Thanks for stopping by! I'm Magi, a scratch cooking, homeschooling mama, learning to raise good kids, good food, and good fun on our teeny-tiny little farm!

Author: Mama

Back To The Grind

Back To The Grind

Today was my first day back at my seasonal fish and wildlife job.  As much fun as the job is, I’m so sad that I’m letting someone else have all the fun of being with my kids all day.  If I could strap them to my back and carry them […]

Our Experience With Straight Talk Wireless

Our Experience With Straight Talk Wireless

If you’re like me, you’ve probably noticed that the cell companies have us country dwellers by the throats. We don’t have good enough signal coverage to ever use up the minutes on even the lowest package. But we work in town, and travel country roads […]

Canning Stew Meat

Canning Stew Meat

When I first heard of folks home canning meat I was a little suspicious.  Besides just sounding gross, it had to be unsafe, right?  That was a long time before I got interested in producing my own food, and a long, long time before I did any research on the subject.  There are several reasons one might want to can her own meat.  My reasons include having shelf stable protein, knowing where it came from, and knowing exactly what is in the jar. 

 I’d like to know that a power outage mid-summer wouldn’t mean having a huge BBQ in order to avoid losing an awful lot of food.  I’d like to get the freezer down to no more meat than I can easily can in one afternoon of canning on the camp stove.  Keep in mind most freezers will stay frozen for two or three days without power if you keep them full and closed.  So if you’re not completely comfortable with the idea of pressure canning you’d have a couple days to get used to the idea.

If you’ve listened to the news lateley you probably already feel just a little creeped out thinking about the meat you eat.  I am a serious carnivore and even I don’t especially like to get meat at the grocery store.  Who knows how it was raised, what it was fed, or if one package is even cuts from the same animal?  Lateley we’ve been going in on sides of local beef with friends.  Also my husband hunts, so much of that meat is harvested locally as well.  Since we live in an area with heavy commercial farming and I’m certain the deer graze on orchards whenever they can, I wouldn’t call it organic meat, but I’d still bet it’s got McFranken beef beat for safety and nutrition. 

Home canning your food means you know exactly what is going into, and coming out of the jar.  I’ve given up flour for lent, (and as a way to get past a weight loss plateau).  Last week I made my family sandwiches for lunch and intended to have a store bought can of chili for myself.  Wouldn’t you know it has flour in it? Why a can of chili would need flour in it I can’t imagine, but I can guarantee when I can mine there won’t be any flour, salt, or sugar in it.  You just plain don’t need it.  

All these reasons, plus a healthy spirit of adventure pushed me past the heebie jeebies and prodded me to try pressure canning meat for the first time. I’ve pressure canned before, having started with beans, so the basic pressure canning procedures still apply, just the recipe for prepping the product differs. 

Before you do any canning at all you should make sure you have an up to date canning manual.  The old standby is The Ball Blue Book.   I like the Ball Complete Book of Home Canning, and Growing and Canning Your Own Food by Jackie Clay.  Whatever you choose, read it thoroughly before you begin, and keep it open to be referenced while you work. 

 Pressure Canning Pints of Stew Meat

I always start by reviewing the directions for a given food, then gathering my supplies, and checking the gasket and petcock on my canner.  I want to make sure the gasket is flexible and fitting properly, and the petcock should be clear of debris.  I sterilize my jars and utensils by scalding them in boiling water, then I hold them in a warm oven until I need them. 

For my recipe I used several packages of local stew meat. I lightly browned the meat to shrink it and heat it through, but I didn’t fully cook it.  I added water to the browned meat in the pan to make a broth.

 As soon as the broth simmered I lightly packed the meat into my jars and added enough of the broth to cover the meat and allow one inch of headspace. 

Next I poked a wood spoon handle into the jars to release any air bubbles, and wiped the jar rims with a clean damp rag to remove any debris. 

Then I added my hot, previously simmered lids to the jars, and screwed bands down to fingertip tightness. 

Now I added three inches of water to the canner, and then placed my filled jars on the rack at the bottom of the canner.  The rack is necessary to insure that the water can circulate under the jars, and to keep the jars off the direct heat of the burner.  My canner allows a second level of jars, with an additional rack between layers. 

Next I re-checked to make sure the gasket was fitting properly, and closed the canner lid according to the manufacturer’s directions. 

With the lid on properly, and the canner centered on my largest burner I turned the heat on “high”.  I allowed the canner to forcefully vent steam for ten minutes. It takes a few minutes of gently steaming before it reaches a forceful vent. 

Once the canner was properly vented I added the fifteen pound weight to the petcock.  We are at 1035 ft elevation, which only requires 11 pounds pressure, but with a weighted guage canner the 15 pound weight is the only option over 10 pounds.  Personally, I feel just a little more safe knowing that I am canning with more pressure than is truly necessary. 

