Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Cookbook Countdown and a Fond Farewell...

Here's something I've been wanting to do for a while...a Top 10 countdown of my all-time favorite cookbooks.  These are the ones that if something happened to them I'd immediately re-order...the ones that if I were a pioneer, heading West in a covered wagon, and it was too heavy for the horses to pull, I'd make the family get out and walk...the ones that are utterly, completely, and undeniably the best of the best.  Now mind you, I have a cookbook collection that numbers about 70 books, and that's all I have space for, so when I get new books I go through and cull out any that are not being used--this list is the 10 that will never get culled.  Here we go:


#10  From Asparagus to Zucchini, a Guide to Cooking Farm-Fresh Seasonal Produce 3rd Ed., by Madison Area Community Supported Agriculture Coalition.

This book is a real gem of a reference book.  I got it a few years back when we subscribed to a local CSA, and MAN, is it ever useful.  It's an alphabetical listing of every veggie you can imagine and how to cook them, and ways to use them.  Because sometimes unusual things like "garlic scapes" show up in your CSA box.  Each section has cooking tips, storing tips and recipes for each veggie.  Score!

#9  Barefoot Contessa, Back to Basics, by Ina Garten.  Who better to give better instruction on all the basics of simple and fabulous food?  Gorgeous pictures and beautiful, real, simple food.  Enough said.

#8  Putting Food By, by Janet Greene, Ruth Hertzberg, and Beatrice Vaughan.  A classic.  The cover says it all: "The classic work on the best ways to can, freeze, pickle, dry, cure, and preserve."  Yup. That about sums it up.  When I come home from the farmers market with a box of some veggie treasure and need a quick run-down on how best to preserve it, this is a go-to reference.  Like when I'm wondering "do I need to blanch these before freezing, and if so how long?"  The answer is always here.

#7  Preserve it Naturally:  The complete Guide to Food Dehydration, by Excalibur.  For those who don't know, Excalibur is a brand of dehydrators.  I have two, and I absolutely love them.  This book is the classic companion to my beloved dehydrators.  It gives times and temps for anything in the world you might want to dehydrate, along with pictures and recipes for using those dehydrated foods, and also includes creative and fun snacks like fruit and yogurt leathers, and even dog treats, and crafts like dried flowers and salt dough ornaments for the Christmas tree.  LOVE IT!

#6  Make it Fast, Cook it Slow, and More Make it Fast Cook it Slow, by Stephanie O'Dea.  O.k. I know that's totally cheap, and may be considered cheating, but yes, I just slipped two books by the same author into one spot on the countdown!  (And I'm gonna do it again in a minute...).  All the recipes in these books are gluten free, and it's pretty much got every slow cooker recipe known to man in there.  Sometimes I gotta adjust the times, especially with chicken recipes, like HALF the time listed!  But that's the case with any slow cooker book.

#5  Miss Vickie's Big Book of Pressure Cooker Recipes, by Vickie Smith.  Of all my pressure cooker books, this one makes the cut because of all the charts which list time, and release method for any basic food you want to pressure cook:  chicken, whole or parts, any meat, veggie, bean, grain.  The charts are worth the cost of the book, for sure.

#4  Nourishing Traditions, by Sally Fallon, with Mary Enig, PhD.  This book almost crept into the #1 spot because it's just flat-out AWESOME reading.  This is an encyclopedic work of traditional food preparation techniques and the #1 best book I know of, anywhere, on nutrition.  This is how I learned how to soak and dehydrate nuts for maximum digestibility and fantastic crispy flavor.  Keeper.  This book will be with me all the days of my life, Lord willing.

#3  Spunky Coconut Cookbooks, by Kelly Brozyna.  (Grain-Free Baking, Dairy Free Ice Cream, and The Spunky Coconut Cookbook).  Kelly is super-innovative.  Her grain-free cakes (coffee cake, yellow cake, scones) are to die for, and guess what?  You'd never guess...they are made with beans and coconut flour!  No refined sugar in sight, woo hoo!

