Category Archives: Update from the Mountain

Cold Weather, Kitchen Renovations and Wildlife Visits

Strange weather is afoot. Here on the Mountain we’ve had several unusual cold fronts since our winter officially ended. Our last frost came just when the lilac buds should have formed and we did not have a single lilac bloom this May. Then not quite a frost, but a very cold snap dropping night temperatures back down into the low 40s, knocked out the blooms on the kiwi trees and most of the blackberry bushes. Now the forecast has bizarre cold returning to the middle of the U.S. this week.

lilies still in bloom

We have plenty of blackberry bushes on the perimeter of the forest, but only a handful of them made berries this summer. Each morning I circle the neighbor’s (undeveloped) property, then our own, picking about a quart of blackberries in total. Then I gather about a pint of blueberries from our garden and usually about four to ten ripe strawberries from my raised perennial barrel. I clean and wash them before alternating between freezing them and canning jam every other day. I am grateful I was able to do this before the cold snap reaches us in a few days. I’m not sure if the various berries will continue to ripen or produce after several shockingly cold nights.

Cog is hip deep in gutting our kitchen. The new kitchen cabinets have been delivered, inspected and stacked in their crates in the basement. Well, most of them. The big lazy susan corner base cabinet would not fit through the basement door so it’s sitting in front of the fireplace in the living room awaiting installation. The large island in the center of our kitchen is where the family now eats since the original dining room was converted into the Two Ice Floes Creations home office. The main section of the new island is also too large to fit into the basement, so it is blocking my piano bench in the small sunroom. Our household life has become an intense game of Tetris for the month of July.

Cog repeatedly offered (at one point almost pleading with me) to wait on the kitchen project, but I insisted we move ahead full speed and damn the torpedoes. Cog’s concern is that my tomatoes and other garden goodies will need to be cooked and canned just when the kitchen is unavailable for these operations. And that despite my alternative plans I will end up in tears. With all my redundant cooking systems and backup plans, this was an excellent way to test out my alternatives. After all, what could go wrong?

tomatoes

Well… today I found out. While Cog was upstairs re-wiring the electrical and installing the new sheetrock on the interior kitchen wall I began my first canning adventure in the basement. I had cleaned and prepped, had all my utensils, measuring and stirring devices, canning ingredients, prepared jars etc. I felt extremely confident as I made the jam on my ceramic hotplate, then ladled it into jars and wiped the rims before placing the lids on each one. Oh, and I even corrected my former jam issues with a better ratio of pectin to sugar. I was feeling pretty good about my efforts.

But you know what? A watched pot really does not boil. Even though I have consistently used this pricey ceramic hot plate to pressure can soups and chili, it would not bring the water in my water-bath canner to a boil for some simple Bumbleberry jam. Cog told me the bottom of the pot was not shaped correctly for the hotplate. Ah, the best laid plans…

The good news is that most of my garden recipes are pressure canning recipes so they will be completed in the basement if the tomatoes do indeed ripen before the new kitchen sink and counters are in. Pickles, salsa and jam will have to be worked in around “construction zone” hours since Cog has promised to return the stove to the kitchen each evening.

Actually, I don’t think there will be too much of an overlap in time unless we hit a snag with the kitchen overhaul. The tomatoes are all still green. I estimate there at least two thousand of them with more flowers bursting out each day. I have no idea what this bizarre cooler weather will do to the tomatoes at this point in their development.

Cog had a visitor outside his office window. It seems the raccoon has found the outdoor cat food dish. One must wonder how long it will be until he discovers the kitty door in the window. Perhaps it is time to get that magnet onto the cat’s collar and activate the magnetic lock mechanism before we have more than just bunnies visiting in the night.

Rocky is that you

Sneaking Into The Farmer’s Field, Blooming Lilies and a Canning S.O.S.

From Mrs. Cog’s Corner

Anyone who read my piece on the medicinal properties of red clover tea knows I am excited to add it to my list of regular items to consume. Red clover is the number one forage crop for livestock in the Northeast U.S. and sure enough, our neighboring farmers grow it.

It calls to me.

After passing one particular field on many trips to and fro, finally I’d had enough. Under the guise of taking pictures I suited up to go traipsing through the field, armed with scissors and a two gallon bucket. The blooms were glorious. Not a single one came off without a bug. Thank goodness I had the foresight after getting home to spread them on a few cookie sheets and set them in the sun for a day. A few more days in the window and my blooms will be dry enough for tea.

Red Clover FieldPink clover blossoms

The zucchini continues to explode in production. Cog and I had a lively conversation this morning about eight zucchini plants being too many, too few or just right. He keeps saying ridiculous things like, “You know you can compost some of that?” LOL Right. Not!

Yesterday, I made another 14 pints of bread and butter zucchini pickles, and 5 with cucumbers which are just starting their earnest production. When I served Cog his tomato/basil sandwich on toast with… pickles on the side for lunch he asked if pickles were going to be a regular on the menu for the next 15 years.

Two days ago I made a spectacular blueberry and peach jam. Like my recent strawberries it didn’t turn out quite right. Once again my fruit floats in the jar after being processed and jelly forms at the bottom. So it separates itself while processing. I spent quite a bit of time Googling and digging in canning forums. The consensus seemed to be that either more pectin was needed or it wasn’t boiled long enough after the sugar was added and before it went into the jars. If anyone has any pearls of wisdom, please let me know. If you are not a premium member, drop a note to the webmaster with your two cents please?

