Showing posts with label Food Preservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Preservation. Show all posts

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Fun Facts

About Disney from my AAA Living magazine.  Why?  Because I grew up in Orlando, and because these are actually semi-interesting enough that I saved the magazine so I could post them.

Plus it's not like a gobjillion people come to Orlando to go here


or here.


Okay, let's bring on the fun.  The top 5 things you didn't know about Disney World:

  1. On the Jungle Cruise, a band of headhunters bursts forth shouting tribal chants.  Hidden in the audio mix, you can hear one warrior yell, "I love disco!"- a phrase added by a prankster sound engineer and never erased.
  2. Many US presidents have visited the park, but on Nov. 17, 1973- at the height of Watergate- Richard M. Nixon made history there.  Addressing a conference of newspaper editors at the Contemporary Resort, he delivered his most infamous line: "I am not a crook."
  3. Vacationing at Walt Disney World in Dec. 1974, a guest at the Polynesian Resort received some papers to sign.  The guest?  John Lennon.  The papers?  the documents that dissolved the Beatles.
  4. The Contemporary Resort, one of the resort's two original hotels, was built in a contemporary way:  Each of the 500-plus rooms was built off-site before being lifted by crane and slid into place like a drawer into a filing cabinet.
  5. Walk Disney considered St. Louis, Missouri, as the site for Disney World, but wen local beer magnate August Busch Jr. reportedly told Walt he'd have to serve beer in the Magic Kingdom, Disney turned his focus to Orlando.
And a bonus:  You cannot buy gum anywhere at Disney World.

Workout: 
Rest/yoga.  I think I've been feeling the effects of the tougher running and lifting workouts I've been doing lately and am planning an easy week next week.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Lucky 09-09-09

No runs yesterday or today :(. I guess I've had whatever was going around. Kind of a combination of a virus and the fact that I think I'm allergic to my hedge (I put some flower clippings inside). But I'm feeling much much much better today, and I'm planning to get caught up on weight training this afternoon.

Work has been busy, but I'm kind of enjoying my project today. I spent a bunch of time figuring out how to make SAS make pretty (and readable- very important) graphs. This is not always an easy feat because SAS output looks way more 1989 than 2009. It takes a little thinking, but it's more relaxing than frustrating, which I needed today.

Speaking of which, it's 09-09-09. That has to be lucky, right? The radio station we listen to is playing "9" songs all day. I haven't tuned in, and I can't think of that many "9" songs- Revolution No. 9, Love Potion Number 9... that's all I've got- so maybe it's kind of a sporadic thing.

Anyway, I'm excited because my parents are on a plane flying to the Midwest right now. I'm excited to show them around Madison, and I hope they don't get lost trying to find us. Our Garmin GPS AND Google Earth show our apartment in a different place than it actually is (take that, stalkers) so getting here can be a little confusing.

No new pictures lately. I'll have to get some of our UFO (I mean patty pan) squash when we harvest those. Oh! question for the bloggosphere: Do any of you have a food dehydrator you would recommend. We don't want something $$$$$, but I'm thinking we could make squash chips and dried tomatoes with some of our harvest??? Suggestions/ recommendations...

I leave you with this:

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Tomatoes!!!

Hello from tomato land. I just harvested 18 lbs of tomatoes from the garden. I have no idea what we are going to do with all of them because we are going out of town tomorrow, but I did manage to give away 4 to the guy who lives next to us. The most exciting thing is I picked one with a nose! Call the Enquirer. Edited to say: Pictures at the bottom.

Today's run was really really good. Not my fastest ever, but I felt really strong the whole time.

Distance: 10 mi
Type: Long
Time: 1:33:45
Pace: 9:22 min/mile

Part of this was fueled by an unintentional (Can anyone else just not control themselves at a restaurant?) carbo load last night at Bluephies. Three pieces of bread with olive cheese spread and 4 baby enchiladas are good for long runs but no so great for the figure. Oh well... I'm back to normal eating habits today.

Some people post pictures of all the beautiful things they cook and eat during the day. Me? It's all about farm animals and vegetables (remember, for the purposes of this blog a tomato is a vegetable).

Tomato with a nose!


I kind of thought about trying to put sunglasses on it after the fact, but I really don't think that would have worked.

Here is our harvest (minus the nasty ones I didn't realize were nasty when I was picking them):



This is maybe 15lbs of tomatoes. You know how many lbs of tomatoes the Joy of Cooking katsup (I think it was katsup) recipe calls for??? 40lbs!!!!! I can't even imagine.