#2  The Dehydrator Bible, by Jennifer MacKenzie, Jay Nutt, and Don Mercer.  Along with the Excalibur book, this one is an absolute necessity as a dehydration reference. 

And...drumroll please...

#1  The Whole Life Nutrition Cookbooks:  The Whole Life Nutrition Cookbook and Nourishing Meals, by Alissa Segersten and Tom Malterre.  These books are a MUST in any gluten-free home.  All recipes are gluten-free, dairy-free, refined sugar-free, most are egg-free, and all are super, super NOURISHING whole foods.  They have a new edition of the Whole Life Nutrition Cookbook coming out in April...oh yeah. I've already pre-ordered it.

Well hey, this has been so fun...not just the cookbook countdown, but blogging and chatting with you dear devoted readers (all 5 of you, haha!)  I started this blog to explore how to get dinner done, allergy-free, using whole foods, without letting it rule my life, and here are the conclusions I've drawn:  cooking whole foods is a lifestyle.  It's just going to always claim a certain portion of my time, and that's a choice.  But breaks are important!  Sometimes ya gotta compromise--maybe use some convenience items life pre-made GF tortillas and pre-cooked beans, and that's ok.   Whatever keeps Mama sane and the food rolling along is a good thing.

Speaking of Mama's sanity...I'm about to make some changes to simplify my life a bit. Make some room for other things.  First and foremost, I'm getting off  Facebook.  I've only been on a month or two, but I'm not very good at multitasking and, to me, facebook feels like an extra task, rather burdensome to keep up with.  I'm not a huge fan of any additional "screen time" in my life, so facebook just isn't a good fit. 

And along those lines, I feel some great closure about this blog too.  I have LOVED writing it, but it feels done to me.  So, onward!  I'm about to free up a little time for some things like the afore mentioned dehydrating projects, home improvement projects, hiking and biking, and a long, long book list, as always!   Who knows, the mood may hit and I may just return to converse about food and life some more.  But for now, a fond farewell and blessings to you my friends.  Nourish on!

Friday, February 7, 2014

Jumbleberry Fruit Bake with Pecans, for Dessert or Breakfast.

Here's a little something fun that will help you use up any frozen berries and fresh apples you may have hanging around.  It's good hot or cold, and could be dessert, breakfast, or a fun and healthy lunchbox treat. 
  
I started out with a recipe out of one of my favorite cookbooks The Whole Life Nutrition Cookbook, by Tom Malterre and Ali Segerston.  Their recipe was for apple-cranberry crisp (which is a fantastic recipe!  I've made it lots of times in the past...highly recommended!), but I didn't want the topping (can't tolerate oats), and I wanted just a very quick and simple baked fruit dish, so here's what I ended up with, loosely based on their recipe:

Preheat oven to 375
  • 3 very large organic Fugi apples, or 4 or 5 small apples, fairly thinly sliced
  • 3 cups mixed berries (I used Costco mixed berries--blueberries, blackberries and raspberries)
  • 2 T arrowroot powder (a natural thickener, available in health food stores)
  • 2 T. lemon juice
  • 2 T. sucanat (Sucanant is a dehydrated, unrefined cane juice: or you could use other sweetener of choice--pure maple sugar, or coconut sugar would probably work just fine too...)
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
Mix together in a large bowl, then transfer to a 9x13 baking dish.  Top with:
  • a handful of chopped pecans.
Bake, about 40 minutes, but may take more like 45 or 50 minutes depending on how thick your apples were cut, and how thawed your berries were--my berries were frozen solid, so it took about 55 minutes.  Cover if it starts to brown on top.  It's done when the juices look bubbly and the apples are tender.

I call this Jumbleberry Fruit Bake because when I tasted it, it tasted exactly like a dessert they serve at our favorite local restaurant. They call theirs Jumbleberry Pie, but it's just basically fruit baked like this, nestled into a pretty martini glass, and topped with pretty, artfully-shaped pieces of pie crust instead of pecans.

