January 8, 2014
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Five Alarm

Five Alarm

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Ah springtime, a time of optimism and hope.  I suppose it was under its delusional spell that I bought a six pack of chile pepper starts from Home Depot, sold under the name ‘Five Alarm Fire.”  I like to cook with some spice, and I get annoyed by buying chiles at the grocery store (they always seem to get lost between the market and home, or I need them but don’t have them, etc.)  But, as I quickly learned, I do not use enough spice in my cooking to ever make a dent in six plants worth of reasonably spicy chiles.

At the end of the season, there were still LOTS left.  I tried to pawn them off on my various garden neighbors, but it turns out that people are fairly xenophobic about their chiles, and you can’t just put a jalapeno or habanero in type in authentic east Asian or Chinese home cooking and expect it to work.

So I decided to make some chile garlands.  I had probably a hundred extra serranos, habaneros and thai chilies on the plants in November.  San Diego’s insanely dry fall weather made drying the peppers outside in the shade a very simple proposition.  Once they seemed reasonably dry, I strung them using a needle and thread.  This turned out to be pretty fun and easy, as long as you remember not to scratch your eyes during the process.  I wasn’t sure how the pros do it in New Mexico, but I just ran the chili through at the top near the stem and it seemed to work.

The result wasn’t exactly a fine work of art.  It turns out that those BIG strands of chiles you see at Gonzalez-Northgate market have hundreds on them, and they tend to be larger chiles to start with (poblanos).  But the overall result was fun and festive.  I took the long strand I made (probably 3 ft long) and divided it in thirds, and gave them away for Christmas.  I’ll be interested to hear if the recipients get any use out of them, or if they remain purely ornamental.

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November 28, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
1 Comment

Farewell to Fall (*sob*)

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Fall isn’t really over until December 21– and a large part of me has never understood why we insist on curtailing this season of orange and gold  in favor of green and red.  It’s especially hard for me to say goodbye to the squash.  But they do start to rot if you don’t do something with them–especially if you grew them in San Diego and planted them all on May 1.

Many of our favorite pumpkin and squash varieties (like tomatoes and chiles) are descended from American natives.  I’ve always loved the idea of doing a native foods Thanksgiving–but getting it together to do the whole meal has eluded me so far.  This year my nod to the concept is the squash.  I tried growing Botanical Interest’s “Lakota Squash” this year, which is a Sioux heirloom variety.  It didn’t grow very big, so I will be diluting it with some butternut squash as well.  But I’m excited to try out the flavor.  Planning to make “pureed squash with sage from Jack Bishop’s “Vegetables Every Day.”

Before cooking, I took a last few pictures of my favorite fruit of the season…

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October 31, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Soap Giveaways

Soap Giveaways

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I like candy, but as someone who works in the field of reducing childhood obesity and diabetes, I feel badly about handing it out for Halloween (though that doesn’t stop me from buying myself a bag of Reses Mini Pumpkins).  This is the second year I’ll give away soap instead of candy.  I hope that the soap we made is cool enough that the kids won’t think we’re the lame people in our neighborhood.

For anyone who wants to try this themselves, melt and pour soapmaking is super easy.  You can buy “plain” glycerine soap base in either clear or white from a variety of online purveyors, including Brambleberry.com.  Then you chop it into chunks, microwave it in a heatproof container for a minute or so, and then pour it into the mold of your choice.  There are lots of cool soapmaking projects at http://www.soapqueen.com/category/bath-and-body-tutorials/melt-and-pour-soap/

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To make this project spooky, we used a collection of plastic spiders and insects that have been assembled over the years.  As you can see on the picture at left, it was hard to reign in the enthusiasm for how many yucky creatures we wanted to put in each soap.  (We used this soap last year, and it did scrape up the hands a bit– fewer creatures are advisable.  Caution is advised with the soaps once you get down to the scratchy plastic spider legs)  Anyway, you just put the plastic creature in the soap mold, pour the soap over it, wait 30 minutes for it to harden, and that’s it, you have spooky soap.