Now I waited for the weight to begin to jiggle indicating that the proper pressure had been reached.  Since the burner was still set on high, and we only need a gentle jiggle, I started timing and began to very gradually reduce the heat to a level where the weight would not be erratically dancing on the lid.  It takes about 15 minutes of tiny downward adjustments to get the jiggle where I want it.  I settle for a little more active than is really necessary, but I like to err on the side of over processed as opposed to under processed.  So far I have never had a problem with my canner running dry, but I suppose that could be a problem with running the canner at too high a pressure, because steam is continually escaping from under the weight. 

I processed my pints of stew meat at 15 pounds pressure for 75 minutes.  After the proper processing time, I turned the heat off and let the pressure drop on it’s own.  Doing anything to speed the cooling will cause the pressure to drop too quickly and cause food to be sucked from under the lid, which can cause seal failures.  It took about forty five minutes for my canner to de-pressurize, after which I removed the weight, and lid. 

I used a jar lifter to remove the jars from the canner.  Although the canner has cooled enough to depressurize, it is still very hot to the touch, as are the jars. 

I placed the jars on a folded towel on the counter and ignored them for twenty-four hours.  After twenty-four hours I checked the seals by pressing on the center of the lid.  It should not pop or flex when pressed.  Any that pop or flex are not properly sealed and should either be refrigerated and eaten soon, or reprocessed with a new lid. 

I removed the metal screw bands from the properly sealed jars and gently washed the outside of the jar to remove any residue that may have been present.  Then the jars of stew meat were placed in our dark, cool, and unusually dry basement.  I’ve never seen such a dry unfinished basement, even in the rainy season I’ve never seen or smelled any moisture or mildew.   The builders must have done an exceptional job with the moisture barrier, which is great for our food storage.  We do continue to watch for signs of moisture or rust on our canned goods, however. 

For dinner tonight, I opened one of the jars and added it to some chopped carrots, celery and potatoes to make a 30 minute “stew”.  After a long day shopping for materials, and working on the new rabbit hutch, a quick wholesome meal was just the ticket. 

I think I ‘ll do up some good homemade and flour-free chili next.  How do you feel about pressure canning, and what do you can?

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Lotion Bars, And Another New Use For An Old Altoids Tin

Lotion Bars, And Another New Use For An Old Altoids Tin

  My hands have gotten seriously rough-side-of-the-velcro dry from all the yard work we’ve been doing, and we got a lull in the good weather, (snowing big fat nasty flakes) so I figured it was a good day to take a deep breath and do my […]

Spring!

Spring!

I must apologize for the lack of quality content this week, but I’ve decided it’s against my principles to blog when the weather is perfect for outdoor work.  I have also been a bit rebellious in regards to house work in favor of getting outside. […]

News From The Farm, and Homemade Yogurt

News From The Farm, and Homemade Yogurt

It feels like life on the farm has gotten busy, but I really can’t say we have accomplished much more than usual.

I joined the sub roster at my daughter’s school and have been called several times.  Monday and Tuesday I subbed for my daughter’s teacher, and my already healthy respect for her grew ten fold.  Honestly, she has a great bunch of students, and five year olds are just a lot of fun, but what a lot to keep up with!  I still wish we could homeschool, but we’re just not there, and this is almost as nice.

The new pup has settled in and is part of the family.  Don’t you just love the smell of a puppy?  She is a smart dog, but her body has outgrown her brain, as pup’s bodies do.  She has learned, with the help of our three year old, to go up the stairs.  Perhaps next she will learn to come back down.

The spring-like weather we were having last week ended Sunday afternoon.  Sunday morning we played at the park wearing only sweatshirts (okay, not only sweatshirts), and came home to a snow free yard.  We even tinkered in the garden area a bit.  By evening we had three fresh inches of snow and now it’s more like six or seven.  I am confident, though, that this is Winter’s last push and I’m standing by my prediction that I’ll have dirt between my toes in the second half of March.

The seedlings I started two weeks ago are up and doing well.  I think it’s funny that the “Early Jalopeno” peppers were the last to germinate.  My husband was right though, the broccoli and cabbage were already getting leggy, so we transplanted them into peat pots, burying them to just below the leaves.

Homemade Yogurt

Dang! If I had realized making yogurt was going to be so easy I’d have done it years ago. I actually did this project a couple weeks ago, but never got around to writing about it.  I followed the directions given in Storey’s Country Wisdom and Know How, but there are a lot of directions on the internet, and they are all basically the same.

Ingredients:

  • 1 Qt milk
  • 1/3 c instant dry milk (optional, adds protein and makes thicker yogurt)
  • 1 rounded tbsp plain active yogurt (or equivalent starter culture)

 

First make sure your cooking implements are sterile by scalding them.  I hold my sterilized jars in a warm oven until I need them.  Rogue bacteria can impart off flavors to your yogurt.  We only want the yogurt bacteria to grow.

