Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts

Saturday, April 21, 2012

In which a friend and I go all Laura Ingalls on some dairy products...

Ever wonder exactly what Little Miss Muffet is eating while sitting on her tuffet? After today, I know! (And if you google "tuffet", you'll see she was sitting on a stool - not as poetic, huh?)
I recently switched our family from industrialized, pasteurized, grocery store milk to raw, fresh-from-the-farm milk. If you have done any research on raw milk, you know that the choice to consume it straight from the cow is not without controversy. Here in Connecticut, though, where farms and local agriculture are well-supported, my decision is met with far fewer raised eyebrows than in other states where raw milk is illegal. My research led me to a realization that the health benefits of non-pasteurized milk far exceeds the small risk we face in consuming it.

Besides the myriad of vitamins and nutrients found in raw milk that are pasteurized out of grocery store milk, raw milk offers some pretty cool things. Did you know you can make 4 items just out of the milk itself? The cream can be skimmed off to make butter. The whey that drains off the butter is buttermilk. The natural skim milk that results from skimming the cream off can be made into cheese, and the whey that results from this can be used to make ricotta cheese.

For some time now, I have been wanting to try to make cheese and butter, and my friend Heidi found the perfect opportunity. The farmer from whom we get our milk (and to whom she introduced me) had a lot of extra milk and was thus selling it off at a discounted price. We stocked up. A lot. I think we may have misjudged a little. Because we got 32 bottles of milk. That's 16 gallons of milk. It turned out to be a bigger project than we anticipated.


But we embraced the project anyhow. And then poor Heidi was in a car accident. But was brave enough to proceed...and even get almost elbow deep in the cheese. But I'm getting ahead of myself...

Let me tell you how to make each of those 4 products:

Butter - The easiest to make.
1. Put cream in a blender and blend it to death. Or at least until you see a separation.

2. Open the blender and  you should see the butter bits floating at the top.

3. Holding the butter bits back with a spoon, let the liquid - which is the buttermilk - pour out into a container where you can reserve it for pancakes and biscuits.

4. Pour some ice cold water in with the butter to rinse it.

5. Blend again on high for about 30 seconds.

6. Pour out the liquid but don't reserve it this time since it's mixed with water.

7. Ta da! Grass-fed, raw milk butter! (Oh, and you can add some salt too at this point if you want.)

Mozzarella Cheese
You need:
2 gallons of milk
2 1/2 t. citric acid
1/2 t. liquid rennet (or 1/4 tablet)
1/2 c. salt

(Our sweet farmer gave us the citric acid and rennet tablet, but if you need your own, you could get it from Leeners.)

(Oh, and here's a gross little tidbit: I read thecheesemaking chapter of Little House in the Big Woods to Audrey before Heidi and I started our project, and we discovered that rennet comes from the stomach lining of a very young, not-yet-weaned calf.)

Anyway...
1. Place milk in a large pot and turn on burner. Bring temperature up to 75-80 degrees. And seriously, you need one of these thermometers to do this project:


That probe-y thingy plugged into the timer might look like an object you would see but not want to see at a doctor's office, but it goes into whatever you are wanting to know the temperature of. Then you can set the timer for a certain temp, and it will ring an alarm when you reach that temperature - perfect for projects like cheese where temps are important.

2. Dissolve citric acid in 1/4 c. cool water and mix with milk for two minutes. Heat milk to 88 degrees.

3. Add rennet diluted (or in the case of the tablet, dissolved) in 1/4 c. cool water. Stir into milk for 20 seconds. Remove from burner and allow to set for 15 minutes.


Curds & Whey

4. Cut curds into 1/2 inch cubes. Let curds set for 5 minutes then warm gently and stir slowly until 106 degrees. Remove from heat and continue stirring for 20 minutes. Allow to settle fro 5 minutes.

5. Drain curds.

6. Mix salt in 1 gallon of water. Heat to 170 degrees. Add hot salt water to bowl of curds so they are covered.

7. Knead curds like bread. Change hot water until it is used up.


And, yes, that's my crazy friend
kneading with her injured arm.


8. Place cheese into cheese mold and cool in a bowl of cold water.

9. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate.


Ain't she purty?

Ricotta Cheese
1. Take the whey from your mozzarella cheese (it cannot be more than an hour or so old) and heat to 200 degrees.

