Beating the heat

Sherbet…I love sherbet…icy, fruity, sherbet.

I was talking to my mother about the frozen yogurt and she related that when I was born… August, 1955 – a VERY HOT!!! August…my grandmother made her pineapple sherbet. My mother remembered that the recipe included buttermilk. As we were talking, I was Google-ing and found a pineapple sherbet recipe…WITH buttermilk – and NO ice cream maker needed.

I had a fresh, uncut pineapple in my refrigerator. I had buttermilk. I had fresh basil.

Pineapple-basil sherbet – So VERY good! It was almost worth the 90-92F temperatures to enjoy this treat. I added the basil to the recipe and if you have not experimented with fruit-herb mix, I highly recommend. Basil and cherries is good as well. I will be experimenting further.

Today, Saturday, it was much cooler at 74F. At my house, the forecast rain did not happen and the overcast sky and heavy air was not as comfortable as 74F usually is in Northwest Montana…still – it was nice to have the A/C off and the windows open. We are to be at our normal low to mid-80’s this week.

Saturday evening: beating the heat.

Nut butter and an indulgent smoothie!

I love my Vita-Mix blender!

I have had it for almost 6 years. Although spendy, I had been burning up a regular blender about once a year AND no way could they liquefy whole fruits and vegetables like the Vita-Mix can. In response to the customer base’s: “We love the blender but it is so tall!” comments, V-Mix came out with a shorter, fatter jar and I recently succombed to purchasing one – perfect! It is a much better fit under my counter AND easier to get things like nut butter out of it.

Nut butter! I like to mix almonds, cashews and a few pecans for my nut mix. A pinch of sea salt and just enough sunflower oil to allow it to come together as a butter.

It is on the pale side, color-wise as I use blanched almond slices, i.e. no skins.

I always make nut butter in the morning…when I have some hot coffee left in the pot. My bonus from making the butter is an indulgent smoothie that uses the nut butter I can’t quite get out of the blender. Some hot coffee, milk, dark cocoa, a dollop of yogurt, protein powder, psyllium (fiber!) and even a bit of kale and spinach…you can’t taste the green stuff…

A nutty, mocha smoothie: breakfast :) !!

**** I just picked up a morning email from Swallow Crest Farm:

Todays’ produce will include:
Salad mix
Kale and swiss chard-both are good for steaming or stir-fry
Bagged baby carrots-thinned from the beds so the remaining carrots size up
Peas
Cauliflower
Basil
Cilantro

Ooooh boy – it will be a GREAT week of cooking from the garden!

After the weekend catch up

Lazy, hazy days of Summer??? – the days have turned hot and hazy and that makes me lazy as I just want to sit still and stay cool.

The garden did produce a small bag of veg this week: a bag of stir fry (small bits of greens, carrots, broccoli and carrots), a bag of mixed greens, a gorgeous and huge head of broccoli!! and a bag of fresh, fragrant basil.

The stir fry did not really appeal so I picked out the carrots and froze the rest to be used to make vegetable broth.

The basil became pesto…my first “traditional” pesto from the garden :)!

That broccoli – it was destined for a broccoli salad. The usual and delicious broccoli salad has raisins, onions, bacon and a light slightly creamy dressing. I made two modifications…

Instead of bacon, I used the “cajun” sausage that my folks bring back from Louisiana. Bill reportedly hunted high and low to find a butcher that made a sausage to his liking. This stuff is good: spicy, a little heat, full of flavor. And it stands up to being fried a bit crispy. I sliced it thin, quartered the slices and fried them crispy.

In place of raisins, dried and slightly sweetened cranberries. A light dressing of a little mayonaisse, Vidalia sweet onion, white wine vinegar, sugar and salt…AND a sprinkling of sunflower seeds.

A perfect salad for a side or a meal.

Continuing with summer salads…I typically make a huge bowl of macaroni salad or cabbage slaw and then kind of fizzle out as I get near the end of it. I decided that this year, I would make small bowls of each and have a variety through the week.

My folks had a picnic with friends and a shared macaroni salad with a new to them combination. I am not at liberty to divulge all, but the secret ingredient is pickle juice :)! – I use Tony Packo’s Sweet Hot Skinnies: pickles and peppers. Spring onions AND their tops – from the garden – are in this salad.

The cabbage is organic from California but the carrots in the slaw are from the garden and a poppy seed vinaigrette for dressing.

It is not rocket science…if I have some good things ready to go for a snack or a meal, I eat good things!

On to more good things.

