Saturday, October 31, 2009

Happy Halloween!



Yes, this is me, The Frugal Fraulein the canning Goddess!  I am going to the local casino tonight in hopes of winning the first prize.  The prize is $1,000!

If you can not tell what I am, I am going as a homecanned jar of dill pickles!  Is that appropriate for someone who loves to can?  I think so.  I will sign on later tonight with more pictures and will let you know how I faired.  Keep your fingers crossed for me!

Oh dear I did not win.  I will post another picture when they come in from friends.  It was fun but the competition was fierce.  I would guess some of the folks were professional costume makers from the outrageous outfits I saw. The winner was a huge dog with a slinky body.  One man was the front part and one man was the hind end.  It had to be seven feet tall.

Well it was fun and that is what counts!

Friday, October 30, 2009

Fishing Hole #2



Fishing Hole is an opportunity for me to share sites of interest I have found while fishing on the internet.  This week I have been reading about Urban Homesteading.  Since I realized I was actually involved in urban homesteading, I have wanted to read all I can about it to learn more and be able to maximize the use of the small space I have here in Olympia, Washington.

Olympia is the capital of Washington and considered a city.  Since I am from the Eastcoast, I do not consider Olympia a city as I know cities.  Yes, it covers 18.5 miles, has approximately 47,000 residents, is the county seat and is the home of Evergreen State College.  But the feel is that of a town.  There aren't any sky scrappers and there are probably more parks than parking lots. 

I live in the unincorporated section of Olympia,  my neighborhood is a residential area on the edge of a greenbelt, so I consider this an urban area.

As you might have read in my postings, I am attempting to grow as much food as possible on my small lot.  I like to use garden beds rather than open garden plots and am now collecting wood to build more.  The plan is to fill the back yard with garden boxes this winter and have them ready for the spring. 

Begining in 2010, I will weigh the food that is harvested and keep track of it to document just how well we are doing.  There are nternet sights that encourage gardeners to submit how much they are producing to document just how much  urban homesteaders are growing and their impact.  The Path to Freedom blog has a goal to reach 10,000 pounds on 1/10th of an acre!

I am not that adventurous and industrious but I am curious just how much we produce. I am working on purchasing  only food items that are grown within 100 miles of my home but last I checked there wasn't a lot of sugar cane grown in Puget Sound.  There are just some things I would have a difficult time giving up.  I plan on growing stevia next summer and am hoping for the best.

I  additionally hope to raise chickens in the spring (that is if Mister T the Dachshund will allow such a thing). I also plan to expand the raspberry vineyard, add grapes and build two more strawberry boxes to produce more fruit. The pear and plum trees I planted last year might produce a pear and a plum. Yes, it will be a huge undertaking but I believe it is doable and necessary.  The economy is going to force all of us to take matters into our own hands and grow our own food.

So here is the result of my fishing expedition.  I am not recommending all of these sites.  I am just letting you see the list of the blogs I am watching.  If you can recommend other Urban Homesteading blogs please let me know in the comments section below so everyone else can see them too.

Urban Homesteader


Home Grown Evolution

Sustainablog

Ledas Urban Homestead

Schell Urban Homestead

Quince Urban Homestead

Sustainable Urban Homestead

My Little Homestead

Denver Urban Homesteads

Barge Urban Homestead

The Self Sufficient Homestead

Off Grid Survival

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Urban Homesteading Update

Please watch this video on Urban Homesteading . Called The Power of Growing Your Own Food.  They also have a website called Path to Freedom which is excellent.  I highly recommend you view both the Utube video and  their website.

I would also like to recommend a website called Food Matters .  Food Matters has a free newsletter that I subscribe to for the latest on food issues.

I have written about my urban homestead and my edible front yard.  These are the folks who inspired me.



Now that we are in Fall and Winter is coming fast we are still working on putting the garden to bed.  The plant material has been cleared out and put into the compost pile.  Next step is to get a truck load of mature manure for the garden beds.  I have my eye on an area in town that has large maple trees.  When the leaves have finished falling I will rake them and bring them home in bags.  Again I am doing someone a service in return for getting the rich leaves.  Then the beds will be covered with (gasp) black plastic to keep them from growing weeds during the winter months.  The plastic was given to me and I recycle pieces used last year which makes me feel a bit better.  I am also watching a large road construction site that is using black plastic sheets to keep erosion in control.  I will ask the supervisor if I can have the plastic when the construction is complete. Again I will hopefully get more plastic free and prevent it from going to the landfill for a bit longer.