Since my jam isn’t perfect that means I can’t give any away, and we’ll have to eat it all ourselves. Sigh.

Jam and pickles

It’s turning out to be a very pleasant summer. The temps haven’t been hotter than the mid 80s and there is a breeze almost every day. The lilies are beginning to bloom. The tomato plants are continuing to grow at an insane rate and many are up to my chin. As the child unit is traveling for the month to visit family, we are hoping to knock out a number of big messy projects including the bulk of the kitchen renovations.

With the absence of kitchen availability looming in the upcoming weeks, I have set up a massive staging area complete with cooking space and access to water in the basement for garden canning operations. Cog just nods and smiles as I explain this, and offers to wait until post-harvest on the kitchen upgrades. I think he sees this as a way to relieve him of the blame when the tomato deluge goes terribly wrong downstairs and I am in tears for access to a proper kitchen once again. This, of course, will not be how things play out

My exile to the basement is excellent practice for several Plan B’s and contingencies that I never get to test because Cog is so efficient at making sure everything works as it should. I am ready for the challenge and will keep the updates coming. :-)

Blooming LiliesThe Lilies of the Mountain

A Baby Bunny, Blueberries, and Basement Adventures

From Mrs. Cog's Corner

Since our last update we have remained incredibly busy and no day passes without an adventure to note and enjoy. I am now in fierce competition with the zucchini patch to stay on top of eating, experimenting with and preserving everything it can throw at me. We have made gluten free breaded zucchini fried in coconut oil as well as oven baked zucchini chips with Parmesan cheese along with various other spices to experiment with. Desperate to try anything yesterday I began canning bread and butter zucchini pickles.

As our Two Ice Floes members cautioned us would happen, Tramp the cat has indeed begun bringing live animals into the house at night via his new cat door. This past weekend we awoke to Tramp repeatedly mewing in a muffled 'voice' and, without even looking, I woke Cog and told him Tramp was on my side of the bed with something in his mouth. Using his trusty iPhone to light the way Cog got up, walked around the bed and gently grabbed Tramp by the scruff of the neck. "Drop it!"

The cat dropped his mouthful as I turned on the light.....and it was gone. After we banished the cat from the house I proceeded to stifle my laughter as a 6'4" Cog chased a 3 inch baby bunny, who was apparently unharmed, throughout the house. At one point Tramp reentered through his cat door to try to take charge again. I woke the teen and deposited the cat in her room with instructions to keep him on lock-down.

tramps present last nightA fuzzy picture snapped as an after thought on Cog's iPhone.

At one point in the bunny chase the rabbit ran to the teen's closed bedroom door in a frantic attempt to get away from the pursuing Cog. As the bunny desperately tried to climb up the door a massive paw repeatedly swept out from the space beneath the door in a failed attempt to recapture glory. So close, yet so far away.

Finally, the bunny was cornered in the sun room and shooed out the back sliding door. Since by now it was in sheer panic mode, it made its way down a few steps of the back deck and then fell into a soft bed of ivy and scampered away. We proceeded to engage in an intense conversation as to whether another bunny family would reintegrate this lost baby bunny into its pod or whether it may be able to survive alone.

Some things are better left unknown.

The blueberries are ripening in waves. We are supplementing them with dewberries (like blackberries but growing on runners on the ground) and about six fat strawberries each day from my three year old plants we moved here with. Massive amounts of blackberries are growing around the perimeter of our property, as well as the neighbor's land, but they won't be ripe for a number of weeks. I don't have to walk far each day to collect berries and red clover blossoms for tea. It's like something out of a storybook.

new blueberry seasonA heavy crop of blueberries.

Down in the basement I am attempting to create order for the upcoming deluge of garden veggies. When we bought the place, prior to moving in we cleaned out the entire basement and painted the walls with special paint that water proofs the cinder block walls. After we moved in we proceeded to stack, like a game of Tetris, most of our boxed belongings from our previous lives (which had already been downsized several times) into the basement of our small cozy home. That was manageable until the new kitchen cabinets arrived and were stowed down there. Once a builder in his younger days, Cog is about to begin remodeling our kitchen.

For the month or so that the upstairs will become a construction zone I will need to move all the kitchen items to the basement in order to take out the old counters and cabinets and install the new. Ceilings will have to be painted and new light fixtures are going in as well. Have I mentioned how much I love Cog?

During this time of kitchen anarchy, the garden will not wait. I have cleared and cleaned the arts & crafts area as well as the gardening operations in a portion of the basement to soon house kitchen items and canning operations. The show must go on.

Meanwhile, Cog and TIF member LionLady are giggling at me in advance of my tomato deluge. I have more than a hundred waist high tomato plants that have at least six tomatoes growing on each and many more blooms are popping out. I see honeybees zipping around them when the sun is shining and, in between, we have had rain showers almost every day. I think they love the organic fertilizer I am giving them. I'm just amazed how healthy they are.

I am planning on canning crushed tomatoes, tomato soup, diced tomatoes, tomato paste, chili, bruschetta and salsa. I must sound like Bubba talking to Forrest Gump about all the ways to prepare shrimp lol. Any other suggestions and/or recipes?

We shall follow up on a regular basis to keep everyone informed how things are going up here on the edge of the mountain.

a happy gardenA portion of the happy garden.