Fermenting your Garden Bounty

Fermented foods in jars.
A question about fermenting.

It’s almost garden season again. Have you thought about how you’ll preserve all your garden bounty yet?

I only recently discovered fermented food and was surprised to find out how much I Iike it.

Fermenting food has been around for centuries.

Historians have found evidence of fermentation dating as far back as 7000BC.

Sauerkraut mixture.
Sauerkraut mixture ready to ferment.

While no one really knows how it came about, it’s likely that our ancestors figured out that they could store foods much longer with fermenting.

And around the time of the turn of the last century, fermented drinks were probably much less likely to make you sick than the water you drank.

There’s some really great benefits to eating fermented foods.

The bacteria that ferments your foods also makes the nutrients of that food much more readily available for your body to use.

The process of fermentation also produces additional vitamins for your body and enzymes that are highly beneficial for your digestion.

And good digestion can support everything from great skin to a strong immune system.

Some of the supplies you need to ferment.

Fermenting supplies
Fermenting supplies

It really doesn’t take much to get started fermenting. Here’s a list of the basics, in no particular order.

  • Canning jars. I have found wide mouthed jars easier to use.
  • Some kind of lid. There are several to choose from. You can be as basic or as fancy as you like. I’ve used sandwich baggies and I have special fermenting lids.
  • A sharp knife for chopping or (as I just discovered recently) a food processor. It all depends on what you’re fermenting and what you like.
  • Some kind of masher comes in handy if you’re making something like sauerkraut.
  • Water or apple cider vinegar. You probably won’t want to use city water from your tap if it has added chlorine or fluoride. See more on that below.
  • Salt for preservation
  • Veggies.
  • Last but not least all kinds of herbs and spices or onions, garlic and peppers. Be creative and try what you like. Make smaller batches with different mixtures to determine your favorite.
Pushing a puck down on sauerkraut.
I’m pushing a “puck” down over my sauerkraut to make sure my veggies stay submerged.

Now there are several types of fermentation. You can ferment grain or fruit as in beer or wine. You can ferment tea as in kombucha. And I’m sure you can ferment a number of other things but, what I’m talking about here is preserving your garden harvest and creating different flavors from all the veggies you’ll get from your garden.

A little about the water you use.

I have well water, so I never thought about this until I did the research.

City water generally has several additives like fluoride and chlorine. Some places add a chemical called chloramine too. Chlorine is not to much of a problem in that you can just let the water sit out for about 24 hours and it’ll evaporate. Or you can boil water to get rid of chlorine.

But, that doesn’t work with fluoride or chloramine. You can’t boil or charcoal filter these out of your water either.

If you have a home filtering system you can check what it says about what all it removes from your water. Otherwise, bottled water might be your best bet.

The fermenting process.

Fermenting takes a little time, but it’s not a hard process. It’s a great way to help preserve all of that garden bounty and give a your veggies a variety of tastes.

Step One

Clean whatever veggies you want to ferment well then chop them into bite sized pieces. In the case of a sauerkraut type ferment, you can shred them with a knife or better yet, with a food processor. I’m embarrassed to say I just realized the food processor thing. I’ve almost never use it….until now.

Step Two

Salt is the key. In most cases you’ll add 1-3 tablespoons of salt to a quart of water and allow it to dissolve. In the case of using cabbage or another high water content veggie you can use some of it’s own water content in place of what you would otherwise use. The salt will also help release the water from your veggies. I’ve got a recipe for sauerkraut here, if you’d like to give it a try.

Step Three

Fill the quart jars with your veggies. You can combine many different kinds, or not, it’s entirely up to your tastes. Experiment with different batches to see what you like best. Add your spices and herbs now too.

Step Four

You want to make sure the salt water mixture you pour over the veggies covers them completely. The point is to not allow any air to reach your veggies during the fermentation process.

Step Five

Next your going to add a lid to keep critters out, BUT you need to allow the resulting gases to escape. If you’re highly diligent you can just put a lid and ring on the jar very loosely and remember to just kind of lift it once a day to let those gases out.

