And so is the chili sauce!
I’ve been making chili sauce with Elegante Mother for the last 15 years, and it usually took us all day to cook it down to the point where it could be canned. Today we were done at 2:20!
Monthly Archives: August 2005
Cooking With Gas
Hm….well, maybe not gas…..but with a lot of fun in the kitchen.
My niece will be here to join us for dinner tonight. It’s just the ladies, as Dear Husband is off boating tonight. I’ve found several recipies that I’d like to try on her, so this is what I’m planning:
Italian pork tenderloin
Roasted veggies
Farmer’s tomato pie (May 16, 2003 in the archives)
Corn Cakes with Fresh Corn and Chives
Peach Blueberry Cake
Wow……now that I have it down on paper I can see that I’m going to have to cut something out. Maybe I can talk her into the Farmer’s Tomato Pie for lunch tomorrow. I can slip in a small side salad that would be much lighter.
To Market, To Market
Peaches
Blueberries
20 pounds of tomatoes
6 plum tomatoes
miniature patty pan squash
green onions
tiny red new potatoes
6 pickle cucumbers
4 green bell peppers
3 red peppers
1 pound crimini mushrooms (baby portabello)
1 portabello mushroom
6 ears bi-color corn
green beans
yellow wax beans
An Apprentice
This weekend I am gaining an apprentice!
We have an old family recipe for something called “Chili Sauce.” I’ve posted the recipe on the June 30, 2003 blog entry. Hopefully, the link will take you there.
Except for last year, Elegante Mother and I have been making this sauce once a year for the past sixteen years we have lived together. I’m not sure why we didn’t get to it, but I must have decided that we could coast on all the reserves we had stored up.
Drizzle
The rain has come! Wednesday night there was a hard shower for about 30 minutes, and then the cloud cover rolled in, and we have had lovely, gentle showers off and on for the past two days. I understand we may continue this way for a couple more days with a chance of storms during the day today and tomorrow, and thunderstorms this evening. (Wouldn’t you know that Dear Husband is planning on staying overnight on the Arr!!?)
The ground is absorbing every little drop! The plants are saying “AAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH!” Everything looks green and clean again.
I was sitting at my desk in the office, facing the window, and an unusual movement in the leaves of the magnolia caught my attention. Individual leaves were fluttering here and there. A plink to the left, and a twitter higher up on the right. Another in the center, followed by another on the lower left. I thought at first there might be little birds on the branches behind the leaves, until I realized I was seeing the start of the rain. Bring it on! I’m ready for more. As a matter of fact, we could have gentle rain like this all week long and I’d love it.
I made a stop at Costco on Friday. When I went into the store the rain had stopped, so of course I left the umbrella in the car. As I neared the exit, there were a number of women standing with their carts, looking out at the renewed storm. I paused for a minute, and decided I wasn’t going to melt and sallied forth saying to the women I passed “We might as well enjoy it while it’s here.” You know….there was a parade of women out in that rain, enjoying getting soaked!
Popcorn
I was thinking about popcorn yesterday. Actually, popcorn and age.
When I was a kid we’d get out an old dutch oven and pour some oil into the bottom, heat it up, then pour a scoop of popcorn into it. One of us would have to shake the pot regularly to keep the kernels from burning on the bottom, and another had to melt some butter in a pan on the stove top. We made huge bowls of popcorn, because everyone in the family would have a generous helping. You could buy corn right from the farms where it was grown, grow your own, or just buy it at the grocery store.
Crops
There’s no point in worrying, what will be, will be. But due to drought, Illinois is likely to loose the majority of it’s crops this year. Iowa and Illinois reign in the growing of corn and soybeans. If I remember correctly, Iowa is first in corn and second in soybeans and Illinois is the reverse. This year the north and west central portions of the state are in extreme drought, and the remainder of the state is in severe drought. The desperate need for precipitation flows from roughly Milwaukee to central Missouri with echos of severe, moderate and abnormally dry ringing the area hardest hit. Some analysts are predicting a twenty percent decline in production for the year.
Cool Link
As I said in an earlier post today, I was surfing the Net and found ClimateZone.com. I wanted some basic information on the annual precipitation in the Chicago area, and this site provided some great charts.
If you don’t happen to live in the Chicago area, but do live in the US, go see it. They offer information by area and by major cities. There were five other large cities in Illinois, in addition to Chicago.
I learned that July is the hottest month (on average), but August is the wettest month of the year! That’s astounding given that we think of August as being the dog days……hot, humid, sunny days where the sun just blazes away. Either it rains a lot at night, or when it rains it REALLY comes down.
Go see what you can learn about your area!
HEAT!!
I’ve been listening to the weather reports each night as we’ve been suffering heat in the upper nineties. The weathermen rejoice when they can say a COOL FRONT has come in, and we’ve dipped into the upper eighties!
I did a little surfing, and on average, the 62 days of July and August have TEN days that are 90 or warmer. So far, in the 41 days of July and August this year, we’ve had THIRTY days that were 90 or warmer, with many of them in the upper nineties!
The forecast for the next week is the “possibility” of rain…..30-40% chance through Saturday and occasional showers on into next week. I’m going to put my rain gauge out and keep track of what we get. I’ll bet you anything that the storms go around us.
In past years, I’ve left the watering to God and Mother Nature. I don’t like to schlep hoses around. But this year I’ve had to start a watering campaign or loose everything. As it is, five of the gardens haven’t been watered at all. I go out before dawn to start the sprinklers every other day. If I forget, they run in the evening, and I hand water what I missed. The gardens that are being watered look lovely; the rest look like crispy critters.
My prayer for the month…..”Dear Lord, please give us gentle, restoring rain.”
Fine Art
I had a lovely visit with my youngest sister this past weekend. She came up, and we drove into Chicago for a show that was canceled at the last moment. It gave us a little more time to chat that night.
The next morning, she worked with me in the herb garden. As I weeded, she cut back the oregano to the crowns. That’s the first time that chore has been done. While I normally prune, I’ve never given it the close haircut it needed. She also helped me plant several plants, and we filled the bird feed bins. It was nice to have the time with her in the gardens.