A Living Hope

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Preparing for our celebration of the Resurrection tomorrow:

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The children’s baskets may be put out awaiting little treats from a certain visitor, but our hearts and minds are fixed the redemptive joy of tomorrow.

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. – I Peter 1:3

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Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. – Hebrews 12: 1-3

Happy Easter, from our family to yours.

Garden Snapshot

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A few quick pictures Firecracker and I took in the garden yesterday afternoon:

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The chickens having a grand time in the compost bin.

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All sorts of things are germinating – peas, peas and more peas, chard, kale, mustard greens, beets, lettuce, poppies, sweet peas, calendula, artichokes, chives, parsley and basil.

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The garlic and shallots we planted last October are really taking off!

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And, of course, our 75-odd tomatillo and tomato-lets are getting big – here (clockwise from far L) are “Black Krim, “Yellow Pear”, “Costoluto”, “Brandywine” and some little “Sweet 100” cherry toms that got a late start.

Today we’ll be planting “Hollow Crown” parnips and “Nantes” and “Cosmic Purple” carrots, and more basil, as well as starting cilantro in the cold frame.  Despite the chilly rain the past few days, it’s really feeling like spring as the garden comes to life.

Buttermilk-Spelt Bread

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We all love the nutty, complex flavor of spelt.  Spelt is very low in gluten, and can form a hockey-puck loaf if you’re not careful.  This recipe produces a light and tasty loaf, although it doesn’t rise as high as a white-bread loaf.   (But who cares?  The flavor is amazing!)

Also, the recipe makes two loaves, one for you and another to share with a neighbor.

Since a few folks have requested it, here’s my all-time favorite Spelt bread recipe, from my friend Naomi –

Buttermilk-Spelt Bread

4 Cups spelt, kamut or hard winter wheat flour
1–1.5 cups buttermilk
1/2 cup melted butter or olive oil (for greasing bowls and pans – do so liberally)
1/4 cup warm water
1 tsp active dry yeast
2 tbsp honey
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 extra cup flour–can be the same used above, or unbleached white flour

2)Directions:
1)Combine 4 cups flour with 1cup buttermilk in a Kitchenaid mixer with paddle attachment until a ball forms.  If dough is too thick, add more buttermilk slowly, but it should be thick enough to form a ball.  Place ball of dough in a bowl, cover with a towl and leave in a warm place for 12-24 hrs.

2)After 12-24 hrs, combine water, yeast and honey in a small bowl and leave for 5 minutes or until it bubbles.  Add salt and baking soda and mix well. Place half the flour mixture, half the yeast mixture and 1/2 cup of extra flour in the Kitchenaid.  Process until a smooth ball forms.  Repeat with other half of dough, yeast & flour.

3)Knead the two balls together briefly and place in a buttered bowl.  Cover with a towel and let it rise for 2 hours, until doubled in bulk.  Then punch down, cut the dough in half and process each half in a processor for 30 seconds each.  Then form the balls into loaves with your hands and place in liberally buttered loaf pans.  Cover with a towel and let rise another 1-2 hours.  Finally, bake for 30 minutes at 350 degrees F, remove from oven and cover tops of loaves with more butter.   Cool on racks before enjoying.

Fresh Eggs

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We got chickens!!

After months of scouring Craigslist, pricing materials at the ReBuilding Center and researching plans (not to mention years of wishing, dreaming)… we finally found a used coop that met our super tight budget. (A coat of pretty paint, and the sturdy coop will look quite nice in the back corner of our yard.)   And a completely unexpected bonus- the large (6 nest boxes) coop came with enough fencing and fence posts for a very large run.

An even bigger bonus – the coop came with 3 organically-fed, heritage breed, 9 month-old hens – 2 Australorps (two big glossy-green/black girls that lay brown-eggs) and an Auracana (a rusty, stripey hen with big tufts of feathers on the sides of her head that lays blue-green eggs).

We can’t wait to expand out little flock, and I can’t wait to write some more about the beginning of our chicken-keeping adventure.   But, that’s all for now- yardwork calls.   After having friends and neighbors help us move the weighty coop into place yesterday, we need to get out and put the fencing up today, so Sarah, Plucky and Nudge can roam their patch of the yard safely (and also keep the tender baby veggies safe from them!).

