How to Cook : Mayonnaise

(alternately titled, “Reasons my mother thinks I may have been an alien baby”)

(subtitled “wherein I use a lot of italicized comments in parentheses”)

Me: I made mayonnaise today!

My Mom: Why?

Conversations like these are not altogether rare around these parts. I do something retro-domestic (yes, I made up that term and considered copyrighting it until a subsequent Google search told me I’m not the first one to make it up), and she wonders where on earth (or outerspace) I came from.

Blame it on Melissa Gilbert. I was obsessed with the TV show of “Little House on the Prairie”. And then, for my 4th birthday, my Aunt Betty & Uncle Mike gave me the first book in the series Little House in the Big Woods. Well buy me a bonnet and call me Katy! Some kids want to run away and join the circus, I wanted to run away and join the Amish.

(Funny side-story here. I was an early reader. Except my mom didn’t know it until I got that book. She was reading it to me and, as she puts it, there’s a lot of words and not many pictures so she figured she could paraphrase a little. As a mom myself now, I know that this really means she had a 4-year-old and a newborn and she was sick-and-tired of reading the damn book already.

Anyway, she’s paraphrasing along when I stop her and say, “You didn’t read that word.” She looks at me – probably with the same bewildered expression she had when I informed her I made mayonnaise – and asks, “What word?” I reply, “Indian. You didn’t say the word Indian.” What did I tell you? Alien baby.)

The answer to her question (which, again, was “Why?” in case you got sidetracked up there), is that I’m cheap. Have you seen how much a jar of mayonnaise costs in the store? And if it goes on sale, the shelf is completely empty by the time I get there. And then there’s the alien list of ingredients. I know Ma Ingalls did not put that stuff in her mayonnaise (although, honestly, I don’t recall Ma Ingalls making mayonnaise in any of those books.) Considering the number of mayonnaise-based salads I make in the summer months, and the chickens making daily egg deliveries right to my door, I think the question should be, “Why not?!?” So let’s go!

You will not believe how simple making mayonaise really is. But the most important thing is the eggs you use. Mayonnaise is made with raw egg yolks, after all. So ideally you would use very fresh eggs from free-range hens. If you don’t or can’t have your own hens, find a trustyworthy local farmer to buy eggs from. In a pinch, organic cage-free eggs from a trustworthy company. Never would I make mayonnaise with eggs from hens raised in confinement with hundreds or thousands of other hens. Remember all of the egg recalls just last year? Doesn’t sound like things have gotten any better.

So now that you have some really good eggs in hand, all you need to go with them is oil (I bought a huge jug of canola oil for the price of 2 regular jars of mayonnaise! You can use whatever oil trips your trigger) and an acid – vinegar or lemon juice. A little salt and a blender and you’re all set.

Put 2 egg yolks, a pinch of salt and a tablespoon vinegar (or lemon juice) in the blender. Give it a quick spin to mix those together, then turn it on low and leave it run while you very very slowly drizzle in 3/4 cup of oil. I’m serious! Drizzle. very. slowly. If you enjoy science experiments you’ll enjoy this process! It’s fun to watch as the whole mess turns from liquid into a beautiful, creamy condiment. And it really only takes about 5 minutes. It just seems longer because you’re drizzling. Very slowly. (If you really want the whole science-y explanation of why that happens, read the last paragraph on this website.)

A few notes… One, you can use additional seasonings if you wish, but it isn’t necessary. I like a little garlic powder, a little ground pepper, maybe a little paprika. Two, if you use fresh eggs from free-range hens, your mayonnaise will have a nice yellow color to it instead of that pasty white color of the storebought stuff. And three, obviously, keep your mayonnaise refrigerated. It will keep up to a week, so it’s best to make small, quick batches and use it right up.

And that’s all there is to it! So go! Get your Ma Ingalls on.

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How to Cook : Chicken Pot Pie

a.k.a. “Winging it when you don’t have a recipe!”

I love this time of year. Our brief moment of down time has arrived. (Well, as “down” as it ever gets around here.) We’re done with volleyball season, and basketball & wrestling seasons haven’t quite begun. And there’s not much for me to do outside right now – though Matt’s been busy reshingling the roof and hauling pigs to the locker.

This time of year, Sunday’s are soup days. After church I make up a huge vat of soup and we just sort of graze on it the rest of the day, and into the week. This week I toyed with the idea of chicken & dumplings, but ultimately decided on chicken pot pie. (Not soup, I know, but still one of those lovely, lazy one-pot things.) But instead of my usual pot pie recipe, made with a biscuit topping, I was craving real “pie” with a real pie crust. Problem was, I didn’t have a recipe for that kind of chicken pot pie. Let the adventures begin!

So first I threw a whole chicken in my biggest pot & covered with water. Added some bay leaves & kosher salt, brought it to a boil, then simmered it a couple of hours or until the water level had reduced by about half. I removed the chicken to a cutting board and let it cool, then pulled off the meat and shredded it. It’s so fast & easy to do after it’s been boiled like that! (I’m thinking I need to just boil a chicken every Sunday so I have the meat & broth to make stuff with later in the week!)

