Wednesday, September 15, 2010

week 14

Cooking in Season
Week 14

Thou shalt not rub your eye whilst picking jalapenos. – ouch!

There’s bulbs on the shelves at the garden centers. The tips of the maples are losing their chlorophyll. The grass is choking with no rain. The autumn wind is both amazingly fresh, but also blows a twinge of regret as summer comes to an end. It seemed like I spent this summer hiding from the heat so much that I missed it. I didn’t even get sick of zucchini this year. Weird.
Anyway, I spent about 4 hours straight at my work garden picking beans. 4 hours and I barely got halfway through my first planting. I harvested soybeans which were supposed to be endamame, but because of the drought, they only filled out when the pods started to dry. So I’m not sure if they can be prepared like endamame, which is steamed in the pod and then removed from the shell and eaten, or if they could be dried. Or if you’re real adventurous, perhaps try to make your own tofu or soymilk? I still have my second planting coming on and it’s incredibly time and labor intensive for such a little handful of beans that I’d like to hear from you if it’s worth it. I just wanted to try something new and figured you all wouldn’t mind playing around with some fun recipes. And honestly, how often do you see soybeans for sale on grocery store shelves. I just shelled them and put them in a bowl with a little water in the bottom and put them in the microwave for one minute and thought they were rather delicious. I often drive around watching the fields of soybeans dry into their sticks with beans all up the side. My little plot is surrounded with soybean fields, but the deer came to my tiny plot constantly and nipped off the tops of my soybeans and ate half of my second planting down to the ground. 85% of soybeans grown in the US are genetically modified. Most are modified to withstand weed killers that are usually sprayed at least twice on the fields. Then these soybeans are ground up and a lot of them end up in animal feed. Mine aren’t genetically modified. I think the dang deer figured that out fast. I wonder if cows in a feedlot would prefer my soybeans over the GM soybeans too. I hand weeded though, which I don’t think is possible for those larger fields.

Anyway, enough about soybeans, on to the pretty beans – first round is ready! I have Jacobs cattle, which are white with red spots, and Vermont appaloosa, which is white with brown and light brown spots like an appaloosa pony. I like to shell these beans and make sure they’re dry (should shatter when crushed) and put them in a mason jar to throw in soups or side dishes later. Hopefully everyone who wants some will get enough at least to try them. Dry beans should be soaked overnight before use, which cuts down on their boiling time when added to soups.

I made a deal with my boss where I took all his tomatoes and in return, he gets some spaghetti sauce. I picked until my trunk was totally full of tomatoes that I could have opened a roadside stand out of it. I also stocked up from Greenfield Organic Farm down in Amish country with enough canner tomatoes to hopefully put back one can per week of delicious pasta sauce. I cook it down in a crock pot for a day with spices before I can it. Looks like I have a lot of cutting ahead of me, but it’s all worth it in the winter when I have delicious tomato sauce from Ohio grown tomatoes picked in season. My sister canned whole tomatoes a few weeks ago and used a can for her chili, which got excellent reviews. Tomatoes take a long time in a boiling water bath, but they are pretty easy to preserve if you just make up your sauce and throw it in some freezer bags not too full and freeze them right away.

Alright, I’ve sat in front of a computer long enough (I swear, not checking my fantasy football scores or anything) but now it’s time to get down to the orchard and see what apples I can find. Here is a wonderfully simple apple sauce recipe from member Kim Applegate.
-4 apples, peeled
-¾ cup water
- ¼ cup white sugar
- ½ teaspoon cinnamon
In saucepan, combine all ingredients. Cover and simmer for 15 – 20 minutes or until apples are soft. Allow to cool, then mash with a fork or potato masher.

Only a couple weeks to go! Email me with soybean ideas and inspiration if I should keep harvesting them. -Janees -

No comments:

Post a Comment