More soon…

Seedlings

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Yesterday afternoon, with my son on my back, the girls and I potted up the first of our tomato seedlings – all 51 of them.  (The one above is a “Black Krim”, a favorite of ours for salads.)  Another 26 little tomato-lets (started a week later) will be potted up this weekend, time allowing.
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(Above: Our eclectic collection of potted-up tomatoes – in sour cream and tapioca containers, large paper cups, milk jugs, juice bottles, hand-me-down pots.)
It felt wonderful to spend the afternoon in the warm sunshine, kneeling with my children on the front steps, tenderly moving each little seedling from a starting tray into its own pot.   It felt wonderful to be growing food with my children, and I am grateful for the many, many days  of gardening with them that are spread out in front of us.
One of the most important resources that a garden makes available for use, is the gardener’s own body. A garden gives the body the dignity of working in its own support. It is a way of rejoining the human race. – Wendell Berry

Real Food

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Today we finished Michael Pollan‘s In Defense of Food.   The girls and I listened to it on unabridged book CD over the course of several afternoons of making dinner.  I had really enjoyed The Omnivore’s Dilemma and The Botany of Desire, but somehow missed this one until now.

Much of what he writes really melds with our family’s thoughts on what we eat, how we eat, and where our food comes from, and we found the book affirming and encouraging.

In honor of Pollan’s call to simply “eat food”, instead of “food-like substances”, here’s the food we made for tonight’s dinner while listening to the final chapters of the book:

sliced mangoes and oranges

roasted carrots, golden beets and potatoes tossed with toasted walnuts and bleu cheese (above)

Cabernet-braised beef with dried apricots

brown rice

mint tea

whole-wheat oatmeal-marionberry bars

Pollan quotes Wendell Berry throughout the book, greatly esteeming Berry’s writings on humanity’s relationship to food, agriculture and nature.  (By the way, thanks to Pollan – and even more so to Kortney at One Deep Drawer – I’ve got a whole stack of Berry’s writings on order from the library). Particularly moving for me was Pollan adoption of Berry’s words as a sort of grace at the beginning of the dinner meal: 

Eating with the fullest pleasure – pleasure, that is, that does not depend on ignorance – is perhaps the profoundest enactment of our connection with the world. In this pleasure we experience our dependence and our gratitude, for we are living in a mystery, from creatures we did not make and powers we cannot comprehend.

Spiced Cocoa Beef Stew

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The girls and I made a special beef stew for  my birthday yesterday.  They especially enjoyed blending the spices at the beginning…and later standing by the stove, inhaling the amazing aroma of spice-dredged beef browning in butter (oh, and eating three big bowls of hot stew at dinner, too!).

We don’t eat much meat, but this is a nourishing, comforting meal that is worth the effort.  A little bit after lunch, we put on some bluegrass music, started a pot of hot tea and got cooking.  Once the dish gets going, this stew can simmer through the afternoon with no need of my assistance, so it’s a great choice for a day when we’re going to be home and want to work in the garden or read all afternoon right up to dinner time.   (I just remember to put the rice cooker on and add the greens to the stew about half an hour before we want to eat.)

This recipe is inspired by a beef-cooked-in-chocolate-and-mild-chilis dish that I had at a friend’s house years ago – I liked the flavor combination of the beef with the cocoa, oregano, and smokiness of the ancho chili powder.   It took me a few tries to come up with this version – just a basic beef stew with the typical tomatoes and wine to tenderize the meat, and spices we like in a typical combination – I end up changing it a little every time I make it – continuing to improve it, I hope.

Larksong’s Cocoa Braised Beef

Ingredients:

In a large bowl, combine

2 Tbsp dutch process cocoa

1 Tbsp ground coriander (I prefer Penzey’s Moroccan)

2 tsp smoked Spanish paprika

2  tsp ancho chili powder

2 tsp cumin

1 tsp ground cinnamon (again, I use Penzey’s Cassia, for a stronger cinnamon flavor)

2 tsp garlic powder

1 tsp onion powder

1 1/2 tsp dried leaf oregano, crushed between your fingers

1/2 tsp ground black pepper

1 tsp salt

1/2 cup unbleached flour

You will also need:

2 Tbsp butter and 3 Tbsp olive oil

about 2 1/2 lbs stew beef, cut into 1 1/2 inch cubes (don’t trim off all of the fat – it adds flavor!)