It was 90 the last 2 days and is forecast to hit 97!!! today. That is about 20 degrees higher than what I consider hot enough. When I saw a recipe for homemade peach frozen yogurt without an ice cream maker, I decided that sounded like a thing to try. No ice cream maker needed! I am not a big ice cream fan, although I have toyed with getting a maker and making my own, but am not thrilled about the idea of a “one trick pony” kitchen gadget. I AM a fan of yogurt and this simple recipe of greek yogurt, some extract and fresh fruit sounded perfect. Instead of peaches, I thought, cherries – I have 4 cans of cherries in my cupboard….good Oregon cherries in only their own syrup with no added anything. My plan was cherries, almonds and almond extract with the yogurt.

On my errand run to Bigfork, Friday afternoon…whaddya’ know??? A local cherry stand was open. A local grower with a Washington orchard as well, had the first cherries from Washington. I bought a bag of Rainier’s. Rainier’s are sweet – not quite as sweet as the black cherry varieties, but they are a bit firmer.

So…greek yogurt, almond extract, a bit of protein powder and fresh cherries…frozen. No ice cream maker. Yes!

Pretty simple and what a treat… a sweet treat with no sugar other than what occurs naturally in the fruit and yogurt. And protein and other good for me stuff. The texture is something along the line of ice milk and the taste has the tang of the yogurt. For this not so great fan of ice cream, it is a perfect substitute.

This year, Bear is acclimated to Montana and so has felt the heat more than last year. He chooses to be in the cool house for the afternoon and early evening.

Bob sprawls on the front porch, often right against the house in the coolest spot, but mostly stays outside.

Occasionally, we have a bit of a stalemate…

Happy Monday!

Cooking from the garden week 6 & 7

The bounty from the farm continued week 6 with spring greens, spinach, radishes, green onions and rhubarb. I was able to share some greens and the remainder I used as I have been.

Meal salads that started with chef’s salad several weeks ago, continue:

BLT, hold the bread!

A southwestern take with a dressing made of mayo, greek yogurt and salsa…more salsa on top…Ole!!!

Week 7 added broccoli to the haul. I had plans for a fresh broccoli-bacon-cranberry salad but ended up steaming the broccoli to have with some cream of chicken over rice.

Not from the garden but I’ve been wanting to share Karin of Paper Route Design’s Granola. I make 1/4 of her recipe and mix it with a rice cereal I buy in bulk at the natural food store. I have never been a granola fan, but Karin’s recipe sounded so good. As she states on her post, it makes the house smell like the inside of an oatmeal cookie :)!

I scoop the granola – rice cereal mix, add some chopped apple and have a great start to my day or a nice bedtime treat.

…so… week 6 & 7…and there will be no week 8.

A minor weather disaster occured here this last Tuesday morning.

That is hail. And that hail is already partially melted.

We had a strong thunderstorm with 1 – 1 1/2 inch hail and then a torrential downpour.

It did a number on the vegetation, including the gardens at Swallow Crest Farm :(

I received an email this afternoon that this week’s distribution would not happen and it sounds like next week’s is questionable as well… Mother Nature. I am sad for the farm folk as things were going so well and they are now having to re-plant and repair.

Here at my house…the sun has re-appeared. There is a lot of yard and woods cleanup to be done but…

…one must enjoy the sun and fresh air!

Happy Day.

On the fritz

The last two weeks, it has been one thing after another…on the fritz!

Yesterday, Monday, started with no hot water. I checked the breakers and the water heater’s breaker was broke…there had been thunderstorms…I reset the breaker, heard the water heater fire up – yea!

But, then…the water, it was scalding hot. It hadn’t been scalding hot prior…blech. A call to the plumber, a discussion…he will be here tomorrow…

Meantime, I usually have VERY hot, as in TOO HOT!, water. Occasionally I have to reset the water heater’s reset but the breaker is holding.

The good – well, kind of good – news is that as I pulled things out of the closet where the water heater lives, in preparation for the visitation from the plumber…I discovered that water was rising from the crawl space …just a wee bit of water, but enough to necessitate a massive closet cleanup.

…that explains all the mice in the house of late…kind of good news #2 = the explanation being the “good” news.

Work went on the fritz as well. I spent most of the day with the rest of the team chasing an elusive bug. Shortly after 6:00 p.m. we had a conversation along the line of “what we should have done at the beginning was…” – yep, it was that kind of day.

Despite an inclination to abstain from wine this work week…I didn’t.

I poured.

I sat.

I looked on the scene.

So…some things fritzed. But…my dog is happy, the grass is green, the air is crisp and clear. Not everything is on the fritz.