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Monday, January 31, 2022
Thursday, January 20, 2022
Local citrus
"Is that a citrus tree?"
Until we finally harvest the last of the fruit sometime in December or January, the evergreen "bush" laden with orange balls is hard to miss. Visitors pulling up our driveway regularly point toward our front porch and ask.
It is a citrus, in fact, one called a satsuma, familiar to lots of casual backyard fruit growers in Louisiana and elsewhere near the Gulf Coast. They are very similar to clementines/cuties, though a bit larger. They're very easy to peel ("zipper skinned"), seedless, and a nice fresh eating fruit.
Until just a couple days ago (mid-January) we were just harvesting the fruits as we ate them, but with multiple nights in the forecast with lows in the teens we decided to go ahead and harvest the rest of them. The eight of us have eaten one or two per person almost every day since about the beginning of December, and we filled a couple small tubs with our final harvest. We're hoping we've figured out a way to keep them in cold storage for a few more weeks without drying out too much. Then the only fresh fruit we'll have to eat until spring will be fuzzy (regular) kiwis (which have kept incredibly well for us in cold storage) until strawberries start to ripen in late April or early May.
Tuesday, January 11, 2022
Sweet, sweet winter carrots
Winter carrots are the best. We grow both a spring crop and a winter harvested crop of carrots. And by far, the winter carrots are sweeter. They are sweeter than you thought a carrot could be. We seed them in mid to late August. By November, some of them have sized up enough to pull up. But they keep so well in the ground, we're not in a hurry to get them out. During a really cold winter spell, we cover them with hay mulch. But for the most part we enjoy them fresh dug through late February at which point we try to have them all dug. We then store them in the fridge where they continue to keep very well.
Monday, January 10, 2022
Threshing dry beans and peas
A major food in our diet is dry beans and peas. We try to grow a variety of both beans and peas to keep things interesting. During the summer, as these crops dry down on the vine, we collect the dried pods into paper bags. We then hang these bags in an outbuilding from wires to finish drying and to deal with them when we have time later.
Now is that time. Winter is when we catch up on threshing all of the beans/peas and seed crops.
If we need to keep a variety pure, like for seed, we'll thresh the bean/pea in a pillow case hitting it with a baseball bat to insure there is no contamination of another variety. But for eating beans/peas, our electric sheller makes quick work of the job. From the picture you can see there is a drum within a box. In the drum are flails that rotate. The peas are knocked out of the pods and fall into the drawer below.
The first step is to pour about a quarter bushel of pea pods into the sheller. Much more and the drum is too crowded to thresh well.
Then the lid of the drum is put on. As you can see, the drum is covered in hardware cloth. Off set from this about a half inc is sheet metal. This allows the peas to roll out without the pods coming out too. Then there are three gaps in the sheet metal from which the peas can fall out into the drawer below as it rotates.
Finally, the box lid is put on. We made the lid out of some scrap lumber lying around (thus the Turkish writing) after we realized some of the peas were flying out. It usually only takes a couple minutes of running the sheller to get the peas good and threshed out.
Once it is finished running, we pull the drawer out. There are some hulls, but it is mostly peas. We dump this into a bin for later winnowing.
The next step is to take the box lid off and then the drum lid. Then just the box lid is put back on and we run it a minute. With that large gap in the drum, all the hulls are dumped into the drawer, leaving the drum empty and ready for the next peas to thresh.
The hulls get thrown to the chickens to find any remaining peas. The bin of peas is then ready to winnow. We simply set up a large fan and dump the peas back and forth in front of it.
They are quite clean of hulls and chaff at this point, but will need one final going over to pick out any bad peas before they are ready for the pot.
Finally, it is time to cook them up. These here are Big Boy Brown Eyes.