Friday, October 30, 2015

Turkeys in the Yard

This lovely turkey waltzed on up into the yard one afternoon to graze on the grass or soak up the sun. Or just to rub it in our faces that it isn't turkey season right now! I love them, we can hear them clucking and nesting in the trees in the evening. I hear them gobbling in the woods while I hang clothes on the line. I have a world-renowned turkey call that I'm not really good at, but my six year old son can call up the turkeys with just his mouth (no turkey caller needed)!

We very frequently see turkeys, deer, armadillos, owls, birds and other wildlife. The other day I saw our black lab  galloping at full speed down the drive way so I jumped up to see what was the emergency. There were six or seven young deer hanging out in a section of a field where we usually see them. I yelled at the dog to come back and the the deer took off for the opposite wood. The dog came home. 

I love the view from my front porch...whether I'm looking in or out. 
"Nothing can cure the soul but the senses, just as nothing can cure the senses but the soul." ~ Oscar Wilde

Have a great week and take care of your soul & your senses! :)


 ~ Ramsey

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Late Summer at Ramsey Farms

The wild muscadine vines are the first to show signs of cooler weather. When the fruit is gone, the grape leaves begin to slowly fade to yellow. The majestic oaks are next. In the garden, things are still going fairly strong. There is yellow squash, zucchini, cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes still growing. The green beans just started producing and we've harvested one small turnip though the turnip bed is full of dark leafy greens, the beet seedlings up are, and the lettuce is popping up.

Turkey and deer are on the move. You can hear them in the woods. I listen to turkey hens while I hang clothes on the line. A family of deer gallops across the front field from one wood to another. I need to build a tree stand so I can watch and photograph the wildlife! 

In mid-September Chief Farmhand, Chris applied fish emulsion to the growing plants. The curcurbits (squash, zucchini, cukes) showed indications of a nutrient deficiency, likely nitrogen, which fish emulsion (think fish compost tea) is full of and can green up plants. It's like a vitamin for your plants. That stinks like the Dead Sea. The plants really did green up and come alive after the emulsion. The smell only lasted a couple of days at most. We are going to be making our own fish emulsion in the future with a little help from our river.


We also purchased our winter cover crop seed: crimson clover. This will look gorgeous this winter. Then in spring, the crimson clover will be tilled into the soil which will enrich the soil with nitrogen and other trace minerals to continue supporting growth next year. The land we now use as our garden lay fallow for many years and our sandy soil doesn't hold nitrogen the way heavier more clay-like soil does.


We will continue to supplement the soil by incorporating compost, manure, cover crops like the crimson clover, fish emulsion, wood ash, and Epsom salt (magnesium) over the years to boost the health and vitality of the soil over time in order to produce a higher yield and better quality produce. The idea is to avoid chemical fertilizers, insecticides and other potentially harmful substances on our garden. By planting beneficial plants, we can entice the right kinds of insects to come into our garden to help with pollination and ridding us of harmful insects.
On another note, the oven died! We "roughed it" for about two weeks...and then...una cuisenéire arrived! My new oven is so nice! Stainless with a smooth ceramic glass top (not the nasty old timely dirty, can't-keep-it-clean coils) and it is 5.9 cubic feet of cooking space that steams itself clean inside, roasts, bakes, convections, broils, boils and warms. There are five burners! Five! I get really excited about this kind of thing. I hated having to buy an oven unexpectedly, but that's what life and emergency household savings funds are for, right?! Besides, who wouldn't want their very own cuisenéire?! (The box had the word "cuisinéire" on it, I decided that sounds so much better than "oven", right?! So henceforth the oven at Ramsey Farms is christened Cuisenéire.)

We have tested the cuisinéire several times including a batch of my daughter's pumpkin muffins just yesterday using our homegrown pumpkin of course. They were delicious and the oven performs perfectly! I am so ready to attempt a new pie crust recipe and dive into a warm buttery pumpkin pie! The cuisinéire has a proof setting, too, so today I plan on making farm bread to further test-out the new oven and all its fun features.