My personal favorites are these little ones we made from the stupid little plastic spiders that they give away with the stretchy cobwebs that everyone seems to put on their houses.  I am hoping to take up a collection of plastic spiders so we can do it again next year.  (Having to buy the plastic stuff to put in this would be THE WORST).

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Realizing that some of these soaps might not be appreciated by all audiences, this year we also made some non-scary fall soap by making a few big sheets of soap, and cutting it out with fall-themed cookie cutters.  I think we’ll offer the kids the choice of the scary or not scary treat.

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Anyway, if you got one of these for Halloween, comment and let me know what you think!  I hope that this goes over okay and that nobody 1) tries to eat them or 2) scrapes up their hands.  We’re going to try to man the door so that instructions are relayed to parents–and they are labeled (with a skull and crossbones).

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October 30, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Healthy Halloween Giveaways: Candy Corn Crayons

Healthy Halloween Giveaways: Candy Corn Crayons

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Three years ago, this was our healthy giveaway:  old crayons re-melted into the shape of candy corns. Our son has always been a big consumer of Crayola products, and its a relief that at least some of them can be recycled.  (What to do with the 10,000 dead plastic markers?  that is a story for another day.)

We had this nice ice mold from Ikea, put the crayons in, put in the oven on VERY low heat (barely on) until melted, and then let the crayons re-solidify in their new configuration.  Some turned out looking more candy-corn-ish than others. Never really heard whether anyone liked this giveaway… for older kids, I bet crayons are probably a disappointment.

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October 28, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Pumpkin Little

Pumpkin Little

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Four months later we’re enjoying the byproducts of the ornamental squash that overran the garden in June.  Here’s another one that came out of the mix seed packet–I think it’s called “Orange Ball.”  (I would never be able to successfully ID these if it weren’t for Amy Goldman’s amazing book “The Compleat Squash“, which is an unbelievably beautiful tribute by a true fancier).  It also appears to be sold under the title “Pumpkin Little” by Botanical Interests. After we’d already grown quite a number of these, my son saw the Botanical Interests seed packet at the nursery, and based on the illustration, which depicts lots of adorably painted miniature pumpkins, was pretty convinced we should grow some more.

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We managed to get out without buying the seeds, but with the promise that we’d try decorating the ones we’d already grown.

Here are our combined efforts:

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canning2013

September 28, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Canning

Canning

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Yes, like everyone else in America, I have decided to try canning. Andy thinks it’s creepy (reminiscent of eyeballs floating in formaldehyde) and I have to admit that I can see where he’s coming from with that.  But it’s still fairly useful when you have major surpluses of garden produce and limited freezer space.  It seems like a good interim solution until I get one of those Count Dracula Coffin-style freezers for all my green beans.  One does wonder what takes more energy in the end: the freezer space, or the rather energy-intensive canning process.  I’m guessing that the freezer takes more energy, but I bet it’s by a narrower margin than we’d think.

In addition to the “Cherokee Trail of Tears” green beans, the Sungold cherry tomatoes were one of the major drivers of canning this year.  Damn those things are prolific.  And they really don’t taste very good.  This year I dispensed with full sized tomatoes entirely and grew Botanical Interest’s “Cherry Tomato Rainbow Blend” which features eight varieties of cherry tomatoes.  The only ones I would grow again are the cherry version of the “Great White” tomato (DELICIOUS, very sweet), and “Sweetie.”  The rest were a real disappointment, and Sungold (I think it was “Sungold” and not “Gold Nugget”) was an outright problem because there were too many and they weren’t that good.

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Making a sauce with cherry tomatoes is another thing I probably won’t do again. That is a lot of work.  The end result (with sugar added) was pretty good, but only because I kept diluting it with other types of tomatoes over a 2 day process.

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The other thing we had a lot of this year was tomatillos and hot peppers, which I made into a salsa verde that we also canned.  I’m hoping this will be a nice holiday gift along with an enchilada recipe. I’ve used the recipe in “Canning for a New Generation,” and it came out pretty good.

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September 1, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Leaving Preschool

Leaving Preschool

I don’t really have the words to describe how much I loved my son’s preschool.  It was the perfect mix of progressive and unpresuming, with lots of project-based learning but also lots of playtime.  We learned A LOT as parents (from’children should always wear underwear’ to ‘no cleats in the classroom!’) and my son definitely did too (I am thankful that we’re not still battling over the underwear).  When it was time for him to leave for transitional kindergarten, he was totally ready, but I was a mess.