1 large onion, finely chopped

1 large red or yellow bell pepper, finely chopped (optional.  And when we have fresh pimentos from the garden, I use 3 or 4 of those)

2 cloves garlic, minced

1/2 cup good quality red wine

1 can crushed tomatoes (with basil, if you like), or part of a quart of home-canned tomatoes, crushed between your fingers, juice included

1 -2 chipotle peppers (from a can of chipotles in adobo), crushed in a mortar and pestle or minced (with gloves on!) (optional – 1 for some heat, 2 for a lot – these can have quite a kick.   I leave it out when making this for the kids)

1 3/4 cups beef broth (if I don’t have any in the freezer, I will use Penzey’s ham base, according to the directions and mix with 1 3/4 cups water – adds a sweetness and smokiness to the broth)

3 big handfuls spinach, kale, or chard, chopped (whatever is growing fresh in the garden, or half a pack of frozen spinach, if necessary).  If using kale, remove the ribs.  If using chard, remove and chop ribs, and add these to the stew 10 minutes before adding the chopped leaves.

fresh oregano, for garnish (I actually have some in the garden already, thanks to Teacher Linda!)

A pot of  white or brown rice, and a loaf of crusty bread

Directions –

1.  In a large pot/ Dutch oven, heat 1 Tbsp butter and 1 Tbsp olive oil on med heat.  While oils are heating, toss the cubed beef in the bowl of spices, coating thoroughly.

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2. Brown spice-dredged meat in batches, being careful to avoid crowding meat, so that it can caramelize (instead of steaming, which is all it will do in a crowded pan). (There will be excess spice/flour mix in the bottom of the bowl – save this!).    This will take about 4 batches – halfway through, add additional 1 Tbsp olive oil.  Remove all browned beef to a separate plate.

3.  Add remaining Tbsp of butter, reserved flour/spice mix to the pot, stirring until fragrant and browning a bit.  Deglaze pan with 1/2 cup of red wine, and pour this back into the bowl and reserve.

4.  Add remaining Tbsp olive oil to the pan, and cook onions and bell pepper until softened, about 5 min, then add garlic and cook, stirring, for another 2-3 minutes.

5.  Add beef (and any drippings that accumulate on the plate) , wine/flour/spice mix, tomatoes, beef broth and crushed chipotles (optional) to the pot.  Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer.  Cover and cook about 2 hours, or until meat is falling-apart tender (the flour will thicken the broth as it cooks, but if it looks like it’s getting too thick, you can add another 1/4 to 1/2 cup broth or water).

6) Add greens, and cook for another 20-30 min.  Garnish with chopped fresh oregano and serve over rice.  Enjoy!

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Flyer

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My dad, who has made me all sorts of great spindles and fiber tools,  made me a new spinning wheel flyer to replace the broken one on my Louet-S10! (It arrived just in time for my birthday.)  YAY!!!!

It’s rainy and yucky out today (although, I’m grateful, because the seeds we’ve planted need the water), so I think it’ll be a great afternoon to listen to our new book on CD while the girls finish their altered book project and I try out my wheel!

Those bags of fiber upstairs are calling me.  Can’t wait to get spinning…

Got our wellies on!

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Seems like we’ve been living in our wellies this week as we spent most of our time planting in the garden.  This week we’ve started:

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Peas, round two, this time in the front yard – Little Marvel, Tall Telephone, and Oregon Sugar Pod II.

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Potatoes, in three beds in the backyard, near the larger coldframe – German Butterball, All Blue, and a rare heirloom, Red Thumb, an oblong potato with thin red skin and rosey pink flesh.

Leafy and misc. Veggies – Fordhook , Magenta Lights, and Bright Lights Swiss Chard; Russian Red, Dwarf White, and Nero Tuscana Kale, chives, an heirloom lettuce blend, mustard greens, and a brave early attempt at carrots.

Sprinkled around the edges of the beds we seeded calendula and mixed-color California poppies.  At the ends of the pea rows, we put in Wedding Blush tall sweet peas.

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When I got too tired to do any more yardwork, and the kids were tired of scooter and bike riding around the driveway, we sat on the front steps (smelling the fragrant hyacinths that have just begun to open), and potted up some seeds:

Tomato and tomatillo – third round of tomato planting, so all of these are repeats – Green Zebra, red and yellow Brandywine, Persimmon,  Black Krim, Yellow Pear, Sweet  Million, Tigerella, Cherokee Purple, Crnkovic  Yugoslav (from Seed Savers), Marvel Striped tomatoes, and Purple de Milpa tomatillos.

Other veggies – we started Musselborough Leeks and a second round of globe artichokes (Tum Tum the Destroyer did in my first pot of 7).

What veggies are you starting in your garden?  What are you most looking forward to starting?


Baking Day

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Monday is baking day.