Then you need a pie crust. You can use a storebought one or make your own. I don’t have any lard right now, so I like this all-butter pie crust from the New York Times. I doubled the pie crust recipe, and then made it again so that I’d have two double crusts. (Leftovers!)

At this point I wasn’t sure if I should pre-bake the crust or not. I’ve never been good at pies in general, because I’ve never been good at pie crusts. Matt’s foster mom was a pie-making wizard, and that’s one of my few regrets is that I didn’t have her teach me how to do a pie crust.

Also, I discovered that to pre-bake a crust you’re supposed to have something called “pie weights”. I don’t have pie weights. Matt asked, “What would Julia Child do?” Well, she would wing it. And so did I. I covered the crusts with aluminum foil, filled them with rice, and pre-baked them at 375 degrees for 15 minutes. Then removed the rice & foil and baked 7 minutes longer.

While the crusts were pre-baking I started on the pie filling, starting with frozen mixed veggies in a pot of water to cook. You can certainly use fresh chopped veggies as well. Either way, just boil them until barely fork-tender. Then skimmed the fat off the cooled chicken broth and threw it in a stock pot on the stove to melt. Next I whisked in flour, added milk, chicken broth, salt & pepper and continued to cook & whisk until it came to a boil. At this point it was supposed to thicken… but mine didn’t seem to be doing that. So once the vegetables were cooked and drained, I went ahead and added them to the sauce. It still didn’t seem to be thick enough so I ended up whisking in another 1/4 cup of flour. That seemed to do the trick. Finally I stirred in the shredded chicken.


the filling

Each pie crust held about 3 cups of filling.

Then it was time to put the top crust on. I just sort of folded the excess under and then crimped down the edge of the crust with a fork. I thought it would be good to put the pies on a rimmed baking sheet, just in case there was any overflow.

After about 25 minutes at 400 degrees… voila!

It turned out exactly how I was craving it… hot creamy filling inside a flaky crust! So don’t be afraid of a little food adventure! Just make it up as you go along 🙂 (More recipes here!)

Chicken Pot Pie
This recipe makes 1 pot pie. Double it if you want leftovers, or throw the second pie in the freezer instead of the oven. When you’re ready to eat it, just put it directly from the freezer into a hot oven & bake until the filling is hot and the crust is golden brown. (I would guess that would be about an hour, starting with a frozen pot pie.)

1 double pie crust
2 cups cooked, shredded chicken
1 16-oz bag frozen mixed vegetables (or equivalent diced fresh vegetables)
5 T. flour
1/2 c. milk
2-1/2 c. chicken broth
1 t. salt
pepper to taste

Boil vegetables until just fork-tender. In a separate saucepan, whisk together flour, milk and chicken broth until smooth. Salt & pepper to taste. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Stir in cooked, drained vegetables and chicken.

Spoon filling into bottom pie crust. Add top crust and crimp edges to seal. Place pie on rimmed baking sheet in case of overflow, and place baking sheet in preheated 400 degree oven. Bake 20 to 25 minutes, until crust is golden brown.

Alternate recipe: Make the filling recipe but instead of putting it in a pie crust, place it in a 2-quart casserole dish and top with uncooked biscuits (either canned or homemade). Bake at same temperature, same amount of time.

1 year ago:

Signs

Tribute

Prayer

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The pretty picture

I actually wrote this post awhile back, and then didn’t publish it. But apparently the theme I touched on yesterday of story, and telling our true stories even when they aren’t pretty, has been on mind a while…

Someone said to me the other day, “I don’t know how you do it all!” I just sort of chuckled and said, “I don’t! My house is usually a mess, we eat out too often, and somebody’s always complaining that they don’t have clean underwear.”

So often on blogs, my own included, you only see the “pretty” picture. And that’s a very natural human thing. Most people, when asked “How are you today?”, respond with “fine” or “good” or even “great”. Not too often do we admit to others that we’re tired, that there’s a colony of dust bunnies taking up residence under our sofa, that we yelled at our kid today and then regretted it. But that’s the real story, and that’s the part of the story we actually all relate to. Certainly we also relate to the happy and good stories – when we celebrate our kids’ accomplishments, or ran 5 miles, or even just managed to cook something really yummy for supper. But the less pretty parts are the parts that we maybe wish someone would hear, look understandingly into our eyes, pat our hand and say, “Me, too.”

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Wherein I return from an unplanned hiatus and use a lot of quotation marks

So I haven’t been here in this space in about 40 days now. This time of year (a.k.a. “volleyball season”) life is just full and busy. And most of the time I handle that pretty well. But there comes a point where I’m tired and things start to annoy me that ordinarily wouldn’t and I take things personally that I shouldn’t. I think thoughts that I wish I wouldn’t, and some of those thoughts unfortunately make their way out of my mouth. I’m embarrassed that I morph into “one of those people”… I can only plead human nature and beg forgiveness. I will try (again) to step back and see the big picture.

When I find myself in this vortex of suckitude, I pray. And I ask, what should I be doing?

