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LSA NewsNo. 101, November 2009
'09
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We have been blanching and freezing a lot of vegetables all along, because that seems simplest, though it isn't, necessarily, and there are reasons, good ones, to get away from using a freezer. Ours is an efficient chest freezer, medium sized, but it does constantly draw current and is vulnerable to a long power outage. Since there's seldom much meat in it any more, total loss would not be much of a financial blow as it would to a steak-and-pork-chops family, but it would still hurt. So we think about diversifying our assets.
We do still have the five-gallon buckets, and have added galvanized trash cans mounted on casters for storing various flours and grains. These we don't grow ourselves, and we're aware how hard they might be to obtain during a long emergency — but at least we have a two years' supply at any one time.
In our kitchen quite a bit of the space is taken up with gallon jars (we think we need even more of these) filled with beans, grains, molasses and what not, which we top up from time to time from the five-gallon lots; also there are jars of dried vegetables and herbs, apples, zukes, pears, and tomatoes from the farm, as well as a zealously guarded jar of fair-trade Colombian coffee.
The dehydrating has gone well this summer, and I'm hoping for one more week of good sun after this storm, to put out some more apples and tomatoes before taking in the dry-box for the winter. I hope to spend the remainder of the long weekend firewooding and making a start on getting down the awnings in preparation for the winterizing.
Tuning the radio to my favorite station, which will play blues, sixties classics, gospel, and bluegrass throughout the day, I start the morning slicing apples, then cook them down while preparing seven quart-size Mason jars for the water-bath. We get away with leaving the peelings in the applesauce by dicing the slices up fairly small. I add some cinnamon and nutmeg to my batches, as the whim takes me.
While the applesauce cooks, I make up a batch of dough with 32 ounces of veggie stock, which comes out to four small loaves of spelt bread to bake on a cookie sheet. Setting the dough aside to rise, I run back and forth between stirring the applesauce and cracking filberts. When the applesauce is turned off and the water bath is coming to a boil, I shape the loaves and put them in the oven to rise, then pour the applesauce into the funnel over the mason jars, wipe their lips for luck, lid and ring them, and pop them into the water bath. Then I work up the thawing duck with some sliced onions and leeks and a myrtle leaf in salt-water-and-sherry in the roasting pan, and set it aside to bake after the bread.
The water bath is done, so I retrieve the jars and cool them, check the bread, turn on the oven, note the time, and go crack filberts. When I have a 12 oz. jar full, I write "filberts" and "09" on a sandwich baggie, dump the jar into the baggie, seal it, and set it in the bulging freezer. If we hadn't taken out the duck I don't know where I would have put the filberts. And there are more of them out there in the rain, calling to me.
I pause, trying to visualize future labels. "10". "11". "12". With any luck, what will be my last one? "22"? "31"? In September of "31" I would be eighty-two years old, my mother's present age. She's had two strokes, a myocardial infarction, dozens of cardiac arrests, throat cancer, has debilitating arthritis and rheumatism, and is legally blind. An oxygen tank sits by her chair; another one squats near my father, who is ninety-two. They don't garden now. She doesn't can anymore and hasn't for many years.
Time to cut up some green beans, zucchini and tomatoes to go with the duck dinner tonight, then sweep the house.
I'm well aware that my farming and preserving and cooking is not of the best quality, and not all that cost effective, and doesn't do as much as I might wish toward self-sufficiency and all that. If civilization collapsed, where would I get canning lids in two years?
But I enjoy it. Beats watching commercials.
Yesterday morning, a friend took me out for coffee.
"So, you're retiring in three weeks."
"Mm-hmm."
"That's said to be a big transition, dangerous to a lot of people."
"How so?"
"Well, they find they don't have anything to do."
My coffee almost went up my nose.
'09 first appeared on Risa Bear's Stony Run Farm blog. Risa also
blogs at The Red Mullet and A Self Supporting Home.