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Overview of Seed Saving

3/20/2021

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This is the "Propagation" section of a presentation given at CSW 2021 (Convention on the Status of Women, typically held each spring in New York).  Cathy Mauluulu of Big Ocean Women and I taught the "Four Ps" of greater self-reliance when it comes to food:  Principles, Production, Preservation, and Propagation. (Our portion of the video begins at 1:23:45; the seed saving/propagation part begins at 1:39:05.)
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The fourth of our four Ps is Propagation-- Tapping into the natural self-sustaining abilities of the plants you grow for food. That might include saving some seeds from your crop, or be as easy as saving some of your potatoes or taro tubers to plant next season. The simplest way to start is when you buy seeds, keep any you don't use.  They will be good next year if you take good care of them- keep them cool, dry, and dark.  They will last at least a few years if you store them properly.   I usually get a good four or five years out of my seeds.  After that, not as many of them will germinate.  You can use seeds from your pantry, too: the dry beans you buy will grow in your garden, though you might not know which variety they are.
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​Seed-saving is part of the expected, normal way of gardening in some cultures, and there are big reasons to do it.  One is the security of having the seeds you’ll need, without having to rely on local market conditions.  Last year, we had a cold, wet spring. I had planted pole beans, and after a month most hadn’t sprouted.  I went to the store to get more.  There were no pole bean seed packets for sale anywhere local anymore.  So of the ones that grew, I let some beans mature on the vine, dried them, shelled them-- and now they’re ready to plant when needed in a few weeks.  

Another reason to seed save is it helps create plants that are adapted to your garden and climate. That’s how we get ‘heirloom’ varieties. The best plants are developed by saving seeds from individual plants that have traits you want. Over the years, a better strain will be developed.

Traditionally, it’s been considered too cold in Siberia to grow watermelons.  Dima in Novosibirsk (NO-vo-see-BEERSK), Siberia, planted them anyway.  After a few years, one tiny tennis-ball sized melon matured.  It held two seeds.  He saved those and planted them the next year.  This time, more watermelons matured. He saved seeds from the largest of them, planting them the next spring. After ten years, he was consistently getting kilo-sized mature watermelons.  We got early-producing, cold-tolerant tomatoes from Siberia in the same way.  Plants in other places are selected to produce well despite heat, drought, or particular diseases.

There’s a huge advantage to the agricultural diversity created by individuals selectively saving seeds- eventually, pests and disease hit individual varieties. If we are relying almost completely on just a handful of varieties, results can be catastrophic.  There’s a potato blight that caused the Irish Potato Famine in the mid 1800s. In the early 1900s, the boll weevil destroyed most of the cotton crop for decades in the southern United States. Having a big diversity of location-specific varieties provides botanists great resources to find disease-resistant varieties.
 
Some seeds are simpler than others to save properly. Tomato seeds are in this category- put the jelly and seeds in a jar with a little water. Set it someplace warm for about three days, until it starts to ferment. The fungus that grows in it is a good thing- it breaks down a slippery coating on the seeds that prevent good germination, and the fungus produces helpful bacteria that help prevent some diseases when the seed becomes a plant.  Rinse and drain the seeds, keeping the ones that sink. Spread on a clean cloth to dry, then store in a labeled plastic bag. When they’re totally dry, store in a paper packet or plastic bag. Label.

If you want to learn more, where do you start? There are some great resources below.  

Where else do you go to learn?  The same as you do for producing food.  You don’t have to be good at it to start, just willing to learn. Find a mentor- a neighbor who knows more about it than you do. Grow a sisterhood of women who “gather and work harmoniously together in ways that bring about … goodness” and use the fruits of their labors to bless their community. 
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Resources:
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►Local growers and co-ops

►Your local/county/state/national Extension Office; here's one for Utah; all states have one, as well as many countries across the world.  https://extension.usu.edu/yardandgarden/​  

►www.seedsavers.org/mission    

►www.seedsave.org  

►Seed Saving instruction booklet, on Kindle, $5, by Bill McDorman  
https://www.amazon.com/Basic-Seed-Saving-instructions-wildflowers-ebook/dp/B01A83JYB4

Growing a garden without buying packets of garden seeds: 
►https://dontwastethecrumbs.com/regrow-food-water/
►Start thinking GARDEN! - The Provident Homemaker 
►More seeds from your kitchen - The Provident Homemaker
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Week 52- Sustainable Food: Gardening

4/10/2020

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As you plan, store, and use your food daily, one thing becomes clear: It needs replenished, and we’re much more dependent on systems and stores than we might have realized.  Right now, many more of us are feeling vulnerable.
 
Fortunately, restocking is simpler than starting from scratch. But that ‘dependency’ issue?  Hardly anybody can be completely self-reliant in this right now.  And we’re made to learn from and help each other. More self-sufficiency, however, is better than less. And almost everyone can grow some sort of food, even if it’s herbs in a pot on the windowsill, or tomatoes in a planter on the porch. You can even grow some vegetables without needing to buy seeds.
 
Ezra Taft Benson- an apostle at the time, who had also served as the United States Secretary of Agriculture-- gave us excellent advice 40 years ago.  He said,

“There are blessings in being close to the soil, in raising your own food even if it is only a garden in your yard and a fruit tree or two. Those families will be fortunate who, in the last days, have an adequate supply of food because of their foresight and ability to produce their own.
 
“The counsel from Church authorities has been consistent over the years and is well summarized in these words:
‘First, and above and beyond everything else, let us live righteously. …
‘Let us avoid debt as we would avoid a plague; where we are now in debt, let us get out of debt; if not today, then tomorrow.
‘Let us straitly and strictly live within our incomes, and save a little.
‘Let every head of every household see to it that he has on hand enough food and clothing, and, where possible, fuel also, for at least a year ahead. You of small means put your money in foodstuffs and wearing apparel, not in stocks and bonds; you of large means will think you know how to care for yourselves, but I may venture to suggest that you do not speculate. Let every head of every household aim to own his own home, free from mortgage. Let every man who has a garden spot, garden it; every man who owns a farm, farm it.’ (President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., in Conference Report, Apr. 1937, p. 26.)
 
“You do not need to go into debt, may I add, to obtain a year’s supply. Plan to build up your food supply just as you would a savings account. Save a little for storage each pay-check. Can or bottle fruit and vegetables from your gardens and orchards. Learn how to preserve food through drying and possibly freezing. Make your storage a part of your budget. Store seeds and have sufficient tools on hand to do the job. If you are saving and planning for a second car or a TV set or some item which merely adds to your comfort or pleasure, you may need to change your priorities. We urge you to do this prayerfully and do it now.
 