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We’re enjoying the Monday tradition of baking homemade bread.  Our favorite “fancy” recipe is Challah – the dough is so kid-friendly, the results wow everybody, and nothing goes better with homemade jam.

It looks like the sun is starting to come out, so I think we’ll go plant some potatoes (along with the usual Yukon Gold and generic redskinned, we’re trying three heirlooms this year – German Butterball, All Blue, and a lovely pink-fleshed Red Thumb).

After some busy gardening, I think we’ll deserve some challah and strawberry-banana jam for afternoon snack.  🙂

Little Ragamuffins

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We scrapped all other plans for today,

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and simply played in in the dirt.

As Firecracker said, “There’s nothin’ more natural than gettin’ dirty.”

Somehow, in the midst of playing “dirt fairies”, “cruel dirt queen who makes her workers dig all day”, “climb dirt mountain”, “search for worms and buried treasure”, and “fill and empty buckets of dirt over and over”, we managed to spread just shy of two yards more compost over the front beds, finally completing them.

Tomorrow – chard, beets, kale, mustard greens and potatoes are sown out front.  The coming weeks – finish backyard beds, plant more veggies, mulch paths, plant a few fruit trees, and finish chicken coop/run.

Our front yard before this weekend’s garden work day:

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And this afternoon:

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Many thanks to all of the volunteers who helped on Saturday!!  We are excited to see the garden grow and develop in the coming months!

Tomato seeds

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You know what they say – “Good things comes in small packages.”  I think tomato seeds are just about the best small package around -they contain the promise of wonderful meals to come.

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I know our garden is going to be growing food for more than our nuclear family, and therefore we’ll be starting more tomato plants than the average garden.  However, we want to grow a wide variety, and I could never use up all of the seeds from the dozen or so types of tomatoes we’ll be growing if I purchased a separate packet of each type.  Thank goodness for mix packs that contain 3 or 4 varieties to a pack – each dyed a different color, so you can still tell what seed will produce what tomato.

My favorite salad tomatoes – Black Krim and Green Zebra…I can’t wait for August!

What are you favorite tomato varieties?

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(One of the two tubs with tomato and tomatillo pots – each with 4-6 seeds.  I can’t help but peek at them over and over, hoping to see someone germinating.  Patience, patience!)

Ridiculously good dinner

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Little Hen and I made this recipe for spiced pulled-pork (from Sunset Magazine) for dinner two nights ago.  I have yet to find a Sunset recipe that is a dud – there are always keepers in ever issue -but this one was a cut above.  Oh my goodness, the allspice and thyme combined with the apple-cider vinegar, and tender (yet economical) slow-cooked pork – it was beyond delicious!!

Here is Sunset’s original recipe (I’ll post my slight alterations at the end) :

Sunset Magazine’s Spiced Pulled-Pork

Yield: Makes 8 to 10 sandwiches

  • 1 1/2  pounds  boned pork shoulder or butt, fat trimmed
  • 4  ounces  green onions, rinsed, ends trimmed, and coarsely chopped
  • 2  cloves garlic, peeled
  • 2  fresh Fresno or other hot green chilies (about 1 oz. total), rinsed, stemmed, and seeded
  • 2  tablespoons  tomato paste
  • 2  tablespoons  brown sugar
  • 2  teaspoons  ground allspice
  • 1  teaspoon  ground dried thyme
  • About 1 teaspoon salt
  • About 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • 1/4  cup  cider vinegar
  • 8  to 10 soft dinner rolls (about 1 oz. each), sliced in half horizontally

Preparation

1. Rinse pork and pat dry.

2. In a blender or food processor, whirl green onions, garlic, chilies, tomato paste, brown sugar, allspice, thyme, 1 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper until finely chopped. Add vinegar and whirl until smooth. Scrape mixture into a heavy 5- to 6-quart pan. Add pork and turn to coat completely. Cover and chill at least 2 hours or up to 1 day.

3. Add 1 cup water to pan, cover, and bring to a simmer over medium-high heat; reduce heat to very low and simmer pork, turning once, until meat is very tender when pierced and shreds easily with a fork, 2 to 2 1/2 hours.

4. Remove from heat and let cool about 15 minutes. Transfer meat to a bowl. Skim and discard fat from surface of cooking liquid. Measure liquid; if there’s more than 1 1/2 cups, boil over high heat until reduced to 1 1/2 cups. With a fork or your fingers, pull meat into thin shreds; remove and discard fat. Mix meat with cooking liquid. Add more salt and pepper to taste.

