Where are we? Part One

9 September 2010

It’s been a heck of a summer. Obviously, I’ve posted very little, and I feel the need to catch up a bit.

First of all, the weather. It was a warm, wet summer. We used the air conditioner more than we ever have, and our electrical bill shows it. It rained at least every 3 days almost all summer — naturally, since I had 250 gallons of water in the always-topped-off rain barrels. Maybe I’ll get to use the water from them next year. At least I’ve got them made.

I think when I empty them out for the winter in a few weeks I’ll put one in the basement to catch the condensate from the furnace. That will give us 55 gallons of emergency water that could be run through the filter and made potable, winter or summer. In the winter it gets condensate from the furnace, in the summer it gets condensate from the air conditioner. I’d like to set up another one also that captured water from the roof whenever it was flowing in the winter. That shouldn’t be that hard. Think flexible hose that can take freezing. But what about when the barrel was full and over flowing? Let the sump pump handle it? There has to be a non-electric solution to that….

We hit upon a great way to use the stored wheat berries we have (after grinding into whole wheat flour): pancakes. The boys love them. I bought a big cast iron griddle that covers two burners on the stove, and I really like making them, although M doesn’t like them (pancakes, that is, not these specific pancakes).

Change you can believe in?

9 September 2010

Among other policies, the Obama national security team has also authorized the C.I.A. to try to kill a United States citizen suspected of terrorism ties, blocked efforts by detainees in Afghanistan to bring habeas corpus lawsuits challenging the basis for their imprisonment without trial, and continued the C.I.A.’s so-called extraordinary rendition program of prisoner transfers — though the administration has forbidden torture and says it seeks assurances from other countries that detainees will not be mistreated.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/09/us/09secrets.html?_r=1&emc=na

Lamb’s Quarters

7 June 2010

So last year I had a few leaves of Lamb’s Quarters in salads. Yesterday, I picked 2 quarts of tips and leaves, jammed them into a pot with a little water and butter, and cooked them for 10 minutes or so. They were delicious! Very much like spinach, except better. It just blows my mind that they’ve been under my nose practically my whole life (I’ve pulled up a thousand of them if I’ve pulled one), and I’m only now figuring out that they’re edible, and not only edible, but really good!

Grape Leaves, Rain, and Bears

5 June 2010

So I’ve started reading Stalking the Wild Asparagus, which I’ve known about almost since its publication in 1962, but have never read. I resisted reading it because I didn’t know what it was and it quickly became a cliche. But better late than never.

Anyway, I read about eating grape leaves in STWA and decided to give it a try, especially since the season was right and I knew of a wild grape vine on our property putting out a lot of new leaves after I hacked it back. I stuffed them with a mix of beef, rice, sunflower seeds, onion, parsley, dill, and olive oil (recipe from Joy of Cooking), and they came out very good. G ate them but D did not. Grape leaves, dill, parsley from our yard, beef from across the street.

Meanwhile, we’re on the verge of having too much rain. It’s raining hard again right now. You watch, now that I have 250 gallons of rainwater stored, it will rain every 5 days all summer and the garden won’t need any of it.

We also apparently have some bears living in southern Wisconsin now, and a few at least visiting our town.

First Salad

4 June 2010

Had the first salad mostly from the garden tonight. Used looseleaf lettuce, a few baby beet leaves, a few kale leaves (from the stuff that survived the winter), a bit of the new purslane (from the seeds I bought — it’s lighter green, larger-leaved, and more upright than the common one), a little parsley, a leaf of swiss chard (which I don’t like raw much), plus some dill and chives. The chives are from a plant growing up between cement blocks underneath a maple tree — we surely didn’t plant it there, but it’s a big and healthy-looking plant.

You look at one thing and you think you can’t possibly have enough for salad for everyone, but then you walk around picking a bit from this and a bit from that, and pretty soon you have enough. It was awesome, too!