“I speak with a feeling of great urgency. I have seen what the days of tribulation can do to people. I have seen hunger stalk the streets of Europe. I have witnessed the appalling, emaciated shadows of human figures. I have seen women and children scavenge army garbage dumps for scraps of food. Those scenes and nameless faces cannot be erased from my memory.”
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Meanwhile, gardening season is here-- a beautiful time of year! It’s best to wait until about Mothers Day to plant frost-sensitive vegetables, but everything else can be planted now here along the Wasatch Front.
 
Here are blog posts you might like:
Starting on Your Spring Garden 
 
Start Thinking 'Garden'

Gardening 101

The Early Garden

What Brigham Young said about wheat vs. gold

How to Prune and Fertilize Trees and Shrubs

Or just click on the 'Gardening' category at the bottom of this page if you're on a mobile device; to the right if you're on a regular computer. 
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Below is information from two of my local resources—the USU Extension office and a local nursery, but it’s helpful stuff for anyone, anywhere.

Your state Extension office has tons of resources.  Here in Utah, it’s the Utah State University Extension office.  Replace “Utah” with any other state name, run a search online, and you’ll find lots of gardening and yard that is specific to your area.

Here are three new gardening videos to help you get started in your garden; they’re from the Utah extension, but these are good advice for any location: 
·         How to Start Vegetable Seeds Indoors 
·         ​How to Start and Grow Sweet Potatoes 
·         How to Create Soil Blocks 
There’s also a great book, Vegetables, Fruits and Herbs guidebook and other gardening resources through their online book store.  One resource I’ve used quite a bit is their free online book, “Common Weeds of the Yard and Garden.”  Use it, and you’ll know better what to weed out, and what to keep.  And it's super useful to know what your soil actually needs to be healthy, before shelling out serious money on fertilizers or supplements.  You can get your soil analyzed, here. (I have this done at every house we've lived in, as we're getting started growing things there.)

The USU Extension has a gardening group on Facebook, called Utah's Gardening Experts.  Post photos, share your knowledge, or ask questions and get help from your fellow gardeners and Extension experts. Join the group here.

The Extension offers online courses. They’re usually $25, but are currently $15 with code GARDEN2020. The code will automatically apply at checkout if you use the link below.   Browse courses.
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April (Mid-Spring) Gardening Tips from Glover Nursery

They also have an article on Victory Gardens: 4 Steps to a Bountiful Harvest

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What will you grow this year?

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Week 47- Planning for Possible Quarantine - even (or especially) with children

3/7/2020

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 We all want security, but mortal life is naturally full of unknowns and risks.
President Marion G. Romney said that the Church welfare plan was originally called the Church security plan.  “What was then meant by that title needs to be understood today; namely, that security, true security, comes only by living the principles of the gospel.  Security is the fruit of righteous living. (emphasis in original)

“…Time and time again we read of families, tribes, and whole nations keeping the Lord’s commandments and making covenants with him and being blessed by his Spirit. Because of righteousness, they prospered both spiritually and temporally. When they did not keep his commandments, they deteriorated both temporally and spiritually.

“The Book of Mormon contains principles which, if we would follow them, could bring us true security in a world wracked by wickedness, fear, and a host of economic problems. I believe our people want to achieve true security, but many of us are not following the course which leads to it.”

He said the whole plan rests on one basic premise—self-reliance. It’s properly supported by independence, work, family, and then the Church, to meet any gaps.

Every day it sounds like there’s a higher chance we’ll face a quarantine; how can we prepare to be self-reliant in that event?  And what can we DO if we’re at home for two weeks straight?  Self-reliance specialist Carolyn Nicolaysen recently published a good article answering these questions.

She suggests--

Read to yourself. Read a classic to the kids. Cook. Bake.* Try a new recipe. Do regular chores. Use Monopoly money for those chores, and set up a ‘store’ for the kids. Make a schedule. Write in your journal, or write letters. Catch up on projects around the house. Visit online with family and friends. Play games. Watch a movie, complete with popcorn and soda. 


Add to that list these things-- spend time outside in your yard if you have one, or anywhere else outdoors if your 6+ feet away from others. Make crafts. Plant a garden. Build a fairy garden out of whatever you find outdoors. Write a list of things you love about these people you're stuck with. (It may help you appreciate them...) Memorize poems. Put on a play in the living room. Watch the ants outside.  Do some nature journaling, complete with sketches.  Spend an hour on your back looking for shapes in the clouds.  These are wonderful learning experiences for children-- no school building needed!

​So, prepare.  If we don’t need it for the virus that had Italy announcing today they’ll quarantine 16 million of their citizens—then that’s wonderful.  You’ll be that much more prepared for whatever else life throws at you, and be able to help your family and neighbors.

*Butter and eggs store for a long time, months past the 'best by' date.  Just FYI.  And chocolate stores even longer.  Maybe a quarantine is a great time to perfect your chocolate chip cookies!
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The Four Seasons Trees kids' craft

11/12/2013

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Last week we had a lesson on the four seasons in the group of 5-and-unders that I teach in a homeschool co-op.

We started with four trees on a page; each tree gets something glued to it:

spring- popcorn
summer- tear bits of green construction paper, hole punch red paper for apples
fall- tiny brown leaves (I used honey locust) or torn brown paper bag
winter- drizzle school glue all over tree and across the base, the child uses a finger to spread it smooth; sprinkle with table salt.  

Their favorite was the winter tree! 

You  can even listen to Vivaldi's The Four Seasons while making these...

The full lesson is below, with activities and songs.  
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Print this full-page size. I printed them black and white because that's all my printer does...
Four Seasons lesson/activities
Materials needed:
music: Rain is Falling All Around, Popcorn Popping, Once There Was a Snowman, In the Leafy Treetops 
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons CD, CD player
Four Season discovery bottles
Autumn sensory box
4-tree papers (1 per child)
Popcorn kernels, popcorn popper, bowl with lid, spray bottle with water
Green construction paper
Red construction paper and a hole punchSmall colored leaves or yellow/orange paper
School glue
Salt
Wipes to clean hands
Crayons

Seasons song: Rain is Falling All Around (leaves are falling, snow is falling, sun is shining, wind is blowing)

Listen to The Four Seasons with eyes closed; what season does it sound like?  What do you see?  Dance to the music, pretending to be a something in that season: an unfurling leaf, a bird, wind blowing, snow falling...

Four Seasons bottles to pass around

Four seasons artwork: divide a page into 4 sections each has a tree outline?  Older ones can write seasons

Get the popcorn popper and kernels ready, sing "Popcorn Popping". Pop the popcorn.

While working on the summer trees, sing In the Leafy Treetops.

Winter:  use fingers to spread glue on the branches and below the tree; sprinkle on salt (or could paint with salt water on tree with a black construction paper background) Sing Once there Was a Snowman

Autumn sensory box for when done: a box full of things like a “Can You See?” book- things of different textures and warmth, things to find, things to count, crocheted apples,

Mist the leftover popcorn with the spray bottle, add salt.  Put the lid on and shake to coat.  