Fermenting Kit.
There are several brands.

I know myself better than that, I’m not that diligent and would never remember to do that. So, I bought a kit. It comes with what’s called pucks and breathable lids. These kits aren’t real expensive and it makes the process so much easier.

They run as low as $20 and you can probably spend as much as you want. There are several kinds, so you can decide what works best for your.

When I first started making sauerkraut I didn’t have the kit. I found a method that used sandwich baggies covering the veggies and then filled with water. I got to say it really was pretty inventive. You can see this method here.

Once you have prepared your veggies and got them in your jars, filled it with your salt water and situated a lid, now you wait.

Make sure you set it on a plate of some type because most of the time it will bubble over and will make a mess. Ask me how I know this 😉

How long do you wait?

As a rule you let your ferment sit from a few days to 6 weeks. The warmer it is the faster your food will ferment, but ultimately the amount of time is entirely up to you.

Sauerkraut.
Sauerkraut ready to ferment.

The taste will continue to evolve the longer it sits. Different foods have a different suggested minimum amount of time to ferment. Each recipe will give you timelines to follow. The trick to getting the taste you like is to test it periodically once you get to that minimum amount of time.

Once it gets to the flavor you like, put it in the fridge. The cold will slow the fermentation process to almost a stop and it will stay pretty much like it is. I’ve never had a ferment go bad in the fridge. So far, I’ve had sauerkraut sit in there for several months and catsup longer than that..

The fermenting process adds a tang to your food. But recently, someone told me they had tasted sauerkraut that had sit for 6 months and it was the best and mildest they’d ever tasted.

Now I can’t attest to that yet, but you can bet I’m going to try it.

Share what you know.

Leave a comment below to let us know what food you’ve fermented and how you did it. I would appreciate any inspiration you can leave.

If you haven’t yet, but you plan to try, let us know what you come up with. I can’t wait to hear!!

Until later-

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey

Homemade Snack Crackers

Homemade snack crackers

Every time I go grocery shopping, I look at snack crackers that I can munch on that will side track me from something sweet. Everytime I refuse to buy them telling myself I can make my own homemade snack crackers.

Homemade crackers
Cooked crackers

I looked for all kinds of recipes and found several that looked good, but just kept putting it off, because, well, you know, it was just so much easier to just buy them.

One night while watching YouTube I came across a channel called Living Traditions Homestead and they were making homemade snack crackers. He kept talking about how easy and quick it was.

After watching it several times I found that it really is pretty easy, just like he said it was. It’s also pretty easy to change it up if you want.

Homemade snack crackers cooling off.
Homemade snack crackers cooling off.

I’ll give you the recipe he gave and then I’ll talk about how you can change it up.

Homemade Snack Crackers

Ingredients:

  • 1 Cup oat flour
  • 2 Cups all purpose flour
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 4 TBL oil
  • 1 Cup warm to hot water.

Instructions:

Dry ingredients
Dry ingredients

Combine flours, salt, and sugar. Mix together well. Add oil and mix. I used my stand mixer for this, using the whisk attachment.

After the above was mixed well, I changed the attachment to the bread attachment.

You may or may not need an entire cup of water. So add about 1/2 to 3/4 of the water to the flour mixture and blend until well mixed.

I only used about 3/4 of a cup of water for this batch.

Rolled out dough.
Rolled out dough on wax paper. Helps keep the mess down.

From here add any additional water you may need a tablespoon at a time. You want a dough similar to bread or biscuit dough.

It’s easier to add water than it is to remove it. So go slow in how much you add at a time.

Roll out your dough on a floured surface as thin as you can get it.

Use a pizza cutter to score the dough into the size of crackers you want.

Bake at 425 deg. F for 7 minutes. Then remove them from the oven and spray or brush oil on top of the dough and sprinkle with salt or sesame seeds or whatever else you like. Then put them back in the oven for another 7 minutes.

After you’ve removed them from the oven, let them cool. If you scored them they will break at those scored lines.

