honey, 1t lemon juice and drizzled that over the veggies and roast at 350 for 30-45 minutes or until tender, stirring every 10 minutes or so.  Very tasty and simple.

This has also been a very good turnip year.  They are firm and sweet and great either raw, mashed, or roasted.  Some people boil them but I don’t particularly care for them that way.  Anyway, I love pulling turnips–it’s kind of like hunting purple Easter eggs.  When they are ready to pull they pooch up out of the ground so you can see the pretty purple tops on them.

 

Several of the farm members had never tried them before and said that they actually liked them once they tried them.  It’s a good substitute for a radish in a salad too!

Eating in season this time of year is very satisfying because a lot of the veggies are “comfort” food.  Personally, I think any food is “comforting” if I’m hungry!

p.s.  We’re having a gorgeous fall here in Tennessee–hope everyone else is too :)

Really Good ‘naner puddin’

Bananas don’t grow on the farm, but a friend of mine gave me a recipe for Banana pudding that I just can’t keep to myself:

1 c. flour

1 stick butter

1 c chopped pecans

 

Cut butter into flour to resemble coarse crumbs.  Stir in pecans.  Spread in 9×13 baking dish.  Bake 350 degrees until light brown.  Cool.  Top with 2nd layer.

2nd layer:

1 8-oz pkg cream cheese

1 cup powdered sugar

1 c. cool whip

4-6 bananas, dep. On size

In bowl mix cream cheese until softened.  Slowly add sugar and mix until blended.  Gently sitr in Cool Whip.  Spread over first layer then slice half the bananas and spread on top of this.

3rd layer:

2-3 oz. boxes instant vanilla or French vanilla pudding mix

4 c. milk

Combine pudding with milk until well blended and pudding has thickened to spreading consistency.  Spread half the mixture over top of
bananas then add another layer of bananas and another layer of pudding.  Top with additional cool whip (I usually omit this step and just sprinkle nuts at this point).  Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Seasonal Decorations

I’m not one who’s particularly fond of Halloween decorations these days.  Sure, when “we were kids” it was fun to dress up the house, our bodies, everyone’s yard in the neighborhood….too much information… :)

Anyway, I do like fall decorations of corn stalks, pumpkins, gourds and such, but who has time to do all that when you’re a farmer?   The entire summer seems like it’s been spent at a “dead run” keeping up with crop production and routine farm chores.

The inside of my house has been sorely neglected, but the good news is:  This is the one season my house is appropriately decorated for the season with spiderwebs that glimmer in the late afternoon sun.

The bad news is that I LOVE Christmas decorations and spider webs just don’t coordinate with those, so a good thorough house cleaning is on tap as soon as the gardens are put to bed!

Yummy Glazed Sweet Potatoes

The farm CSA members received sweet potatoes in their shares for several weeks and several of them returned a few really good recipes for different ways to cook them.  I tried this one the other night and ooh, baby!  It’s a culinary delight :)

Yummy Glazed Sweet Potatoes

Preheat oven to 350

2 lbs. sweet potatoes – peeled, cubed

throw in a baking dish

Whisk together:

2T evoo

2T honey

1 t. lemon juice

1/2 t. salt

pour over and mix with sweet potatoes

Cook approx. 1 hr. stir several times

The potatoes get sticky and gooey and the lemon juice perks right out of the sweetness and says “here I am”. 

 

Get to know your veggies–Turnips

Turnips have a lowly reputation as being a rotating cover crop for corn and soybeans, as well as a livestock food.  Turnips are tasty!  Eaten raw in a salad, roasted in the oven, added to stews–turnips also add to our important daily intake of good calories.  Rather than listing all of turnip’s nutritional attributes, check out this link http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/vegetables-and-vegetable-products/2699/2 for a full description of why you should be eating turnips.

A new recipe I just ran across sounds absolutely delicious, and it’s going to be part of my supper tonight:

Turnips and Pears

Eileen Droescher

1 lb. turnips

3 pears

unsalted butter

1 onion, peeled and sliced thinly

2/3 cup walnuts, halves

salt and pepper, to taste

1/2 lemon

fresh chopped parsley

Cut turnip in half, then into 1/4 inch thick slices. Cut
pears in half, core and cut into 1/4 inch thick slices. Saute turnips in butter
until tender and crisp. Add pears and onions. Cook while stirring mixture for
about 3 minutes. Add walnuts. Cook for 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
Squeeze lemon over mixture and sprinkle with parsley.

