Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2015

lavender peach cornmeal cake. homemade sweets.



Is there a more succulent symbol of summertime than the over-juicy peach ripening in the August heat? Sticky sweet juice runs down chins so much that it makes you hunch over crooked to eat them on the grass. This is the peak of summer, when the grass is golden and crisp and the fruit hangs low and juicy. Fruit is the savior of summer, as the temperature runs high. For me, there is no exception for making a dessert without this abundant fruit. 

And here in my house, we have boxes of fresh peaches from a local and organic U-Pick farm. When we aren't growing much of our own fruit, u-pick is the next best thing. Yes, you may throw down $40-80 on buckets of cherries, or boxes of peaches, but when you store them correctly, it is so worth it. When we gather pounds and pounds of this fruit, all other projects stop, and we focus on freezing, canning, and gorging on the fresh, perishable fruit. This fruit is not like the fruit at the store that travels far and sits on the shelf without bruising or browning. This is picked when it is ripe, and needs to be dealt with quickly. I like to make many different types of food with the fresh fruit while we have it, from sweet to savory versions. 

With the peaches, I love making pie of course, as well as peach salsa, ginger peach butter, and peach cobbler. This recipe for lavender peach cornmeal cake adds some fun texture and herbal flavor to a fruit dessert. It was tough to decide between using lavender or rosemary to accompany the peaches in this dessert, and I think both are delicious. This recipe utilizes lavender, but you could omit the herbs all together, or try using other herbs or spices like thyme or cinnamon. Serve it for dessert with ice cream, and then eat it for breakfast with morning coffee or tea, and with another fresh peach of course. Savor the flavor of summer and gorge on some juicy peaches. 


Tuesday, June 23, 2015

salt crusted new potatoes. homemade eats





We were weeding our four beds of onions today and came across some volunteer potatoes that we had let grow amidst the onions. The plants were big, and we pulled them out along with two to three small bright potatoes. Just by weeding a few plants out, we got about three pounds of red, fingerling, and dark purple potatoes. They were beautiful in the dark soil, and so exciting to harvest.






Harvesting volunteers is so gratifying. Its almost a "free lunch," since there was no planning or maintenance involved to grow the food. And we make lunch from them. We like to keep some "wild" in our farm and garden. It often surprises me on how much life overflows without too much human control. There is so much food out there just growing on its own, if only we are there to see it. 

Saturday, May 3, 2014

chevre red cabbage slaw. homemade healthy.




chevre red cabbage slaw


Red cabbage is a beautiful thing. Especially when its all chopped up in a white bowl, with the deep purple burgundy shreds cut with the whites of its insides. Its a crunchy confetti of purple delight, and it can become a magical bowl of veggie addiction when gussied up in a bright slaw. I threw this recipe together in less than 10 minutes, grabbing jars of nuts and mustard and running out into the garden for some chives. 

It was for a housewarming party...I mean, a tent warming party, up a short trail in the woods 
to where I currently live. We had our friends living here on the farm come from their respective homes on the property through the woods to our tent cabin, fit with a new pallet deck and a fire pit. So I made this, along with homemade cornmeal buckwheat muffins, graham crackers, and cinnamon marshmallows.