All posts by Gary Huber

Crockpot Apple Butter, otherwise known as Canning While You Sleep

Last cycle, I purchased some of Homestead’s red processing apples to make my yearly crockpot apple butter, and of course, I was very pleased with the results!

Making apple butter in your crock pot is easy, and nearly fool proof. Its basically cooking down the apples with the sweetener of your choice and spices, until much of the water has been cooked out, then putting them in jars and either keeping refrigerated, or water bath processing to keep in the pantry. The only thing to keep watch is to not let it burn, and to make sure you cook in long enough.

10lbs of small apples, peeled, cored and sliced
(this amount of the small red processing apples filled my 6 qt crock pot nicely) Dont forget! You can compost the peels and trimmings, I just wouldn’t compost the seeds!

3 cups of dark brown sugar, packed (or light brown sugar, or white sugar, and more or less according to your preference

1 tsp pumpkin pie spice

2 tsp cinnamon (more or less, to your taste)

1/2 cup apple cider or apple juice

Place all in crockpot, mix gently. I usually mix the sugar and spices then mix it in the apples, a little less messy that way.

Cook on high, stir at least once every hour, to keep it from burning. When its time for bed, and its still cooking, turn it to low, prop the lid open a little bit to keep it from getting too hot and burning, by now it should be bubbly and hot.

When the apples are soft and cooked down, take a potato masher and mash them up to the consistency of your choice. Take a taste, does it need sweetener? A little more spice? Is it still a bit watery? Add sugar, spices or let it cook until it is right for you. Most of the water is cooked out when you place a spoonful on a plate and no or very little watery ring forms around the outside of your little scoop of apple butter. At this point, I use my stick blender and work it until the apple butter is very smooth. If you like yours a little chunky or with more texture, then just mash a bit or leave it alone.

When its perfect (and only you will know when!), turn it back to high until the apple butter is bubbling, fill clean hot canning jars to 1/4 inch of the top , Clean rims, seal with new lids and clean rings and water process them for 10 minutes. If you would rather not go to the trouble of water processing, then just put into clean hot jars. Clean rims and seal with new lids and clean rings, allow to cool, then keep in the refrigerator. Jars that are not water processed must be refrigerated. For how-to’s on water processing and jelly/jams, try here: http://www.pickyourown.org/jam.htm

I used the tall 12oz canning jars and got 6 – 12oz and 2 – 8 oz jars altogether.

I like to add a spoonful of my applebutter to BBQ sauce, it deepens the flavor, it also works well in my sloppy joe sauce! But mostly, I will give these jars away as gifts along with a loaf of my homemade bread.

Happy Canning!

Dirty laundry…

This last cycle, several orders of laundry liquid and laundry powder crossed my cashier table.  Many of the consumers had never used homemade laundry soap, and wondered how well would it clean?

I have in the past made my own laundry powder and was quite pleased with the results.  My clothes were clean, I mean really clean.  No perfumy residual odor, and more so than that they felt clean.  My towels seemed more absorbent, plus more lint, and I’m embarrassed to say, cat hair wound up in my lint trap.

I emailed Kelly of Grandma’s Soap and was pleasantly surprised with the information she sent me regarding her soaps.  They are free of dyes and perfumes which can not only aggravate your skin but its safer for our lakes and streams.  She is also the sixth generation of her family to use this same recipe.  She puts alot of care and integrity into her product, each soap is cured 6 month or more, she will sell no soap before its time! 

As Kelly says “It is simple, basic and pure”.  Her liquid laundry detergent is low sudsing so its ideal for HE washing machines. 

She also offers an exceptional deal in her Sample gift set #1513, you receive a sample of the liquid laundry detergent and old fashioned soap, so if you are hesitant to commit to a gallon, at least try the sample set. 

If you want to wow and impress just about everybody,  get a Make Your Own kit #1368.  You will receive the instructions and materials to make 3 gallons of your own liquid detergent, how cool is that? Add a bar of Grandma’s Old Fashioned Soap #1365, and that is a cool green gift!

Tips for using Grandma’s Liquid Laundry Soap #1367

A cup of vinegar added to the wash will whiten clothes and eliminate odors and bacteria.

Soaking clothes in lemon water prior to washing will naturally whiten them.

A moistened bar of Grandma’s Soap makes a great pre-wash stain stick.