5. Spoon about 1/4 cup pulled pork onto each roll bottom; set tops in place.

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We made a quadruple recipe (since I happened to have a 5-ish lb. pork shoulder in the fridge).  This way, I could serve pulled-pork with spinach rice and a side of roasted sweet potatoes (in cumin, paprika, coriander, garlic, and a titch of cayenne) the first night, and pulled-pork sandwiches (on homemade buns) with a side salad and some homemade pear sauce later in the week.  There were also two dinner-sized bags to pop into the freezer.

If you’re going to make a quadruple batch, and also planning on feeding this dish to children (who, by the way, love shredding the pork, it’s great, messy fun!), here are some changes I recommend:

1)Quadruple everything in the recipe, except the hot chilis – keep this the same, so it’s not too spicy for little ones (our pork had a teensy kick to it, but even Tum Tum ate three helpings with no complaints.) and also do not quadruple the water – instead use 2 1/2 – 3 cups.

2)Definitely let the larger cut of meat sit in the rub overnight or even 2 days in the fridge.

3)Increase cooking time to about 4 hours, using a meat thermometer to check that the middle of the roast has reached a safe temperature – that’s 160F.

If you’re looking for a hearty, easy, delicious late-winter meal, I highly recommend this recipe.

Up next for comfort food (if I can get my hands one some local lamb that doesn’t bust the budget) (thanks for tipping me off to this yummy looking recipe, Chris!) – Honey-Rosemary Lamb Sandwich.

PS- Have you seen Sunset’s blog, One Block Diet?  I have been reading it lately, and getting some inspiration for our own garden project.

Library books this week

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The girls are listening to Daddy read The Mousehunter at bedtime, but our daytime book selection reflects the unusually sunny, warm weather that has us all thinking of anything except the tail-end of winter.

We just finished listening to Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (Which is why we’re starting an asparagus bed -  Little Hen was fascinated by the chapter on asparagus – as read by Barbara Kingsolver’s daughter), interspersed with a complementary collection of Appalachian music.  Indulging a totally separate branch of the girls’ current interests, we had worked our way through a stack of books on Norse mythology and ancient Egypt.  So, it was time to order some new items.  In the afternoons, when we’ve needed a break from gardening, we’ve been scrolling through the library’s website, ordering books, books on CD, and music CDs that appeal to us.

When we went to pick up the books, it was clear that a definite theme must have been running through our collective subconscious while we were ordering:

SPRING!!

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This afternoon, while the rain comes down outside, we’ll be reading the chapters on winter and spring from Our Farm, a book about 5 siblings’ experience of a year on their family’s farm.

What books are seeing you through the end of winter, as we edge toward spring?

Why I haven’t been blogging the past week or so

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We’re working on a converting our front lawn into veggie beds, and the unseasonably warm and dry weather has helped us get a jump start on sheet mulching.  Goodbye lawn, hello permaculture landscape!  While Tum Tum and I spread cardboard, straw, manure and compost, Little Hen and her Daddy were busy building cold frames out of scrap wood and old windows from the ReStore. (Firecracker was either resting inside, or resting curled up in a nest of blankets on the driveway, since she not only had strep throat, but then a head-to-toe reaction to the amoxicillin meant to cure the strep.  Poor kid. )

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(Collage posters Little Hen made calling for Garden Volunteers – I wrote the words, but she went to town with the scissors, a stack of old issues of Mother Earth News and a glue stick.)

Last year we worked at Penelope’s Garden, but this year, we’ll be hosting a community-building garden of our own.   It will be years before our seedling fruit trees and berry bushes obscure many sunny patches of our yard, so we thought we’d make good use of it all and put in veggie beds to grow fresh, organic produce for families of limited means.  This weekend, a team of volunteers will help us finish installing the front yard beds and create many more in the backyard, so that the organic veggies grown here and cared for by volunteers can be delivered to the families at Birch Community Services, a local non-profit serving needy families in Portland.

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We saved a little time for planting poppies and sweet pea seeds, rhubarb and asparagus crowns.  We also started tomato, artichoke, and cardoon seeds in pots in the basement.   The dry evenings allowed me to plant blueberry bushes, dozens and dozens of strawberry plants, and a red currant after dinners last week.

