Harvest and Last Minute Planting

My lovely in-laws were in town for the weekend. I took advantage of the extra child-care, and hit the garden to sow the last of my seeds. It’s not too late, even in the Upper Midwest! I planted on Friday, and seedlings appeared today. And bonus, there are far fewer weeds to deal with this time of year.

I planted a mix of beets, some butterhead lettuce, and spinach. Each of these crops mature relatively quickly, and thrive in cooler temperatures. Just in case of an early frost, I did plant in my cold frame if extra protection is needed in October.

I’ve also been harvesting and preserving (when I get the chance). For fresh eating, we’ve enjoyed zucchini, tomatoes, onions, herbs, and green beans.

And here is what I’ve put up:

12 pints of strawberry freezer jam
2 gallon bags of frozen strawberries
5 gallon bags of frozen blueberries
3 gallon bags of frozen green beans
1 small jar of cornichons
1 quart jar of fermented sour pickles
1 gallon bag of pesto ‘cubes’ (prepared and frozen in ice cube trays)

I’m hoping to have time to can tomato sauce this weekend — we’ll see.

Happy gardening, harvesting, and preserving!

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Beets and Whole Wheat Linguine

The debate of nature vs. nurture will probably always rage – but when you see characteristics of yourself popping up in a two-year-old, you have to assume genes pass on strong and very detailed traits. My oldest son has inherited my palate – he loves fruits and veggies, will try most foods without hesitation, and will not turn down a baked good under any circumstance. He also seems to have inherited my food fixation.

Does this happen to other people? You see, hear, or read about a certain ingredient, dish or food, and you just have to have it? I’ve spent days thinking about peanut butter chocolate chunk pretzel cookies (yes, these are amazing, and yes, I will give you the recipe someday), wheatberries, or a fennel gratin. I think about them until I eat them, and then the obsession stops (for at least a little while.)

I discovered the other day that my son shares this…problem? We read a book that had a variety of vegetables in it, and he became fixated on beets. “Beets? Eat beets right now? Want beets!” This went on for days, no joke. I’d think it was over, then all of a sudden, he’d be talking about beets again. While I don’t give into every whim my children have, this seemed like one I should act on. I hustled to the farmer’s market that weekend, and procured us some golden and chiogga beets. (If you’ve only had standard red beets, these are a real treat – the golden beets don’t bleed all over everything, and the chiogga beets are actually striped when you slice them!)

I wanted to cook them quickly, so I used a preparation method from Deborah Madison’s Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone for five minute beets. Peeling them took a few minutes, but then I used the food processor to quickly shred them, and everything was a snap from there. Pairing the earthy beets with nutty whole-grain pasta seemed right, and soft goat cheese and fresh herbs finished the dish. My son was happy, until we got the book Curious George Makes Pancakes from the library – guess what we had for dinner that night?

Beets and Whole Wheat Linguine

12 small to medium beets, peeled and shredded
1 T butter
1/2 cup water
juice from 1/2 lemon
10 oz whole wheat linguine, cooked al dente
2 additional tablespoons butter
1/4 cup chopped chives and parsley
salt to taste
1 cup crumbled goat cheese

1) Remove beet greens (save and use any way you’d use spinach), peel raw beets, and coarsely shred. Using the shredding disk on a food processor is an easy way to go. My little one helped with the preparation, and enjoyed nibbling the raw beet shreds.

2) Saute beets in 1 T butter until beginning to soften. Toss with a little salt. Add 1/2 cup water, cover and cook until soft,  about five minutes. Remove lid, and continue cooking until water has evaporated. Toss with juice from 1/2 lemon.

3) Cook pasta until al dente, reserve a little of the cooking water. Toss pasta with beets, 2 T butter, and chopped herbs. Add a little cooking water if pasta is too dry. Serve warm, topped with crumbled goat cheese. If you like greens, adding some of the sauteed beet greens to the dish would also be good.

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Zucchini Cherry Muffins

I enjoy a nice muffin – not the oversize, oversweet muffins that you’d buy at the store or a coffeehouse, but a good home-baked muffin – made in a regular-sized muffin tin.

My grandmother would often serve a blueberry muffin with dinner, in lieu of a dinner roll. My mom continued this tradition. As a grown up, I now realize this is kind of weird — but also kind of fun. And since the book If You Give a Moose a Muffin is wildly popular at my house, the tradition continues. Much to the delight of my two-year-old (and his stuffed moose, who always joins us at the table when I serve muffins.)

This muffin is not too sweet, has some whole wheat flour in it, and is a great way to use up some seasonal produce. If you don’t have zucchini, I’m sure a carrot would be nice. If you don’t have sour cherries, fresh cranberries (or even dried) would be good too.

Zucchini Cherry Muffins

3/4 cup whole wheat flour
1 cup unbleached flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt
2 eggs
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup grated zucchini
1 cup fresh or frozen sour cherries, chopped

1) Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Whisk together flours, baking powder, soda, cinnamon and salt.

2) In separate bowl, add eggs, sugar, oil, and vanilla. Whisk until smooth.

3) Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients, and stir until just combined. Stir in zucchini, and gently fold in sour cherries.

4) Grease a standard size muffin tin, or use papers. Fill each cup almost full. It only makes 11 muffins – sorry. If that bugs you, fill them a little less full and stretch it for a full dozen.

5) Bake for 25-30 minutes, until golden brown and a toothpick stuck into the center of a muffin comes out clean. Serve with dinner – seriously!

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Apricot Buttermilk Shakes

I found Wisconsin apricots at the Farmer’s Market the other weekend – I might have to look into what it would take to grow my own. Apricots are a lovely little stone fruit – bright and tart, with an unassuming peel and an easy to remove pit. My toddler ate two a day for a week.

I had four left, so I decided to whip them up into a fun drink we could have with a summery dinner. It was very cold, tangy, and just a bit sweet. A lovely way to end a hot, humid day.

Apricot Buttermilk Shake

2 cups buttermilk (I used lowfat)
4 apricots, pitted but not peeled
1/3 cup honey
handful of ice

Whir in blender until very smooth.

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Giveaway Winner!

Thanks for your comments and entering my first giveaway! The randomly selected winner was #4, Laurel:

Laurel wrote:

I love collard greens, sliced super thin and fried with bacon. Best!

Laurel, please contact me at tallgrasskitchen@gmail.com from the same email address you entered with, and let me know where to send the cookbook. Enjoy it – it’s a fun one.

You all had such great seasonal favorites and ideas! Most people enjoyed their favorites straight up, or with a slight embellishment. Simple diced watermelon, strawberries with brown sugar and sour cream, figs, cherries…all so good. I think my favorite idea was from Peef over at Burp: a bacon, lettuce, peach sandwich! Genius!

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