If you would like to see Kelly and her mom of Grandma’s Soap, they are demonstrating at the following dates:

Sept 18-19: Farmer Days, Center Grove Orchard, Cambridge, Iowa

October 2:  Country Celebration at Center Grove Orchard, Cambridge, Iowa

October 3:  Artist Bazaar at Snus Hill Winery, Madrid, Iowa

October 8-9:  Osborne Heritage Days, Clayton Country Observation Center, Elkader, Iowa

Karla of Heart of Iowa Soapworks also offers  a great laundry detergent in a powder form.  As with the liquid soap, its all handmade, even down to the bar soap she grates to make the mixture.  Its compact profile and low sudsing formula makes this a no brainer for your laundry room.  Karla also indicates that a Stain Stick is coming soon, so keep your eye out for that! 

Karla tells me that she has not tested her soap on delicate items, so if in doubt, she says don’t use it, take them to a professional cleaner.  But it does do an exceptional job on towels, bed linens, jeans and your regular laundry.  The powdered detergent comes unscented, but can also be purchased in a lavender scent #1168.

As with all of Heart of Iowa products, you can be sure of the love and care put into your soap!

Tips for using Heart of Iowa Powdered Laundry Soap #1167

 Turn the washer on and run some water in the botton.  Add 2 heaping TBSP of the soap and swish it around to dissolve.  Add clothes.

If  its a heavy load, like towels, do a double rinse.  Also add a big cupful of  white vinegar to your rinsewater.  Towels seem to like to hold more soap than other items.

For really stinky, grimy clothes, add an extra TBSP of the laundry mix and 2 cups of white vinegar.  Letting the clothes soak for a while before agitation helps too.

For white clothes, Karla uses a bleach alternative or regular bleach for a little boost.

I hope this answers any questions you have about using the homemade laundry detergent.  Both Kelly and Karla are happy to answer any other questions you have, and truly, their products are of exceptional quality.

Happy Washing!

One Iowa Egg Farm Takes a Free-Range Approach

by Helena Bottemiller | Sep 07, 2010
Re-posted with permission from: Foodsafetynews.com

This isn’t your typical egg farm. In Elkhart, Iowa, about 70 miles south of Wright County Egg–the mega-farm at the center of a 550 million egg recall tied to almost 1,500 Salmonella illnesses–colorful hens are milling around Foxhollow Farm. Lyric-less rock music is playing in the hen house, and it’s for the hens. The head rooster, a five-year-old Black Cochin Bantam named Shadow who appears to run the place, is friendly and strutting for the camera.

In many ways, Foxhollow Farm represents the antithesis of large-scale egg production in Iowa, which produces more than twice as many eggs as any other state.

egg2.jpgFoxhollow has about 200 laying hens. Wright County Egg, one of the top 10 egg producers in the country, has millions. Foxhollow allows its chickens to roam, following Animal Welfare Approved guidelines. Wright County Egg uses battery cages, a practice animal welfare activists are trying to ban. A dozen Foxhollow eggs will run you about $4.50. Wright County Eggs, sold under more than a dozen labels in more than 20 states, are closer to $1.

And then there is the issue of transparency. Despite numerous attempts, Food Safety News and the Iowa Egg Council, were unsuccessful in finding a single large-scale producer willing to give a tour or in-depth interview on egg production and the new Food and Drug Administration egg safety rules. Tai Johnson-Spratt, who runs Foxhollow Farms with her husband Thomas Spratt, offered a tour with less than a day’s notice.

Well under the 50,000 bird cut off, Tai’s farm doesn’t have to follow the new FDA egg regulations, but she’s actively managing chicken health and food safety.

“They don’t get sick unless something tragic happens,” she says. “We don’t usually have a problem with disease. I think the fact that they can go outside and do what they want to–we have dust baths, we have nest boxes, we have enough perch space–is important, they can express they’re natural behaviors. They’re doing what chickens do.”

If a chicken shows signs of illness, it is taken to the Iowa State poultry extension for a diagnosis. Drugs are administered only at the advice of Foxhollow’s poultry veterinarian.

Salmonella is much trickier to control, because birds do not show symptoms. The hatcheries are monitored for Salmonella, explains Tai. “All the hatcheries are supposed to be 100 percent pullorum-free, which should prevent Salmonella from reaching anybody’s plates, but that’s not always the case,” she says, because the bacteria can creep into a poultry house on the farm.