 

 

 

My husband bought me this fancy thermometer, which will sound an alarm when the target temp is reached.

Next scald your milk by bringing it to 180 degrees over a medium burner.  After the milk has reached 180 remove it from the heat source and allow it to cool to approximately 110 degrees.  Add your yogurt and dried milk and stir thoroughly.  If you’d like you can pour the mixture into smaller containers for incubating. I used pint jars.

 

 

 

To incubate my yogurt I put an inch or so of warm water in a slow cooker, then added my containers of yogurt.  I set the cooker to “warm” then covered the whole works with a heavy towel.  I left a thermometer in the slow cooker and checked it every hour or so.  If the temp was creeping above 112 or so I’d turn it off, and when the temp dropped below 108 I’d turn it back on for a few minutes.  Temps closer to 120 yield a more tart yogurt, and temps too low won’t propogate the cultures.

After about five hours, test the set by gently tipping a jar of yogurt.  Keep the lid on in case it is still fairly liquid.  It should be set up by this point, but if not, continue to incubate it until it has thickened.  When your yogurt has reached the consistency you like you can refrigerate it for about a week, adding fruit or flavorings when you are ready to eat it.

Lacking cheese cloth, I used a coffee filter inside a strainer to drain my yogurt.

I added the step of straining my yogurt to make it “Greek”.  When you strain the yogurt, the whey takes much of the lactose with it, leaving you with a low carb, high protein end product.  It also makes a thicker, more decadent yogurt.  I use it as one would commonly see yogurt at the store, mixed with fruit, or vanilla, but I also use it plain in place of sour cream.

 

 

After I made this good yogurt, my friend, Amy, one-upped me by making the most delicious cream cheese I have ever tasted.  I’ll have to try that next and let you know how it goes!

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Pantry Cooking Week 3, Chili-Quin-Corne

Pantry Cooking Week 3, Chili-Quin-Corne

I know what you’re thinking.  She doesn’t know how to spell Chili Con Carne!  Don’t worry, I do.  Chili-Quin-Corne is the brain-child of my brilliant husband and daughters.  Sometimes they like to invent things in the kitchen, and sometimes the things they invent are delicious.  Chili-Quin-Corne!  It […]

Three Day Weekend

Three Day Weekend

Wow! What a great weekend we’ve had. We welcomed a new addition to our family, a little girl who we have tentatively named Macaroni. She is a mutt, and appears to be a lab/heeler mix. She is smart and has a great temperament. So far […]

28 Days To Hope For Your Home

28 Days To Hope For Your Home

***Not for the mildly disorganized***

Before you read this take a quick glance at your house.  Does it look beautiful? Yes?  I’ll save you some time.  This post is not for you, come see me again on Monday and we’ll cook up something delicious.

Okay, now I’ll share some sad truths with the rest of you.

The Sad Truth: I’ve been living under the assumption that, being a grownup, I don’t have to do my dishes if I gosh darn don’t want to. Another sad truth, is that eventually, I do have to do them,( I know, it SUCKS!) that is unless I want my husband to throw them away and buy all new ones, which he has suggested and would be more than willing to do. He’s not even mad. He hates washing dishes as much as I do, and that’s only the beginning. We’re not lazy mind you, we just have more interesting things to do. While I’m happily minding my hens, garden and, oh yeah, the kids, and Nate is happily creating something out of wood and antlers, our house slowly really, really quickly falls into disaster status.

Have you ever wondered why your home can go from company clean to “don’t open the door, it might be the health department here to shut us down” in a matter of days  hours  moments?

I used to wonder that, until I read 28 Days To Hope For Your Home.  Do I have my dream home now? No, but I have hope.  I now understand why and how my house can get so messy in mere minutes.  AND, I know how to reverse the trend.  I’m developing new habits, getting used to the look and feel of a neat home, and not even cringing when someone drops in unexpectedly.

In 28 Days to Hope For Your Home, Nony from A Slob Comes Clean, shares what she’s learned about the roots of slobberism, and the de-slobification process.  She takes you through a specific set of daily steps to develop four simple habits which will lead to a home you can actually live in.

28daystohope250Interested? For the rest of February, you can get 28 Days to Hope For Your Home at half price, by clicking on any of the affiliate links in this post.  That’s only four dollars!  Just two weeks ago I would have spent ten times that on take-out because I couldn’t find my kitchen!

Click here to view more details

 

 

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Sixteen Brick Rocket Stove

Sixteen Brick Rocket Stove

I’m always trying to find new ways of cooking in the event of a power outage.  Outages are fairly common in my neighborhood, so we’re pretty well able to cope by using the gas grill, or camp stove.  The issue of purchasing fuel, however, has […]