I know others plant green crops which are turned back into the soil in spring instead of covering the boxes.  I have chose to cover the beds because I am loading them with manure to make more good soil.  We have a substantial amount of rain usually in the winter and I am not confident the green crops would grow.  Maybe next year I will be brave and try that.



We are also collecting all the free wood we can for our wood stove.  It is the plan to only heat with wood this year.  I will be watching the electric bill to make sure it stays very close to what we consume in the Spring and Summer.  Within the past week we have picked up three truck loads of free burnable wood.  The wood included end cuts from a construction site, very large rounds of Doug Fir which will need to be split, plywood which will be used for building projects, pallets and assorted 2x4s, 2x10s and 2x12s.  We have built a relationship with one builder who will call us when he has a scrap pile. Since we have cleaned up when we have picked up free wood from him he is delighted and said he will deal with us only.  Yea!

While collecting free wood we have come across alot of wood that can be used to build more garden boxes.  I plan on adding boxes to the front yard which is now lawn free.  Then the back yard will be tilled and covered with garden boxes.  The boxes will be filled with mushroom compost which is a local byproduct of a mushroom factory, my composte and garden soil. It is a huge undertaking but will bring me step closer to being sovereign.

Check the June postings archive for more articles on Edible Front Yards.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

How a Flu Virus Spreads

Please watch this excellent video made available by National Public Radio. 
Flu Video

Stay tuned and I will create some postings on how to prepare for the flu.  In one of my former careers in this lifetime, I was an Emergency Preparedness Consultant and did presentations for companies on how employees could prepare for the flu so they would be able to care for loved ones and hopefully still be able to come to work.  Most of the employees were in the medical field and are considered essential workers in emergency situations. It is time we all sharpen our skills and prepare to face an influenza outbreak.  Do you know how to prepare for the flu and care for your family members?  Have you prepared for a pandemic?  Do you know what social distancing is?

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Frugal Fraulein's Finds


Keep checking this posting.  I will be adding money saving sites as I come across them.  This posting will keep expanding rather than add new postings. By the way, this piggybank was given to my friend Margie in the early 1960's and she still has it!  I purchased it at the Over The Rainbow store on Washington Street in Marblehead, MA and gave it to her for a Christmas present.  When I visited her recently I just couldn't believe it when she pulled it out and showed it to me.

1.  Here is a website to find free WiFi access.  I checked out the free sites for Washington and there are loads of them!  For those of us wanting to be frugal and option would be to cancel your internet connection and use the free sites.  Of course you couldn't be like me with my hands attached to the computer most of my waking moments. Free WiFi Connections

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Marblehead Red Flannel Hash


If this article piqued your interest, you are probably wondering what in the world Red Flannel Hash is. It is a New England fish dish.  While researching for this article I had a good laugh reading this posting on  Cooks.com .

Suspecting her husband of unfaithfulness a mining camp wife, who was also ran a boarding house, awoke in a bitter mood. When she went to cook breakfast for the miners she noticed the laundry hanging to dry in the kitchen. In a fit of anger she grabbed her husband's red flannel long johns, ground them up and threw them into the hash she was preparing. The breakfast was served and the miners kept asking for more of that "bright red hash". The wife had ground up her husband's only pair of red flannels, so she substituted beet in the next batch of hash. They proved to be just as popular.



No, Marblehead Red Flannel Hash was not made from some red long johns that had not been washed all winter. It is a fish dish concocted out of necessity by early settelers along the Atlantic seacoast. 


Front Stree at Fort Sewell ater a Northeaster
Life in those days would have been harsh. Wind, cold, snow, high tides and rocky soil created hearty souls that persevered using foods they could store. Homes were small, with low ceilings, small rooms, handmade glass pane windows and dirt cellars.  The hearty souls had to made do with what they had to survive.

Early Gregory Street, Marblehead
In their unheated cellars, they stored winter vegetables like potatoes, onions, beets, carrots, parsnips, turnip and winter squash that they might have grown in the rocky or loamy soil.  They also would have had salted Haddock and Cod and pork fat. These were not rich people but hard working survivors.