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As Little Hen’s sign (which she hung on the front door) says -“Gardening – You want to sign up?”  If you’re interested in volunteering to grow food for needy families in the Portland area, and teaching those families to grow their own nutritious, organic produce, please e-mail me at

angela(dot)baker(dot)knits(at)gmail(dot)com

I’m working on setting up a little blog dedicated to the garden this year.  More on that soon.   If you have any ideas on a name  for the Birch Community Services’  educational and food producing organic garden hosted at the Baker’s house, I’d LOVE to hear them (short, sweet and whimsical is best).

Happy gardening!  The rains and cold weather are on the way, so I’m sure I’ll be posting more from indoors later this week!

Morning reading

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This photo pretty well sums up our morning literary activities of late.

First thing this morning, we had to get a bit pot of chili blanco going on the stove, and batch of brownies in the oven, since it’s our turn to bring dinner to our homegroup.   While Firecracker helped measure out the spices and crush the garlic, Little Hen was in the living room, practicing some yoga with her Yoga Pretzels cards (she says “Warrior 1” is her favorite pose).  She does 3 or 4 cards each morning, when she remembers.

After the brownies came out, we sat down for a little reading.  We are trying to read two stories a day, and the children all really enjoy and look forward to our snuggle time on the sofa while we read and discuss the stories from Scripture.

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For Christmas, my mother surprised us with a copy of my favorite book of children’s poems – Tirra Lirra: Rhymes Old and New, published in 1932 and now out of print (I have scoured used bookshops for it for years, but she was able to quickly find a copy used on Amazon.com for next nothing.)  It is a wonderful, whimsical book fo children’s poems, and the girls got a big kick out of reading some of the poems today.

The poems in this book are full of delightful imagery, tell rich stories, and crack us all up.   I think we’ll keep reading a few every day for now – they enjoyed them so much.

I’ll leave you with the poem from this book that was my favorite as a child – Eletelephony :

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Once there was an elephant,

Who tried to use the telephant –

No!  no!  I mean an elephone

Who tried to use the telephone –

(Dear me! I am not certain quite

That even now I’ve got it right.)

Howe’er it was, he got his trunk

Entangled in the telephunk :

The more he tried to get it free

The louder buzzed the telephee –

(I fear I’d better drop this song

Of elephop and telephong!)

– Laura E. Richards.

Late Winter Nature Table

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The intense sunshine this afternoon has all of us anxious for spring, but this morning’s hard frost was a good reminder that winter hasn’t left us yet.  It’s clear we’re moving toward spring, though – we opened the kitchen window to get a better listen to the a few birds singing this morning.

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Our nature table had been empty since returning home from Florida, so after lunch, the girls spent a while reworking the shelf with me.  I realize we have so few “late winter” items, but we had fun going through our box of objects and choosing things to put out – things that reflect the lingering winter and anticipate spring.

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I am looking forward to adding more and more items that direct us toward the coming spring as the weeks pass – we brainstormed a list of things we might like to put out – seed packets when they come from Baker Creek (until they are planted), a dish of moss taken from the back stoop.  There are  needle-felted eggs and butterflies we’d like to make, books on the spring equinox to pick up from the library.  And then, if we’re brave enough, asking lovely neighbor for a small branch from her cherry tree that we could force into bloom.  And eventually, our Easter goodies.

Hope you were able to enjoy a piece of sunshine today, and get a glimpse of the light at the end of winter’s tunnel.  Spring will inevitably be on her way soon.  What does your family use in your nature table to signify winter giving way to spring?

Simplifying

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The past month has been an opportunity to re-evaluate what we value as a family – to really examine what we strive to be and to accomplish.  Although unintentional, the blogging break these past several weeks has been very therapeutic for our whole family.  (Actually, it was a break from all computer-related activities).

I realized how much time was being spent every week blogging, and reading other beautiful, but consuming, blogs.  I realized how much more time I spent reading, knitting, sewing, being still and quiet when I tuned out technology.  My stress level went down, and we were all less rushed and more at peace.  Most importantly, I spent so much more time  communicating and interacting with my children in a positive way.

I am going to continue blogging, still for the reason I began – to be an encouragement, and reminder of the value of being a mother, and a keeper of the home and a member of the greater community.  There is priceless value in the small, everyday moments of raising a family.   But, for the next few months, at least, I’ll be scaling back the frequency of  posting and dramatically pruning back the amount of time spent on the computer.

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So, that’s it for this week.  I’m not going to spend the next hour reading other mama’s blogs (as inspirational as they are) while the baby naps – getting neurotic and feeling completely inferior about this humble little blog and our domestic activities compared to what I see elsewhere.

