Posts Tagged Food preserving

Weekend Highlights – Special Edition – January 12, 2013

This week, I felt it was time for something a bit different.

I begin each day on our Facebook page, exchanging brief thoughts, finding out who is in the midst of an exciting cooking, canning or gardening project, sharing inspirational quotes and images, reading about the antics of family pets, a homestead’s cow with a mind of its own, hens and roosters who never fail to speak their minds, children who wholeheartedly participate in the farm  life and jokes and cartoons that spice up our days when we need it most, as if we knew just what was needed at the time though we are miles apart.

ashh - free ship

In this edition of the Weekend Highlights, then, I would like to acknowledge neighbors I first met through our Facebook page. By neighbor I mean to refer to a sense of community. Of course, I cannot acknowledge everyone in this one post. I will choose randomly, just for a taste. Let’s begin with three. I am sure you will discover new pages and ideas and ventures that spark your interest so that you add them to your own Facebook list. Enjoy.

I apologize to those who are not on Facebook, but I really must take the time to acknowledge the great folks we’ve met there. Can you forgive me? I will include a link to their blogs. Yes, we are going to discover some new blogs at the same time!

ashh - submit recipes label - blog

You can access the entire Weekend Highlights series to date by clicking on that category in the sidebar at left.

*************************************************

ashh - blog - marvelous

Marvelous Memories is a spirited place to be if you enjoy pop culture, and if you think you don’t, you will after even a short visit. “Marvelous,” as I like to call the owner of the page, digs up memories from the 50′s to the 80′s in a wide range of interests, from entertainment to fashion, the home and kitchen.Video clips of commercials and old game shows, photos of our childhood toys, astonishing kitchen and office decor… a journey into another era that will make you smile, cry, laugh and think.

You do not have to have lived in the 60′s or 70′s to appreciate the rich and  sometimes puzzling mosaic of a society on the cusp of sudden, rapid technological and world view changes. (Above picture from January 1960 House & Home magazine).

Her hobbies include, “Blogging, Pina Coladas and getting caught in the rain,” says  Marvelous.

Also visit the Marvelous Memories Blog

*************************************************

“Living a healthy, wealthy and wise life includes pursuing opportunities to improve and maintain reasonably good health, being surrounded by a wealth of family and friends, and wisdom blended with discernment to know there is always a better way!” – Healthy Wealthy Wise & Other Junque

ashh - blog - healthy wealthy

The above is the page’s profile picture, and a very fitting one it is. Here, you will find a collection of resources, tips, images and ideas for the home and garden. Food preserving, grocery saving tips, a daily three-things-to-do list and a generous pinch of common sense and humor.

There is also a blog, titled My Other Palette, where these words will greet you: “Love deeply. Laugh. Cry. Talk to God. Be realistic about the to-do list. Stay in touch. Hug. Dream. Smile. Break Bread often with Family… Extend Grace. Be Quick to Forgive and Slow to Anger. Walk. Breathe. Sing. Dance. Read. Eat Chocolate… Life is Good! “

*************************************************

ashh - blog - 0112

Welcome to The Chicken Chick at Egg Carton Labels by ADozenGirlz, where you will find resources and shared experiences of life with chickens, caring for them and laughing with them. A good sense of humor seems to be the order of the day here, as well as capturing precious moments where humans of all heights and ages mingle with the birds. Clearly, the trust is mutual.

The author is an advocate of backyard chicken-keeping. And do not miss out on the chicken-inspired merchandise: Personalized egg carton labels, Henbag purses, chicken coin purses, chicken hats, got eggs?™ tee shirts, chicken outlaw tee shirts and more.

There is also a blog: The Chicken Chick.

*************************************************

Thank you for reading this Weekend’s Highlights. Please take a moment to leave a few words and click the LIKE button on the pages you enjoy. Thanks.

ashh - cheese

, , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

5 Ways to Wrap a Canning Jar

ashh - 1206 blog

How many of you actually open commercial preserve jars you receive as gifts during the holidays? Raise your hand. No one sees you. It’s OK. Alright, a very few hands went up way in the back. Hardly noticeable. The rest of you probably mean to use the preserve, but later, much later find it still sitting in the back of the fridge or cupboard. It will make a perfect last-minute gift sometime this year, so it can sit a while longer in someone else’s cupboard.

Now, if it is true that it is the thought that counts, then it stands to reason that a jar of preserves or vegetables that was made with care and attention by a family member or friend has that extra ingredient, that touch of warmth, that unspoken whisper that says, “I made this one for you because you are a gift in my life.” This will not sit on a shelf for too long. In fact, you might make tea or coffee and share it with your friend right there and then. You just know how good it is.