“You can get Salmonella from a bird flying over, from the feed, in the water–it can come from anywhere,” she says. Foxhollow manages pests and keeps its facilities clean. Tai also believes that giving the birds space is the best way to prevent disease from spreading. “In confinement, if one gets sick, they all get it.”

Foxhollow collects eggs three times a day and refrigerates them right away to stop any bacterial growth. The eggs are then sanitized and refrigerated until they reach the consumer. Tai has an Iowa egg handler’s license and she takes her keeping-the-eggs-below-40-degrees duty seriously. “We do things the way we’re supposed to,” she says.

eggfarm1.jpgWhen asked about the big producers upstate, Tai simply says: “There’s a lot better ways to do it. This takes a little more room, a little more time, a little more effort, but what you get out of it–these chickens are happy, they have everything they need, and it’s not much.”

“I think part of it, though, is that consumers aren’t educated about where their eggs come from,” she adds. “People think all brown eggs are farm eggs. That’s not true. People think all eggs are the same. That’s not true. Taste one of mine, taste one of DeCoster’s; you’ll see right there–even if you don’t cook it–just look at it. Look at the yolk. Mine are orangey, theirs are pale yellow.”

Though Foxhollow can hardly keep up with demand for its eggs–and its heritage chickens and turkeys–the farm represents only a tiny, though growing, fraction of Iowa’s poultry industry.

Foxhollow sells somewhere in the neighborhood of 3,600 dozen, a little more than 43,000, eggs per year. Iowa produces 14.25 billion eggs per year, according to the Iowa Egg Council.

Tai admits cost also has a lot to do with it.

“If people are used to getting eggs for 99 cents, why do they want to spend $4.50 for mine? There’s a lot of value in my eggs; they just don’t see unless they’re educated about it.”

Lynn Fallon Kicks-Off August Membership Drive

Dear Friends,
Happy Summer!

I am very excited to share the good news that we now have nearly 450 members! When I first visited with Gary and Jason last December, one of the things I was impressed with was their ambition. They set a high, challenging goal of getting 600 members by the end of September. I, for one, like a good stiff  challenge – especially when it’s for a good cause.

But I’m also a big believer in the power of community, and I know that’s what has gotten us this far. Many of you have hosted a house party (and I’m hoping many more will do so in the future!) and they have been very successful. Others share information about the Iowa Food Cooperative with family, friends, and co-workers whenever you have the opportunity and that too has generated new members.

We want to up the ante and tell you about the next big push to reach our goal of 600 members before the first of October. And, we want to provide some incentive to you to help. During the month of August, each person who brings a new member to the Iowa Food Co-op will receive a $10 gift certificate to the IFC. But for those who like a good challenge – we’ll have three gift baskets that will go to the three people who bring in the most new members. These gift baskets will, of course, have a food theme: a Breakfast Basket, a Lunch Basket, and a Dinner Basket.

Many of our producers are donating to the baskets, so you know they’ll be good!

When you invite someone to join, just make sure they put your name in Section 5 where it says, “Please give more detail.” We’ll tally up the new members on September 1, and announce the winners in the September newsletter.

Let’s make it happen!
Lynn

2nd Distribution Site: Village of Ponderosa

Iowa Food Cooperative Pick Up Location at Village of PonderosaOn our next distribution on July 15th, you’ll be able to pick up your goods at a second location in West Des Moines! A special thanks to LADCO members Jeremy Moore and Charlotte & Dennis Reynolds for making this happen!

The new location is near the West Des Moines Gateway Market Cafe,  just west and North of West Glenn Shopping District. The distribution site will be in “Building C”, also known as “The Bike World Building”.

