May 24, 2013

Gotta have flowers among the veggies

I've decided I like to have flowers among my produce when gardening.  There's a lot of practicality to gardening but I also need the visually appealing beauty of the flowers.  Of course flowers are vital to producing anything and also attractive to pollinators and other beneficials.  So I make sure there's room to plant marigolds, zinnias, and nasturtiums with my veggies.  Nasturtiums are tasty and nutritious, too!  And are  supposed to improve the flavor of tomatoes.


Fingerling Potatoes


I planted 8 fingerling potatoes that I got from the grocery store (organic) in a large container.  It was originally a self-watering contraption that my husband and I made but the weight of the dirt and everything pushed the self down so far it covered up my watering hole.  We probably didn't do something right.  It's a great concept.  Here's what I pulled up 2 weeks ago from four of the original potatoes!  I stopped counting after 50!

May 01, 2013

Carrots!

I don't know why but I have always been kind of scared of growing carrots.  I didn't think you COULD grow carrots in Texas.  A couple of falls ago, I planted a few and waited and waited but nothing came up.  About a year later I noticed I was getting a weed that looked just like a carrot top so I let it grow, curious to see what it would become.  A few months later I pulled it up and there was a healthy little carrot on the other end!  Ever since then I've tried harder to grow carrots.  And I don't know if it's because my soil has been improving or what but I've had more success!  This week I pulled up my finger carrots- I think I planted them in January or February.  (This is partly why I'm going to be better about this blog- so I can remember these things.)  Look how beautiful these babies are!!

They have a delicious, mild flavor.  I had them planted in front of one of my patio tomatoes.  Carrots do love tomatoes!

In other news, we had a good rain on Saturday and by Monday the squash and beans I planted last Thursday were peeking through.  What a difference rain makes!!


April 26, 2013

Pick a Peck of Peppers

Now for some current happenings...

Today I planted Kentucky Wonder green beans in the far garden where the lettuce was growing before.  I also planted a jalapeno pepper in the far corner.  I'm hoping it will get enough sunshine behind the tomato plant I planted last month.  I took out the sugar snap peas that have stopped producing much now that the temperature has been rising.  I also dug up the potatoes there.  They did not win out in the competition for sun with the peas and so only made about one potato per plant.  In their place I planted 2 hills of fall squash- delicata, one hill of tatuma summer squash and one hill of patty pan squash.  In a pot I planted a pimiento sweet pepper plant.  I've never tried this kind before and am hoping it does well.  The bell pepper I planted a couple of years ago it producing tons again but the leaves are looking really sickly.  I think I need to find out from our local agricultural extension what is going on with it.
The beauties of gardening! (Flowering dill)

Jalapenos always love our hot summers!

Swiss chard enjoying a bit of sun in its shady corner.

I think this is a beneficial bug?  Am I right?

I never realized that eggplant grows these thorns on it.

Blackberry season will soon be here!!

Why the mottled leaves?  Poor pepper plant, you have served us well!

April 25, 2013

January Garden

And just because I want to remember what for next year, here's what my garden looked like at the end of January.  A few weeks later, we had lettuce coming out of our ears!!  I was giving it away.  By March it was covered in aphids.  I tried to wash them off but there were so many I had to throw most of it out.  I don't know if there's really anything I can do to deter them next year.  They didn't seem to be a huge problem until it started warming up more.  But I probably shouldn't plant lettuce in my far garden again next year.  I believe I planted oak leaf and a blend.  Also in this bed were broccoflower, carrots, beets and turnips.  The beets and turnips mostly just made tops.  The broccoflower was great but it took a really long time to grow.  The cauliflower was in my strawberry bed.  This was the first year I grew cauliflower that made a head.  I think it's because I fertilized it with an organic fertilizer a couple of times.  This plant actually made two heads!  Also, at this time in my strawberry bed my sugar snap peas were producing like crazy!



Spring Is Here!

I know I'm really behind with my posting but here are some pictures I took back in the end of March when everything was starting to bloom and peek out of the ground.  I love the arrival of Spring!!
Strawberries and green onions- our battle with the birds has begun!!

Black swallowtail butterfly caterpillars on the dill.  That's okay- we'll share!

Society garlic around the plum tree

Our plum tree starting to bud out.  It amazes me how these beautiful flowers emerge from a lifeless stick.  

Sugar snap peas growing like crazy!  These grow anywhere I plant them and my kids love to come up and pick off a snack while they are playing outside.

My cilantro usually bolts really quickly but it sure looks beautiful, especially against the purple kale.

My first daffodil.  I planted bulbs in December and they all came up!!!

January 19, 2013

Kale Recipes

My kale has been doing fabulous in my garden! It doesn't mind the few freezes we've had and basically planted it and forgot about it!  What an easy vegetable!