Enjoy!

Sorry, this is not the prettiest picture!  You can see where I already impatiently delved into the lower right-hand corner. :)

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Mulligatawny and Freezer Series Wrap-up

Well hey there.  I bet you thought I'd dropped off the face of the earth...been abducted by aliens...broke my hand in a bar room brawl and left unable to type.  I'm happy to report that none of those scenarios actually occurred.  No, my long absence from blogging, while less colorful and scandalous, is pretty much what you'd expect...the busy-ness of life.  Blah, blah, blah...you know the drill. 

But hey!  I've still got blog posts roaming around in that space between my ears.  And I've been dying to wrap up this whole "Freezer Series" so we can get on to other topics.

Alright, I've gotten most everything used up from my freezer stash, except I still have tomatoes and peppers, and I'm in no hurry to use those up and then have to pay $2.00 each for peppers in the store that are grown thousands of miles away, picked too early, have traveled in a truck for days or weeks, are overpriced, and of low nutritional quality.   I'd rather keep eating peppers I can get in season, a few miles from my home, picked fully ripe that morning, and stashed away in my freezer that same summer afternoon.  (Just as a side-note,  I pay about .30 to .50 cents each for peppers in peak season at the farmers market, as opposed to the aforementioned $2. EACH in the store mid-winter.)  So...I'm holding steady on the peppers and tomatoes I have left...we've still got a good 5 or 6 months til the next local harvest.

Lately I've been focusing on the pantry items--dry beans and dehydrated foods.  Now, let me just clarify, for the record, that I'm not a "Prepper".  Have you heard this term?  It's basically when people store tons and tons of food in their house, like long-term food storage (years!), incase of some sort of catastrophic event.  Ok, I get that.  I'm not saying there's anything wrong with being prepared for life's emergencies, and in fact, it's probably a great idea to have some stuff stored away--I mean, what if you lost your job?  Would you have several months worth of necessities saved up and enough $ in the bank to get by for several months until you recovered?  Or what if there was a storm and power outage...would you be able to survive away from the grocery store for a week or two?

However, in terms of food storage, my personal philosophy is solely focused on getting the most nutrition possible for the least amount of money, which means, yes, I will dehydrate and freeze foods in season to eat when they are out of season in order to ensure superior nutritive value, (and save a lot of $ at the same time).  However, by the time the next season rolls around, I want the previous year's crop to be totally eaten up.  So I do not store very much of anything very long--just enough to get from one season to the next.  I can't stand a bunch of extra "stuff" hanging around.  I'm just a simple girl.  I like my home to be simple, clean, and organized as much a possible.  Collecting a lot of "stuff" I'm not using is burdensome to me.  My family lovingly calls me "the anti-hoarder" because if anything is not earning the space it takes to keep it around here, it's gone.  Clutter and I are not compatible housemates.

I see no point in dehydrating and freezing (or canning) any more food than I can use up before the next crop comes in.  Why would I want to still be eating 2013 tomatoes past the time when 2014 tomatoes are ripe and abundant?  And nutrients do start to decline the longer you keep stuff, so, essentially: I like to eat stuff that's ripe, freshly picked and local as much as I can while it's in season, then stash some away for winter.  Simple as that.  (If you like the idea of keeping food longer than that, you may want to purchase freeze-dried food, which is something people like for backpacking and camping because it is light and compact, but that's not what we're talking about here.)  What I'm focused on is not keeping food forever, but rather stashing a few super-nutrient-packed items with summer sunshine still alive in them, just long enough to nourish us in the cold months until the earth wakes up and starts producing again.   

We're getting down to the time when I need to make sure I'm using up anything I saved from 2013 harvest so I have space to start this process over for this coming season.  That said, we won't see any good local crops around here until June, at the earliest, so I still have 4 months to slowly and steadily, use up whatever I have left from 2013.

