Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Vinegars!

Until a year ago I had no idea you could make your own vinegar! What?! Yes! You can and even if the thought has never crossed your mind, it's a fun experiment. I'm still fermenting and my previous attempts failed in mold but this time things seem to be going better in my kitchen laboratory!

These next pics are of my lemon vinegar. Simply pour store-bought white vinegar over a jar full of lemon scraps, peels, and slices. Let that sit for a two to three weeks, strain, dilute with distilled water, and use the lemony-scented vinegar for cleaning kitchen counters, washing mirrors and windows, dilute for mopping, scrubbing the shower or tub, I even spray it on my hair after the shower to help soften  my locks! I'll never add my lemon scraps to the compost pile again!


If you know me, you know I hate waste. I dislike tossing things out that still have good life in them. We reuse, recycle, reduce, and compost as much as we can. But I've been wasting my fruit scraps in the compost all these years! I love making things from scratch...
Vinegar is so fun and easy to make using these scraps of fruit we might normally toss. Save your apple peels and cores (I've also tried pears and read articles about other fruits like peaches, berries, and grapes, too). Allow your scraps to dry out for a few days. I simply lay them out on newspaper on a sunny spot on my kitchen counter that's out of the way and in about four days they're dry.
Add your fruit scraps to a mason jar or whatever glass container you need based on your volume. I have been making quite small batches. Cover fruit with distilled water. You can continue adding your dried fruit and capping off with the water until your container is full (or as full as you want it). Keep the jar covered with cheesecloth, a paper towel, or what I use, an unbleached coffee filter and secure with a rubber band. Note that plastics and metals interact with the vinegar in a bad way and should not be used. Let this sit in a warm spot out of direct light (top of the fridge or hot water closet) for about a week after you've filled your jar. Stir every other day or so to prevent molding.
After about one week of fermentation, give it a smell. Does it smell lightly vinegary? Has the liquid darkened in color? If not, let it ferment for another week (stir daily or at least every other day!). Strain into clean glass. Toss your apple and fruit pieces, peels, chunks, etc. in your compost - they've now done triple duty!

Pour your vinegar back into the original glass - the oozy, filmy, slimy, thickened "stuff" on the bottom is what they refer to as the mother. That's the "alive" part of vinegar and the most potent part. This "mother" also allows you to continue making vinegar without additional fruit - sort of along the same lines as a sourdough bread starter. Only this is a fruit vinegar starter!

Put your breathable lid (cloth, paper towel, or paper coffee filter) back on your jar and now place it in a warm (room temp is fine) dark place. I keep mine in a cabinet that is between the fridge and the oven so it stays warmer there and no sunlight reaches the cabinet either. Let it continue the fermentation process for up to 6 or 8 more weeks. Check weekly for color, smell, and taste. When it "tastes" ready for you (as vinegary as you want it) then it's ready to use!
When it's ready to use, strain mixture into a clean jar using a fine sieve. Keep the mother and at least 1 ounce of vinegar in your original jar. Put a plastic lid on the strained, clean vinegar and stick it in the fridge for longest shelf life. Use as needed! I use my fresh, organic vinegar in everything from sauce, condiments, broth, stew, and all sorts of dinner recipes plus it's an excellent natural hair rinse, facial astringent and toner, and apple cider vinegar (ACV) has tons of medicinal / herbal uses. People use ACV as a gargle to relieve sore throats, coughs, and colds.

My small batches don't last me very long! But now I'm ready to try making it from scratch using the mother as a starter! I also want to make wine vinegar and champagne vinegar, but never want to spare my drinking wines "just" to make vinegar! ;) Have you made vinegar before? Tell me all about it!

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Our Version of Bojangle's Biscuits

In a recent post, I whetted your appetite with some photos and descriptions of our quest for The Best Biscuits in the World! After trying many a recipe over the years, we've made these twice now and they've turned out flaky, buttery, and scrumptious! Not only do they taste good, they look photo-worthy, and they are not difficult to make. (If it has too many ingredients, or too many steps, or seems too complex - I generally skip it! I need simple!)

So without further adieu, here is the recipe! Try it for yourself and tell me what you think! We also served these as leftover-Easter-ham biscuits! Yummmmm!

