Saturday

Eggplant: Parmesan


Eggplant is easy, we started the white eggplants from transplants, my purple ones are still growing because I started them a little late from seed. My garden is definitely helping me achieve my goal of eating healthier and cooking more. When I had 4 little eggplants ready that I needed to use, of course Eggplant Parmesan came to mind. It was my favorite garden dish so far, wait, no cucumber chicken salad, wait, no, fresh salsa. Ok, Eggplant Parmesan is my favorite hot dish thus far.





Eggplant Parmesan Recipe
Ingredients
2 lbs (about 2 large) eggplants
1 can of tomato sauce
3 clove garlic, peeled and minced
Olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
4 large eggs, beaten
1 1/2 lbs of fresh mozzarella cheese, sliced into 1/4 inch rounds
1 cup grated high quality Parmesan cheese
1 packed cup fresh basil leaves
Method
1 Cut eggplants lengthwise into 1/4 inch slices. Dredge the eggplant slices first in the flour mixture, then in the beaten egg. Working in batches, slide coated eggplant into hot oil and fry until golden brown on both sides, turning once. Drain on paper towels.
4 Preheat the oven to 350°F. In the bottom of a 10x15 inch glass baking dish, spread 1 cup of tomato sauce. Top with one third of the eggplant slices. Top eggplant with half of the mozzarella slices. Sprinkle with one third of the Parmesan and half of the basil leaves.
5 Make a second layer of eggplant slices, topped by 1 cup of sauce, remaining mozzarella, half the remaining Parmesan, and all of the remaining basil. Add remaining eggplant, and top with the remaining tomato sauce and Parmesan.
6 Bake until cheese has melted and the top is slightly brown, about 30 minutes. Allow to rest at room temperature for about 10 minutes before serving.





Friday

Okra: Garden to Table

So Okra was another vegetable I had no idea what looked like in 'real' uncooked form. I have about 25 plants and they have been producing really well. This is the first crop that produced that I started from seed. The first trick harvesting it at least every other day, because if you don't, the plant gets lazy and stops producing.
My second challenge with okra was my challenge with my whole garden. How do I eat all this stuff. With Okra, I cooked gumbo, i'll fry my next batch. Okra is good raw to me, it has a buttery starchy taste and it's kinda gooey.









Gumbo vegetables (all from Garden)

Papers, Onions, Tomatoes, and Okra, garlic, Parsley, and Basil.

Wednesday

Garden: After & Before- June/March


We have come so far in just 4 months!

Garden Layout:
Area 1
Bed 1: Cantelope
Bed 2: Asparagus, Rutabaga, Garlic, Cabbage, Broccoli, Collards, Strawberries
Bed 3: Parsley, Oregano, Rosemary, Lavender, Chives, Thyme, Sage, Mint, Catnip, Basil, Dill
Bed 4: Watermelon, Pumpkin, Gourd


Area 2
Bed 5: Peppers, Tomatoes, Onions, Potatoes (harvested)
Bed 6: Cucumbers, Squash, Zucchini, Eggplant, Okra
Bed 7: Corn, Beans, Squash
Bed 8: Sunflowers, Sweet Potatoes





The Garden is close to the original layout plan from March.






What the Heck is a Rutabaga?

One time my sister stopped by a country kitchen to get some dinner, as she peered over the counter of county foods, she pointed and said “I'll have some rutabagas” The overwieght black woman behind the counter erupted in muffled chuckles as she leaned on the counter burying her face in the arm of her spoon hand. When she recovered, she said “i didn't know no skinny white girl knew what rutabagas was”.

She was right, I am not skinny, but when my rutabagas seemed to be getting big, I had no idea what to do. Basically a rutabaga is a cool season root vegetable, its what happen when a collard and a turnip really love each other. I ended up just cubing, boiling and seasoning for lunch. Cooked, it takes like a zesty potato.












Monday

POTATOES-catching up on the harvest

I haven't been able to post in the last month. I have been working full-time, went on vacation, and spent the last week as 4-H Camp. This has highlighted the fact that my garden has such little upkeep. We go a neighbor to come turn the water on 3 times that week, and the garden's doing beautifully! I have also been trying to figure out video blogging with no success. The Garden has changed so much in just 4 weeks.
When the weather warmed in late may, the garden exploded with life!
At that point I was harvesting a strawberry here and there, eating lettuces and collards. There was a period of time that everything was growing rapidly, but there was nothing to harvest. Then when we came back from Florida last week we had our first Summer bounty!
There is so much to post that I thing I will highlight a Harvest each post.









POTATOES
Growing: easy
The first of the harvest was when I notice my Potatoes looking sickly, I got worried and looked it it up in a book and saw that when you potatoes plants decline, it's time to pull them up and get your potatoes. It was so fun, we had half red potatoes half white. We had 3 rows of about 10ft and produced around 100 Potatoes total. Next year I want to plant more! I am deciding if I should do a second crop, if I do, I have to battle with the potato beetle season. Ewww.


Whe potatoes look bad...


1. Pull potatoes up-pull potatoes off roots




2. Roll plastic much-dig up the rest of the potatoes



3. Re-bury drip line for next crop




4. Roll plastic mulch and hay back over dirt to keep weeds away


5. Enjoy Potatoes~



Saturday

Composting. Recycling made very very easy.

There has been way too much Baby posting going on, so I thought w cover composting. Composting is just letting nature recycle organic materials. The end result is a very rich dark soil filled with nutrients. The only thing nature needs to turn organic substances (grass clippings, food, discarded plants, dead leaves) into compost is time and oxygen. The microorganisms do the rest!

How.

