Wrapping up the work week

It is Friday evening, 7:30 p.m. as I write this post. I’m done working for the day but will have a bit of a working weekend to catch up from some distractions this week. Still…it is Friday and even if I will be working, it is a different pace, a choice – weekend working. For now, it is Friday.

This week was a mixed bag of sun breaks, wintry squalls, spring snow, rain and fog. Tonight, after a wintry day, a small fire is going in the woodstove. A new recipe: Foodie with Family’s Cincinnati Chili provided a warm and comforting Friday supper. Bear and I had a lunch time walk at Wayfarer’s, Bob kept me company through the afternoon group work session. It was a good day at the end of a good week.

Last evening as the sun made an appearance…

Bob was out also…

And so was some blue sky.

Enjoying

So…Spring. Technically, it is Spring – for more than a day now. Montana did not get the memo, but then Montana rarely does. That is just one of the reasons that I love Montana :)!

Here, at my house, in northwest Montana, we have been under a winter storm watch/advisory/warning for the past 24 and now for the next 24. It has snowed and rained and snowed and rained. Montana Spring!

Today, Wednesday, I had a very productive morning. Bear and I took a long break at lunch for a run to town…necessary errands and a walk. Back to work after. Suppertime: Bear was napping in the bedroom, Bob was in the sunroom and I took a bit of a break to just be with Bob and enjoy the late afternoon.

Marmalade by the numbers

I finished the last of my cranberry citrus marmalade some months ago – just before Jennie Perillo posted on her blog: In Jennie’s Kitchen: Clementine Rosemary Marmalade. Perfect timing. And that post referenced a previous post of hers: Meyer Lemon, ginger & mint marmalade… oh, YUM!

Jennie notes in the Clementine recipe that she used the same ratios as is in the Meyer Lemon recipe. I love understanding the ratios…be it baking or marmalade or any recipe…it is the ratios: how much of this with how much of that makes things come out right. huh…interesting life metaphor as well. But back to marmalade. I intended to make Jennie’s Clementine Rosemary marmalade the weekend following her post. But, life and motivation… Fast forward to several weeks ago when clementines became unavailable here. RATS!

Blood oranges and meyer lemons were done as well. BUT, I did manage to snag an order of blood oranges and pixie mandarins from a grower in the San Joaquin valley of California. A week and a half ago, 30 pounds of blood oranges and 20 pounds of pixie mandarins arrived on my doorstep.

Marmalade does not take a lot of fruit. And Jennie’s recipe is a perfect quantify that results in 2 pints, i.e. 4 half pints…enough to keep me going for awhile. And the other thing about that smaller recipe – although I procured a large canning pot and rack, it is so big and my stove burners are not big and it is a bit of a pain to deal with. The smaller recipe was perfect and allowed me to experiment with my citrus mix: 2 blood oranges, 3 pixie mandarins and 2 lemons.

This fruit is not organic so I let it swim in a bath of vinegar and water for a bit and then gave it a good scrub before slicing it.

So pretty!

The other thing I learned as I perused recipes is that the pith and seeds of citrus contains pectin. So…you do not need to add pectin when you make marmalade…pectin and sugar being the things that cause the fruit to “jell”.

A lot of recipes have you peeling the citrus, removing the pith and seeds, bunding the pith and seeds in cheesecloth and including that bundle in the cooking of the fruit and sugar, thus providing the pectin without the pith and seeds getting into the marmalade. A lot of work and for my money, not necessary. The pith and seeds cook down and they provide the bit of “bitter” that IS marmalade. I followed Jennie’s recipe of lopping off the ends of the fruit, halving (mandarin and lemon) or quartering (blood oranges) and slicing very thin.

The fruit/water/sugar mix is on the rolling boil, another pot holds the jars and a third has the lids.

And per the numbers in Jennie’s recipe, 4 half pint jars of gorgeous marmalade are the result. So easy, so much less mess than a huge batch. I will make another couple of small batches experienting with rosemary, ginger and basil.

Marmalade by the numbers!

For those not interested in marmalade… Mr. Bear – enjoying a lazy sunday afternoon…too bad he does not have a comfy place to nap…

St. Patrick’s Day: 2012…in Montana

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MISSOULA MT
400 AM MDT SAT MAR 17 2012

.DISCUSSION…A RATHER POTENT WEATHER SYSTEM HAS BEGUN TO IMPACT
THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST THIS MORNING AND WILL CONTINUE ITS
PROGRESSION NORTHWARD. AS IT DOES SO…PRECIPITATION IN THE FORM
OF RAIN WILL PLAGUE VALLEYS OF WESTERN MONTANA AND CENTRAL
IDAHO…WHILE SNOWFALL IS EXPECTED IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN. THE MOST
FOCUSED SNOWFALL POSING THE GREATEST IMPACTS TO TRAVEL WILL BE
ACROSS SOUTHWEST MONTANA…

Right, then… going to rain today here in northwest Montana.

Maybe a bit hard to distinguish…

but THAT is a Robin!!

In the U.S. of A., a robin is a sign of spring.

In the U.S. of A., St. Patrick’s day is confusing… Most of us have no idea other than “GREEN” and it relates to something Irish and is a grand time of having corned beef and cabbage, drinking Guinness or Irish Whiskey or both and generally being hilariously happy about what we know not :)!

Well, now.

St. Patrick was a 5th century cleric.

The Irish “rising” was more 16th-17th century.

There was a lot of hoo-hah in all of those 1200 years relating to religion and land and I don’t know what. Part of me is embarassed not to know considering the bloodshed. I’m currently reading the Outlander books by Diana Galbadon. They chronicle the Highland Scots in the 18th century. Ultimately, I’ve learned a bit more about christendom and my embarassment increases.

…moving on.

Corned beef brisket.

I make corned beef brisket as I make pot roast: sear the briscuit, deglaze, cover with liquid, cook low, slow and long.

Deglazing.

Well…. choices…

I had the Jameson’s (IRISH!) and the Amber Bock (AMERICAN!)

Oh-ho! No way was I using the Jameson’s…saving that for today’s sipping !!!

Pot deglazed, brisket put back with a bit more of the Amber Bock and water to cover…all in a 275 oven for 3-4 hours.

Meanwhile…

NOAA was wrong.

Funny looking rain…

St. Patrick’s Day: 2012…in Montana.