Instead,  I am going to put on some mint tea, and sit down with my girls and enjoy our tea with oranges, Nutella on graham crackers, lively conversation.

Blessings on you as you connect with your loved ones today.

I’ll be back next week.

Words from Trish

This week, I was able to join Angela in Florida for our first visit in two years.  We spent Little Hens birthday at Angelas Parents and her and the kids stayed overnight in My Husbands and Mine beach house. The weather has been brisk down her, but we had a blast.

Angela has asked me to post up that she has NOT abandoned her website, but will be back when she arrives home at the end of the month, but im sure chaos will ensue with her having to come home and re-acclimate to a real winter temperature and children being cooped up, ill guess she’ll be bak to blogging in February.

Until then, i have a few pics to share from our ventures together.

Little Hens Birthday

An afternoon with Percy Jackson

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A lovely, chilly December Saturday – the icy weather kept us in the house, delving once again into the world of Greek Mythology.    We made  mugs of hot mint tea, and listened to Daddy read from our current Percy Jackson book.

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It’s wonderful to share a passion with your children – there’s not much we love to do together more than read adventure stories and share the world of imagination.

Wishing your family some time to slow down and connect this busy season.  Blessings.

Christmas tea

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The dolls hosted a little Christmas tea party for their sparrow, cardinal and swan friends yesterday morning.   Pretend mint tea, fruitcake, gingerbread, and bird seed were served under the Christmas tree.

The girls were inspired by my favorite childhood Christmas book – Tasha Tudor’s, A Doll’s Christmas.  If you haven’t read it, I highly recommend it.  It is out of print, but you may be able to find it at your local library.

Last-minute handmade gifts

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The weather here has been  bitterly, bitterly cold (we are eagerly anticipating our annual Christmas trip to Florida next weekend!!).  The past few days, we’ve built a big fort out of chairs and blankets in the living room.  We’ve been spending our mornings snuggled under it, reading Christmas stories (like this collection of short stories, and this, and this).

While Tum Tum naps in the afternoon, the girls and I have been finishing some last-minute Christmas gift sewing.   The children’s’ Great Aunt gave us some lovely blue toile, and I picked up some other fabric at the thrift store (including a sturdy pale-blue canvas with ferns).  We set out to make a few more farmer’s market totes/library totes for family and friends.

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Firecracker held and worked the pedal, and Little Hen and I guided it through the machine.  Little Hen trimmed the threads and helped cut fabric.  In two afternoons, we were able to churn out five large totes, and one child-sized one.

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All of the totes are lined with contrast fabric and have reinforced, deep-set handles.   A few have lined pockets, since I had a bit of fabric leftover.

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The child-sized tote was cut from 3/4 yd late 1940’s/early 50’s (?) sombrero fabric we found at the thrift store – the colors were so vibrant!  And for 75 cents, how could I pass it up, even with a few age spots?  I had originally planned to give it to one of my nieces, full of craft supplies (colored pencils, watercolors, brushes, etc), but Tum Tum adopted it this morning, putting Nativity figures in it and carrying them around the living room, so we’ll see if it actually leaves the house…

No time to make handmade gifts for Christmas?  Consider buying handmade – here are some beautiful totes  on Etsy – a burlap coffee bag tote, a floral bag,  a tie-dyed tote, and this bright oilcloth bag.

Now to clean up the clouds of fabric and thread snippets all over our living room!

I heard a bird sing…

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Yesterday evening, we strung popcorn and cranberries and decorated our little Christmas tree.  We have quite a collection of bird ornaments, and as we hung them by candlelight (dark at 5pm!) I was reminded of  Oliver Herford‘s little poem, I Heard a Bird Sing –

I heard a bird sing
In the dark of December
A magical thing
And sweet to remember.

‘We are nearer to Spring
Than we were in September,’
I heard a bird sing
In the dark of December.

Hope and Light to you on these dark winter nights.


Christmas Paper-Craft Kit

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The girls are reaching an age where they really enjoy being able to participate in making Christmas gifts.  So, for their cousins (ages 5 1/2 and 3 1/2), we put together little paper-crafting kits, so Aasha and Ruby can enjoy an afternoon of Christmas crafting.

This is a very frugal gift, costing us less than $1 per kit, since we used cardstock scraps and last year’s Christmas cards, as well as craft notions purchased at the thrift store.  It’s also a gift crafty kids will love – when I made my girls fall-themed kits for Thanksgiving day, they made cards, collages, and all sorts of really inventive little creations.