"There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle." ~ Albert Einstein

 What's the last thing you got really excited over? When is the last time you lost yourself in an activity you enjoy? Have you stood still and watched the sun set or rise in the past week?

make it your best,
Ramsey

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Pumpkin Processing...Is it Pie Time Yet?

Little pun'kin in the pun'kin patch
If you have have five feet of yard space, you can grow your own pumpkins! They are easy to grow and a great garden project for the kids. The seeds are nice and big (for easy planting for little hands), seedlings appear rather quickly and kids love watching these green little balls turn into awesome orange pumpkins like "magic" in a few weeks. Besides, don't they just make you smile when you see them?


Harvested and cured and waiting
Our five year old son checked on his pumpkins every day to see how much bigger or how much orange-r it got. He walked with a definite swagger when he cut his first pumpkin from the vine. He showed off those pumpkins to anyone who came by the farm. 

We harvested the pumpkins and allowed them to cure in a semi-sunny dry spot for ten days (they sat on my porch swing). The pretty-as-a-picture pumpkins lined my kitchen buffet for a couple more weeks while we tended to more urgent food business.

Cut in half crosswise

We scooped out the seeds and "gunk" (the strings). I rinsed the seeds to remove the pumpkin goo and laid them out to dry for roasting! The pumpkins got ready for a nice hot steam bath in the oven. I got to use my holiday roasting pan from my friend, Laura to roast such a large load of cute little pumpkins.
Remove the seeds and strings

Bake skin side up for an hour or more
To cook a pumpkin, wash and cut it in half, crosswise. Remove seeds and strings. Place the pumpkin in a pan, shell side up, and bake for one hour or more in a 325-degree oven. Bake until the pumpkin is tender and it begins to fall apart. Let the pumpkins cool,  then scrape the pulp from the the shell. You can then push the pumpkin through a ricer or strainer. I pureed my pumpkin pulp in the blender until it was smooth. The empty shells went into the compost.

Now what do you do with all your neon orange pumpkin putty? Pumpkin pie, pumpkin latte, pumpkin bread, pumpkin muffins, pumpkin cupcakes, pumpkin pie, pumpkin
Pumpkin seeds ready to roast
cheesecake, pumpkin pancakes, pumpkin soup, pumpkin cookies, pumpkin brownies (are those possible?), pumpkin cake, pumpkin gingerbread, pumpkin waffles, pumpkin tarts, did I say pumpkin pie yet? 

My stomach just growled a little. A lot.


Getting scraped
Pumpkins are a squash, replace butternut or acorn or other winter squash with pumpkin in any recipe. I found a couple of recipes for baked and stuffed winter squash that would be so yummy with pumpkin in place of the winter squash. 

But first things first. My oven was busy roasting pumpkin seeds and I wasn't ready for all that baking yet. I mean, c'mon...I'd just cut, scooped, baked, scraped and pureed pumpkins from our garden. I needed a little break.

I scooped all the awesome pumpkin puree into mason jars, leaving a 1/2 inch head space, put the lids on and stuck those jars right in the freezer. Now they are just sitting there chilling out (haha) waiting on me. 

The new oven will be delivered tomorrow. I'm seriously contemplating testing it out by trying some pie crust recipes and then a homegrown, home baked genuine pumpkin pie this weekend! And I am promising myself to make at least one other pumpkiny dish that isn't a pie! I won't buy canned pumpkin again. We love knowing where our food came from, who grew it and how it was grown. And it didn't travel not a mile to get to my table.
Seasoned roasted pumpkin seeds

Oh! the roasted pumpkin seeds were a delicious crunchy snack! I liked mine mixed with raisins. I did one batch with cumin, salt, and paprika. Another batch with sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg and a teeny tiny dash of allspice. I think the salty spiced ones were actually better.

Do you have a delicious pie crust recipe? What is your favorite pumpkin recipe? 




~You must first BE who you really are, then, DO what you need to do in order to HAVE what you want.~

Go be you & have fun,
Ramsey