Here’s some lessons I learned.

Scored dough.
Scored dough, ready to make.

I didn’t get the center thin enough, so the center wasn’t as crunchy as I would have liked. Around the outside of the dough it was nice and crunchy though.

When I make my next batch I’ll roll it out in much smaller batches so I can get the inside much thinner.

I’ll also score the dough all the way through next time. It seemed to cook better that way.

The other thing they mentioned in the video, that I actually tried, was to add dried herbs or spices to the dough along with the dry ingredients.

You can add herbs and spices to mix it up a little.

Powdered ingredients with spices and herbs.
Powdered ingredients with spices and herb.s

I used 1 tsp garlic powder and 2 tsp oregano.

There’s so many things you could add. You could add basil, dehydrated tomatoes, thyme, rosemary, onion powder, etc, etc. Be creative.

After all was said and done they really were good.

Previously, I tried this recipe using whole wheat flour and they were really hard. Either whole wheat is too dense for crispy crackers or they were too thick. Honestly, I think it was a little bit of both.

Since this mixes different flours, I think I’ll change that mixture up next time, trying something different. Maybe using some coconut or almond flour. That might add some good flavor too.

You can make your own oat flour if you don’t have any.

Powdered ingredients.
Powdered ingredients.

Oat flour is not something I have hanging out in my cabinets, so I had to make it. The Living Traditions Homestead video showed how to make it.

I used quick oats but you could use whatever kind of oats you have in the cabinet. Then just blend it using a blender, a bullet, a ninja or one of those personal smoothy makers.

I put a cup of quick oats in a regular mouthed mason jar. The mixer blade fits perfectly on the regular mouthed jars.

So I attached the mixer blades and just used it on the blender for make an oat powder or flour.

Let me know if you give this a try.

Tell me how you liked them. Even the uncrispy (is that a real word?) ones taste good, they just don’t have the crunch.

Let me know what herbs or spices you used. I’d love to hear what you come up with.

Hope to see you next week.

Until next time –

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey

Never Enough Time

Do any of you feel like there’s just never enough time? Between the day job and taking care of the garden, taking care of what comes out of the garden, keeping up laundry and the house, oh and cooking some supper and having dishes to eat on, that leaves about 30 min to sleep.

Okay, maybe it’s not that bad, but sometimes it feels like it.

Last weekend, I took one day with my grandkids. We played, watched moves and then went to my company party.

Me and the grandkids at the co party.
Having a snack at the company party.

We had a ton of fun just hanging out and watching movies, brushing hair and just doing “stuff” last Saturday. They always make my weekend, no matter what we’re doing.

That left Sunday as the only time I had left to get stuff done over the weekend.

Many jars of infused oils.
Infused oils. I love just looking at them.
Calendula infused sweet almond oil.
Calendula infused sweet almond oil

I started by straining the infused oils that were ready.

These oils had sat and infused at least a month and some of them as much as 3 months.

I think they turned out beautifully. Most of the golden ones are calendula and sweet almond oil, 1 pint is calendula and coconut oil and the green one is lavender and coconut oil.

Lavender infused coconut oil.
Lavender infused coconut oil.

I’ll make some salves, lotions and maybe some chap stick with these. I’ll probably leave a little bit as it is and use it just as an oil too.

We discovered this year that we really like breaded, fried okra. I grew up with the old boiled okra, and had learned I hated it.

After the boiled stuff, I never had the nerve to try it any other way, until this year.

So this year, we grew some okra for my daughter-in-law and decided we had to try it. Wow, is that better than the boiled stuff.

This weekend we had about 6 gallons of okra that needed to be processed. My plan was to dry some and bread and freeze some for use in the winter.

That way we could just use however much we wanted at a time.

I only have chest freezers so I could only freeze one tray at a time. They need to freeze in a single layer. So that took all day.

Left over fried okra.
Guess what was for supper tonight. Well, at least part of it.

While the breaded okra was freezing, I cut and set some up on the dehydrator. I filled 8 of the 9 shelves in my new dehydrator.