I just got some pallets from Home Depot, you can sometimes convince them to give them to you for free, and made a square like structure. You can use chicken wire, garbage cans, 5 gallon bucket or pretty much anything, or even nothing, you can just pile it up on the ground. I like the pallet because it can hold a lot of stuff and the slats inside allow oxygen to get to the rotting material, thus speeding up the process.

All you need to know is BROWN + GREEN. You need 1 parts green material :kitchen scraps, rinds, skins, and peels, discarded plant parts, grass clippings, weeds ect. With 3 parts brown (dead materials such as leaves, newspaper, tea bags). Put your pile in a sunny location and WALLAH! THAT’S IT, You will have rich dark soil in a few months. I actually ask my neighbor for their dead leafs, they look at me funny but are happy to oblige, and I put kitchen scraps into a gallon plastic baggie which I drop off at the compost pile every 2 days or so.

Composting DON’TS:

-don’t put new material in a pile that has already broken down

-do not put invasive weeds in pile

-keep dairy and meat product out of your compost: it will attract critters!

Monday

Cloth Diapers: Off the Deep End. Into the Rainbow



I have to be honest, I must say that I bought my cloth diapers on a whim because they were really really cute. Not like me at all. After I bought them, I was very willing to hate them and resell them. But alas, these other women weren’t crazy, it is actually easy, affordable, and super amazingly adorable.


As any self respecting Hippie, I looked into cloth diapers, but like many, there were just too many options, I got overwhelmed and quit. I was happy using disposables bought from Sams, and the start up cost didn’t appeal to our rice and beans budget. However, recently, me and my husband became debt free and were allotted each other ‘blow money’ to celebrate. At this time, I met two mothers who cloth diapered. They explained it wasn’t hard and directed me to diaperpin.com. This explained the different types in about a five minuet reading. From there I knew that of the like 7,000 times I would change Søren I was bound to stick him with a diaper pin, so normal pre-folds were out. I hate Velcro with a passion, especially when it comes to washing it, so after some looking I decided on One size Fuzzibunz. The website was easy and informative, then I found a chic who sold them for 13.50/diaper. So I bought 18. That’s 250 bucks. A lot of money. About what I would have spent in 5 months of disposables. There are many many sites dedicated to misconceptions about cloth diapers, but I will tell you a few that surprised me…
-They don’t leak, like at all. I even went for 8 hours (overnight) and he was still ‘holding it together’. He cant make it the full 12 hours unless I put 2 pads in one pocket. (no biggie, they each come with 2 anyways.

-Normal Arm and hammer detergent does the trick. (and you only use 1/4th the amount you would on a normal load. Per Fuzibunz instructions- that’s 4 times less detergent than I was anticipating)
- I thought you needed to do 2 dryer cycles. But, they are more like swimsuits, after you normal spin cycle, they are very close to dry, and only a few hours of a sunny day to be sweet smellingly dry and soft. Honestly the entire clothes line process (up and down) takes about 2 minuets.

They are so cute- My baby is going to be naked most of the summer, its just how I roll. I know it’s a bad reason, but once you go cloth, disposables look so ugly!
You don’t have to buy brand accessories, I got my waterproof bag to use in my diaper bag at Target, and I use a $1.00 ‘lingerie’ bag from Wal-Mart to store dirty diapers in my laundry area. (needs to be breathable)

POOH Nasty. I Used the disposable-flushable liners and it makes pooh cleanup easy. I spent $20 and how I have 1,000 liners. This will last me about a year. I reconsidered cloth once Søren moved to solid foods and therefore was pooping solids. I have since realized that if I don’t add rice or oats to his food mixtures I get runny pooh, no fun for me or the diapers. This works well because I freeze Søren’s food mixtures and defrosting can sometimes cause a little excess liquid, mixing a little oatmeal makes feeding him easier too! (if baby does have diarrhea, it washes out of the fleece easily. No stains so far, even with bright orange pooh pooh.)
DreOct 29, 2011- What i have learned s6 months in...
So, I want to post a follow up. There are a few things i have learned in the past 8 months that this blog doesn't address. I love my fuzibunz, however, here are a few challenges...
1) the first thing. Oder. Wet diapers smell gross. There was a whole learning process. i used to but them in a bag next to the washer. this sucked. it stunk. I did two things to cure this problem. One is i store wet and dirty diapers in my diaper Jeanie. the lac of OPEN air flow cut back on smell. Then i decided to rinse them out before i put in the diaper Jeanie. Totally took care of all the odor. You do have to figure out how to dispose of your wipes-we use a covered trashcan. Rinsing out the diapers in your bathroom sink is really not a big deal considering you need to wash your hand after anyways.
2. Poop. the poop liners do work well,- however i have heard horror stories of them getting stuck in septic tanks. i also recommend you put a diaper sprayer on your toilet. (about 30 bucks)
3. I did need to strip my diapers because arm and hammer did cause build-up on my fleece diapers- causing a waterproof waxy surface that makes your diaper leak. You can get detergent that wont build-up but it's harder to find. I just used Oxi-clean to strip the diapers- getting them back to their normal absorbancy- about 1 time each month.
4. One more thing is you CANNOT use diaper rash creme with clothe diapers! it will RUIN the fleece. Statistically cloth is supposed to discourage rashes. But when soren gets a fever, it is often accompanied by diaper rash. So it's good to have disposables on hand in case your baby does get a rash.
So i hope that this helps! i love them, I would do it a million times again!
DreJan 14, 2012- what i have learned a year in ....
One more thing. We have completely cured our diaper rash problem by just using a disposable every night with diaper creme every night (it took me a while to figure out this creme is more preventative then prescriptive). If their is any irritation one night with creme and he is completely happy and smooth the next morning. Because he is getting older and sleeps 12 hours- we also put a clothe Diaper on top of the disposable to prevent leaks