>How much garden still grows?

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Call it leftovers, call it a fall crop, call it the end of summer. Call it whatever you wish; to me it means that school has started and summer gardening is nearly done.
I neglected the broccoli and it flowered.

The beans are hanging on, producing a few more handfuls for the steamer, and even putting out a few small buds that might ripen if the warm weather holds.

And of course the zucchini continues, even after I cut back the vines to prevent the powder mildew from spreading even farther.


The kitchen has green tomatoes ripening on every windowsill. If you’ve ever seen my kitchen, you know that means on both (small) windowsills and probably beside the sink. I’m going to keep visiting the farmers’ market until it’s over; when the fresh vegetables and fruits are gone, I know I’ll mourn.

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>New Basic White Bread for the New Breadmaker

>When my new bread machine arrived, I cleaned it up and tried it out with the basic white bread recipe in the instruction book. The bread machine and its recipe worked like a dream. This recipe makes a 1 1/2 lb. loaf. Can white bread be delicious? This one is.

1 1/8 cup water, warm
1 1/2 Tablespoons oil (optional; I use olive oil)
1/2 Tablespoon sugar
1 1/2 teaspoon salt
3 cups bread flour
2 teaspoons active dry yeast

Cook on basic cycle.

I ordered a Breadman model TR875. It had good reviews and was highly recommended by other breadmaking bloggers. So far, so good! Now that school has started, I’m more likely to bake bread on weekends. A loaf of plain, delicious white bread is a great start to grilled cheese or french toast. On a cool weekend day, the aroma makes the whole house smell wonderful.

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>Compost: How far can I go?

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Compost: how far can I go? How much waxy paper, how many pizza boxes, will actually decompose in the bin with the kitchen waste? Only time (lots of it) will tell.

Last spring I set a few composting goals in a 3-2-1 Summary style. I’d noticed that the litter from the bunny boxes didn’t decompose completely. I still compost the contents of the bunny boxes, but this time I’m planning on leaving the bin for a full year. The time and the heat of a second summer season, I hope, will help the pine and red cedar bits decompose all the way.

Popsicle sticks didn’t decompose very well, either. To hasten the process, I broke the sticky sticks into smaller pieces. If the additional time and the breaking down of fibers doesn’t make a difference, I’ll know they’re just not suffiently biodegradable for a backyard bin.

My main goal was to add in papers of many kinds – papers and cardboards that are food-tainted or otherwise unsuitable for recycling. Take pizza boxes, for example. The lids are usually contaminated with bits of pizza sauce and spices. Advice from the Interwebs said this: tear these lids in strips, soak them to further break down the fibers, and then bury them in the compost. The cardboard circles from the frozen Tombstone can go this route, too. Further experiments: the wrappers from butter/margarine sticks (hoping such small amounts of dairy won’t cause a problem), waxy wrappers from orange dreamsicles, an occasional paper towel.

That paragraph makes it sound like we eat a lot of junk food. We do consume a fair share, (blush) I admit it. Pizza or drive-through foods are the exception, though, not the rule. I’d rather use my crockpot than bring in a Big Mac, and the family knows it.

There won’t be many paper towels, either; we’ve eliminated paper napkins and paper towels almost entirely.

But ultimately, this experiment will depend on time. I have the new composter, and I’ll use that one exclusively next season while the big black one sits and does its thing: lets the compost happen.

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>On being self-sufficient

>A city family, even in a small city, will be dependent on the grocery store and the basic utilities. The question nagging in the back of my head is this: How much of that is really necessary?

It’s a small city lot that makes room for my garden behind the garage, a plot that has gotten a little larger over the years we’ve lived here. We grow a small amount of our food here, more a supplement than a significant amount of the family food supply.

I haven’ t learned to can — yet. I bought some of the supplies I need, and decided that next summer my project will be jam. The raspberries in the backyard yield almost nothing, and what little ripens goes to the birds before we even know it’s there. But I do have rhubarb, and we have the farmers’ market. Market strawberries, backyard rhubarb, and maybe raspberries and blueberries will make some J for our PBJs next summer.

I blanched and froze beans this year, both green and yellow, and a little bit of sweet corn, too. I have cartons of frozen rhubarb and grated zucchini frozen for winter baking. Soup stocks, turkey and chicken and beef, share the freezer space with the vegetables. When it’s time to cook, I’ll reach in the freezer instead of adding a commercially made mix to the crockpot.

The freezer is small, though. When Chuck picked it out, he wasn’t thinking of putting up enough food for the winter. He and I both thought it would just be a convenience. Now, a few years later, I wonder if we need a larger one. But do we? What am I really planning?

If we grew or bought from the farmers’ market more of our produce, we wouldn’t need to buy it from the grocery store. It would cost less purchased in season, and taste great when we cook it. It would be mainly organic, introducing fewer chemicals into our systems.

We could look into getting a dehydrator, something I’ve only read about. We have the storage space in the basement, but it’s a bit damp in fall and spring. Is it suitable for dried food? Need more research before I go farther with that angle.