All this to say that presentation matters. So don’t you doubt yourself twice if you were about to gift some of your canned peaches or dilly beans or pickles or preserves this holiday season. Do not assume this may be perceived as not being a real gift. You know how much work you put into your canning projects and you know how it fills your heart to think about the people with whom you are glad to share your stash of preserves.

ashh - 10 pct off

Not convinced? Perhaps you’d like a few presentation ideas. First, forget the immediate meaning of the words “gift wrapping.” I will ask you instead to adopt my definition (as a Granny I can make such rules). Gift wrapping, then, is about presentation. It is about the added touch that takes a simple gift and gives it new meaning. Here is what I mean.

To a jar of home-made apple sauce… add a loaf of home-made whole grain bread and a wine from a good local artisan. Wrap the package in a colorful table-cloth. Secure with a bow.

To a jar of your canned peaches… add a novel by their favorite author (one they have read years ago and have been looking for ever since is even better). To this, add a lap desk with lamp. Wrap (actual wrapping paper this time) the jar and book and place them on the lap desk, which will then be used as a gift serving tray. Add a colorful ribbon if you wish.

To a few jars of your tomato sauce… add their very own Squeezo Strainer (it includes a recipe booklet), a colorful pasta serving bowl and pasta. Arrange the jars and pasta in the bowl, perhaps with some playful shredded raffia. Add a card that provides instructions to go to this or that closet to discover the rest of the gift. The Squeezo awaits there, of course, conventionally wrapped.

To a few jars of your home-made fruit preserve… add a warm sweater and some gourmet coffee. Fold the sweater. Place the coffees and preserve on top of the sweater and secure with a large ribbon.

To a jar of your canned tomatoes… add tomato seed packets, a growing kit and food preserving book. Secure the seed packets to the tomato jar, perhaps with twine for a rustic look. Add a large cut-out of a tomato with instructions to find the matching tomato somewhere else in the house or room. You will have attached the identical tomato cut-out to a colorful fabric-wrapped package kept in another room.

ashh - free ship

Finally, if you happen to run a tight ship (I am with you there), you can save a lot of money by giving home-made gifts and foods. And, if you happen to experience an occasional bout of the holiday blues, finding creative ways to “wrap” your gifts is actually quite uplifting. You’ll get back in the spirit the moment you begin.

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

Weekend Highlights – Noteworthy Articles by Fellow Bloggers – November 10, 2012

The weekend is a good time for grazing. This is a summary of some of the delightful Blog articles I have been reading during the week. I invite you to graze through these, and also through the archives of the creative writers who wrote them.

Food canning equipment, tool carts, compost bins, growing kits, cider and fruit presses, the Squeezo Strainer, food dehydrators, juicers, smokers, cold frames, greenhouses and so many more innovations contribute to making our lives organized and healthier and to turning our homes and properties into an oasis where the living is good.

All of these things exist because we are creative and because we have a unique ability to adapt to our environment. In truth, foodies, homesteaders and gardeners who write about their experiences are telling the ongoing story of our inventive spirit. On their pages, every tool and appliance is like a paint brush; ready to express a new vision.

You can access the entire Weekend Highlights series to date by clicking on that category in the sidebar at left.

*************************************************

It has been a while since I’ve acknowledged new bloggers who have added their names to the list of followers who keep an eye on what is going on here at Granny’s Parlour. Let’s do that right now. Here are three, selected very randomly.

*************************************************

I found these mouth-watering pickles (don’t you just love the label?) on the  Obsessive Canning Disorder Blog. “OCD for the canning obsessed,” specifies the page header.

“I watched my Grandmother can in the early 70′s, and watched my Mother can between that time and thru the 80′s. Canning was a way to preserve the harvest, and for me, it’s a way to preserve their history and to continue sharing this way of life with my family. It’s also ‘food insurance’ for the long run…” explains the author. “I can to preserve what we have in abundance for times when we won’t have abundance.  I can to make gifts, and I can just because I CAN!” she adds.

Article categories feature, among other titles: Cookin’ up a storm, Friends and The Monkey Crew & More, which includes musings about the trials and tribulations of everyday family life, and, of course, the OCD segment, with photo upon photo of completed canning projects. They will make you want to reach in and grab a jar for a taste.

“Food insurance for the long run.” I like that. Explore.

*************************************************

Next, we pop over to Patina and Company, for inspiration on Arranging Autumn Indoors.