Today I just washed and bagged the little guys and threw them in the freezer. This is how you preserve tomatoes if you have access to modern conveniences and are lazy/going out of town the next day:



So I guess having a deep freeze is helpful if you want to save a lot of food. Not sure if there are any outlets in our storage unit... or if we could get something that big down there without anyone noticing (we did get the treadmill up here...).

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

You say tomato...

Important note: For the purposes of this post, a tomato is a vegetable and not a fruit. Bear with me, people.

Last night D and I had our first adventure into the world of canning our own food. I picked about 37 tomatoes from our garden this weekend (and only had to toss a couple of them) so we had to do something to preserve them. Enter canning. Last week D made some delicious salsa with our tomatoes and we thought that would be an easy thing to try. So how does one go from a bunch of tomatoes sitting in a Whole Foods reusable bag on the living room floor to canned salsa? Here's the story in pictures.

First you get some tomatoes. Lest you think our tomatoes are any less freaky than our carrots, check out The Jolly Red Giant on the right there:



And the Siamese Tomato Twins:



Okay. Enough with the tomato pictures. How does one make tomatoes into salsa?

First you have to blanch them. This seems to be a recurring theme in vegetable prep. To do this, you cut an X very lightly on the bottom of each tomato, then each tomato is boiled for about a minute



followed by an invigorating ice bath



and a chance to dry.



This makes the tomato's skin shrivel up so you can peel it off.



As you can imagine, this is incredibly messy. Don't wear your prom dress.

Then the tomatoes are cut up and put in the food processor along with onion, jalepeno, and spices.



Puree, and you have salsa.



So now for the canning part. The first thing is that we did not actually put anything into cans. We used jars. I guess we could call it "jarring", but then what would we call my driving or D's atonal musical compositions?

Canning tomato products or anything acidic is easier than canning non-acidic foods because they are less vulnerable to spoilage.

Everything gets washed first thing and then the jars go into a 250-degree oven for 40 minutes and the lids and rings get a dip in the hot tub.





The salsa has to get hot, too.



When everything is nice and sterilized, you funnel the hot salsa into the hot jars and screw on the hot lids.



using some fancy canning tools we bought from Target.


Each jar is set aside to cool. During the cooling process, somehow (physical science is a complete mystery to me) a vacuum is created(?) in the jar which causes the lid to get sucked down. This keeps the bacteria and other nasties out.



And there you have it. Canned salsa. I know you'll all want to run out and do this yourself now that the price of salsa at the store is an astronomical $1.79.

Anyway, as a city girl, it's been an eye-opening experience to learn how much work is involved in the simplest things we buy from the grocery store. It makes me think of In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan, a book that is mainly about the evils of modern packaged food. I remember reading the book and nodding along to everything he wrote, but it's one thing to believe that and a whole different thing to commit yourself to a life without those conveniences. Just one bag of broccoli, just one can of salsa is the result of hours(!) of work when you think about the whole life cycle of the food from getting the garden ready, tending it, harvesting the crops, and finally preparing it. It makes me appreciate all the conveniences I have and gives me a lot of respect for all the men and women who were and are still completely self sufficient when it comes to food.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Lazy Gourmet

There was a request to know what we do with all our broccoli before it goes bad.

We start by trying to give a bunch away and eating it like crazy until it's starting to get limp. At that point, we freeze the rest.

So how does one freeze broccoli? It's not quite as simple as just sticking it in the freezer. You have to blanch the broccoli first to keep the enzymes in it from breaking down further. Then you have to let it dry before you stick it in a Ziploc (or a vacuum sealed bag if you have a food saver device). But then, voila, you have frozen broccoli. You can find this pretty easily if you do a Google search.

Here's the process in pictures.

Get some water boiling



Set up your cooling/draining station.



Put a scoop of broccoli in the boiling water and cook for about 1 minute.



Take it out and put it in the ice water to stop the cooking process.



If you stop right there, you will actually have some pretty well cooked broccoli. All you have to do is warm it up with whatever seasoning you like. It's tender but crisp.

Once the broccoli is cool, allow it to dry.



And then bag it and throw it in the freezer.



The only downside is the water you use to cook the broccoli is really nasty. It smells awful. I'm going to brew some up for Halloween to scare the kids.



And there you have it. Broccoli storage 101. That said, my understanding is that broccoli doesn't do well in hot climates so this may be a moot point for most of my readers (unless you want to grow broccoli during the winter, which might work).

We have visitors this weekend, but depending on our plans we may have Operation Dig Up Carrots underway.