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Is including this lesson useful to anyone? Or should I stick with closer-to-homemaking posts?  
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How to get that weeding done!

5/29/2013

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Pull weeds while you’re talking on the phone- better yet, while you’re on hold.  Yesterday I managed to get the above bed completely weeded, plus another one (3x50) while waiting to speak to a real human on the phone.  

 Go for a walk or a run outside; when you’re, do your stretches next to something that needs weeded.  Hey, if you’ve gotta bend over anyway, you might as well make your hands useful!

Pinch little weeds out as soon as you can identify them.  This is a bit of a change from what I used to do, pulling them out as soon as they appeared.  Years ago a wise neighbor pointed out all the volunteer perennials in her flower beds… and changed forever how I weed.  Instead of indiscriminately pulling every seedling in the bed, now I only pull when I know what it is.  This isn’t as hard as it seems; 90% of the weeds in my yard are one of the same nine or ten plants.  Figure out what your common weeds are, and learn to identify them as small as possible.  If you don’t know what it is yet, let it grow until you do.  There are only a few plants that will spread horribly if you wait- and you’ll be able to identify those pretty quickly.  Generally speaking, most plants spread only once they’ve flowered and set seeds.  You’ll get a lot of pleasant surprises by weeding this way; right now close to 1/3 of the flowers in my yard are volunteers!  I’ve even had bushes and trees free this way.

Use weeding time as one-on-one time with a child. Let them tell you about their day, or their new project, or the book they've been reading, or whatever else.  I have great memories of fixing barb-wire fences on our farm because of this- it meant time to talk with my dad.

Spend time in your yard, in all parts of the yard.  You’ll better notice what needs done.  And you’ll enjoy it much more than from indoors!  Another neighbor told me to have a place to sit somewhere on each side of the house.  Sit and read, or watch the kids, watch the sky, watch the bugs, whatever brings you joy.  Gather a bunch of fresh flowers for a vase every couple days.  Enjoy those efforts!

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Pruning grape vines

4/6/2013

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photo credit: Dario Sabio
You plant a grapevine, keep it watered, and it gives you juicy, crisp, sweet, pop-in-your-mouth grapes... so isn't that all there is to it?

Sort of.  

You can leave it at that, but you'll have more grapes and less disease problems if you prune it right- which can mean removing up to 80% of the plant!

Pruning helps the vine get the light it needs, better airflow (which reduces disease), increases production, and gives you a better-looking plant.  See the video below to watch how to prune properly.

For those of you who like to see the science and details behind it, check out this very good slide show about it.  This one is targeted  at commercial grape growers, but includes a lot of practical information for the average gardener.

Or read this short pruning summary- less than 2 minutes to read-  including categories of grapes.  I discovered from this one that my Niagara grapevine, being less vigorous than many, should have 3 buds left on each spur (stub left on the main vine), rather than the 2 shown in the video below. 

If you'd like to learn about all kinds of pruning for fruiting vines, shrubs, and trees, try the USU Extension Pruning handbook.  I have a hard copy of this same handout from when I took the Master Gardener course in about 1999.  I pull the booklet out almost every year and learn more each time.  The more I've pruned, the more I understand all of it...
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Bees, not killing a houseplant, and garden tasks

2/16/2012

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Yeah, it's a motley assortment on today's post...
 
I get a monthly newsletter from the Utah State University Extension; I'm passing onto you a couple good resources they listed.  One is a short article, “So You Want to Raise Honeybees?”.  It lists some things you may or may not know, but need to, before deciding if getting a hive is a good idea for your situation.

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Another recent article is
"Care and Feeding of Indoor Plants"  

It's a real pity I didn't read this years ago;  during at least the first decade out on my own, I killed every houseplant that had the misfortune of being in my house.  There was only one exception; a ficus tree that came with my husband when we were first married.  I figured that was because he got it established; he'd had it for five years already before our wedding.  (Almost 18 years later, that same tree is in the corner of our dining room!)
And I can now keep a plant alive, proving I remember to water it.  (But not too often- apparently I drowned the first several plants.) 

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What can you do in the garden now?  As soon as any snow is off the ground, it's a good time to:

-prune most trees, particularly fruit trees- you're aiming to do this after the worst of the cold is over, but before leaves come out.  There is a previous post with some excellent videos on how to prune.
-prune shrubs that bloom in the summer, like roses.  They tend to be healthiest when pruned by about 1/3 each year, though you can cut them nearly to the ground if you have to.  That's a great way to get a wild bush back under control.  (This trick works with overgrown lilacs, too.)
-clean and sharpen your garden tools and mower blade
-trim and rake out any dead annuals left over in the garden from last year.
-add mulch to beds and around trees.  This will help moisture stay in the ground longer, getting plants off to a healthier start.
-plan your garden, if you haven't already.  Find a garden spot that will get at least 6-8 hours of sunlight a day.  Most stores have all their seed packets available by now, and remember you may already have seeds in your kitchen.  Don't start seedlings indoors, though, until about six weeks before they can go outdoors.
-plant peas, if you like.  They take about two months to produce pods, and are hardy enough to plant right now.  They'll do best in a sunny place that has some sort of shade around the roots; they stop producing if the plant gets too hot.
-transplant hardy herbs and bareroot raspberry and strawberry plants (if you're local and want any, email me!)

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Related posts:
How to Prune and Fertilize Fruit Trees, Shrubs, and Landscape Trees

Starting on Your Spring Garden

Start Thinking GARDEN (what seeds you may already have, how long they'll keep, when you can till, and more)

Gardening 101
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Extending Your Harvest

9/29/2011

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Ah, harvest time!

Our gardening days this season are numbered: according to the data at the KSL weather center, the average first frost of the fall in Riverton (they don't list South Jordan) is September 24, and the latest first frost was October 4th.  So enjoy that produce while it lasts! 

That first one is not necessarily a killing frost.  Even if it is, there are at least two simple ways to protect your plants: cover them with a sheet, blanket, or tablecloth; or turn your sprinklers on the garden overnight.  That will form a layer of ice that protects the plants from dropping below 32 degrees.  The plants won't die at the freezing point.  How do you know if it will freeze at your house?  The rule of thumb I use is: check the temperature outside at 10pm; it will drop about ten degrees more overnight. 

So-  if it's 42-44 degrees at 10pm, plan on protecting any plants you want to keep growing.


Things you can do in the garden right now, besides keeping up with the tomatoes and zucchini (!):

-trim asparagus plants to the ground

-put mulch around your rhubarb (it'll come up a little earlier that way)

 
and don't prune or fertilize bushes or trees right now; doing that now sends the plants a message to grow new branches.  Those new ones will not be tough before winter, leading to extra winter damage.