I think it's beautiful to behold - almost like purple peacock feathers- but that doesn't mean my family equates that with good eating. 


"One cup of kale contains 36 calories, 5 grams of fiber, and 15% of the daily requirement of calcium and vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), 40% of magnesium, 180% of vitamin A, 200% of vitamin C, and 1,020% of vitamin K. It is also a good source of minerals copper, potassium, iron, manganese, and phosphorus. Kale’s health benefits are primarily linked to the high concentration and excellent source of antioxidant vitamins A, C, and K -- and sulphur-containing phytonutrients. 

"Carotenoids and flavonoids are the specific types of antioxidants associated with many of the anti-cancer health benefits. Kale is also rich in the eye-health promoting lutein and zeaxanthin compounds. Beyond antioxidants, the fiber content of cruciferous kale binds bile acids and helps lower blood cholesterol levels and reduce the risk of heart disease, especially when kale is cooked instead of raw." 

Reason enough to try to sneak in to our diet more often!  So I've been experimenting and found some good recipes to use with our kale.

Kale Chips

I've seen lots of recipes for this but basically...

1. Wash the leaves.  Then strip them off the stem and tear into 3 inch pieces.  

2. Place the pieces on a cookie sheet in a single layer.  Drizzle olive oil over the leaves and toss to coast lightly.  

3.  Sprinkle kosher salt or experiment with other spices.  We tried nutritional yeast which gave it a cheesy flavor my family loves! 

4.  Put the pan in an oven set at 250 degrees for 15 minutes.  Turn and then cook for 25 more minutes.

Enjoy!  These were good- not comparable to potato chips- but good.

Orecchiette with Kale, Chickpeas and Sausage

from Williams Sonoma "Cooking from the Farmer's Market"

1 lb orecchiette or shells
1 T olive oil
1 t minced garlic
1/2 t red pepper flakes
1/2 c chicken broth
2 bunches kale, stems removed and leaves cut into 1" pieces
salt and pepper, to taste
3/4  lb sausage, slice to 1/2" thick
1 1/2 c canned chickpeas, rinsed and drained
1/4 c grated parmesan cheese

Boil pasta and cook al dente, 10-12 min.  Reserve 1 c of cooking water and drain the pasta.  While pasta is cooking in a large frying pan over medium heat, warm the olive oil.  Add garlic, red pepper and saute until fragrant, about 1 min.  Stir in broth, kale and a pinch of salt.  Raise the heat to high, cover pan and cook until kale begins to wilt, 1-2 minutes.  Continue cooking until the leaves are tender and the liquid has evaporated, 3-4 minutes more.  Stir in chickpeas and cook until heated through, about 2 minutes.  Add pasta to kale and stir to combine.  Stir in 1/2 c of pasta water to moisten mixture, adding more if needed.  Transfer the pasta to a serving dish and sprinkle with cheese.

I really liked this.  Kale pairs well with sausage.  My family liked it just fine, too.  

Zuppa Toscana

1 lb ground Italian sausage
1 1/2 t crushed red pepper
1 large diced white onion
4 T bacon pieces
2 t crushed garlic
10 c water
5 cubes chicken bouillon
1 c half and half
4 large potatoes
1/4 bunch of kale (I used atleast a whole bunch & it was still great!)

Saute Italian sausage and crushed red pepper in a large pot.  Drain excess fat.  Set aside.  In the same pan, saute bacon, onions and garlic over low-medium heat for approximately 15 minutes or until the onions are soft.  Add chicken bouillon and water to the pot and heat until it starts to boil.  Add the sliced potatoes and cook until soft, about half an hour. Add the half and half and just cook until thoroughly heated.  Stir in the sausage and the kale, let all heat through and serve.  

Yummmmy!

January 18, 2013

Dinner Success- Brown Sugar Spiced Pork Loin


Last night was one of the rare dinners around here where all six people (including four kids under 8 years old) where happily eating without complaints or having to be prodded or bribed.  It was a beautiful thing.  And it was so magical that I feel the need to document it so we can hopefully repeat it sometime.

I made Brown Sugar Spiced Pork Tenderloin from this recipe that I found and slightly adapted from Tasty Kitchen.  It is so good.  I don't make pork tenderloin very often.  Its one of those things that I just forget about sometimes.  I'm usually a beef or chicken kinda gal.  But when I remember that oh yeah, we like pork too, this is my go to recipe.

I served the pork with applesauce, carrots, a green salad and breadsticks.  Any sort of homemade bread almost always makes my family happy.  I used this recipe from Our Best Bites.  We all enjoyed them, but I think I might want to tweak them a little bit.  I didn't put any garlic or cheese on them and they seemed a little bit plain.  My husband said they needed more sugar.  Maybe.  Or I will just plan on always turning them into garlic breadsticks.  But they were super easy and rose beautifully.  And the kids, including my almost 11 month old gobbled them right up.