And inevitably the answer seems to be, “Write”.

Write what, I ask. I don’t have anything to write about. When we were in the beginning stages of the farm, there was a lot to write about. But now the farm mostly hums right along, with nary any carnage in sight. I feel shy and vulnerable writing about personal stuff (like that first paragraph up there… it sort of terrifies me to put that all out there publicly, without even an accompanying photograph of a cute kitten to distract you.) I’m not funny enough to write comedy.

“Just write,” seems to be inevitable answer number 2.

And so as “this time of year” winds down, I’m going to just write. I may not always write here. I have my various notebooks I keep and up until now most of my personal stuff goes there. But I am going to try and use this space and write more personal stuff publicly. I think “story” is one of the most important human connections. In an age where we seem to only put on our game faces (to steal a phrase from “this time of year”) for our Facebook friends and blog readers and even our real-life acquaintances, it’s sometimes nice to hear that we’re not perfect all the time. More on that tomorrow…

1 year ago:

Fall

Lather, rinse, repeat

These are the days

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The ordinary story of today

I make the less-than-quarter-mile walk to the chicken pen, trying to use all of my senses between here and there, take it all in, imprint it on my skin, looking for what I can notice this morning. The air is slightly cool and slightly damp. I breathe it in, smell it, relish the feel of it. The cattails are prominent now in the ditches. They remind me of my grandparents for some reason. I think maybe they had dried cattails as something decorative in their farmhouse. That house is gone now, a new one built in its place by the new owners. I wish grandma & grandpa had been able to stay on the farm longer, long enough for me to grow up and buy it from them.

I reach the chicken pen, survey for any suprises this morning. No dead chickens, no lame chickens, no dumpy looking chickens. All is well. Sometimes Ike is asleep in the shed, a chicken or three perched on top of him. Today he’s awake, calmly surveying his territory, a benevolent king and his defenseless flock.

The chickens come to the feeders as I fill and set them out. They aren’t rushing the feeders, which tells me we’re giving them the right amount of feed. Don’t want to under or overfeed them. Some continue to rest on the east side of the shed, soaking in the morning sun. Others explore the grass, pecking for bugs and weed seeds as chickens should do. A few are still inside the shed, until Ike gets frisky and chases them out. I smile. That’s good for them, get them moving. I wonder if Ike’s presence makes for healthier chickens. I like to think it does, that they feel protected and calm and that this helps keep them well.


A chicken helping Ike out with his grooming

On the walk home I notice horse prints. Probably the neighbor out for a ride. Sounds like fun. (I find further evidence when I get home – a pile of road apples in the yard – but find out later it wasn’t the neighbor but some lost horses visiting us in the night.)

I’m trying to be more observant, trying to tell the everyday stories. Being observant leads to gratitude. Being observant keeps me living in the moment more. And the storytelling somehow feels like connection.

1 year ago:

Under construction

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Special delivery

A few of our hens have been laying their eggs in a basket of drying beans in my garage. How considerate of them to deliver daily eggs right to our door!

1 year ago:

First day of school

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Puzzle

The puzzle of how to piece together 24 hours is exasperating.

1 year ago:

On the road to recovery?

So where were we?

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Installment #11: One of these things just doesn’t belong here

I mentioned we have quite the herd of kittens this year. The older 4 are in that really playful stage, and I was a little worried about how they’d be around our new batch of chicks.

As it turns out, the kittens love the chicks… thankfully in a nice way, not in a finger-lickin-good way. I caught Tony here, trying to take a nap in the freshly-bedded chick brooder. But the chicks weren’t really letting him get any rest.

Excuse me, but that’s my tail your pecking.

You wanna go?!?

Other installments are here.

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Inspiration


We’ve got a nice crop of kittens this summer

As I slide back into this space, I wanted to share with you who’s inspiring me right now…

public::bookstore
I love Tara’s photos, and how her posts feel like it’s just me & her chatting over coffee

{my topography}
I’ve long admired both Christina’s writing and her art, and how she makes time for both amid a full & busy life. So happy for her & her forthcoming book!

SouleMama
Another I’ve long admired. Amanda is full of grace and creativity. I’m enjoying their adventures in setting up their new homestead.

Habit
So happy that it’s August and these gals are back online! Whenever I’m at a loss for words I follow their lead, take a picture, and try to capture the essence of my day (or some moment of it) in 36 words or less. Very therapeutic.

What’s inspiring you these days?

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Well hello there



double rainbow over the farm

I didn’t intend to be gone from here so long. It just sort of happened. Apparently I really needed a break.

But I’m feeling drawn back to it, drawn back to my camera, to words + pictures, to slowing down & being mindful & noticing things & appreciating it all.

I decided to drop the advertising from my site. It had actually been a nice little monthly bit of change when I was still over on blogspot. But once I moved to my own hosted site that dropped off. I don’t know why that would be. But I feel like without it I have a little more freedom to write whatever happens to come into my head.

So hello again. Hope you’re still with me.

1 year ago:

AWOL

Grandpa’s tractor

Vacation

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