Salted fish racks in Nova Scotia
Marblehead Red Flannel Hash is unique because it is made using salted or corned fish.  Salted fish was rolled in rock salt and dried in the sun then packed in wooden boxes.  The dried fish lasted most of the winter.  Corned fish is fresh fish that is rolled in course salt like kosher salt and refrigerated till use usually the same day.  Our family always uses Haddock instead of Cod.


Salt, Salt Pork, Dried Beans and Common Crackers were staples of early New England settlers



To make Marblehead Red Flannel Hash you need potatoes, onions, beets, salt pork and corned Haddock.  The amounts will depend on how many people you are going to feed.  A good sized fillet of Haddock will feed a family of four.  Look for a thick fillet.  Ask the fish monger to corn the fish.  If they look at you oddly, bring the fish home and sprinkle liberally with kosher salt and refrigerate till dinner time.



Salt pork is a piece of pork fat  usually from the back of the pig that has been salted and cured.  One side is rind which has to be removed with a sharp knife and discarded.  I presume in the olden days this piece of rind was also cut up and cooked but I was taught not to use it as it is tough (we would have used it in baked beans). The remaining fat is cut into very small pieces, put into a fry pan and fried till golden brown.  The small brown pieces are called rashers. Salt pork is similar to bacon but does not have any meat attached.  Salt pork rashers are very salty.  The liquified fat will also be used in this dish so do not throw it away.  For all of you Cardiologist wannabes out there please do not email me with warnings about sodium content and fat content.  This dish was created for hard working people who used salt to preserve their food and did not eat prepared foods and convienence foods laced with artificial ingredients.  The salt was commonly collected from the ocean and contained more nutrients and minerals than the iodized stuff we have today that might be laced with aluminium.



I prefer to use fresh beets straight from my garden. 


First the beet greens are cut off and kept for another dish.  I like them steamed with some onion as a side dish.  Next the beets are scrubbed to get off all the dirt.  Then the root is pulled off.  Do not cut it off or the beets will bleed as they are cooked.




I boil my beets till I can insert a knife easily then pour off the boiling water.  Then run them under cold water and the skins will slip right off.  I finish them by cutting off the end where the stems grew and the root end.



Boil the potatoes and onions till done then rinse the excess salt off the fish and place the fish in the boiling water with the potatoes and onions and cook for 7 minutes.  The fish will break into flakes when done.  Pour the contents of the pan into a colander and drain off the liquid.



Put potatoes, onion, beets, fish on a plate.  Mash it all up till it turns into red mush.  Sprinkle with some pork rashers and a little bit of the liquid fat (teaspon or so) to taste and you have just made Marblehead Red Flannel Hash.  If you like Haddock and boiled vegetables with a taste of salty pork pieces you will savor this dish.  If you try this I really want to hear about it because it is one of my family's favorites and we consider it a treat to have (especially since we have to fly the Haddock to the west coast).


Marblehead's Barnacle Restaurant Corned Beef Hash

Red Flannel Hash is a name more commonly used for corned beef hash.  Often leftovers of a boiled corned beef dinner were mashed and fried the next morning and topped with an egg.  The hash gets a nice crust when fried and is delicious.  Red Flannel Hash is a common breakfast at New England diners and local restaurants not to be mistaken for the Marblehead Red Flannel Hash. 

Here is a great Recipe for Red Flannel Hash. Give it a try.
 

Friday, October 23, 2009

Bittersweet


There was a bittersweet moment on my trip to New England. I forgot my garden clippers and was not able to cut bittersweet the vine that grows as abundantly as blackberries grow in the Pacific Northwest.  It really was in my plan to cut some bittersweet and pack it up in a box and mail it home. 


There are two types of vine commonly known as Bittersweet.  Oriental Bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) is the invasive variety that can be distinquished by the blunt thorns that grow on the vines.  The berries grow along the vine. American Bittersweet or false bittersweet (Celastrus scandens) does not have thorns and the berries grow at the end of the vines. Bittersweet produces a vibrant yellow shell over a deep orange berry.  As the vines mature and dry in the Fall, the shell cracks open to reveil the orange surprise inside whose colors match the yellows, oranges and reds of New England foliage at it's peak.