This morning I knocked out a bunch of pantry staples all in one shot:  my home-dehydrated carrots, dehydrated onions, raisins, canned fire-roasted tomatoes, rice--and frozen items:  chicken thighs, chicken stock, and some fresh stuff I had that needed to be used up:  apples and a lemon.  What could all these random items come together to make?  Drumroll please...mulligatawny!
 

If you like curry you will love this soup.  If you hate curry, you will probably hate this soup.  I am the only one in my family who loves curry and loves this soup, so I don't make it very often, so when I do make it, I get it all to myself.

You know I'm not about to sit here and re-type what's already up on the web, so here's the link for you.  This recipe is from Stephanie O'Dea, author of the Make it Fast, Cook it Slow books.  My tweaks are:  double the chicken thighs, reduce the curry by half (for those who are not big curry fans), maybe you will need a few extra cups of stock or water, and make this in a 4 qt crock.  I go "High" for 3 hrs, then add in the rice and go about 45 minutes more.

I've been sick with a cold this week--first time in, I dunno...years?  I can't actually remember the last time I was sick.  I made the mistake of stating that fact out loud last week.  Don't ever do that people.  Because not more than a week later I was sick.  I guess I forgot my old friend "Murphy", and his "laws" about these kinds of things!  Boldly boasting about your awesome immune system is the surest way to catch a cold.  So, I've been a soup-making machine all week, and grateful for my stash of chicken stock, which is now almost depleted--time to make more. 

First it was "Red Lentil Soup" from Shaye Elliot over at The Elliot Homestead.  The minute you are done reading this blog post, do yourself a favor, click on the link and go get that recipe.  It.  Rocks.  I love Shaye's book by the way.  You can see it on her website.  My whole family is crazy about that soup and requests it for their lunches. 

Then mid-week I made a chicken tortilla soup, with black beans, and I also threw in some chopped spinach and zucchini, just cuz they were hanging around and needing to be used up.  It was really good.  Everyone loves that soup.  I just make it out of whatever I have, but the basis for the recipe comes from Sarah Fragoso's book Everyday Paleo Family Cookbook.  Sorry, I don't have any link to give you on that one.

O.k.  Here are the last of the freezer principles: 

#4 Keep the Freezer Full for Maximum Efficiency:  I line the bottom of my freezer with gallon-size water bottles (remove a little for headspace so they don't split when they freeze).  This helps for times like right now when there's not much left in there.  And in the summer when it starts to get packed I can always remove the bottles for extra space.

#5 Diversify Your Preservation Techniques:  So here's something I need to keep in mind next year.  For instance, zucchini.  This year I simply dehydrated chopped zucchini.  But there were times recently when I wished I had some frozen chunks that could be used immediately instead of having to re-hydrate, like in a soup.  And there were times I wished I had some shredded and frozen for muffins.  So next year--diversify.  Freeze some in chunks and some in shreds, and dehydrate some--both chunks and shreds.  Also, if you have a freezer failure, or something happens, like moisture gets into your jars of dehydrated stuff--at least you still have some left in another form.  (By the way, you may want to get a freezer alarm--I am going to get one as soon as my freezer gets full again. That will protect you from any unnoticed freezer failures that would result in a ton of lost food--so sad!)  And next year...I need to diversify the foods I choose to save.  This year it was a lot of some things and nothing of others, which gets old round-about January.

And last but not least...#6 Make Kits as You Go:  Here's something I discovered last year and have LOVED reaping the benefits this winter.  Make kits.  Like, fajita kits:  Onions and peppers are ripe at the same time.  Buy a box of each, come home and combine your peppers and onions, sliced and portioned out for individual meals. Then all you have to do it add the chicken when you go to use it.  Or Apple Crisp Kits:  Prep the apples and berries in one container, crisp topping in another, keep them together, then all you have to do is dump it in the pan, add the topping and bake.  Any steps that you can "front load" will really pay off when it comes to prep-time and dishes later.

Okay...I've got Mulligatawny to eat.  Over and out.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Freezer Series: Ways to use up that freezer stash.

