- Author: L. Watts
What a meeting! You missed it!
Market! Link! Social Media! Pictures! SB County expectations! Gray-scale flyers! Photo album! Out-reach! Class opportunities! Great ideas, good food (of course we had good food!)
These are just a few of the things we brain-stormed in the Marketing Brainstorming meeting we had this past Saturday. There was a good turn-out at Susan Israel's very nice house—thank you Susan for hosting.
Check out some pics:
Complete with Post-its! You cannot see all the ideas flying around here, but look at the number of post-its on the windo in the back and you will get an idea of the number. And there were even more by the end of the meeting.
This picture did not include one of Suzy's dogs that climbed up on the back of the couch and and licked Lane's head to get his attention!--all very sweet dogs.
There were a lot of very good Ideas to help publicize the MFP program. Many things to think about and start to take action on.
For starters, one easy Idea for you all: If you post anything, anywhere on the web as a response to a food/canning article, item, blog, picture or such, please include in your signature “Master Food Preserver of San Bernardino County.” If you have a webpage of any sort, please link to us ! This will help us to come up in results for searches about canning/food preservation. If you can make this a link to our Home page or blog or Facebook page it would be even better. If you need help with this just e-mail me!
COMING UP: Brining, smoking a bird for T-Day, from Darrell Fluman. It's a good one so don't miss it.
Now I leave you with the recipe for the delicious Meyer Lemon Polenta cake that Suzy served at our meeting. Not a preservation recipe, but it uses optional candied lemon slices and we TALKED about canning stuff!!!
Meyer Lemon Almond Cake
http://www.sfgate.com/recipes/article/Meyer-Lemon-Almond-Cake-6036459.php
Serves 8-10
This cake pairs the bright flavor of Meyer lemons with a moist, buttery crumb made of almond flour. This is naturally gluten-free (as long as you use gluten-free flour blend to coat the pan). It can be gussied up with a topping of candied lemons, or served without.
Tips From Suzy: The recipe is hard to follow. I've learned to do some prep first: A small bowl of just the almond flour, a small bowl of the lemon zest/lemon juice/vanilla, and a small bowl of polenta (just cornmeal--don't tell anybody)/baking powder/salt/cardamom powder. They get mixed in with the butter/sugar/egg mixture in that order. And any lemons will do.
The cake:
8 ounces (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
1 to 2 teaspoons all-purpose flour or gluten-free flour blend
1 cup sugar
2 cups almond flour
3 large eggs
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
¼ cup Meyer lemon juice (about 1 large lemon)
2 tablespoons finely grated Meyer lemon zest (about 2 large lemons)
½ cup medium-grind polenta (cornmeal!)
1 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
¼ teaspoon ground cardamom
Candied lemons (optional):
1½ cups sugar
2/3 cup water
3 to 4 medium Meyer lemons (about 10 to 14 ounces), sliced 1/8-inch thick, seeds removed
For the cake: Preheat the oven to 325 degrees, and place a rack in the middle.
Place the butter in a large mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment; set aside. Use the butter wrappers to grease the inside of a 9-inch springform pan and sprinkle with the flour, rotating to coat the bottom and sides of the pan; discard excess flour. Cut a circle of parchment paper to fit the bottom, place inside the pan and set aside.
Add the sugar to the butter; mix at medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 4 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl once or twice. Add the almond flour and mix slowly to combine.
Add the eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly to combine, scraping down the sides of the bowl, before adding the next. The batter should have a light, mousse-like texture.
Remove the bowl from the mixer. Using a large spoon or rubber spatula, gently fold in the vanilla, lemon juice and zest. Add the polenta, baking powder, salt and cardamom, continuing to fold carefully.
Spoon the batter into the prepared pan and smooth out to the edges. Set the cake pan on a rimmed baking sheet and bake 45-50 minutes, until the top is golden brown and the center is set.
Remove the cake from the oven and let sit 10 minutes. Run a butter knife around the edge of the cake to loosen, then remove the sides of the pan. Leave the cake on the bottom of the springform pan, place on a rack and let cool. The cake can be made a day ahead; loosely wrap or place in a cake carrier and store at room temperature.