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The Volunteer (Weed) Food Project, Part 1

7/22/2011

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One of the goals last year was to learn what "volunteer" foods there were in my yard, and learn to use them.  Most people call these foods 'weeds', but that's just because they normally don't get used.  The definition of a weed is just a plant in the wrong place. 

One unexpected side effect of this project was that I do a little less weeding, and a little more harvesting!  Below are some of the 'free food' plants in my yard.

Should you want to try this at home, here are a few common-sense guidelines:

1) Eat it only after you're SURE what it is and if it's edible.  Look at different photos of the plant, or have someone who knows come check it with you. I prefer to identify it from two sources, to be sure.

2) Eat only the parts you know are edible.  Just because the leaves are edible doesn't mean the seeds are.  Remember the potato plant: the tubers (roots) are great, but the tops are poisonous.

3) Try a little bit first, wait a while to see if you react to it. Even if it's edible, you could be allergic to it. 

4) Notice where it's growing, think about if that's a problem.  Plants growing alongside busy roads will most likely have picked up extra chemicals, externally as well as internally. 

With all that out of the way, for additional information on the plants, try the database at Plants For A Future   and the identification handbook Common Plants of the Yard and Garden.  My new favorite book is Wild Edible Plants; From Dirt to Plate, where the author, John Kallas, not only tells you what is edible, but how  to prepare it.
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Lambsquarter, Wild Spinach
Chenopodium album L

EXCELLENT green, fresh or cooked.   I like it much better than, and have stopped planting, spinach.   It belongs to the same plant family as quinoa.  The leaves are a little thicker, like spinach, and have a slightly lemony/sour flavor.  They don't have the tiny crystalline structure that spinach has that leaves your teeth feeling gritty.  Most tender and flavorful when young.

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Prickly Lettuce
Lactuca serriola L

Both this and Sow Thistle are good if picked really young.  I've eaten them in salads.  Older ones are more bitter and -surprise!- prickly.

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Cleavers
Galium aparine

An interesting feature of this plant is the tiny, Velcro-like hooks all over it.  Because of these, the plant feels sticky.  You DON'T want to chew this up fresh; it'll stick in your throat.  It is supposed to be a very 'cleansing' plant; I make a sort of homemade liquid chlorophyll with it.  I grab enough to pack into a tight softball-sized wad, then put it in the blender with about three cups of water.  Blend until well pureed, then strain through cheesecloth or a doubled-up dishtowel.  An ounce or two a day is plenty, unless you want cleaned out in a hurry!

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Shepherds' Purse
Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.)

My daughters love to nibble on the heart-shaped seed pods.  Leaves are good raw or cooked, but definitely best before the plant starts to get tall.  That's all I've done with the plant, though Plants For A Future lists a lot more possibilities.

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Dandelion
Taraxacum officinale

Oh, you knew this one would show up on my list, right?  Is there a more common yard weed? 

I've NEVER thought they tasted good!  Apparently that's because I've been eating them plain; the old-timers who used these as an actual vegetable dish say to sauté them with onion and bacon for best results.  Leaves that have been well-watered and partly shaded seem to be the least bitter.



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Common Mallow, "Cheeseweed", "Cheeseplant"
Malva neglecta

 Scientific names can be hilarious!  Take this one, for instance, or Tribulus terrestris(puncture vine).  Anyway, I digress...

 My children like the “cheesies” (round, button-shaped seeds) so much that one son transplanted some INTO his garden.  All parts of this plant are edible- root, stems, leaves, and fruits (cheesies).   They are pleasantly flavored, and can be used like okra to thicken things.  The section on mallow, alone, in John Kallas' Wild Edible Plants is worth the price of the book!


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Redstem Filaree, Storksbill, Cranesbill
Erodium cicutarium

A couple of the common names refer to the beak-like shape of the seed pods.  This is a fairly flat-growing plant, unless there are plants close by to support it.  It grows in a rosette, radiating out from the center.  If you rub the plant, it smells a little like parsley.  It also tastes a little like parsley. :-)    I love it in salads.

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Getting Going on Gardening, Companion Planting

6/10/2011

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Catmint/catnip, to help your get more produce from your garden..... read on!

Photo credit: Jennifer Benner

What can I say?  --it’s been a strange year for gardening.  My garden has not been completely planted yet, and a lot of what was put in, didn’t make it.  We had enough rain and snow in May to hit half our precipitation average for the year.  Beans and corn were planted three weeks ago; the corn came up in crooked rows (I think they got washed out a little bit), and only two of the bean plants have made an appearance.  I may have to replant.  The volunteer tomatoes are finally up; they were this size a month earlier last year.  But they are up.  That’s good.   The plants that are doing well are the ones that were established before all the wet weather hit.  Onions and celery overwintered, and the volunteer lettuce came up in March or April.

If you’re still putting plants- or seeds- in the ground, consider companion planting.  The concept is that one plant can help another.  Garlic and onions tend to keep insect pests away from anything real close, and flowering plants attract pollinators.  Find something that the bees like, plant it close to your vegetables or fruits, and see your production go up. 

The plant in my yard that always has the most bees around it is catmint (nepeta).  I've been growing Walker's Low (which is named after a location, not how short the plant is- it's about 2 feet tall.) It  looks similar to lavender, blooms longer,  and can tolerate colder temperatures- down through USDA Zone 3.  See it at http://www.finegardening.com/plantguide/nepeta-x-faassenii-walkers-...

And here's a great find; a video series called "Home Grown/Home Made", produced by Fine Gardening magazine.  The description is "Welcome to Homegrown/Homemade, a video series from FineGardening.com and our sister site FineCooking.com. We're following a gardener (Danielle Sherry) and a cook (Sarah Breckenridge) as they plant, maintain, harvest, store, and prepare garden vegetables".  They include tomatoes, basil, squash, carrots, blueberries, potatoes, arugula, and peas.  Check it out, and see what you think!

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How to Prune and Fertilize Fruit Trees, shrubs, and landscape trees

3/30/2011

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Both the red-twig dogwood, left, and pine tree, right, will benefit from pruning. There's also a rosebush behind the pine tree that needs it.

Why should you prune and fertilize?

Fertilizing right makes a huge difference in how quickly your trees grow, and how healthy they are.
Pruning also helps their health; you cut out anything broken or diseased, remove branches that rub (these would open them to more disease and breakage), helps make for strong trees (by selecting and balancing good branches with strong angles), and opens the tree up to allow more light onto the leaves and fruit/flowers, making it more productive.  Some shrubs give more blossoms and better stem color (like the red-twig dogwood, above) when pruned. 