 
Brown Sugar Spiced Pork Loin
(any recipe that starts off with brown sugar has got to be good, right!?)

Rub:
2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. ground cumin
1 tsp. chili powder
1 tsp. cinnamon
2 1/2 pounds (about 2) pork tenderloins,
2 tbs. olive oil

Glaze:
3/4 c. packed dark brown sugar
1 scant tsp. dry garlic
3 good shakes cayenne pepper
1 tbs. water

Preheat oven to 350.

In a small bowl, stir together salt, pepper, cumin, chili powder, and cinnamon.  Coat the pork with the spice rub.

Heat oil in a cast iron pan or other oven proof skillet.  Brown the pork on all sides for a few minutes. 

Remove from heat but keep the pork in the skillet.  Mix glaze ingredients and pour half over the pork.  Bake in oven for approx. 25 minutes or until pork registers 145 on a meat thermometer.  Halfway through baking, pour more of the glaze over your pork.

Let pork rest out of the oven in the skillet 10 minutes before cutting.  The pork's temperature will continue to rise until it reaches abot 155. 

Slice on the diagonal.  Serve with applesauce and enjoy!

(I have only made this with one tenderloin and had a little extra glaze.  Not a big problem.)

Update on our After Dinner Chore Chart



Well, I promised an update on how it worked out and I am VERY HAPPY to report after almost 2 months, it has been a huge success!  At least with me : )  No, really, my boys were actually pretty excited to do this at first. And though they've certainly lost some of that enthusiasm and there have been a few complaints, we have stuck with it and it has become "the norm."  The spinner has made it more fun, eliminates fights over who gets to do what or anyone getting tired of the same chore, and everyone gets to learn how to do all different chores.

What I like best about it is most nights we are all in the kitchen working together on cleaning up.  Even my two year old tries to help.  And when we all work together it goes fast and I feel unified instead of like the exhausted, unappreciated maid who has spent too many hours in the kitchen.  Not all of my kids can do all of the chores and they still require some help from my husband and I but I know they will eventually get the hang of it.  Meanwhile we are all learning some valuable lessons.



January 13, 2013

Book Review: How Will You Measure Your Life?

I just finished reading How Will You Measure Your Life? by Clayton M. Christensen and found it inspiring! I don't consider myself to be a practical, business-minded person, but maybe I am more than I think.  I liked how he applied business and management principles to real life.  As a homemaker, sometimes I feel like running a family is like running a business- just because there are so many different aspects to it, but of course it is more than that.  Despite the successful business background, I found Christensen to be compassionate, as well as honest and very smart.  Overall, for me, I felt like he was stressing the importance of living life on purpose, with a definite and clear purpose- being more deliberate and focused in everything I do.

Here are some of my favorite quotes:

"Real strategy in companies and in our lives is created through hundreds of everyday decisions about where we spend our resources.  As you're living your life from day to day, how do you make sure you're heading in the right directions?  (p62)

"With every moment of your time, every decision about how you spend your energy and your money you are making a statement about what really matters to you. (p75)

"You will be constantly pressured both at home and at work, to give people and projects your attention.  How do you decide who gets what?  Whoever makes the most noise? Whoever grabs you first?  Overcome the natural tendency to focus on the short term at the expense of the long term." (p80-81)

"Our default instincts are so often just to support our children in a difficult moment.  But if our children don't face difficult challenges, and sometimes fail along the way, they will not build the resilience they will need throughout their lives... You should consciously think about what abilities you want your child to develop, and then what experiences will likely help him get them.  So you might have to think about engineering opportunities for your child to have the experiences you believe will help him develop the capabilities he needs for life." (p155)

"When the kids come home for a family reunion, I like to listen to their banter back and forth about the experiences they had growing up, and which had the greatest impact on their lives. I typically have no memory of the events they recall as being important. And when I ask them about the times when Jim and I sat them down specifically to share what we thought were foundationally important values of our family, well, the kids have no memory of any of them. I guess the thing to learn from this is that children will learn when they are ready to learn, not when we’re ready to teach them….Your parents most likely weren’t thinking consciously about teaching you the right priorities at the time—but simply because they were there with you in those learning moments, those values became your values too. Which means that first, when children are ready to learn, we need to be there. And second, we need to be found displaying through our actions the priorities and values we want our children to learn.” (p137)

I think my favorite part is when he talks about setting a culture in our family.  We all worry that when we aren't there our kids won't make the right choices and even though they will always have their agency to choose for themselves and they may not choose what we think they should, we can instill certain habits and "autopilots" in our families.  This is through consistency, repetition and basically stating "We want our family to be known for kindness" or whatever else you want your culture to be.