Oriental Bittersweet vines can choke and kill trees so many gardeners labor to kill the vines and rid their garden of this pesky invader.The powerfully invasive oriental bittersweet vines engulf other vegetation, slowly killing it. The germination of a bittersweet seed in the ground at the base of a tree seems harmless enough. Yet, it won't take long for the oriental bittersweet vine to make it to the tree's crown, a la Jack's beanstalk made famous in folklore. It can be difficult to imagine a vine killing a tree, but oriental bittersweet vines have slain many a giant. Capable of reaching four inches in diameter, oriental bittersweet vines wrap so tightly around their victims that the trees are strangled, in a process called girdling by arborists. Even when oriental bittersweet vines aren't strangling a plant, they envelop it in so much shadow that they rob the plant of the sunlight required for proper photosynthesis. Conservation New England reports that, in the case of smaller trees, uprooting can even occur, as the trees' root systems are unable to contend with the massive weight of entrenched vines. See Landscaping and Bittersweet for more information on Bittersweet.

I would have loved to make a wreath for my door with the real thing and not a plastic reproduction from Michael's craft store like the one I have hanging outdoors.  Everywhere I looked I saw bittersweet vines crawling up trees, over fences and along walls.  There it was free for the picking and I didn't do it! 

I was really had my buttons pushed when I saw some really beautiful wreaths on sale at a high end florist for a mere $120 and even more upset when I saw several on homes around town.  To think someone would pay that much for an invasive vine that is free for the picking.  I suppose it is worth it to have someone remove the leaves and fashion a ring with the thorn free vines.  That's it I am going to get some American Bittersweet starts and plant in along the fence in my backyard next summer and see if I can propagate it.  Maybe I will be able to go into the bittersweet wreath business next fall. To grow bittersweet vines or not to grow bittersweet vines: truly a bittersweet decision.


Marblehead Hubbard Squash

In my continuing series on New England regional foods,  here is a beauty!  The Hubbard squash

I grew these Hubbard squash on a trellis in my garden this year.  They are larger than your head and very heavy.  I was surprised how well they did growing up on a trellis and didn't need to be slung.






The  Hubbard squash is credited to Marblehead history. According to local legend the seeds were brought home from South America probably Argentina or Chili via the West Indies and ended up with sea Captain Knott Martin in 1798.  One variation of the story states Captain Martin gave the seeds to his gardener sister Sarah Martin.  Sarah  and her sister Martha grew the squash successfully and  gave seeds to Elizabeth Hubbard. Elizabeth gave some to seed seller and agriculturist James Howard Gregory around 1844.
Gregory named the large squash after Elizabeth. 



By 1900, J.H. Gregory produced 400 acres of seed crops and was one of the largest seed growers in America. He is remembered as a great American Seedsman and philanthropist who introduced many kinds of vegetables suited to the New England growing region and had a reputation for maintaining and improving variety quality. He was also the first to develop the "picture" seed packet with instructions. One of the historic buildings of Marblehead, Mass. was the "squash shed" located downtown.


This is the place where the squash was brought from the production fields. I remember reading accounts of Gregory's Squash Shed and went to Elbridge Gerry Elementary School across the street. Villagers would line up at the shed to receive the emptied squash after Gregory and his seed staff cleaned the seeds out. The squash halves were given out to any families who wanted baking squash and it became a squash season tradition that lasted decades.A more detailed history can be found at Long Island Seed   and a great history of J.H. Gregory can be found at Save Seeds.    

Winter squash are great keepers.  I grow Hubbards and Acorn squash to enjoy throughout the winter.  My favorite recipe is to simply open the squash, clean out the seeds and set aside, then sprinkle with either brown sugar or drizzle maple syrup over the squash and bake.  I also like to make squash pie.  I think I will have squash for dinner tonight!

Here are some great Hubbard recipe sites:
The Big Apple Farm recipes
Big Oven
Homestead Farm Recipes
Please leave a comment below if you have a great recipe or site to share!!!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Regional Food

Many of you have probably experienced enjoying foods that are regional.  Those dishes you grew up with and those that helped mold your taste preferences.  While on my trip to Massachusetts and New Hampshire in America's New England, I had the opportunity to delight in some of my favorite foods.