Most trees handle pruning best while dormant, so right now is perfect.  Fertilizing fruit trees and other fruit-bearing shrubs is best done before you see the flowers.  You can still do it after, but the resulting fruit will be softer and bruise more easily.  Now is a great time for this, too.

These great videos and links are from the USU Extension site.  Right now is a perfect time to prune.  So if you have been wondering how to really prune a fruit tree, this video's for you!


§  Step By Step Orchard Pruning (video) - techniques demonstrated by Matt Palmer

Here is info on pruning other things:

§  Pruning Landscape Trees

§  5 Minute Pruning Shrubs (video) 

How to Prune A Rose Bush (video)  

 

If you don't know how to choose a fertilizer, see  Selecting and Using Inorganic Fertilizers

To fertilize a fruit tree the simplest way, measure the width (diameter) of the trunk.  You need 2-4 ounces of actual nitrogen per inch of diameter. If you have a new tree, 1" diameter trunk, let's say you'll need 2 ounces.  If you have a bag of fertilizer that says 33-0-0, that means it is 33% nitrogen by weight.  To get 2 ounces of nitrogen, you'll need 6 ounces of this particular fertilizer .  If you have a bag of 10-10-10, you'll  need 20 ounces of that one.   (see the fertilizer link above.)  If you already know this and want to know more, there are more details here, Fertilizing Fruit Trees.

 

--Rhonda

http://www.theprovidenthomemaker.com

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Gardening 101, Flour Tortillas, Gluten-free Tortillas

3/25/2011

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Picture
Oregano volunteer between flagstones.  The garden started itself, hooray!  This baby plant needs moved since it will get tall.

Are you itching to grow a garden this year?  Whether you're planning big, or starting small, here's some great information.  When you buy seeds, keep any you don't use.  They will be good next year if you take good care of them- cool, dry, and  dark.  They will last at least a few years if you store them properly.   I usually get a good four or five years out of my packets.   After that, not as many of the seeds germinate.  Edibles look good in your flower beds!  Planting a few of those in existing beds is an easy way to get started.
For more information, click on this link, 
Gardening 101.
It includes:
​-
choosing a garden spot
-preparing your soil
-fertilizing
-choosing seeds
-saving seeds you grow
-when to plant them
-helpful links
-an area-specific freeze chart for SLC, Utah (USDA Zone 5)


See Gardening On A Dime for some cheap ways to help you garden.
To get a chart showing what you can do each month in your garden, see the USU Extension  month-by-month garden guide.

Happy gardening!
-Rhonda
______________________
Flour Tortillas- makes 12
3 c. all-purpose flour
2 tsp. baking powder
3/4 tsp. salt
about 1 cup warm water

The simple instructions:  mix dry ingredients, add water and knead til smooth.  Form 12 balls, let rest covered, flatten with hands, roll thin, and cook in a hot pan, flipping once.  Cover with a kitchen towel.

If you want more details:   Stir together flour, baking powder, and salt.  Gradually stir in the water, then mix with your hands until it holds together.  If it's very tough, add another teaspoon or two of water.  If too sticky, add a little flour.  Knead until smooth.  Divide into 12 balls.  Cover with plastic wrap or a damp cloth and let rest 10-15 minutes to let the gluten relax.  Flatten a ball with your hands until it's about 4 inches across, then roll with a rolling pin, working from center out, until very thin and about 9 inches across.  It helps to use very little flour on the counter and a little more on the top of the tortilla so the rolling pin doesn't stick.  Cook over med-hi heat in an ungreased skillet.   When top is covered in blisters, flip it over and cook until the other side bubbles up too.  The blisters should be golden brown. Each side should take a minute or less.  When each tortilla is done, put it in a plastic bag or on a plate; cover with a towel to keep them warm and moist. 

If you're saving them for the next day, they stay soft but not soggy in a plastic bag with a paper napkin inside to absorb the excess moisture.

To make tortilla chips, cut into triangles and deep fry, or spray with Pam and bake at 375 degrees for about 7-10 minutes, until crisp.

Make tortilla bowls by either baking or frying, too.  Baking- drape over an upside-down ovensafe bowl, spray or brush lightly with oil, bake until golden.  Frying- make a few holes around the bottom of an empty 10-oz soup can, heat oil 2" deep to 375 degrees, put a tortilla on the hot oil, and immediately press down on it with the soup can.   Cook about 30 seconds or until crisp.  Lift out, draining off extra oil.  Set on paper towels.  

Simple Gluten-Free Tortillas-makes 8
2 cups oat flour (I use whole oat grouts, and grind them into flour with my wheat mill. You can also use rolled oats and grind them in a blender)
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2-3/4 cup warm water (using warm or hot water allows the oats to act 'glutinous', no xantham gum needed.)

Mix dry ingredients. Add water slowly and mix evenly with a fork til moistened. Gather dough into a ball, adding more water if needed. For pliable tortillas, I've found it's important for the balls to be moist(not sticky once kneaded, though). Knead well. Split into 8 sections, then form balls with each section. Cover for 10 min. You may want to cover with moist towel to keep them moist.

Shape into tortillas 7 - 8 inches diameter. Cook on hot griddle or medium-high heat frying pan(heat these first), for 1 -2 min per side. Stack on plate and cover with a dish towel. Serve warm. These will toughen quickly when reheated.

The basic recipe can also be rolled out and baked for crackers.  For more details on that, go to 
http://wheatdairyeggnutfree.blogspot.com/search/label/Tortillas%20and%20Crackers 


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Making Honeybutter and White Honey; Starting on your spring garden

3/17/2011

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Picture
Little purple pansies...

Did you know that both the flowers and leaves are edible? They're nice in a salad.

Hey, it’s that time again- the snow has melted, the soil is drying, and some things can be planted!  Depending on where in the yard your garden is, it may be dry enough to till, at least as soon as yesterday's rain dries up.  A way to tell is- walk on it or stick a shovel in it.  If big chunks stick to your shoe or shovel, it’s not ready.  If you tilled now you’d compact the soil and have big hard lumps all over.  My garden area used to be a sandbox, so it has good drainage-- yes, I had to add a bunch of good stuff to it!--, and it was absolutely beautiful tilling condition this week, at least until it rained.   Early season crops that can be planted outdoors now include potatoes, peas, lettuce, spinach, broccoli, cabbage, kale, radishes, onions, asparagus, and rhubarb.  Most of the nurseries, both big-box and local- now have seed potatoes, asparagus, rhubarb, onion sets, and bare-root  berries (strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries) and fruit trees waiting for you.     For a GREAT information sheet you can print out, listing when to plant different seeds here on the Wasatch Front (USDA Zone 5), go to http://extension.usu.edu/files/publications/publication/Horticulture_Garden_2009-01pr.pdf   If you live elsewhere, look up your state's extension office- they'll likely have a list for your area.  For a list of what you can plant without having to go buy seeds, see my blog post, More Seeds From Your Kitchentheprovidenthomemaker.com/my-blog/more-of-the-cookbook-more-seeds-from-your-kitchen.