Bad bugs gone “good”?

We’ve always heard the expression good guys gone bad, but bad guys gone good?

In the hoophouse, tomatoes were planted in late winter.  During the summer they produced and produced bunches of tasty tomatoes.  In the process, the tomato hornworms found them, even inside the plastic surround of the hoophouse.

There are parasitic wasps that like to feed upon these giant green monsters that devour tomato plants, and I haven’t really experienced them in the hoophouse yet, so I sort of panicked when I saw so many hornworms on the tomato plants, but then I noticed that most of them were decked out with little white globules on them.  “Parasitic wasps”!  They did venture into the tunnel!  I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many hornworms on tomato plants, BUT I’ve never seen so many parasitic wasp eggs either.  The hornworms that had eggs on them got to stay on the plants (it was hard to do, but I left them).  These are the “Bad guys gone good”.  I’m hoping the parasitic wasps will find a place to winter over in the warmth of the high tunnel.  The hornworms that didn’t have any eggs on them?  Well, even the chickens won’t eat them, so they must be bad.

By the way, birds fly freely in and out of the high tunnel too.  I sure hope they are working on the grasshopper population in there!  It’s a lively place :)

 

The First “Cold Snap”

Fall is my favorite time of year–always has been.  I love the colors of the trees, the cooler weather…..and putting on a jacket after hanging it in the closet last season.  You know where I’m going–I put on a jacket this morning to pick peppers and tomatoes and stuck my hands in the pockets and found $6.00 AND a pair of reading glasses.  I’m a lucky girl :)

Do you remember?

Do you remember where you were when JFK was shot?  I was in Mrs. Watson’s 2nd grade class, probably spinning my wooden chair around on one leg, when the announcement came over the loudspeaker.

Do you remember where you were when the terrorists struck on 911?  I was in a stress management class.  Yes, a STRESS managment class.  Imagine that!  We didn’t have access to TV until late that afternoon but I’ll never forget that day and WE need to never forget that day……..

Mr. Rooster, Sir

The Happy Hens at Wild Things Farm get a lot of attention.  One of the key players in the lives of the Happy Hens is Mr. Rooster Sir.

Mr. Rooster Sir has been with the Happy Hens ever since the beginning.  He did have a partner to watch over the chickie chicks but his partner was mean to the girls so he went bye-bye.

I’ve noticed that Mr. Rooster Sir watches over the girls constantly.  While they are busy pecking and scratching, he’s watching out, looking, ready to sound an alarm if there’s danger.

One day a hawk perched in a tree way too close to the chicken universe and Mr. Rooster Sir sounded an alarm.  All the girls scurried into their safe haven (aka chicken house) except one.  I didn’t actually see what happened, but I think the hawk actually almost made contact with her because she was hiding underneath a corner of the coop.  I gathered her up and put her back in the house with her companions.  They were upset for a day or two after that incident.

The next day after that encounter, I took fence wire and went across the pen in a zig-zag manner so birds of prey wouldn’t be able to “swoop” down and grab one of the girls.  So far it’s worked really well keeping critters from swooping.  It does take my hat off occasionally when I stand up too tall in the pen.

A few months ago one of the CSA members shared a sourdough starter with me.  I’ve been keeping it fed and tried a few bread recipes but they’ve all turned out to look and feel like one of those discus thingees they throw in the Olympics.  The chickens love testing my mess-ups!

Another observation:  Mr. Rooster Sir will stand there and wait until all the girls have gotten their piece of bread before he will even attempt to get one for himself–a true gentleman.  So appropriately named.

Back to the successful breadmaking experience.  The recipe I used makes a “sponge” from warm water, yeast, and the starter, then let it set for 10 minutes then add flour, sugar and salt, mix together and let rise for 2 hours then knead.  This is where I was messing up.  I wasn’t kneading the dough enough. Kneading sufficiently gets the gluten broken down enough to hold the dough in shape while it’s baking.  So knead, and knead, and knead until it’s really pliable and holds its shape.  I “googled” “sourdough bread not rising” and figured that out.  The bread turned out perfect.

Don’t tell the girls!