It was a wet and windy fall day today and it made me thankful for a warm, dry place to call home. I stopped to take a couple pictures this afternoon and was mesmerized by the bright leaves that had been blown to the ground in the morning's gale. They were bold, beautiful colors of leaves that had been plucked up prematurely...before they had the chance to fade.
This made me think about several things:
1. How much I love fall
2. How much I love rain
3. How charming New England is
4. How rock walls and fall leaves go perfectly together...
I passed a tiny cemetery and the tombstone of a man that died on Christmas day in 1812. That was almost 200 years ago! What a different world surrounds that small graveyard now. It was the words on the stone, written by his wife, that impressed me: "Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth; for the faithful fail from among the children of men."
What would they write on your tombstone, or mine? How do our lives reflect what we hold dear? Will we be found faithful?
I was reminded of a song Steve Green sings: Find Us Faithful.
CHORUS:
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful
May the fire of our devotion light their way
May the footprints that we leave
Lead them to believe
And the lives we live inspire them to obey
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful
Let us be found faithful.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Friday, October 01, 2010
Tomato: From Garden to Pantry
This week I canned some more tomatoes and thought I'd share the process...
Bowl of peeled tomatoes.
Jars ready to be filled.
Squeezed tomatoes.
A little basil adds a nice flavor.
Ta da! The tomatoes before I put on the sealing lids and baked them.I made some Spanish rice with the juice I squeezed from the tomatoes. The seeds were a nice addition.
These lids we got at a local hardware store and they work great for freezing food in canning jars, or storing left-overs in the fridge.
Following is the recipe we used for canning tomatoes this year. I tend to not be able to follow recipes well, so I did a variation on this theme. And the rice...well that was kind of an experiment...it needs some fine-tuning, but it tasted great!
Crushed Tomatoes
by Cathy Barrow
Crushed tomatoes are the most useful item in my pantry. Where I used to buy commercially canned tomatoes regularly, I now have pints and quarts of my own canned tomatoes available for soups, stews, casseroles and sauces. Having some of each size means less waste.
Ingredients:
25 pounds of tomatoes
Bottled lemon juice
Kosher salt
Sterilized jars, lids and rings
I usually process about 25 pounds of tomatoes at a time, resulting in 6 or 7 quarts (or 12-14 pints) of tomatoes. Even our small household uses 30 or more quarts of tomatoes over the winter.
Instructions:
Dip the tomatoes in boiling water for 30-60 seconds, then plunge into a large bowl filled with ice water. (I use my sink or a cooler.)
Once all the tomatoes have been blanched, begin peeling and crushing them. Cut out the core and any soft spots, then cut an X in the base of the tomato and slip off the peel.
Squeeze the tomato in your hands, releasing the juice and most of the seeds, then either chop further, or just place the crushed pulp in a deep nonreactive stockpot. Continue to peel and crush until all the tomatoes are in the stockpot.
Bring the tomatoes to a hard boil and boil well for 5 minutes.
Put 2 tablespoons lemon juice and 1 teaspoon salt in each quart jar. (Use 1 tablespoon lemon juice and 1/2 teaspoon salt for each pint.)
Fill the jar, leaving half an inch of head space. Wipe the rims, place the lid and ring, and finger tighten.
Process in a boiling water bath for 45 minutes (quarts) or 40 minutes (pints.)
Turn off the stove, allow the jars to rest in the boiling water for 5 minutes, then remove them to the counter, where they should remain, undisturbed, for 24 hours.
After a day, test the seals, wipe the jars clean, and store in a cool, dry place for up to one year.
Makes 6-7 quarts of tomatoes.
Spanish Rice
Lauren Lombard
A rough idea of what I did:
1 lg onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 green pepper, chopped small
1 packet Sazón Goya seasoning (pictured below)
Salt to taste
2 Jalepeño peppers (less if spice is a problem)
4 cups Jasmine white rice (can be made with brown, but liquid proportions change)
6 cups squeezed tomato juice and seeds (can use 5 cups V8 juice and or water instead)
1 jar capers (I didn't have those this time, but I like them)
In medium pan, sauté onion and garlic; add other ingredients, bring to boil. Turn down to low; cover and cook an additional 25 minutes.
Bowl of peeled tomatoes.
Jars ready to be filled.
Squeezed tomatoes.
A little basil adds a nice flavor.
Ta da! The tomatoes before I put on the sealing lids and baked them.I made some Spanish rice with the juice I squeezed from the tomatoes. The seeds were a nice addition.
These lids we got at a local hardware store and they work great for freezing food in canning jars, or storing left-overs in the fridge.
Following is the recipe we used for canning tomatoes this year. I tend to not be able to follow recipes well, so I did a variation on this theme. And the rice...well that was kind of an experiment...it needs some fine-tuning, but it tasted great!
Crushed Tomatoes
by Cathy Barrow
Crushed tomatoes are the most useful item in my pantry. Where I used to buy commercially canned tomatoes regularly, I now have pints and quarts of my own canned tomatoes available for soups, stews, casseroles and sauces. Having some of each size means less waste.
Ingredients:
25 pounds of tomatoes
Bottled lemon juice
Kosher salt
Sterilized jars, lids and rings
I usually process about 25 pounds of tomatoes at a time, resulting in 6 or 7 quarts (or 12-14 pints) of tomatoes. Even our small household uses 30 or more quarts of tomatoes over the winter.
Instructions:
Dip the tomatoes in boiling water for 30-60 seconds, then plunge into a large bowl filled with ice water. (I use my sink or a cooler.)
Once all the tomatoes have been blanched, begin peeling and crushing them. Cut out the core and any soft spots, then cut an X in the base of the tomato and slip off the peel.
Squeeze the tomato in your hands, releasing the juice and most of the seeds, then either chop further, or just place the crushed pulp in a deep nonreactive stockpot. Continue to peel and crush until all the tomatoes are in the stockpot.
Bring the tomatoes to a hard boil and boil well for 5 minutes.
Put 2 tablespoons lemon juice and 1 teaspoon salt in each quart jar. (Use 1 tablespoon lemon juice and 1/2 teaspoon salt for each pint.)
Fill the jar, leaving half an inch of head space. Wipe the rims, place the lid and ring, and finger tighten.
Process in a boiling water bath for 45 minutes (quarts) or 40 minutes (pints.)
Turn off the stove, allow the jars to rest in the boiling water for 5 minutes, then remove them to the counter, where they should remain, undisturbed, for 24 hours.
After a day, test the seals, wipe the jars clean, and store in a cool, dry place for up to one year.
Makes 6-7 quarts of tomatoes.
Spanish Rice
Lauren Lombard
A rough idea of what I did:
1 lg onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 green pepper, chopped small
1 packet Sazón Goya seasoning (pictured below)
Salt to taste
2 Jalepeño peppers (less if spice is a problem)
4 cups Jasmine white rice (can be made with brown, but liquid proportions change)
6 cups squeezed tomato juice and seeds (can use 5 cups V8 juice and or water instead)
1 jar capers (I didn't have those this time, but I like them)
In medium pan, sauté onion and garlic; add other ingredients, bring to boil. Turn down to low; cover and cook an additional 25 minutes.
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