Thought I'd mix it up today, put the next few freezer principles on hold, and throw in a couple of good recipes to help you whittle down those freezer and pantry items you may be trying to clean out.  These are what I made for dinner last night and snacks today, all from stuff I had here that needed to be used up.

The first one is a  Gluten-free White Chicken Chili, from Living Without Magazine.  Click HERE for the recipe.


Items I was able to use up: 
1. pinto beans
2. a jar of tomatillo salsa I had in the cupboard
3. frozen red-peppers
4.frozen turkey stock that I made from our Thanksgiving turkey!

The only note I would make on this recipe is that I thought it needed about 2 c. of additional stock or water...not quite enough liquid.  I swapped pintos for white beans and red pepper for green, because that's what I had on hand.  I love that this chili has so many veggies in it.

And this recipe reminds me...next summer I need to freeze zucchini in chunks for soup, instead of just dehydrating it.  For quick soups like this one, frozen would work better.  I like dehydrated zucchini for long-cooking soups though, in the crock pot.

Overall final opinion on the recipe...two thumbs up...way up!  It was quick and simple to make.  We all loved it.  I ate mine with a dollop of guacamole, because everything is better with guacamole.  Sour cream would be lovely too if you eat dairy.

Next up: Blueberry Buckwheat Muffin recipe I found at www.bestofthislife.com.  (Click HERE for the recipe.)


Muffins are a great vehicle for moving berries, nuts and fruits (and even veggies sometimes!) out of the freezer and into your family!  Who can resist anything in a cute little muffin-y package?   However they can also be a vehicle for a bunch of sugar and insulin-spiking simple carbs...so be intentional about choosing recipes that move your nutritional goals in the direction you want them to go. ;)

The flour in this recipe is simply buckwheat and ground flax seeds. Next time I am going to diversify the flour a bit though--swap in some rice and tapioca flours for a little more lightness to the texture--recipes with just buckwheat as the only flour can be a bit "rough", or "gritty" feeling to me, sort of "scratchy" in my throat...it almost makes my throat a little sore...is that weird?  My family doesn't seem to notice any problems, but I always do.  Anyone else notice that "scratchy throat" effect with pure buckwheat?  Or teff flour?  I notice the same problem with teff.  The old timers and pioneers ate pure buckwheat pancakes, right?  But those people were just a whole lot tougher than me, that's all there is to it...anyway...I digress.   So, bottom line is, I am of the opinion that buckwheat flour is great!  but needs to be mixed with other, less gritty flours.  I'll let you know if I have good success with swapping some of the buckwheat flour in this out for other flours.  And you let me know if you do, ok?

I LOVE the fact that here is NO sugar, at all, in these muffins, so you can really taste the shredded apple and berries.  (The recipe calls for chocolate chips, but I left them out...I don't want the added sugar and I don't really like how the chocolate competes with the sweetness of the fruit--shine berries and apples!  shine!) 

These muffins are tender and moist and chock-full of fiber (beware of the high fiber...if you are not accustomed to a lot of fiber in your diet, don't go crazy and eat a whole bunch of these at once, or you'll be cursing my name!!).  They are not really very sweet, except for the natural sweetness of the berries and apples, but if you want them sweeter you can always drizzle and little bit of local honey on them when you go to eat them, and that just makes them even better!

I love how these stayed beautifully moist for the next morning--these don't even really need any butter or anything on them, but a drizzle of honey is lovely.  They were a hit with the family.  Overall verdict is:  these are a keeper, but with reservations about the "all buckwheat" thing...I will absolutely be making these on a regular basis, but I do think it needs a flour tweak.

Alterations I made:  Switched the almond milk for cashew milk, switched the coconut oil for olive oil.

*Note:  If you use a dark or nonstick pan be sure to always lower your oven temp 25 degrees.