The address of the building is:
5950 Village View Drive
West Des Moines, IA 50266

Butternut Squash Soup

Butternut Squash Soup
Recipe Type: Entree
Author: Coryanne Harrigan
Ingredients
  • 1 medium to large butternut squash
  • 3 T. unsalted butter or vegetable oil
  • 2 large leeks (white part only), cleaned and chopped
  • 4 t. minced fresh ginger
  • 6 c. chicken or vegetable stock
  • 1 ½ t. salt
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Halve and seed the squash.
  3. Oil a baking sheet and place the squash on it cut-side down.
  4. Bake until it can be easily pierced with a fork, about 1 hour.
  5. Let cool, then scoop the pulp from the squash skin and discard the skin.
  6. Melt butter in a soup pot over medium-low heat.
  7. Add leeks and ginger and cook, stirring, until tender but not browned.
  8. Stir in the squash pulp along with 4 c. of stock; bring to a simmer and cook for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally and breaking up the squash with a spoon.
  9. Remove from heat and puree until smooth with an infusion (stick) blender or in batches in a food processor.
  10. Return to heat and stir in remaining stock and salt.
  11. Heat through and serve.

Butternut Squash Pizza

Butternut Squash Pizza
Cook time: 70 mins
Total time: 1 hour 10 mins
Serves: 2-3
Ingredients
  • 1 butternut squash (about 1 pound)
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • Pizza dough for 1 pizza
  • c. grated mozzarella cheese
  • c. grated Gruyere cheese
  • 12 sprigs parsley
  • 20 sage leaves
  • lemon
  • From
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Slice off the top of the squash about ½ inch under the stem and slice just enough off the bottom to remove the remnants of the withered flower stem; be careful not to cut into the seed cavity.
  3. Split the squash in half crosswise just above the bulge. Stand each half end up and carefully cut away all the skin. Cut each portion in half lengthwise and scoop the seed and fiber from the lower half with a spoon. Cut the quarters crosswise into ÂĽ inch slices. The upper portions will yield half moon slices, and the lower sections elongated C shapes.
  4. Brush the slices with olive oil, season with salt and pepper, and arrange them in one layer on a baking sheet. Roast in the oven for 30 to 60 minutes, checking from time to time. The roasting time will vary according to the sugar and moisture content and the density of the squash. It is done when lightly browned and tender to the touch.
  5. Meanwhile, peel and chop fine the garlic and add to the ÂĽ c. olive oil. When the squash slices are done, remove from the oven.
  6. Put a pizza stone in the oven and boost the heat to 450 degrees. Roll out a circle of pizza dough, brush with the olive oil and garlic, and sprinkle evenly with the mozzarella and Gruyere.
  7. Arrange the slices of cooked squash over the cheese.
  8. Bake the pizza for about 10 minutes, until the crust is browned and the cheeses have melted.
  9. While the pizza is baking, chop the parsley leaves, Fry the sage leaves briefly in hot olive oil, then drain them on an absorbent towel.
  10. When the pizza is done, garnish with the sage leaves, the chopped parsley, and a squeeze of lemon This is a very rich pizza, and is best served in small portions as an appetizer.
  11. Makes one 12 inch-pizza.
Notes

Chez Panisse Vegetables (Waters)

Sweet Pepper Salad

 

  • 4 “Red Knight” red peppers
  • 3 “ Orion” green peppers
  • 2 “Sunray” peppers
  • 3 “Islandes” peppers
  • 2 “Limon” hot peppers
  • Olive oil, salt, white pepper to taste

    Chop vegetables to preference.
    Mix in olive oil, salt and white pepper to taste.
    Let chill for 1 hour or more.

 

Summer in Winter Chili

  • ½ cup dried kidney beans
  • ½ cup dried black beans
  • 1 dried chipotle pepper
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 pound ground beef
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 2 quarts canned tomatoes
  • 1 cup frozen sweet corn
  • Chili powder, to taste
  • Salt and Pepper, to taste

    Place dried beans into a large bowl and add enough water to cover the beans by 1-2 inches.  Let sit for 8 hours or overnight.    Drain and rinse beans in cool water.  Place beans into a medium-sized saucepan along with 2 cups of water.  Add 1 dried chipotle pepper.  Turn heat to high, bring to a boil.  Reduce heat, cover and simmer for approximately 1 hour.  Test for doneness.  Once beans are done, remove from heat and let cool with the lid off.  

    Melt butter in a large skillet or stockpot.  Add beef and brown over medium heat.  Add chopped onion and garlic and stir.  Let cook another 4-5 minutes until onion and garlic soften.  

    Add tomatoes along with their juice to the beef.  Add beans and their cooking juice and heat through over medium-low heat.  Add the corn and let chili heat through again.  Finally, add chili powder, salt and pepper to your liking.  
      

—Adam and Lucy Cameron, Thistles & Clove

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