Next week I’ll post “Gardening 101”, info on finding a good spot for your garden, how to prepare the soil, and when to plant what.

After the recipes is a condensed version of an essay, "The Proper Role of Government", that President Benson wrote while an apostle.  It is classic, timely, and every American, LDS or not, would be better off reading it.  Please look it over.  I know the principles in it are true.

-Rhonda
__________________________________​

Honey Butter (simplest version)
8 oz. (2 sticks) butter, softened
8 oz. (3/4 c.) honey, room temperature
 
A tiny bit of salt and vanilla is good, too.  Stir or whip until all smooth. Whipping it will give you a fluffier texture. Refrigerate.
 
This kind sometimes separates.  Just stir it again to recombine.  Or to keep it from separating, add either ½ c. powdered sugar or one egg yolk.  The Lion House recipe calls for the egg yolk.  It makes it silky-smooth, too.  Make sure to use an egg with no cracks, then wash and dry it well before using in the recipe.  Then using it raw will be safe.  
 
Canadian White Honey 
3 lbs (1 qt.)  honey   warmed just till softened
2 (7-oz.) jars  marshmallow cream   
1   cube   softened butter or margarine   
 Combine all and whip until blended. Makes about 2 quarts. 
 
 To make true creamed honey, (which is EASY, just takes time for it to sit) see this video.


 
__________________________________
 
 
The Proper Role of Government
by The Honorable Ezra Taft Benson (excerpts)
Former Secretary of Agriculture to President Eisenhower
Published in 1968

See full text here. 
 

THE MOST IMPORTANT FUNCTION OF GOVERNMENT  It is generally agreed that the most important single function of government is to secure the rights and freedoms of individual citizens. But, what are those rights? And what is their source? Until these questions are answered there is little likelihood that we can correctly determine how government can best secure them. Thomas Paine, back in the days of the American Revolution, explained that:
"Rights are not gifts from one man to another, nor from one class of men to another… It is impossible to discover any origin of rights otherwise than in the origin of man." (P.P.N.S., p. 134)
Starting at the foundation of the pyramid, let us first consider the origin of those freedoms we have come to know are human rights. There are only two possible sources. Rights are either God-given as part of the Divine Plan, or they are granted by government as part of the political plan. Reason, necessity, tradition and religious convictions all lead me to accept the divine origin of these rights. If we accept the premise that human rights are granted by government, then we must be willing to accept the corollary that they can be denied by government. I, for one, shall never accept that premise. As the French political economist, Frederick Bastiat, phrased it so succinctly, "Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place." (The Law, p.6)

A  FORMULA FOR PROSPERITY

1. Economic security for all is impossible without widespread abundance.

2. Abundance is impossible without industrious and efficient production.

3. Such production is impossible without energetic, willing and eager labor.

4. This is not possible without incentive.

5. Of all forms of incentive – the freedom to attain a reward for one’s labors is the most sustaining for most people. Sometimes called THE PROFIT MOTIVE, it is simply the right to plan and to earn and to enjoy the fruits of your labor.

6. This profit motive DIMINISHES as government controls, regulations and taxes INCREASE to deny the fruits of success to those who produce.

7. Therefore, any attempt THROUGH GOVERNMENTAL INTERVENTION to redistribute the material rewards of labor can only result in the eventual destruction of the productive base of society, without which real abundance and security for more than the ruling elite is quite impossible.

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE NEEDY?  On the surface this may sound heartless and insensitive to the needs of those less fortunate individuals who are found in any society, no matter how affluent. "What about the lame, the sick and the destitute? Is an often-voice question. Most other countries in the world have attempted to use the power of government to meet this need. Yet, in every case, the improvement has been marginal at best and has resulted in the long run creating more misery, more poverty, and certainly less freedom than when government first stepped in.

THE BETTER WAY  By comparison, America traditionally has followed Jefferson’s advice of relying on individual action and charity. The result is that the United States has fewer cases of genuine hardship per capita than any other country in the entire world or throughout all history. Even during the depression of the 1930’s, Americans ate and lived better than most people in other countries do today.

FIFTEEN PRINCIPLES WHICH MAKE FOR GOOD AND PROPER GOVERNMENT

(1) I believe that no people can maintain freedom unless their political institutions are founded upon faith in God and belief in the existence of moral law.

(2) I believe that God has endowed men with certain unalienable rights as set forth in the Declaration of Independence and that no legislature and no majority, however great, may morally limit or destroy these; that the sole function of government is to protect life, liberty, and property and anything more than this is usurpation and oppression.

(3) I believe that the Constitution of the United States was prepared and adopted by men acting under inspiration from Almighty God; that it is a solemn compact between the peoples of the States of this nation which all officers of government are under duty to obey; that the eternal moral laws expressed therein must be adhered to or individual liberty will perish.

(4) I believe it a violation of the Constitution for government to deprive the individual of either life, liberty, or property except for these purposes:
(a) Punish crime and provide for the administration of justice;
(b) Protect the right and control of private property;
(c) Wage defensive war and provide for the nation’s defense;
(d) Compel each one who enjoys the protection of government to bear his fair share of the burden of performing the above functions.

(5) I hold that the Constitution denies government the power to take from the individual either his life, liberty, or property except in accordance with moral law; that the same moral law which governs the actions of men when acting alone is also applicable when they act in concert with others; that no citizen or group of citizens has any right to direct their agent, the government to perform any act which would be evil or offensive to the conscience if that citizen were performing the act himself outside the framework of government.

(6) I am hereby resolved that under no circumstances shall the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights be infringed. In particular I am opposed to any attempt on the part of the Federal Government to deny the people their right to bear arms, to worship and pray when and where they choose, or to own and control private property.

(7) I consider ourselves at war with international Communism which is committed to the destruction of our government, our right of property, and our freedom; that it is treason as defined by the Constitution to give aid and comfort to this implacable enemy.

(8) I am unalterably opposed to Socialism, either in whole or in part, and regard it as an unconstitutional usurpation of power and a denial of the right of private property for government to own or operate the means of producing and distributing goods and services in competition with private enterprise, or to regiment owners in the legitimate use of private property.

(9) I maintain that every person who enjoys the protection of his life, liberty, and property should bear his fair share of the cost of government in providing that protection; that the elementary principles of justice set forth in the Constitution demand that all taxes imposed be uniform and that each person’s property or income be taxed at the same rate.

For the other principles see
here.
Picture
Ezra Taft Benson

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Start thinking GARDEN!