The main thing is to just keep on keepin' on with the freezer and pantry clean out...my next targets:  dehydrated zucchini and kale (from my own tiny, not super-successful, "but-at-least-I-got-some-kale-out-of-it" garden last year) and the whole peppers I have frozen that need to be stuffed...then some millet and quinoa flour, and some frozen white fish...how about you?

I'll be back later this week to wrap up the last of my freezer series with 3 more bits of freezer wisdom I've learned through trial and error, so you don't have to!  ;)

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Freezer Series, Principle #3 Vacuum Seal Whenever Possible.

We've covered Principle #1: Put stuff into the freezer READY to go... and Principle #2: Be Kind to Yourself.  On to today's freezer principle (drumroll please...)

Principle #3: Vacuum Seal if Possible

It's been 5 months now since I started putting tomatoes into the freezer, and I didn't mean to, but for some reason I vacuum sealed some tomatoes and ziplock freezer bagged some.  (Oh I remember why I did that...if I only had a few tomatoes I just ziplocked...but when I had a 15 lb box I got out the vacuum sealer.)  Here are the results of 5 months in the freezer with vacuum sealing, and without.

Can you guess which one was freezer bagged, and which one was vacuum sealed?
You are correct!  The one on the left is the freezer bagged one, and the right is the vacuum sealed one.  Enough said?  

The vacuum sealed ones were as gorgeous as they were last summer.  The freezer bagged ones were o.k, but lots of ice crystals in the bag, and some freezer burned and discolored spots on the tomatoes. 

Really, it's super simple and no hassle at all to pull out the vacuum sealer...so no more being lazy on my part, not wanting to run upstairs and get the vacuum sealer, where I store it when not in use...in fact I think to make it easier next August the vacuum sealer will earn a permanent place on the kitchen counter for a few weeks.

If you are going to be freezing a lot of things next summer, and you do not have a vacuum sealer...well, you've got about 8 months to try to get ahold of one.  I got mine at Costco several years ago.  It's a Food Saver brand and works great.  I love it.  But I notice they have them all over the place in various price ranges...usually between $100 and $200.  Keep an eye open for good sales and you may even get one on clearance somewhere this time of year.  Even if you have to pay $160 for one in August, if you start saving now that's only $20/month between now and then.  Have a daily latte habit?  Make coffee at home and you'll save a LOT more than $20/month...probably $20 per week!  All for the love of fresh garden goodies in January!  It's totally worth it.

If need be you might consider borrowing a vacuum sealer, or going in with a friend or family member and sharing the purchase of a new vacuum sealer, but personally it's not something I would buy used on craigslist.  You never know what people have been carelessly vacuum sealing...like they might have gotten raw meat juices in it and not thoroughly cleaned it...ew.  Not really a risk I'd take.

Now, to vacuum seal tomatoes you'll need to "flash freeze" them whole (Simple to do:  Just line up your clean tomatoes on a parchment-lined baking sheet and stick the whole sheet into the freezer for about 24 hours), then when they are totally frozen, vacuum seal them and get them right back into the freezer.  The vacuum is very strong, so if you tried to vacuum seal them fresh you'd end up with a bag full of squashed tomato juice!  You can certainly vacuum seal liquid items for the freezer, like meats in marinades, and soups and stews, just be alert and shut your vacuum sealer off before it sucks all the liquid out of your bag!  And make sure the liquid does not go up into the top of the bag where you want a nice seal.

I personally ONLY vacuum seal foods that are going directly into the freezer, but I do not vacuum seal dehydrated foods, unless I am freezing them.  (Dehydrated foods are best kept in glass jars with simple screw on lids in my opinion.)  So when you vacuum seal any kind of food I'd recommend getting it right into the freezer for food safety reasons.  And be sure to thoroughly read the directions that come with your vacuum sealer. They are fun and easy to use, but make sure you observe good food handling, as always, for safety.  (That's the mom in me talking...I'm always concerned for your safety 1st! ;)

And finally, if you choose not to vacuum seal, but want to go the freezer bag route, that's fine too....just try to get as much air as possible out of those bags prior to freezing, and probably try to use up the food within a shorter period of time.  The vacuum seal bags I use are BPA free, and if you leave enough room at the top you can cut them open, take stuff out, and then re-seal them!  And personally, I recycle them when I'm all done with them.  I always try to recycle my ziplocks too, unless they've had raw meat in them, and then, they really just need to go into the garbage, sorry. :(

Three freezer principles down...three to go!  See ya tomorrow.