The preschool he went to is surrounded by sage brush and eucalyptus, and going there definitely had some calming, aromatheraputic effect on me.  I’m afraid my son was always picking the aforementioned sage, which would then collect in our house, on the balcony, etc. etc.   So one day we decided to infuse some in oil.  (And we dried some, and we made some into sachets for his underwear drawer–all of which did seem to finally cure his need to pick lots and lots of it). And then we made some very interesting melt and pour glycerine soaps using our infused oil.

I’m sure the last thing his teachers want is to bathe in a soap that smells like their workplace, but… whatever, we gave them the soap on the last day anyway.  And some jam we made earlier in the year (still working on getting the jam right, it turned a strange color), and we wrapped it up furoshiki-style for them.   It seems pretty inadequate a thank you– the peace of mind these teachers gave me for two years was a huge gift–but hopefully they know how much they mean to us.   (Probably they caught the hint when I cried a river when I picked him up that day.)  A big shout out to Mr. Matty, Ms. Patsy and Ms. Anna for the amazing work they do at Mesa Child Development Center.  We will miss you!

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beansalad

August 31, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Birthday Bean Salad

Birthday Bean Salad

If there is a clear winner amongst all the Seed Saver’s Exchange vegetables we’ve enjoyed the past few years, it would have to be the green bean “Cherokee Trail of Tears.”  Unlike some other varieties I’ve grown (“Tavera,” which didn’t sprout,”Purple Bush”and “Red Swan” varieties, which seem to put out one harvest and then turn into dry twigs, and “Blue Lake”, which was tragically decimated by locusts), “Cherokee Trail of Tears” is prolific and seems to enjoy San Diego’s climate.  It handles both semi-shade and extreme sun well, and puts lout lots of beans which can be enjoyed green or shucked as beautiful ebony black beans.

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For my Mom’s birthday we had a bit of both (green and shuckable) so I made a cold bean salad with both mixed together with some cherry tomatoes and a vinaigrette.  I hadn’t really cooked fresh shelled beans before, and I’m not sure I did it long enough–so they were a bit crunchy but not bad.  And they were a really awesome shade of purple.

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I wish I could say that this bean salad fueled all the hula hooping my son did at the party.  I think it’s more likely that the chocolate chip cookies did that.

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August 21, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on First Pumpkin

First Pumpkin

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Harvested the year’s first pumpkin–a pretty adorable sugar pie. Hopefully a few more ‘winter luxury pie’ to follow. It’s been a foggy July and most of August, and the powdery mildew has run wild.  I think we’re lucky we got anything at all!

August 19, 2013
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Cucumber Salad

Cucumber Salad

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Most of the year we grow enough surplus lettuce that we’re the people who always bring salads to parties.  By August, though, all the lettuce are rangy, leathery, and bolted.   While I do see a few seedlings popping up here and there (re-seeded themselves!), we need a different potluck standard in the meantime.  Fortunately, the answer this year has come from the ‘pickles’ my son found at home depot.  He’s not much of a vegetable eater (this is the cross I must bear as a parent), but he does appreciate salty, crunchy pickles.

The type he picked out is very spiky, and somewhat seedy–I think they really are pickling cucumbers.  Too lazy to actually pickle them, we’ve been using them in sushi, and our new potluck go-to dish–cucumber salad!

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Cucumbers look really amazing when they’re growing–I love the curling arms that allow them to climb the tomato cages.

I don’t love cucumbers the way some people do, but this dish isn’t bad.  It seems very Turkish to me–summer breakfast in Turkey always seems to feature cucumbers and tomatoes–so perhaps this would be a breakfast salad there.  It works as a dinner salad here, where we prefer less healthy breakfast fare.  To make it, I just slice up three cucumbers (or how however many pickles we’ve been graced with), add a bunch of cherry tomatoes, and put in a quarter cup of olive oil, salt, pepper and lemon.  Viola! A salad sans lettuce.