The first delicacy I had the good fortune to taste was one close to my heart.  Fried Haddock fish.  As it happens. my last name is Haddock so I have always been sensitive to this Atlantic Ocean fish.  Can you imagine what it would be like to work in a Fish Market and be continuously asked for a pound of Haddock and have the customer laugh? This delicious fried Haddock came from the The Barnacal restaurant in Marblehead, Massachusetts.  To the horror of my friends, I took out my camera and took a picture of my lunch.  The container hoild tartar sauce which the fish is dipped in and the salad is coleslaw.  Yummy!  Sometimes I squeeze lemon on my fish and sometimes I like cider vinegar on the fish and french fries.  Tomato catsup is very commonly used as a condiment as well.

The Haddock fish is found on both shores of the Atlantic Ocean and prefers cold water.  It was once one of the mainstays of New England fishermen catch off the Grand Bank.  Due to fishing limitations set by the government, the Haddock are now flourishing again and available. In the northwest Atlantic, it ranges from the southern end of the Grand Banks to Cape Cod in the summer and it extends its range southward to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, in the winter. The haddock, like the closely related cod, are easily distinguished from other coastal Massachusetts fish by their three dorsal and two anal fins. The front dorsal fin is triangular in shape and taller than the following two. The posterior two are squarish, the middle dorsal being slightly larger than the last. Of the two anal fins, the second or posterior one is a mirror image of the third dorsal fin. Haddock can be distinguished from the other closely related members of the cod family by a black lateral line and a large spot on each side of the body over the pectoral fins. The largest recorded haddock weighed 37 pounds and measured 44 inches in length. Few haddock exceed 20 to 24 inches in length, 3 to 5 pounds in weight and 9 to 10 years old.


A young Haddock is called Schrod and a young Cod is called Scrod.  Smoked Haddock is called Finnan Haddie.  Historically, Haddock was fileted, salted and dried on racks.  Salted or corned Haddock can still be purchased.


The meat of the Haddock is lean and white and is considered premium white fish. It is not a fishy tasting fish which make it very popular even with people who often don't care for other fish and seafood.  It is less firm than cod and flakes beautifully when cooked. Haddock is excellent baked, broiled, fried, poached, microwaved or used in a chowder or stew.




HFere is a site with a great variety of Haddock Recipes .  I highly recommend you try this delicious fish.


How to make Old Fashioned Fried Haddock

Cut fillets into serving pieces.
Heat shortening in skillet over medium heat.
Mix salt and cornmeal; roll fish in cornmeal mixture.
Fry in hot shortening for 3 minutes or until delicately browned.
Place on brown paper bag to drain excess fat.

I brought 5 pounds of fresh Haddock back to Washington so we will have having fish dinners for a while!  What is your favorite Haddock recipe?

Two Roads Divergered In A Wood



I am back from a fabulous trip to Massachusetts where I visited with friends and family, attended a High School reunion and went on a foliage trip through New Hampshire.  It was a magical trip to the past and I throughly enjoyed every moment.



I had the realization that when I made the decision to move west to the Pacific Northwest I was living actually living my favorite poem.

 "Two roads diverged in a wood and I ....I took the one less traveled by and that has made all the difference"  Robert Frost of New Hampshire



I am happy with the twists and turns my life's adventures have taken me through and feel richer for them all. 




As life has taught me to let go of the stones in my backpack, the road has become easier to travel and the scenic vistas have become more clear.



Now that the way is clear it is time for new doors to open to new vistas and new adventures that will enrich my life futher and allow me to continue on my journey of evolution.



I look forward to being the observer,                                                         



Taking on the challenge of the next mountain,



Stopping to appreciate the color of the universe,



Weathering all storms,



Having the wisdom to chart the right course,



And the knowingness to forsake chaos to create order.





Monday, October 12, 2009

New England Foliage



I will be away in New England visiting old friends and touring the Fall foliage for a week.  I will return with lots of pictures to share and stories to tell.  Use this week wisely to prepare for the unknown.  When I get back I will be sharing more about my journey in preparedness and hopefully will inspire you to kick it up a notch.
Abby The Frugal Fraulein.  ....The house on the left is my home in Marblehead, Massachusetts.  The Nathaniel Bowen House was built in 1689.