“For 22 years I have been developing my skills in creating and renovating gardens, interiors and construction projects… I have designed, sourced, researched, managed and physically worked on almost everything, from furniture and accessories to driveways and drainage,” explains Leslie, the author.

The article that caught my attention, because I felt it provided an accurate portray of the overall atmosphere of the blog and the character of its author, begins with these words: “Everyone who reads my blog knows I love autumn. However, it is one of those seasons like late winter or early spring when there are certain days you have to enjoy it from inside the house.”

Reaching for a good book and a cup of tea might come to mind, but the author is of a mind to bring carefully selected samples of the outside beauty inside, to adorn the house in time for the Canadian Thanksgiving. This article will provide inspiration as our own Thanksgiving approaches. It offers tips for selecting proper vegetation from the garden and for arranging it for a stunning, uplifting effect. Rule number one: “What looks great together outside will look great together in your bouquet.” There is more. Explore.

*************************************************

“In the early 1970s, my parents were part of the ‘Back to the Land’ movement and built a geodesic dome – without electricity or running water -  in rural Nevada County, California.  That’s where I grew up, climbing trees, riding my pony, eating from the garden and wearing (painfully unfashionable) hand-sewn clothes.  Eventually I went away to college… and to law school… in 2011 I realized I’d had enough of law firms and skyscrapers, …I moved back to the dome with my rescue-mutt Lola…” – Sara – Domesteading – Single girl goes back to ‘Back to the Land.’

Now you and I know what Domesteading means. And there is more. Once you get to this blog you must read the great little story of Henge and Hollow Farm. For now, I invite you to read the most recent post, titled On a Day Like Today. I like a good musing post and this happens to be just that.

“It starts with kicking off the covers, slipping on my boots and hoodie, descending the squeaky stairs, pulling open the heavy back door and heading up the path to the barn.  Every morning I use this time… to assess the day: the temperature, the clouds, the wind, the subtle changes in air pressure that one feels with her bones instead of her skin… As I approach the barn I hear the hens fretting about the day’s agenda in their usual manner. They jostle on the ladder inside the coop like commuters on a train platform…” Continue Reading

*************************************************

Thank you for stopping by to read this Weekend’s Review. Please take a moment to leave a few words on the Blogs you enjoy, if you feel so inclined that is.

, , , , , , ,

2 Comments

Just a Smidgen

..a lifestyle blog filled with recipes, photography, poems, and DIY xo

frugal feeding

n. frugality; the quality of being economical with money or food.

From the Tractor Seat

Plowing through life one row at a time...

Hedge Rose Farm

homestead education, crafts, art & traditional entertainments

Seasonsgirl

For seasons of life, the changing seasons, and the seasoning we all love to cook with.

Romancing the Bee

Beautiful Beekeeping, English Cottage Gardening, and Cooking with Honey

lola rugula

my journey of cooking, gardening, preserving and more

Outtakes on the Outskirts

Country life never goes as planned

bits and breadcrumbs

where all trails lead to good food

Domesteading

Single girl goes back to Back to the Land.

patinaandcompany

Design, Garden and Living

Obsessive Canning Disorder

OCD for the canning obsessed

A Recipe Blog

"The Farm" Old World Garden Farms

A blog about creating a little slice of heaven in the middle of Ohio

1840farm.com

Living and Writing at the Intersection of Family, Food, and Farming

The Snail of Happiness

small steps to sustainability

City Girl Farming Blog

Raising Chickens, Gardening, Canning, Cooking and Living in the City

The Unorthodox Epicure

Confessions of an Aspiring Food Snob

made by mike

Just another WordPress.com site

Rantings of an Amateur Chef

Food...cooking...eating....tools - What works, and what doesn't!

Local cooking and eating in New York's Hudson Valley.

In Lehman's Terms

blogging about life, kids, photography, art, gardening, cooking, and the kitchen sink

fast grow the weeds

This is a journal, of sorts, of an organic garden in SW Michigan. "Ut sementem feceris, ita metes: non semper erit aestas."

Rural Spin

Retro Living in a Modern World. Naturally Sustainable Skills in City and Country

The Townhouse Homesteaders

Creating a homestead in 1280 square feet

Clover and Thyme

a food & garden journal.

The Botanical Baker

Baking inspired by nature's botanical garden

barelypoppins

practically imperfect in every way

Savoring Today LLC

Connecting family & friends with healthy, delicious food.

Northwest Edible Life

life on garden time

Redoux Interiors

Don't throw it out. "Redoux" it.

Kitchen, Yard & Garden Musings From All Seasons Homestead Helpers

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 90 other followers

%d bloggers like this: