Crossposting my breakfast

Crossposting from my regular blog, but it's food related so I think it's warranted.

This morning, I decided to have a real morning, instead of going back to bed when Matt left for work. I had already assembled his lunch (homemade bean soup : pseudo recipe below and homemade apple crisp) and made him a breakfast sandwich (fried up a slice of homemade Goetta sausage on toast, and filled up his thermos with some fair trade organic dark breakfast blend coffee). Time for my breakfast. A slice of the Goetta with a fried egg on some lightly toasted whole wheat with a cup of that same coffee accented with some maple syrup and a dash of whole milk. Yum. I pulled up the shades in our office to let the morning sun shine in and decided I should blog just a smidge. I will be posting some photos a little later today, but I still don't have photo software on our main computer and mine is up in the cold cold attic.

And now the recipes.

Homemade bean soup
I started with pork bone broth (used the bones we had frozen from the pig from our wedding reception). Just simmered those bones in some water forever it seems until they were soft and all the remaining meat and cartiledge fell right off. I used dry beans for soup for the first time. Combining Northern White Beans, Pinto Beans and small Red Beans in a pot, washing them, soaking them, rinsing them, partially cooking them and rinsing again before they were ready for the soup.

Cut up some leftover ham, an onion, celery, carrots, 2 cloves of garlic, and some cabbage and sauted it ever so slightly in butter with some sage. Put about 1/2 cup of dry barley into the broth and set it to simmer for about 15 min before adding in the beans and the other goodies. Let the whole thing sit on low and simmer and hour or two. We had some for dinner last night with some crackers and it was super filling. Has to be all those beans.


Apple Crisp
Peeled and sliced 4 huge Cortland apples from Victoria Valley Orchard (bought for us by Matt's Grandma from the cutest little local orchard you would never know was there). Put them in a 9x13 pan with about 1/4 cup sugar (I used raw sugar), a whole bunch of cinnamon, a dash of nutmeg, a dash of cloves, and a dash of ginger. Mixed up the apples to spread out the spices.

In another bowl, mixed up 3/4 cup whole wheat flour, 2 cups oats, and about a cup of milk. (I also added about 2 tbsp butter this time around, but last time I made it without cause I didn't have any and it was still delicious). Stir this mixture up well until it's kinda crumbly. Spread it evenly on top of the apples. Bake until the topping is crispy and the apples are soft and they appear to be syrupy.

I have been eating this warmed and topped with yogurt.

Goetta Sausage
Ok, so this might make some of you go ew, but this sausage is made from leftover meat and oatmeal. It's kinda sloppy, but delicious. We had quite a bit of pork still left frozen from our wedding reception and didn'tknow what to do with it, so when we found this German delight on the internet, we thought it was worth a try.

I ground 2 lbs of leftover roast pork with an onion. Then I mixed in 2 1/2 cups of oatmeal and 8 cups of water. I also added a pinch of cayenne pepper. You take this whole sloppy mix, bring it to a boil and then simmer for a couple hours, stirring occassionally. It does get stuck to the bottom of the pan pretty badly otherwise.

Once it starts to look like it's thickening up some, put it into greased loaf pans and put it into the fridge to cool and set up. It's supposed to thicken up so you can slice it and fry it in a pan, but ours had a little more fat than we planned on, so it was a bit gloppy. I thought maybe baking the loaf or adding more oatmeal per pound of meat next time might be a good idea. But we still have sliced it up a bit, then squished the slices in the cast iron skillet to fry it up for breakfast. Currently this is what Matt is having as a favorite breakfast. If you make this, try not to judge it before you taste it.

CSA box 9/26


It's nearing the end of the CSA season and that makes me a bit sad. Our CSA will be offering some late season boxes this year and I think we will take advantage of them. I really could tell the end of summer was here with this box. The tomatoes are quite as pretty as before and there are a lot more roots in here.

This week's box:
-cucumbers
-zuchinni
-potatoes
-green cabbage
-winter squash
-cilantro
-Beauty Heart radishes
-tomatillos
-tomatoes (of three varieties: heirloom, stuffers and sungold cherries)
-carrots
-garlic
-sweet pepper
-onion
-jalepenos (which had turned red)

I'm sure M. will miss his BLT sandwiches when the CSA season is over and we have to see what tomatoes actually cost at the store. But until then, he's in tomato heaven.

Swiss Chard

Even though October is right upon us, we are still growing our garden strong outside. The advantage of our contianers will be when the weather gets too cold and we would loose our remaining harvest, we can simply bring the whole darn thing inside. We're hoping we'll have enough nice days left to get much of our veggies ripened outdoors however.


Last week, I picked the first bundle of swiss chard from our plot. We needed an additional vegetable for our dinner (there was only one serving of beans left) and I was yearning to nibble on our tender-shooted greens. Because we grew them in a planter, they never got big and woody like the chard I was used to as a child in late season. Instead, every shoot was tender and young tasting. I steamed them and topped with butter and salt. (that's really all they ever need) Very delicious. I hope we can move this plant indoors and continue to grow it into the winter a bit.