For the candied lemons: Combine the sugar and water in a shallow saucepan and heat over medium-high until the sugar dissolves and the mixture comes to a strong simmer. Working in batches, add the lemon slices and continue to simmer, turning the slices occasionally, until the peels turn translucent, about 6-7 minutes, depending on the thickness of the slices. Remove from heat and let cool. The candied lemons can be made a day or two ahead; refrigerate in the syrup.
To finish the cake: Remove the candied lemon slices from the syrup and blot with paper towels. Overlap the slices atop the cake.
Note: Reserve the remaining syrup to mix with mineral water or club soda for a light spritzer, or to add to a citrus-based cocktail that calls for simple syrup. Or, use it to sweeten lemonade.
- Author: L. Watts
PICKLES! NATIONAL PICKLE DAY!
#NationalPickleDay
Guess what's coming up? National Pickle Day on November 14. You all know what a pickle is, right? Those green things you put on burgers, eat with grilled burgers, get wedges of on your deli-plates? Typically refereeing to cucumber pickles in the US of A?
Pickles can be sweet, sour, salty, dill, hot, garlic, fruity, mustardy, spicy or any combination there-of. They can come in chips (crosswise slices), sandwich slices (lengthwise slices), halve, wedges, quarters, whole (small, medium, large or gigantor), baby, chopped (relish, both sweet and sour). Generally we think of cucumbers as pickles, but just about any other fruit or vegetable can be made into pickles.
There are pineapple, peach and fig pickles. Don't forget green bean, bell pepper, okra and asparagus pickles. Meat can be pickled (pickled pig's feet anyone?). Cabbage (and other things are pickled into delicious sauerkraut, kimchi and hot sauces.
Pickled plums are snacked on in Japan. Pickled turnips are munched in the Mid-east. Chile pickle is ingested in India. Pickled winter vegetables are chewed in China. Garden vegetable pickles (giardiniera) in-taken in Italy. (please allow me my alliteration!)
Let's all celebrate the wonderful world of pickles! It is going to be National Pickle Day November 14—get a jar of pickles and pucker-up with someone you love.
http://nationaldaycalendar.com/national-pickle-day-november-14/
Make some of these and store in the refrigerator so you will have PICKLES on hand for National Pickle Day:
Garlic Dill Pickles (For the Refrigerator)
(about two one-quart jars)
Adapted from Marissa Mcclellan, Tasting Table: http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/08/garlic-dill-pickles.html
2 quart kirby cucumbers (approximately 3 pounds)
1 1/2 cups apple cider vinegar
1 1/2 cups filtered water
2 tablespoons pickling salt
8 garlic cloves, peeled
4 teaspoons dill seed
2 teaspoons black peppercorns
1 teaspoon red chili flakes
Wash jars thoroughly in warm, soapy water. Rinse well. Wash lids of jars, rinse well. Since these pickles are NOT processed and MUST be stored in the refrigerator, you may use any jars you wish as long as you have their lids to fit.
Wash and dry kirby (pickling) cucumbers. Remove both ends. Cut into chips, spears or leave whole, depending on your preference.
Combine vinegar, water and salt in sauce pan and bring to a boil briefly. Turn off heat.
Divide garlic cloves, dill seed, black peppercorns and red chili flakes between jars. Pack cucumbers into jars as tightly as you can without crushing them.
Pour the brine into the jars, covering the cucumbers and leaving 1/4 inch headspace (that's the amount of space between the surface of the brine and the rim of the jar).
Remove any air bubbles from jars by gently tapping them. You can also use a wooden chopstick or plastic utensil to help remove stubborn bubbles.
Wipe rims of the jars and put the lids on; do not screw down too tightly.
Let the jars cool before putting them into the refrigerator. Do note that your jars may seal during the cooling process—they still must be stored in the refrigerator.
Good after at least a day or two of marinating in the refrigerator. Will be better with a week or two of refrigerated storage—if you can wait.
These will disappear quickly! Enjoy.
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- Author: L. Watts
Wanted, Wanted: People interested in learning about Home Food Preservation. For a very reasonable fee and investment of your time as a volunteer, you can learn all about preserving food at home.