3/10/2011

1 Comment

 
Picture
courtesy photos8.com

 It felt like spring today!  I love the warmth of the sunshine, the smell of the moist dirt, the sight of daffodils and tulips popping out of the earth, the plump firmness of leaf buds swelling.  If you’re thinking about gardening this year, the stores (and catalogs!) have the seeds and bareroot plants you may want.  For instance, this week’s CAL-Ranch ad features packets of seeds 10/$1.  (No, that wasn’t a typo.)  They also have onion sets, a bag of 100, for $1.99.  (Onion sets are baby onions, you plant them to harvest onion bulbs this year.  You could plant onion seed, but it’d likely be two years before bulb harvest.)  Smith’s Marketplace had bareroot raspberries and blackberries a month ago, and have their roses and fruit trees now.  I assume everyone else does, too.

 When you buy seeds, keep any you don't use.  They will be good next year if you take good care of them- keep them cool. dry ,and  dark.  They will last at least a few years if you store them properly.   I usually get a good four or five years out of my packets.   After that, not as many of the seeds germinate.  You can use seeds from your pantry, too: the dry beans you buy will grow in your garden.   Other seeds you may have in your kitchen are flax, mustard seed, celery seed (this one is NOT celery plant, you grow this for the celery-flavored seeds), coriander seeds (the plant is cilantro, the seeds are harvested as ‘coriander’), fennel seeds, aniseed, raw unsalted sunflower seeds, popcorn, raw peanuts, other raw nuts (if you want a tree!)….  If you have any onions, potatoes, or garlic that are starting to sprout, plant them instead of throwing them away.

Edibles look good in your flower beds!  Planting a few of those in existing beds is an easy way to get started. Leave a few carrots or parsnips in the ground for year #2, or plant carrots from the grocery store. They'll send up beautiful, lacy white flowers in the summer. (I love them in flower arrangements.) And then the next year, you'll have volunteer carrots 'naturalized' into your flower bed! Onions and carrots have some of my favorite flowers. 

Fresh herbs make nice companions in a flower bed, too. The foliage is great, and most have pretty flowers as well. My 'kitchen garden' is just off the front porch; hardly anybody even notices that it's food. It's only 6x22 but in the bed are LOTS of edibles. To get the whole mixed picture, here's what's in it: lots of spring bulbs (NOT edible), rock cress/aubrietta, pansies (edible leaves and flowers) a couple strawberry plants, a young crabapple tree, a really gorgeous yellow rose bush, garlic chives (white 'firework' flowers), chives (purple ball-shaped flowers), a trailing mini red rose, shasta daisies, lavender, catmint, oregano, parsley, lemon thyme, regular thyme, marjoram, purple-leaf sage, green-leaf sage, a few annuals, one ornamental grass (Miscanthus), sedum and aster for fall color. Even better, I can use the herbs in the dead of winter- I just plunge my hand down in the right place through the snow, and come up with a handful of parsley or thyme for the soup pot. Yummy.

Sunchokes (Jerusalem Artichokes) are beautiful, too; they look like small sunflowers. They're pretty pricy to mail-order the roots, though. I just bought a 1-lb bag from the grocery store, though, for $3. Much better. I also got my horseradish start from the grocery store, and I'm thinking of growing some ginger that way
.
 


There’s quite a bit of gardening, or ’pre-gardening’, that can be done right now.  For instance:

 -If you have fruit trees, now is the time to prune and fertilize them. 

-If you’re up for a bigger challenge, you can graft fruit trees right now. 

-You can till when your garden soil doesn’t stick to your shoes.  (Another test is to make a ball of it; if it compacts densely, it’s too wet.)  You COULD till it before that, but your garden will end up compacted and clumpy.  Your plants would not appreciate it.

 
There is a month-by-month gardening guide on our local Glover Nursery’s website.  Here’s a piece of it:

MARCH

• Early March is a great time to plan your garden layout.

• Make corrections and amendments to your garden if the soil has dried out enough.

• Start eggplant, peppers and tomatoes INDOORS. (6-8 weeks before setting plants out)

• Plant bare root raspberries and strawberries.

• Plant kohlrabi, lettuce, parsnip, potatoes, rhubarb asparagus, cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, parsley, swiss chard, spinach, turnips,

onion, peas from mid-March until the first part of May.

• Plant carrots, beets and endive from mid-March until mid-June.

• Plant radishes from mid-March until September.

• Use floating row cover to help warm the soil for faster plant growth.

For info on how to start a garden, or improve the one you have, see Gardening 101  The how-to-start–it is the first page.  The other pages have the chart for last average frost dates in Utah, links to good gardening websites, ideas for gardening cheaply, etc.  Have fun!

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How to eat well and still spend less; Quick & Cheap Meals

2/3/2011

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Picture
photo courtesy of photos8.com

Hi everyone,

Does it always seem like too much of your budget goes to food?  Do you wonder what amount of money is 'normal'?  If so, go to the Official USDA Food Plans pdf.

This page will give you the 2010 averages, based on nutritionally balanced diets cooked at home.  Now that you see how frugal you really are, here are some tips to help even more; pick just one or two to try so it's not overwhelming. Then all that's left is deciding how that new-found money is going to better use!

Ways to eat well on less money:

*Buy on sale and get extras so you never pay full price.

*Buy the fresh fruits/veggies that are $1/lb or less.

*Find ways to throw away less- only serve up what you will eat, save wilted veggies in the freezer for soup later, re-purpose leftovers.

*Use meat mostly as a flavoring (mixed in with other ingredients), not as its own dish.

*Buy meats that you can get for $2/lb or less, or whatever is bargain-price for your area.

*When you buy meat, get a bunch on sale, then cook it all at once.  Package and freeze most of it for future, faster, meals.

*Buy flour, sugar in bulk, make more things from scratch.

*Keep your kitchen clean so you like being there!  (You don't need to do it all yourself!  Doing dishes 'all the time' causes depression for me- once I added that to my kids' job charts, I felt much better!)

*Grow a garden where you used to have some lawn- you get the same water bill, more food.  Packets of seeds can last 4-5 years if kept cool and dark.   Or split packets with a friend.  

*Make your own bread instead of buying it.

How much can you save on bread?  Cost varies by recipe, but mine comes out to less than $ .50 per loaf ($. 42), including the electricity for baking, for top-quality whole-wheat bread.  (Well, frankly, the quality varies by week....)   If you eat two loaves a week, that saves you $200/year when compared to $2.50/loaf of bread.   We go through 6 loaves a week, so we’re saving over $600 per year.  Yes, a stand mixer and grain mill  definitely pay for themselves!  For the recipe I use, see Basic Bread on my website.
 