Using the time I had tonight to get a couple more things done.

Freshly made sweet pickles.
Making more pickles.

Tonight I made more sweet pickles for my husband’s sandwiches. Boy, did I start something. He loves those things and reminds me regularly when he’s getting low.

From the dehydrator I jarred up a little under a gallon of dried okra.

I now have enough okra to probably last us the winter. But…..it’s still growing. I’ll be giving some of that away this weekend.

Jarred okra.

This dehydrated okra makes a pretty decent snack. If you salt it a little before you dehydrate it, it’s a nice crunchy snack. My mom would have really like it.

Time or the lack thereof.

Anyway, my point here is, once the garden starts coming in and you have to start putting up the goodies, time runs away from you. It feels like there’s just never enough time.

I try really hard with “to do” list, to make sure I’m not running in circles. I’m even crossing stuff off my list. But it feels like I’m adding as much as I’m crossing off.

I guess that’s just how it goes. Mark off 1, add 2.

Extra days

I’m taking off this coming Friday to catch up on things that I can’t get done on the weekend. I’ve done this several times this year.

It used to be taking vacation time to work, even at home, would have really irked me. But not anymore. These days it makes me smile.

I really enjoy putting it all together, trying to put up more and more of our own food every year. And I really don’t mind just getting stuff done here at home, whatever that might be.

Now if I can find a way to ditch the day job…..

How do you get everything done. Or do you? If you have a secret on how to find more time, I hope you’ll share here. I know there has to be some kind of cool method out there…..maybe.

Let me know what you’re up to in these last days of summer.

I’m really hoping to get back to some kind of trial and/or error next week. Maybe a cracker or maybe even some mustard. I’ve been working on both.

Until next time-

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey

I Lost Track of Time.

Tuesday's harvest

I have to say, having a full time job can really get in the way of harvesting and preserving my veggies.

Monday's harvest.
Monday’s harvest (with a side of homemade chocolate chip cookies).
Tuesday's harvest.
Tuesday’s harvest. isn’t that pretty?

We had a holiday this week and it threw my whole weekend off.

I also got to play with my grand kids over the weekend, so I was a little distracted. I was so busy with them and with harvesting and preserving and picking berries, I completely lost track of my days.

I didn’t even realize Tuesday was Tuesday until about 10 pm Monday night. Oops.

I’ve been canning.

Jar of canned tomatoes.
Quart of canned tomatoes

We’ve been harvesting and preserving our garden goodies.

We don’t have a ton of different veggies, but we have enough of the few we grew. I’ve given some to family and now I’m preserving for later.

Of course, we’ve been eating them too….daily.

This weekend, I canned 10 quarts of tomatoes and 3 quarts of chicken broth.

I’ve been saving up tomatoes through the week and froze them. Then I thawed them this weekend. The skins come right off when you thaw them. That was something new I tried and it worked great.

Chicken/rabbit broth.
Chicken/rabbit broth.

We bought a few chickens from a farm down the road a few weeks ago. I cooked them and used the meat last week.

Then I cooked what all was left from the chicken along with some veggies and some rabbit parts I had saved in the freezer. You can read how how I make broth here.

We’ve found that the rabbit makes the broth a bit darker than usual. I’m guessing that will make it more flavorful too.

I’m dehydrating too.

Dehydrated veggies in the dehydrator.
Dehydrator and dehydrated veggies.

I dehydrated some of the banana peppers and okra. I’ll be able to add the peppers to meatloaf and maybe some meatball and the okra to soups and gumbos during winter.

I also dehydrated the last of the radishes we had. They were so good roasted, I thought dehydrated, they would be really good in soups and stews. We’ll see how that goes.

Since they lose their bite when they’re roasted, I’m counting on the flavor without the bit in a soup or stew too.

We went berry hunting.

Picked elderberries.
Elderberries

We also went berry hunting Monday morning. I’ll be coming up with some elderberry syrup soon. Stay tuned for that one.