Friday, January 10, 2014

Freezer Series Principle #2: Please Be Kind...

Pressing onward friends...How is your freezer quest coming along?  This is about the time it starts to get a little old, because emptying a freezer takes time, and maybe a few meals that you don't necessarily love, and maybe some meals that are, how shall we say...a little unusual.

Well today let's chat about actual freezer cleaning.  But first...a few pictures, and a few principles I've been extracting from this process.

Freezer Principle #2:  Be Nice to Yourself.

So, here's the thing.  I have three freezers.  One in the house fridge, one in a little fridge I have in the garage, and one small chest freezer.  The general plan is that I keep stuff I use all the time in the house freezer (berries, nuts, frozen packages of veggies, and all those little containers of leftovers I'm going to use up "someday".  The garage fridge freezer is for prepared freezer meals I can stack, and meat stocks and broths.  The deep freeze is for bulk stuff, like bulk beef and meat purchases, and bulk preserved items, like all those tomatoes and peppers I froze in the fall.

Now the easiest part of all this usually gets done first:  eating up freezer meals that were ready to go, and using up some bulk items (tomatoes, turkey breast, etc.) and now it's getting down to some things where I have to decide "is this worth keeping and using up" and if I decide it is, I need to make a plan and actually use it, today or tomorrow...and if not, I need to bite the bullet and throw it away.

That's where it's easy to fall into the thought pattern of "Oh, I'll just hang onto it, and someday I'll do something with it".  These are things like huge Costco-size bags of stuff that you were sure would end up saving you a ton of money, but you never made a plan to use them, and now they are a. expired, b.freezer burned, or c. a burden--you don't want to mess with them anymore. 

Prime example:  today I had to throw out a 3 lb bag of almonds, unopened.  I bought them at Costco a LONG time ago and planned to soak and dehydrate them for snacking, but shortly after that I found out that almonds were the things that were causing my throat to swell up so tight that I felt like I was breathing through a coffee stir straw!  I should have given them away, but instead I thought, "oh well I will still soak and dehydrate them for my family...", but did I?  No.  After a while they got lost, buried and forgotten about, until they became expired and too old to be of any use.  And there are lots of old packages of beef bones that come with our 1/4 beef purchases.  Oh yeah, I always think I'm going to get right on making those into beef stock...but do I?  Mmmm, not usually.  And now they are too old, so gotta toss 'em.  That's a gem I hate to waste, but often do.

So.  There are lots of things like that.  You know what?  That happens.  Don't mess around saying "oh I wish I had...", or "maybe later I will...".  Just toss them.  Yes, it's like throwing $ into the garbage, and yes, it's wasteful, but it's over and done with; don't be burdened by those things any longer.  Toss 'em.  Forgive yourself.  It's o.k., I promise.  That happens to everyone. Give yourself the same grace you give others.  Be kind to yourself, ok?  If it makes you feel any better I'll show you my pile of stuff that got tossed today. 
 
You can't see the almonds because they are buried, but you can see the leftover Halloween candy...who needs that?!?!  Why in the world would I have even kept it?  Or even bought it in the first place?  Next year any kids that come to my house are getting pencils or crayons.  And the ice cream?....ay yi yi!  That was from New Years Eve.  It definitely does not need to hang around here any longer.  The Udi's buns?  Well those are just a loss friends.  I'm not sure why we even have those...if we eat GF buns we always buy from a somewhat "local" bakery (in our home state); we must've bought these Udi's buns ages ago.  Lots of bits and pieces...leftover tomato paste, a bit of freezer burned peas in the bottom of the bag.  Yeah...a few errors in judgement reflected here.  But I'm not beating myself up...just movin' on folks.  
 