You will learn about: food safety, high-acid canning (fruits, jams and jellies, pickles, and the like), low acid canning (meats, beans, vegetables, etc.), fermentation (kimchi, brined pickles, sauerkraut. . . ), freezing (you know about that!), and dehydration (fruit, vegetables, leathers, jerky) among other things.
This is a very interesting course, and with its information you can learn to preserve all sorts of things.
I hope to see you there!
- Author: L. Watts
Join us for the Gifts from the Kitchen class. It is this coming Thursday. Sign up now, put it on your schedule. You will be informed, entertained and will get a bag of swag to take home: a sample of everything demonstrated. See you there!
- Author: L. Watts
AKA: Apri-NOT Butter
In this missive I shall relate to you some depressing things:
1. I purchased apricots at a store. (YIKES!)
2. Next day, I cut them up, added sugar and lemon juice and cooked it up for a jam, er, butter.
3. The result thickened/jelled but tastes like sweet-sour mystery fruit “stuff”. No 'cot flavor at all.
4. I have the equivalent of about a quart and a half mystery-fruit-apricot-jam-wannabe-butter-stuff in a tub in my refrigerator.
The above is truly a huge failure: but by my failures shall I (and) you learn.
Take Number 1:
Anyone knows that you cannot buy decent apricots in a store; where I live it is impossible. I seriously doubt that anyone can buy a decent, good apricot in any store anywhere. Good apricots canbe gotten at road side stands or farmer's markets, but not in a brick-and-mortar store, especially if they have them shipped in. And if YOU can get good apricots in a store where you live, you are truly blessed by the Apricot Deity OR you do NOT know what a truly ripe apricot tastes like. Around here, the difference between store-bought and home-grown is just like the pictures on this page-please note!
In my area, good apricots are ONLY found on a tree. If you don't have your own tree, the best tree is usually one that is in a backyard, planted too close to a wall, and has fruit-laden branches are hanging over that wall. This means you need to be bold and run and steal that low-hanging fruit (because you KNOW it is NOT “low hanging fruit”, if you get my drift), then run to your car laughing crazily and zip off in a hurry because you are feeling so guilty about stealing. Or you knock on a door to ask permission to pick, but, of course, no one ever answers and so you are still forced to steal those fantastic apricots. But wait, you are going to drop off a jar of jam to give those not at home a thank-you for your steal, so it is not that bad, right?
Well, any way, I purchased apricots at a store. And they were truly a worst-case example of the phrase “low hanging fruit” I have ever had the misfortune to experience. Some were big, some smaller. Pretty color, some dark, some not so dark. No. Aroma. What. So. Ever. But like a fool, I said to myself, I'll give them a try; it was a true case of hope springs ever-eternal in the breast of an apricot lover.
Number 2:
I cut them up, sugared them on, juiced them up and attempted to cook them down. Too much in one pan—a double batch. Undistinguished apricot flavor equals mystery fruit.
Number 3:
“Stuff” says it all. Very depressing.
Number 4:
It now resides in my fridge. Should I process and can it? If I do, would I even consider giving it out for gifts—nope, I would be embarrassed to give it for a gift unless I labeled it “Mystery Fruit” jam. And if I did can it up, what would I use it for? Maybe I will can some up and use it for some barbecue glaze or base for a grilling sauce.
If you want to do the following recipe, “For the love of God, Montresor!” make sure you do it with wonderful apricots from someone's back yard!
So below is the recipe I used. It is from So Easy To Preserve. I tried, but it turned into a soft mystery-fruit jam. Need I mention to NOT double the recipe?
I wish you the absolutely best of luck. Maybe you will get mine!
Apricot Jam (if it fails, you call it butter, or syrup, or sundae topping or . . . and I didn't peel the apricots!)
From "So Easy To Preserve", Cooperative Extension Service, University of Georgia, Third Edition.
Makes about 10 half-pint jars.
2 quarts crushed, peeled apricots
6 cups sugar
1/4 cup lemon juice
Sterilize canning jars. Combine all ingredients; slowly bring to boiling, stirring occaisionally until sugar dissolves. Cook rapidly until thick, about 25 mintues. As mixture thickens, stir frequently to prevent sticking. Pour hot jam into hot jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Wipe jar rims and adjust lids. Process 10 minutes in a boiling water bath.
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