If your kids would like to make these thrifty gifts for their young friends and family, they will need:

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Scissors and pinking shears

a hole punch

paper punches (we used cardinal and snowflake punches, which I pick up when they are deeply discounted after the season)

Christmas-print cardstock scraps (we found some 60% off right after Thanksgiving (with a coupon)  for another project and I saved the scraps) or old Christmas cards to cut up

blank cardstock (we used reds and whites approx 3″x5″ from our economical big box of trimmings and discards from a stationer’s)

small cellophane bags (thrifted), and one larger cellophane or paper bag

crafting notions, such as ric-rac, sequins, stickers, buttons, glitter, seam-binding (anything crafty you can pick up at the thrift store)

glue sticks and glitter glue

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Directions:

1.  Use the pinking shears and scissors to cut out small pieces of cardstock and old Christmas cards – various sizes (2″x3″ up to 3″x5″).

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2.  Puch out snowflakes and birds (this is Little Hen’s favorite part), and sort them into the small cellophane bags. (Firecracker spent a very long time glueing the glittery wings on all of the little cardinals and getting them at just the right angle.)  Punch holes and tie with thrifted ribbon or ric-rac.

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3.  Fill additional small bags with craft notions and other small cut-outs from Christmas cards, and again whole-punch and tie these closed.

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4.  Neatly fill the large cellophane or paper bag with the card stock, and add the bags of punches and notions in the front.  Throw in a glue stick and a tube of glitter glue.

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5.  Create a pretty label for the front from additional cardstock, and decorate with glitter glue.  Whole-punch, and run a ribbon through the label and the bag to attach and close.

6.  Give the gift of open-ended Christmas crafting fun!

Cranberry-Pear Pie

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It’s no secret that pie is our dessert of choice here at the Baker house.  At the holidays I try to bake a pie at least a 3 or 4 times a week, rotating between nut and custard and fruit pies.  And, in my opinion, at the holidays, no fruit pie is complete without the fruit of the season – cranberries.

I love the layer of complexity (and nutrition) that cranberries add to a fruit pie – especially how their tartness marries with the sweet flavor of barlett pears.  I made this pie for Thanksgiving and twice since (we’ve even had it for breakfast, and I’m sneaking a late-night slice at this very moment).  The girls love it served warm, with whipped cream on top.

When adding cranberries straight to a pie, the result is uneven (who likes a large, sour, unexpected bite of whole cranberry?) and often runny (due to the moisture cranberries release while cooking).    This recipe remedies those issues and makes a really special holiday pie.

Larksong’s Cranberry-Pear Pie

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Ingredients for a 10 inch-deep dish pie:

For the cranberry layer:

12 ounces fresh cranberries (one bag), picked through and washed

zest of one orange

1/2 cup light brown sugar

2 -3 tbsp unsalted butter

For the rest of the pie:

2 pints home-canned sliced pears, syrup drained off, and tossed with 2 Tbsp tapioca starch and 4 Tbsp granulated sugar

one pie crust (I prefer a lard crust), well chilled (I usually make a half dozen at once, freeze them, and just take them down to the fridge the night before I want to make a pie)

approx 2 cups butter streusel (also freezes well) or second pie crust

Directions:

1.  Preheat oven to 425 F.  In a medium skillet on medium heat, combine 2 Tbsp butter and brown sugar, stirring until sugar dissolves.  Add the cranberries and orange zest, and cook, stirring occasionally until cranberries have popped and cooked down (if it begins to stick, add additional Tbsp butter).  Remove from heat and let mixture cool slightly.

2.  While cranberries are cooking, roll out pastry.  When cranberries have cooled slightly, spread them evenly across the bottom of the pie crust (see below.)

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3.  Layer the pear/tapioca/sugar mixture over the cranberry layer.  Add streusel over the pears, pressing down slightly to prevent streusel from rolling off the top (the pie should be mounded up quite a bit, but will sink down some as it cooks.).  If you choose to use  a second crust, roll out the pastry, and add it to the top, decorating as you desire.

4.  Cover with foil and place in preheated oven (I use a pie moat underneath, since it may bubble over some).  Bake for 30 minutes, then remove foil and bake an additional 15-25 minutes, or until pie is bubbly and golden brown (being careful not to overbrown the streusel).

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5.  Let cool for a bit, and enjoy with whipped cream or ice cream (and a glass of mulled wine).

If you have a favorite rustic holiday dessert you’ve written about, I would love to share the link here.  Thanks!