Our CSA: Driftless Organics

For the second year, M. and I are part of a CSA. We chose to join up with Driftless Organics mostly because we love great produce, but also because one of the founders/farmers/owners is a college friend of his. Josh Engel and his brother Noah have been growing colorful organic potatoes since they were young kids. It turned into a full fledged organic farm and last year they started a CSA program.

Every other Friday, I pick up a large box of farm fresh produce. We look forward to finding out what is in the next box like little kids anticipating Christmas presents. I should have been documenting each and every spread as I unpacked the boxes, but so far I have only remembered twice. Also included in our box is a newsletter which lets us in on what's going on at the farm, what's in the box, some ideas on how to use some of the more unusual items we might receive and a recipe or two.


In this box, we received 4 ears of sweet corn, lacinato kale, yellow summer squash, zucchini, carrots, potatoes, pickling cucumbers, some peppers which were brown and very tasty, white onions, mini mixed peppers, sungold cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, mixed heirloom tomatoes, and garlic.

This was our most recent box. In it was, two delicata squashes, carrots, zucchini, red potatoes, red onion, garlic, mixed mini peppers, that spicy brown pepper, very sweet red pepper, eggplant, collard greens, edamame, roma tomatoes, mixed heirloom tomatoes, cilantro, sage, and a giant head of red cabbage.

I am going to try to document what few boxes we have left. We are also hoping to purchase some post-season veggies from Josh. Last winter, we ate our weight in delicata squash and made loads of purple kraut with his amazing red cabbage. I'm hoping we can make enough kraut to last us the winter. Last year, we ran out in January or February and it was rather sad. (I'll be sure to document the kraut production when it happens).

Fried Eggplant on Pesto Angel Hair Pasta with side salad


We received a nice slender violet eggplant in our most recent CSA box. I didn't really know what to do with eggplant and the only thing that came to mind was eggplant parmigiana. I also had a bumper crop of giant basil leaves in our rooftop garden which was just waiting to be made into some of the freshest pesto in town. So I got creative.

First the eggplant. I have no idea how to cook with such an ingredient, so I just made it up. Thickly sliced and salted each piece. Mixed up an egg, with some flour and some water to a pancake like consistency. After dipping the eggplant I fried it up in some saved bacon grease until each was a crispy golden brown.

Meanwhile I had cleaned and trimmed the basil and some flat leaf parsley (both from our roof-top garden). Toasted some pine nuts and crushed a couple cloves of garlic (from our CSA). Put everything in the food processor with some olive oil and some Parmesan cheese. Blended it up until it was a nice pasty green. Also had some angel hair pasta cooking in my big dutch oven next to the frying eggplant.

When the pasta was done, I stirred the raw pesto (I don't usually cook mine cause I like flavors to be extremely bold) into the noodles. We topped the pasta with a couple pieces of eggplant (which was like candy, so smooth and sweet inside with a crunchy fried coating) and some more parm. cheese.

For a side salad, we chopped some red leaf lettuce, an heirloom tomato (we get so many tomatoes from the CSA this time of year we try to incorporate therm everywhere we can so they don't go bad before we can finish them), some small cucumbers (the first from our garden), some finely chopped onion and dressed it up with some Tarragon Dijon dressing.

Ingredients in this meal which came from our CSA share:
-eggplant
-heirloom tomato
-garlic
-onion

Ingredients in this meal which came from our roof-top garden:
-giant leaves of basil
-flat leaf parsley
-cucumbers

Pork Tacos


M. and I had one portion of shredded roast pork left from our wedding in the freezer and when I suggested tacos last night, he suggested using the pork. Add some onions, jalapenos, one spicy pepper which we don't know the name(a brown we one thought was sweet, but was obviously not), water and some spicy taco seasoning and let it simmer for an hour or so and we had a luscious pork feast which tasted a little like "carnitas" from Chipotle.

We put the meat in a crunchy taco shell with freshly shredded romaine lettuce, a chopped heirloom tomato, cheddar cheese, and a dollop of sour cream. I also made some spicy rice. Just regular rice with a good glop of salsa, some habenero sauce and Mexican blend corn (corn with peppers) all mixed up. Topped the whole shebang off with a glass of Sangria. Delicious.

Sometimes I wish we either followed a recipe or wrote down more detailed measurements of what we put into our cooking so we could replicate it at another time. This is one of those moments. This was so good I'd eat it every week if we could.

Ingredients in this meal which came from our CSA share:
-jalapeno pepper
-spicy brown pepper of unknown lineage
-red onion
-heirloom tomato

Ingredients in this meal which came from our roof-top garden:
-jalapeno pepper

New beginning

Throughout the summer, M. and I have been experimenting with food and being very domestic. I have been wanting to document our culinary exploits for some time. So here it is, a new blog focused on one of the things I enjoy the most: food. Be prepared for some exciting posts about our inner-city, roof-top gardening; experimental cooking with what little might be in our kitchen as well as trying to cook up our CSA box without wasting even those things we don't know much about, and just plain good eats.