Christensen says: "It's not as simple as setting family rules and hoping for the best.  Something more fundamental has to occur- and it has to happen years before the moment arises when our children are faced with that difficult choice.  Their priorities need to be set correctly so they will know how to evaluate their options and make a good choice.  The best tool we have to help our children do this is through the culture we build in our families. (p159)

"Forming a culture is not an instant loop; it's not something you can decide on, communicate, and then expect it to suddenly work on its own.  You need to be sure that when you ask your children to do something, or tell your spouse you're going to do something, you hold to that and follow through.  It sounds obvious; most of us want to try to be consistent.  But in the pressures of day-to-day living, that can be tough.  There will be many days when enforcing rules is harder on a parent than it is on a child. (p169)

"...it's easier to hold on to your principles 100 percent of the time than it is to hold to them 98 percent of the time.  The boundary- your personal moral line- is powerful, because you don't cross it; if you have justified doing it once, there's nothing to stop you doing it again.  Decide what you stand for.  And then stand for it all the time. (p191)

"I came to understand that while many of us might default to measuring our lives by summary statistics...the only metrics that will truly matter to my life are the individuals whom I have been able to help, one by one, to become better people." (p203)


January 08, 2013

Birthday Cakes

We have three birthdays in our family within 18 days of each other, intermixed with Christmas, New Year's, my Mom's birthday and our anniversary.  So the end of December/beginning of January is PARTY time at our house!  That also means lots of CAKE.  
I thought I'd share some of those with you.

My husband always loved ice cream cakes growing up.  The price tag on those store bought ones can be really pricey so this year I found a recipe at foodnetwork.com for Ice Cream Crunch Cake that I tried and- WOW! it was good!  It really was easy - you just need time to freeze each layer and room in your freezer.  Mine doesn't look as beautiful as theirs but I'm sure it tastes just as good!


 
My second son requested the Motor Cross cake again this year.  I know he had it at least one other birthday, as well as my oldest son, and my oldest son made it for his Cubscout Blue and Gold Banquet last year.  So this is certainly a favorite around here!  I like it because it's pretty easy and even if you have crumbs in your frosting, you cover it up with cookie crumbs and cocoa puffs and all other kinds of goodies.  We never seem to be able to find the chocolate donut holes so we use peanut butter cups instead.  This year it got a little lopsided but my son thought it was awesome!  Plus he likes that he gets a motorcycle to keep!

 
On my youngest son's birthday this year I came down with the stomach bug and we'd just returned from traveling to visit family so I didn't have ingredients to decorate a cake.  My sweet hubby ran to the store and got some Elmo cupcakes and of course my son loved them!  

But I thought I'd share his cake from last year.  It's from Betty Crocker I thought it turned out cute.  Super easy- I really only do easy- and yummy!


 
What birthday cakes have you made?  Feel free to post a link in the comments section!

January 02, 2013

Felt Playhouse: Homemade Christmas Present

I had a blast making my little one a felt playhouse for Christmas and I imagine we will have a blast playing in it in the months to come!  Already all three of my boys think it's lots of fun!  Even my 9 year old gets excited about it- though my older boys' ideas of playing are a little different than mine.  (Think robbers breaking in to steal carrots compared to picking apples from the orchard and eating them at our pretend table.)

We had a little knit house that covered a card table growing up.  I remember pretending all kinds of things inside our "house."  So I've wanted to make one for my kids for awhile but never seemed to find the time. 

Then I saw this adorable felt house at homemadebyjill and was inspired!  I loved the idea of having a garden and apple tree where they can pick fruits and veggies.  I also loved how she put mesh in the windows since it can get a little stuffy in a felt house.  I copied a lot of her ideas with a little personal twist of my own.

 My lettuce leaves are a little too plumb : )  But I think the pumpkin vines turned out pretty good.  I still need to finish the actual pumpkins!
  Here's the other end of the garden with one loan corn stalk.


I had fun with my flower garden!





I decided to leave off the dog since my son has lots of stuffed animals he can carry in and out of the pet door.


In the future it will be fun to put some mail in this little mailbox.

 
I still need to finish the pumpkins and a few more apples and tiddy up a few thing- I think mine is a little too loose around the edges but all in all, I'm very pleased with how it turned out.  And it was really a lot of fun to make!! 

January 01, 2013

A Favorite Book

Santa brought my son a book that we've checked out from the library many many times and I was excited to get our own copy!  My son just turned two and doesn't always sit still to read a book with lots of words but the rhyming and cadence and onomatopoeia (I did remember something from English!) in this book appeals to him.  He even laughs at some of the sound words in here.  And we both love the pictures!  Such a fun book!