Back to canning. Many vegetables and fruits become ripe just when I’m starting school, and it’s just about impossible to spend the prep time in the kitchen that’s really necessary. Or is it? Could I do enough of the work in July and early August to make this happen? I don’t know.

My kitchen is so small it’ll be hard to make room for a major process. Blanching the beans took up (I am not kidding) close to half the counter space.

But really, if we picked up another medium sized freezer, an upright perhaps, we wouldn’t need to go shopping every week. We’d be able to pick up milk and orange juice and bunny food, buy meat in bulk on sale, but the veggies and fruits would be in the house already.

I’m dreaming, but it’s a dream that could work out in the end. We’re city people, so we’re not going to put up a chicken house in the backyard. We’ll just have to keep buying eggs from Chuck’s coworker who does raise chickens. But learning to make our own jams, freeze our own tomatoes and peppers and herbs, can do more than just season our foods.

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>Broccoli — flower-ettes?

>Dear gardener friends;
Is this supposed to happen? Is my broccoli supposed to flower, or did I do something wrong?

Leave a comment, please. In the meantime, I’ll try for a clearer picture and I’ll hope for rain – for the entire garden.

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>Rhubarb Nut Bread

>Warning: make a double batch for sharing. The batch I set out in the staff lounge on treat day was gone by morning recess.

Ingredients
1 1/2 cups firmly packed brown sugar
2/3 cup vegetable oil
1 egg or 1/4 cup egg substitute
1 cup buttermilk or sour milk
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 1/2 cups flour
1 1/2 cups raw rhubarb, chopped
1/2 cup pecans or walnuts
1/3 cup white sugar
1 tablespoon melted butter

Directions
Heat oven to 325F, lightly butter and flour two 8″x4″x3″ loaf pans.
Combine the brown sugar, veggie oil and the egg.
Combine the buttermilk (sour milk), baking soda, salt & vanilla. I mixed it up; added the vanilla to the brown sugar/ egg mixture. It worked.
Add the milk mixture to the sugar mixture alternately with the flour, beating well after each addition.
Fold in the rhubarb& the nuts.
Turn batter into the two loaf pans.
Sprinkle with the melted butter and sugar.
Bake for 45 minutes or until done.
Turn out on a wire rack to cool.

From Recipezaar – a plurk buddy recommended this, and I’m glad she did! I look forward to making it in January with some of the rhubarb in the freezer. I wonder if this would make good muffins?

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>Meal Planning Monday: the reality show

>Assistant: I can’t believe you’re making an entire show out of meal planning. This is not dramatic or funny.
Director: If TLC can make a half hour episode of Kate Gosselin grocery shopping, we can make something out of meal planning.

First step: Inventory. Thawed a whole chicken Saturday night using the dying coals of the grill so it’ll taste smoky. Red peppers roasted on the grill Saturday as well; we made good use of the grill time. Sweet corn (among other goodies) from the farmers’ market, tomatoes from the garden, and the everpresent early autumn zucchini. Using those items as starting points, here goes.

Assistant: Do people really plan an entire week? I’m being devil’s advocate here to help make things interesting, understand. Where’s the video here? The grill? The dying or dead coals?
Director: Whatever. Knock yourself out. Go ahead. Make my day.

Monday: Rotisserie chicken, sweet corn, banana bread, salad (including cherry tomatoes, of course). This is a meal full of planned overs. Chuck works late on Mondays, so it’s just Amigo and me eating supper at home. There will be lots of chicken left over and I’ll make chicken stock with the carcass. See Wednesday for more.

Director: So Monday is planned-overs, heading into Wednesday. Is Tuesday anything special?
Me: I have a meeting after school, so I won’t be home immediately. This is the kind of day that works better if I prepare the meat the night before or Tuesday morning before leaving for school.

Tuesday: stuffed meatloaf. Ground beef and ground turkey, with all the additions of my usual meatloaf, but in two layers with roasted red peppers squashed in between. Cook it up in the oven as usual and serve with…hidden zucchini orzo and a vegetable or maybe baked apples (farmers’ market, of course).
Wednesday: here comes the reference to Monday. Chicken soup in the crockpot! Leftover corn, a few other veggies (did somebody say zucchini?), and maybe egg noodles. Mmm.

Director: did you plan this soup all along?
Me: Sort of. I have a longer meeting after school, Grandma will be here with Amigo, so an easy supper is in order. She’ll add noodles as needed when she gets here. I’ll be home by 5, I think, and I’ll make grilled cheese or something simple very simple to go with the soup.

Director: Okay, what’s next?
Me: No idea. I usually just plan a few days, not the whole week. I don’t have a meeting on Thursday, so I’ll actually have time to cook. Maybe I’ll grill something.
Assistant: The grill needs cleaning.
Me: Then again, maybe not.

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>Sometimes there are days like that.

