Estigmene acrea (Salt Marsh Moth) |
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Salt Marsh Moth
Saturday, August 23, 2014
New Septic System.... or How to spend $600 an hour without even trying!
After consulting with a certified soil scientist (a neighbor who lives less than a mile from our house) we had the contractor here last week to install a new septic tank and new drain field. A one day job costing $5000.00! but hey - we're good for another 75 years - more or less.
First you find the old septic tank and pick a spot on the sewer line between the house and the tank where there is a joint in the cast iron pipe |
Pipe in the trench leading to the new "D-Box" |
New "D-Box" for 4 drain field lines |
Next you dig a 65 foot long 6 1/2 foot deep trench across the slope of the land following the ground contour |
Like this |
Then you dig three more identical trenches parallel to the first turning the entire back yard into a re-enactment of WWI trench warfare |
Last everything is buried and smoothed out. Done! |
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Canning Mania!
Some of the stuff I've canned this past week! Tomato sauce, Tomatillo salsa, Green chile enchilada sauce, Dill pickles, Sweet bread & butter pickles, Summer squash mix, Crushed tomatoes, and lots of dried tomatoes. There is also stuff in the freezer like Ratatouille, NY pushcart onion sauce, and Pesto
The garden is in full swing. So far we've harvested:
20 lbs of zucchini, yellow crookneck and golden scallop squash
60 lbs of onions - yellow, white, red and chippolini
28 lbs of tomatoes for making sun dried tomatoes
20 lbs of other slicing and cherry tomatoes
13 lbs of cucumbers
10 lbs of Hatch chiles
plus cayenne peppers, eggplant, pole beans, snap beans, basil and sage
Monday, August 4, 2014
Panzanella
So what do you do when you have a loaf of crusty bread you baked yesterday and a garden full of ripe red tomatoes and fresh basil?
You make Panzanella!
The bread is an easy no-knead wet dough loaf that rises overnight. The Basil is Genovese type from Italian imported seeds and the tomatoes are Costoluto Fiorentino, also from Italian seeds. There is a rule about heirloom garden tomatoes - the uglier and gnarly the tomato - the better and tastier it is - so you can guess that these are spectacular tomatoes!
The recipe? - Oh yeah, the recipe. If you can't figure it out from the photos...... well - just saying.
OK - not to be rude to the culinary challenged - Cut some of the bread into cubes and dry it out in the oven on a cookie sheet. 300 degrees for 5-10 minutes, or use stale bread. Drizzle with olive oil. Chop the tomatoes and add them and any juice too. Tear up the Basil and add that. Sprinkle a little salt and pepper and toss. It is common to sprinkle a little red wine vinegar over the finished salad. I like it that way. It's also common in Northern Italy to add some shaved Parmesan - which I also like but don't have any..... tsk, tsk. In Tuscany, where this dish originated, they don't usually add cheese.
How 'bout that food styling backdrop in the photos! I wanted to hide all the stuff on the kitchen counter - FLASH! I'll prop up some of my color coded cutting boards! Yeah lame, I know. Get over it. It's less distracting than the clutter on the counter.
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