Good-bye garbage.  Hello clean freezer.



The top shelf items are bits and pieces that are still good, and they are going into a chicken fiesta soup tomorrow.  The third shelf is berries and nuts that are going to be made into baked berries (a recipe that looks scrumptious from book I have called "From Scratch" by Shaye Elliot...it involves just berries, honey, and nuts).

So after this weekend, we should have one freezer that is nearly empty, and ready to re-load with READY TO GO items (please see my previous post for Principle #1).

This freezer is frost free, so I just wipe it down when it gets dirty, no need to defrost.  However my chest freezer needs de-frosting and cleaning about once or twice a year, so I will link for you some great directions I found on Martha Stewart's website:  HERE ya go.  You can clean your freezer with baking soda dissolved in hot water (2 T. baking soda to 1 qt warm water), rinse with clean water, dry and you're good to go.

Meet you back here later for more than you ever wanted to know about your freezer and mine!

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Freezer Series: Principle #1

Okey Dokey.  As I've been emptying the freezer of all last summer's market bounty (along with store bought frozen items and meat...) I've learned some things that will be helpful for next season.  Here we go:

Rule #1  Put things into the freezer READY TO PULL OUT AND USE. 

This is my defining, overall take-away from this round of freezer emptying.  Henceforth, nothing will enter my freezer unless it is prepared, and ready to just take out and cook. 

For instance:  An enchilasagna, all prepared and waiting:  HELPFUL!  Big hunks of frozen meat that come out needing preparation:  NOT HELPFUL. 

Here's an example for you...last night I had an enchilasagna (enchiladas, but layered up into a casserole, like lasagna) that I had pulled out of the freezer to defrost in the fridge all night.  All I had to do was pop that pan in the oven to bake, and warm up some frozen veggies--boo yah!  Done baby.  Dishes?  Zip.  Except the plates we ate off of, and the casserole dish.  So guess what I did with all that extra time?  Made these stylin' fleece PJ pants! 

These pants could be a whole other topic, but suffice it to say I got this fleece at Jo Ann's on clearance for $3. a yard, and they are totally warm and cozy!  I love them.  When I posted them on facebook I asked the question:  "what do you think those little creatures are?  Some sort of mutant bird/squid?"  I still can't figure that one out...
 
 
Now let's contrast last night's dinner experience with my freezer experience today:  I'm making Tomatillo Chicken in the crock pot.  I froze fresh local tomatillos in the fall, along with poblanos and jalapenos--so that's good, I had them all here, ready to use...however they did release a lot of moisture in thawing, and I still had to prepare them under the broiler and in the food processor...so really, this did not help me out that much. 
 
How to fix this problem:  instead of bagging the tomatillos and peppers up separately next year I will just go ahead and broil and process them right when I bring them home from the farmer's market.  Then bag them as a sauce, ready to use, and freeze.  Then in the winter all I will have to do is open the bag and dump it in on top of the chicken when I'm ready to use it.  Easy peasy.
 
Here's another example:  Tomatoes.  Ok, I've enjoyed having them frozen, whole.  But it would be MUCH easier if I would just make them into soup immediately when I bring them home, then freeze, and add in the "milk" (coconut or dairy, whatever you like to use...) when I go to heat it up.  My friend S.T. makes soup "concentrates" in the summer:  she does not add in all the necessary liquid, but freezes a concentrated version, then adds the water when she goes to use it.  BRILLIANT!  No need to take up all that extra space in the freezer.
 
So the essence of today's principle is this: put it in ready to go.  No more sticking stuff in there to "make" later...front-load that work and just prep it before it goes in.  No more putting chicken breasts in the freezer in their original package.  At the very least I can get them into a quick marinade before they go into the freezer, so I can just bake or grill when they come out.
 
OK, more principles coming up this week...but no time to write it all today.  I'll be back tomorrow...