Ramsey Farms Bojangle's Biscuits


ingredients

  • 3 cups self rising flour
  • 3 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 teaspoons confectioners' sugar
  • 1/2 cup shortening
  • 1 1/4 cup buttermilk
  • butter

directions

Mix dry ingredients. Cut in shortening. Stir in buttermilk. Knead a few times, roll or pat out on a board and cut with a biscuit cutter. Bake in 450 degrees F oven for 12 minutes (or until golden). Brush with butter.
Nutritional Warning: 199 calories9 grams fat25 grams carbohydrates4 grams protein per biscuit.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

This Week in the Kitchen & Laboratory at Ramsey Farms

Homemade Ranch Dressing on Our Lettuce, Carrots, & Radishes
In the past two weeks, I have been busy in my kitchen! Which is pretty usual. I love concocting delicious things for my family and friends to eat and wonderful healthy alternatives of bath & body products. Let's see in the past few days, I have...

  • Made hand soaps, deodorant, sunblock, body wash, and shampoo! I've been experimenting with the recipes and ingredients for all of these and have some fabulous updates to share soon.
  • Ranch Dressing with homegrown onion and herbs for all those carrots and radishes we’re picking! It is the best ranch dressing my mouth has ever tasted!
  • Homemade ketchup using a blend of herbs and seasonings including those we grow right here! This is not the same recipe that I mentioned in this blog previously. This has a delicious flavor that is somewhat reminiscent of cocktail sauce without any lumps. 
    Ketchup in progress

    Smooth, blended ketchup
  • Homemade mustard using yellow mustard seeds, beer, and my own secret blend of herbs. Next on my condiments list is mayo!
  • Hot and spicy vinegar and some rosemary-infused vinegar. 

  • Chicken broth that smelled so yummy it felt like Christmas or Thanksgiving up in the house! 

Frozen stash of chicken bones & veg scraps
Broth simmering
  • Pita bread - soft and fluffy pita bread! It's perfect for stuffing with salad, leftovers, covering in peanut butter and honey, plain, or anyway you like it!
  • Speaking of peanut butter. I asked my family yesterday why have we never made our own peanut butter?! They looked at me kind of strange (hey, I'm used to their looks of bewilderment) and well, I'll probably be making some peanut butter next week! 
  • Coming soon: Peach Honey Sangria Slushies! Sounds like a little bit of Georgia Heaven!


Friday, April 10, 2015

The Past Few Weeks Here at Ramsey Farms

It's been so gratifyingly busy here the past few weeks! Farmhand Chris works from sun up until sundown most days and everyone has been pulling more than their own weight with various chores both indoors and outdoors.

Here's our current planted list:

January 23, 2015: Planted Ruby Lane potato seeds (30) in “Creekside” bed
February 14, 2015: Onions: sweet yellow south & white – Front Garden
March 3-4, 2015: Beets, Potatoes (white & red), Broccoli, carrots, celery, leaf lettuce (210), head lettuce (2 varieties), radishes (3 varieties) – Front Garden
March 8 - 11, 2015: Field Garden- Beets (2 varieties-176 total), Leeks, Kale, Sweet Yellow & White Onions, Sweet Peas (245), Turnips
March 29, 2015: cucumbers (2 varieties) – Front Garden

***Everything planted before April is already up & growing!***
***We've been eating bunches of fresh, crispy radishes!***

April 3-9, 2015: Hot peppers: jalapenos, Chili, Anaheim. Mild peppers: pimento, sweet banana, California Wonder. Cucumbers (2 varieties), yellow crookneck squash, dark green zucchini, beefsteak tomatoes, roma tomatoes, golden sweet corn – Front Garden
Field Garden - bush beans

My herb garden is growing chocolate mint, lavender, cilantro, dill, chamomile, pineapple sage, and maybe more but I think that's all that's up and growing! We've been using all of those but the chamomile already. The pineapple sage was a perfect addition to a salsa I made last week!

I took the aloe plants outside last week. The next day we had a huge thunderstorm complete with large hail and damaging winds. Ugh. Several pots were broken (including a special one from my mom) and there were broken aloe arms. I've since repotted the plants that were damaged or had their pots broken. Some of the poor aloes look like Frankenstein plants because I put the broken aloe arms into soil mixture

The hot, direct sun also gave the aloes a pale (puke green) look. I think this happens every spring when I move the over-wintered plants out of doors. Yet it scares me every time! I moved all the aloes to the shade of a big oak tree at the edge of the yard. Keep your fingers crossed that all the aloe plants improve in health and appearance! Luckily, the two largest and oldest aloe plants are too heavy for me to move by myself and are still in the house!

Monday, April 6, 2015

Herb Beginnings

March 26 - Dill Seedlings

March 26 - Cilantro Babies

March 26 - Chamomile popping up
Remember to check out all the garden pics and more at our Ramsey Farms Facebook page.





This post ranked #5 in our most-read posts of 2015!