With cold and flu season just a few weeks away, you’ll want to make some of your own elderberry syrup.

I have a few cool things in the works. You’ll see those soon.

I’ll catch you next week with something new.

Until then –

Health, Wealth & Blessing ~ Tracey

Dehydrating Veggies

A few things in the garden exploded and we have tomatoes and banana peppers running out our ears. So, I’ve been dehydrating veggies, a lot of them.

tomatoes and banana peppers.
Tomatoes and banana peppers.

The tomatoes

We planted a lot of tomato plants this year because we weren’t real sure they would all grow because the seeds were so old. We planted all these plants with the idea some wouldn’t make it.

We were wrong.

tomatoes to be cut up for dehydrating
Mortgage Lifter tomatoes

These Mortgage Lifters don’t get as big as I thought they would, but they made up for it in sheer volume.

They’re beautiful and really good, but there’s so many of them.

They’re called “salad sized” tomatoes. Too big to eat like a cherry tomato, small enough to cut up for salads, but too small for slicers.

And the perfect size for dehydrating.

We got some cherry tomatoes, but not as many as I expected. I’ve just been eating them from a bowl right off the counter like snack food. They just don’t last long here.

Banana Peppers

Banana Peppers to be cut up to be dehydrated
Banana Peppers

When we bought these banana peppers, we weren’t sure we liked them. I was pretty sure my husband would, but not too sure about me.

Like the rest of the garden it was an experiment.

After cooking several and just eating them right out of the garden, we both discovered, they’re really pretty good.

We like grilling them with what we’re having for supper.

The little plants look like they have Christmas light on them, there are so many little peppers on them.

They were slow to start, but once they got started….watch out! They went to town and we have quite a few of them now.

Dehydrating Veggies

My Dehydrator

If you remember from a post or two back my dear hubby got me the dehydrator of all dehydrators for my birthday. And I’ve been using it almost constantly since to dehydrate veggies.

A dehydrator full of tomatoes.
Getting ready to dehydrate my tomatoes.

I’ve dehydrated so many tomatoes and Lemon Balm leaves, I have enough to last several months.

Dehydrating veggies is so much easier than canning. The actual amount of time it takes is probably a little longer, but it’s much easier.

I turn on the dehydrator and walk away.

And it holds so much, I can get a lot done at one time.

Dehydrating Tomatoes

Dehydrated tomatoes.
Powdering my dehydrated tomatoes.

I slice the tomatoes about 1/4 inch thick and filled all but 1 tray, using parchment paper on the trays to hold all the juice. This makes clean up a lot easier.

Once they’re dehydrated, they pop right off the parchment paper and are easy to grind up.

I was originally using my mortar and pestle, but couldn’t get them powered enough so I started using my spice grinder.

Peppers & Okra

Sliced banana peppers.
Sliced banana peppers.

I used the dehydrator from my dad for the banana peppers and a few okra. I was trying to do as much as I could all at once.

I sliced the banana peppers about 1/2 inch thick, the same with the okra.

The peppers and okra are pretty dry and don’t take very long to dry. Dehydrating the tomatoes took about twice as long because of all the liquid they contain. They’re really juicy.

Storing my Dehydrated Veggies

Dehydrating veggies takes up much less space in my opinion. You can seal the Seal-a-meal attachment in canning jars or in the sealing bags. Or you can crush or powder, like I did with the tomatoes.

I’ve dehydrated our garden goodies before, but only had four trays, so it took a while. Now I have 13. YAY!!

Next

I’ll be canning the pink brandywine tomatoes this weekend. I like choices when I’m cooking.

I’ll be freezing a few things too, like breaded okra. Makes frying up okra this winter quick and easy.

I hope you got a couple of ideas here. There’s a lot of things you can dehydrate to help preserve your garden.

Just last weekend I found a book on dehydrating food and of course, I bought it.

I can’t wait to see what I’ve been missing.

If you have ideas or have tried something I didn’t mention, let me know. I’m always up for trying something new.

Until next time –

Health, Wealth & Blessings ~ Tracey