July 7, 2017

Mama Squabbles

About two weeks ago I told you about my four broody hens trying to occupy three nest boxes (along with any other hen who cared to lay an egg). The first two chicks were claimed by the first hen out of the nest. Over the next several days, we had one or two chicks hatch per day, until we ended up with eight chicks.


A second setter came off the nest quickly and adopted the remainder. All might have been well and good, but soon a third broody joined the group and tried to round up a few of the chicks as her own.


That did not go over with the first two Mamas and they started fighting over the chicks!


The chicks, of course, don't know any better and run to any hen who clucks at them to come.


Third Mama finally accepted her lower status and now simply follows the little crowd, tending to whatever chick she can.


The first two seem to be great buddies and are starting to tolerate the third hen as long as she keeps her distance.


The fourth broody hen remains vigilant on the nest. I took her off, removed all the unhatched eggs, and cleaned out the nest boxes, but she refuses to leave it, even with no eggs.


Such is life in the barnyard.

Mama Squabbles © July 2017 by Leigh

July 4, 2017

As American As ...

I'm guessing "apple pie" will come to mind to finish that phrase, but since I'm not harvesting apples at the moment, you're going to have to settle for blueberry pie.


I read somewhere that the use of "à la mode" to refer to ice cream on top of pie was first used by an American restaurateur. Outside of North America I believe it means contemporary or modern. I suppose the gentleman who coined the phrase hoped that ice cream on pie would become the latest modern dessert trend of his time! Now we probably think of it as classic. Worldwide Readers, how do you understand the term? Anyway, recipes below.

Blueberry Pie a la Mode

Crust for 10" pie:
  • 2 & 2/3 cups flour (I used 2 C white and 2/3 C homegrown whole wheat
  • 1 tsp salt 
  • 1 cup lard
  • 1 egg 
  • 1/2 cup cold water

Cut lard into flour & salt. Beat egg into water and add to flour mixture. Mix with a fork (not hands, because we don't want to melt the little lumps of lard) until moist. Divide in half for top & bottom crusts.

Filling
  • 5 cups fresh blueberries
  • 1 cup sugar (more or less)
  • 1/4 heaping cup white flour
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 or 3 tbsp butter

You know the drill: mix the filling ingredients, roll out the dough, put it in a pie pan, fill it up, top with more crust and bake. I preheat my oven to 425°F (220°C) and then turn it down to 350°F (180°C) when I put in the pie. Takes about 35 to 45 minutes to bake.

Ice Cream (Vanilla)
  • 2 cups whole milk (I use goat milk and cream, of coarse) 
  • 2 cups cream 
  • 1/2 cup sugar 
  • 3 egg yolks 
  • pinch sea salt 
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract

Heat milk, cream, and sugar and stir until the sugar melts. Beat egg yolks and gradually add milk mixture, beating well (I do this in my blender). Add salt and vanilla. Chill. When cold, pour into frozen mixing bowl (I'm referring to the Cuisinart Ice Cream Maker - pictures here). It takes about 20 to 25 minutes to freeze soft. Remove paddle and put the bowl back into the freezer until time to serve. It hardens as it sits in the freezer.

Our blueberries are just getting ripe so I'll be picking them about every other day for the rest of the month. We eat plenty fresh, and I freeze them, make jam, and try to freeze plenty of ready-to-bake blueberry pies. (How to freeze fruit pies here.) Fresh is best, especially with ice cream, so we'll be getting our fill on those too!

As American As ... © July 2017 by Leigh

July 1, 2017

Wheat Processing

Continued from "Wheat Harvest."


You'd think that after doing something for a number of years we'd have it all figured out. Not so and processing wheat is one of those things. It's a traditional skill for which many of us have some knowledge, but for which finding the equipment and developing the skills are a challenge.

Wheat processing is a two-part job. The first part is threshing, i.e. removing the wheat grains (berries) from the wheat heads. The second part is winnowing, which is separating the chaff (plant waste) from the grains.

The modern industrial-scale way to harvest and process wheat is with a combine harvester. It does it all-in-one (video of one in action here.) That's obviously beyond our scope, so we've looked at the more traditional methods, such as threshing wheat with a flail. The photo below shows two men with flails.

Photo by DEXTRA  [No restrictions], via Wikimedia Commons

Here's a good video of flailing in action.

George Washington designed a 16-sided threshing barn. We had the opportunity to see this on a field trip to Mount Vernon a number of years ago. Here's the threshing floor.

By Galen Parks Smith (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL
(http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

The freshly cut wheat was placed on the floor to be treaded by a team of horses. The grains and chaff fell through to be collected below for winnowing.

Flailing was one of the first methods we tried, with a flail Dan made. The major plus with this method is that the heads don't have to be separated from the stalks (straw). The major negative is that it is very laborious and time consuming. Working with a team (as seen here) would definitely be faster and more fun, but it would require four very coordinated people.

Besides flailing, we've tried a number of other methods over the years as well. The links will all take you to videos to see these in action.

Some methods we haven't tried:

There are a ton more ideas, just check out YouTube!

What we decided to try this year, was to use the chipper that Dan turned into a feed processor for me. Click here for photos about how he did that.


Whole heads are tossed into the hopper . . .

Best results were obtained by throwing in a handful at a time.

and end up in the barrel...


This works very well, and you can probably see the advantage of not including too much of the stalk. That would mean more debris and chaff to clean out.

The seed heads are now flat and empty, so the next step is to separate them (and any straw) from the small berries and chaff. I did this with my compost sifter / sunflower seed separator...

This is with 1/2" hardware cloth, but 1/4" would be better.

That left wheat and lightweight chaff...


The next step is winnowing. In lieu of a brisk breeze, I used an electric box fan.

Berries and chaff are poured from one container
to another in front of the fan on high speed. 

This is repeated until all the chaff is blown away,


and only the wheat berries remain.


Then it can be ground into flour

Did this the quick way with my WonderMill rather than my hand mill.

and baked into bread!

Bread from our own homegrown wheat: sliced,
toasted, & topped with homestead raspberry jelly.

Besides making a sifter with a finer hardware cloth, there is one more improvement we'll make next year - to add a cradle to Dan's scythe. The advantage of the cradle is that it causes the cut wheat to fall neatly head to head, making it easier to cut the heads from the straw. There is an excellent video here, which shows how to make a grain cradle, adjust it, and use it.

The only other thing to add is that the bread has the most delicious flavor! The wheat seed wasn't anything special, just seed wheat from the feed store. Maybe it's the freshness, or maybe just the fact that we grew it ourselves, but it's the best bread I think I've ever made.

Wheat Processing © July 2017 by Leigh