Yesterday the Teachers' Quorum (14-15 yr. old boys) came to my house for their weekly activity.  They've been learning about nutrition and safe food handling, so they all pitched in and cooked a meal.    Their handout included budget-friendly, adaptable, and fairly fast recipes; the kind that would be especially valuable when in college or on missions.  For these recipes, click on Quick & Cheap Meals.  The boys did great with them, I think you'll like them, too.   

Happy cooking and budgeting!
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What to do now in the garden; fruit leather

11/5/2010

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Picture
from photos8.com

(Originally 7/15/10)

JULY in the garden:
• Plant beets and turnips for fall harvest.
• Thin out plants and fertilize.
• Fertilize potatoes with nitrogen.
• Watch watering on tomatoes! Even deep watering is better than frequent shallow watering to avoid blossom end rot.
• Irrigate at ground level rather than over head spray to avoid diseases.
• Keep looking for any signs of pests. Use insecticides only as necessary.
• Stake tomatoes if you haven’t already.
• Remove suckers and pinch back tomatoes as necessary.

This was from Glover Nursery’s website; see it for a month-by-month checklist. 

Remember that you can also plant shorter-season crops; the seed envelope will tell you how many days until harvest for that variety.  The official information for our area (data from Riverton) is that the earliest-ever fall freeze was Sept. 13, average date is Sept. 24, and latest was Oct. 4.  So worst-case scenario is 58 frost-free days remaining, best-case is 80 days, plus whatever length you can extend your growing season by covering your garden with a sheet or blanket for those first frosts.  

 
Now, for that fruit that some of you have coming out your ears-  our favorite way to eat it is ‘Fruit Leather’. 

Here are two samples of how much to use:

Apricot leather:
1 c. apricot puree (1 ½ c. pitted apricots)
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
Around 3 Tbsp.* sugar or honey

*2023 update- over the last several years I've reduced the sugar and lemon in this.  1 Tbsp. sugar/honey for every 1 Tbsp. lemon juice is plenty. I've even dropped it to 1 Tbsp. each per quart of puree, and it tastes delicious. It does sometimes brown more though.


Cherry leather:
1 c. cherry puree (1 ½ c. pitted cherries- or use the food mill for this one)
1 Tbsp. lemon juice

Dry until there are no more sticky spots, roll up and store in an airtight jar.  We’re still eating leather made two summers ago, it’s holding up fine.

 The best leather is made with overripe fruit, too, which is helpful!  Basically, you puree or mash fruit, or send it through a food mill, sweeten it to taste, then dry it.  You can sweeten it with concentrated fruit juice, or with sugar, or honey.  We like it best with sugar because that way the fruit leather crystallizes over time, rather than getting tougher.  You can also add a little lemon juice to keep the leather from turning brown as much.

Whatever you’re going to dry it on/in needs sprayed with Pam or oiled first.  Trust me, you don’t want to forget that step.   Leather is no fun to chip off of trays!  Pour about a ¼” layer, and put it someplace to dry.  It’ll be done in about 24 hours in a dehydrator.  You can also dry it on cookie sheets in your oven (lowest setting, door slightly ajar for air circulation), or in a car parked outside on a hot day. 

A good article on drying is at http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles/shaffer58.html



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Fall Gardening checklist; Creamy Blender Frosting- Chocolate and more!

11/4/2010

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Picture
Chocolate Blender Frosting on pumpkin cake.

Picture
Dump these in the blender, mix on high...

Picture
...until it looks like this.  Yum!

Hi everyone,  

Most of the garden is done right now, since the frost a couple weeks ago.  Here’s a section from one ‘Fall Gardening checklist’ online:  
“After you harvest, it's time to clean up your garden. Cut back perennials to a few inches above the ground -- they'll grow back next year -- and pull out annual and vegetable plants. Put healthy plants on the compost pile, said Toby Day, associate horticulture specialist at Montana State University Extension. "But if the plant material is diseased, throw it away instead of composting it. Most compost piles don't get hot enough to kill disease or insects." Also, throw away weeds so they don't go to seed in your compost.

Day recommended a few related cleanup jobs before the temperature drops: Remove soil from pots and bring them indoors so they won't freeze and crack. Bring in liquid fertilizers and other substances that shouldn't freeze. Blow out your irrigation lines. And clean, sharpen and oil garden implements so they don't rust.   Enrich your soil before you head indoors for the winter. Larry Sagers recommended shredding everything from corn stalks to woody branches and tilling the material into the ground. If you don't have a shredder, he suggested renting one for the day. "Compost costs around $30 to $50 per yard to buy," he said. "My take is I'll shred my own."

Read more:
http://www.ehow.com/feature_7293587_fall-gardening-checklist.html  
    

* * * * * *
    
This is a fabulously smooth frosting.  The consistency is closer to store-bought frosting than any other homemade I've found, but the flavor is WORLDS above the stuff from a can.  For a wonderful, rich hot fudge sauce, see below, There are pictures on my blog of how to make this, and lots of variations- milk chocolate, butterscotch, caramel, peanut-butter chocolate, 'Nutella' flavor- click on this link:   Creamy Blender Frosting
 

Creamy Chocolate Blender Frosting
(original, very dark version)

 6 blocks (6 oz.) unsweetened chocolate                   
1 ½ c. granulated sugar

1 c. evaporated milk, cream, or coconut cream         
6 Tbsp. butter (not margarine)

1 tsp. vanilla                                                                         
Pinch of salt, optional

Chop chocolate, then put everything into a blender.  Blend on low until better chopped, then scrape down sides with a spatula. Blend on high until it becomes dark and smooth.  This may take about ten minutes, or only two minutes in a Vitamix or similar.   Makes 3 cups.

  For different flavors, try using a different extract than vanilla- maple, orange, rum, mint.  You could also add a teaspoon of frozen concentrated orange juice, a couple Tbsp. of maraschino cherry juice in place of the same amount evaporated milk (along with maybe a 1/2 tsp. almond extract).  Or 1/2 tsp. cinnamon for a nice winter flavor.  You can reduce chocolate to 5 blocks, for slightly less intensity, and have it still work.

  If you have any extra frosting, use it as a base for hot chocolate: 2-3 Tbsp. per cup of milk, use a blender to mix.  (Personally, I use up my extra by putting it on a spoon...)    

Hot Fudge Sauce: Use the same ingredients, except reduce butter to 2 Tbsp.  Instead of mixing in a blender, bring to a boil in a small saucepan; let cook for 2 minutes, until sugar is dissolved.
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    I'm a disciple of Christ, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a family-defending, homemaking, and homeschooling mom of eight children, two of whom sometimes can't have milk or wheat. Growing up on a farm in a high mountain valley, my parents taught me to 'make do', work hard, smile, and help others.  I love cooking, learning, growing food and flowers, picking tomatoes, and making gingerbread houses --which CAN be made allergy-friendly-- with my children.  I hope you find something to help you on my site!

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