>I ordered a sub sandwich Thursday and saved half for Friday in another teacher’s refrigerator. Her water bottle tipped, and I had a soggy sub for lunch.

Sometimes there are days like that.

I didn’t want to cook last night, but couldn’t justify ordering out or going out. I threw a few things together and called it Kitchen Sink Casserole. Dirty rice (with ground beef and miscellaneous spices and garden vegetables), meatsauce from last night’s spaghetti, egg noodles, the tiny bit of leftover spaghetti, all in a casserole dish. It was actually rather tasty. But yes, indeed, it was an Ultimate Leftover.

Sometimes there are days like that.

The newspaper never showed up on our porch. Sometimes our carrier is a little late, but she’s usually reliable. I don’t remember her ever missing us completely. Chuck has been on a roll with the evening crosswords this week; this will wreck his perfect record.

Sometimes there are days like that.

I gathered up a stack of Time magazines to mail to La Petite and discovered that Buttercup the hungry bunny had chewed on two issues. One was still readable; I’ll send it anyway.

Sometimes there are days like that.

My minivan may need work on its exhaust system, the garage door is turning temperamental, my tomatoes look awful, but the zucchini keep growing and growing and growing and growin. They’re the energizer bunny of the neighborhood gardens.

And as long as we have zucchini, we will not starve, even on days like that.

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>In answer to the rhetorical question "How was your day?"

>If I really described my workday in detail, it would be so jargon-filled that only small portions would be understandable by the greater public at large. Let’s try anyway.

It was benchmark day. With Title I and REACh funds, we formally benchmarked reading levels for each and every student in our school building. We’ll do it again in January and May. Today was my day to write sub plans, copy my word lists, and participate in benchmarking my class.
How’s that so far? Not bad, eh? Let’s go on.
My sub would need the multimedia cart to show a Safari piece for science. He’d also be teaching a make-words vocabulary activity and a personal narrative lesson in taking brainstorming sessions and focusing on one seed moment.
Meanwhile, I reviewed the differences in Rigby benchmarks vs. Fountas and Pinnell and how that would affect my levelled reading program in fiction and informational. We discussed formulas for calculating error rate, self-correct rate, WPM speed, fluency, comprehension rate, and instructional vs. independent levels. Then the bell rang, and we were on.

I pulled the benchmark kit out of the reading specialist’s office, organized my workspace in a corner of the instrumental music room, and called my first kiddo to read for me. Using the intermediate kit and the adaptive calculator for reading rate, I benched her, sent her back, then calculated the data I needed while she and the next student walked the halls. Error rates, meaning based or visual, all were important tools for planning instruction. That’s the heart of assessment, isn’t it? But I digress.

I finished the second student and then sent him out for recess. I was on my way to ask the Title I Reading teacher about comparing comprehension and fluency rates in an when the 6th grade teacher almost ran past me. “Georgia’s going to Starbucks. Do you want anything? Of course you do!”

I reached the Title teacher in her cubby within the library and asked her about satisfactory vs. excellent comprehension scores, extending rather than literal comprehension, and what counts and what doesn’t as additional information in the retell. Text to self connections and the less common text to text connections are the best options for extending the retell beyond the literal. Then she redirected me into the speech/ language room because the SLP (not the PSL) was going to Erbert and Gerberts to pick up lunch. Would I like anything? I’d brought a lunch, but this sounded better, and I could add up the cost without analyzing fluency, so I said yes, please, and I’ll take the avocado on top.

With lunch on the way, I was momentarily distracted by the library media specialist having trouble with the large Monovision monitor that attached to our computers. She and I troubleshooted (troubleshot?) and found out that we needed to reset the screen resolution and one other display option before it would work. Then we rebooted, observed, and shouted woo-hoo! so loudly that the kids coming back in from outside heard us and stared. I can just imagine: “There they go, bouncing around the computer monitors again. What is this, some kind of celebration dance?” If they only knew.

My day? Pretty good, all in all. Unique, to say the least. I can’t wait for tomorrow.

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>Conserving Resources: It’s as simple as a barrel.

>Green Moms Carnival is hosted by Mindful Momma this month, and they’re posting on the topic of Conserving Resources. I didn’t post far enough ahead to actively participate, but I can still contribute.

One of my favorite ways to conserve a finite resource is by using a rain barrel. In fact, I liked the rain barrel so much I bought a second one in August! Here’s a quick 3-2-1 summary of the highlights of my special water-conserving tool.

Three reasons to use a rain barrel instead of a conventional sprinkler:

1. Set it up correctly, and it’ll water the roots, not the leaves, of the plants.
2. The water goes directly into the soil; very little evaporated.
3. It’s rain water. It doesn’t have to go through the treatment plant before it waters my garden.

Two changes in thinking with the rain barrel:

1. I’m careful with the water. After all, I “harvested” this myself!
2. I use this water to rinse litter boxes and compost buckets, too.

One final thought in favor of rain barrels:

1. It saves the potable (drinkable) water for its intended purpose: human consumption.

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