2. Remove from heat and skim curds from the top and into a cheesecloth lined colander or strainer.

3. Add juice from 1 or 2 lemons and wait for additional curds to rise to the top.

4. Drain ricotta and refrigerate. Use within 3 days or freeze.




Our project was a lot of work but fun, and it won't be so difficult now that we know what we are doing...now that we are certified pioneer ladies (didn't want to steal any of Ree Drummond's thunder by using the word "women").

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Laundry, Tourist Attractions, Tents, and Pop Rocks

I've neglected the blog because of this:
laundry


Of course, if that were completely true, the pile of laundry wouldn't be there; all of the items would be neatly folded and put away. But certainly between roadtrips, camp-outs, outside play, and sports camp, the washing machine has been running almost non-stop.

We had a big roadtrip last week, an unplanned one, but one that was a whole lot of fun. Simel had some issues with his visa to take care of and a friend in DC who could help him, so last Wednesday we made the 5 1/2 hour trip down to our nation's capital.
capitol


Wednesday night I dropped Simel off at this friend's house, and we met back up on Thursday. We had a wonderful time seeing the sites, but the best part of all for me was that some friends from Atlanta happened to be in the area on the same day, so we got to see the sites together.
White House1


Vietnam Wall 2


Lincoln Memorial 2


Lincoln


There was one shot I was SO excited to capture...yes, the one that EVERYONE captures. But, alas, it was definitely not meant to be:
Reflecting Pool 1


I did get a little bit of the monument in the reflecting pool. Of course it was a mud puddle that captured the reflection, but anyway...
Reflecting Pool 2


Washington Monument


Washington Monument with sunshine


Washington Monument kids


girls in front of American History


Remember that 5 1/2 hour drive down to DC? Well, it took us 9 1/2 hours to get home! I can't stress enough how nice it was to be home. Since we've gotten home, the kids have enjoyed a night camping in our backyard, and they have also been participating in sports camp at church.

We also had an outing of sorts yesterday. I saw Fizziwigs Candy Factory pinpointed on a map of Connecticut and thought it sounded like a fun place to visit. I assumed it was going to be a bit like Dylan's Candy Bar in NYC. Not really. We could have just gone down to the local drugstore for the same sugared assortment, but the experience gave me a good picture anyway:
15 Fuzziwigs

A note to Simel's mom: No, I did not buy that giant lollipop for him; it just served as a great prop for the photo.

AND...the experience also afforded me an opportunity to give Simel a new experience: Pop Rocks. A must-do for any visitor to America! The jury's still out on whether or not he enjoyed the fizzy candy.
14 Pop Rocks


So the pile of laundry grows higher...it's been busy around here, that's for sure. Someday I will see the bottom of that mountain of clothing!

Monday, March 21, 2011

A Spring Tease

(Linking up with Sweet Shot, You Capture (theme - Youth), Black & White Wednesdays, Communal Global, and Live Every Moment (theme - Spring).)

It's a very gloomy Monday. Two inches of snow accumulated on the ground throughout the morning hours, and it continues to fall. You would never know that just 3 days ago, the mercury was flirting with the 72 degree mark.
helicopter


Sweet Shot Day


The day was just too beautiful. We took a break from school and from co-op and spent the day with friends at the park.
bench


We enjoyed the beauty of the waterfalls.
pretty waterfall


silky waterfall b&w


the long road


We hiked
walking along


two boys


all the way to the top where a tower with few railings stood, inviting the children to climb...and giving the mamas a few heart attacks in the process.
downstairs


And along the way we climbed lots of rocks
Alex on rock


Jacob


and some trees,
strange tree


one of which was covered by the initials of other hikers-by.
initials on a tree


Oh, and we saw enough bear poop to cause those of us with middle-aged legs much angst over trying to keep up with the energetic, youthful legs that insisted on carrying the children seemingly miles ahead on the path.
up the hill Alex & Michael


But the boys assured us in true Lord of the Flies fashion that, with their walking sticks, they could easily take on any bear...even a famished one just waking up from a long winter's nap.
rock chair MIchael2


fighting a tree


stick play Audrey1


It was a long hike--about 2 hours--and at the end, the children were delighted to become spectators on the sidelines of another visitor's remote-controlled car fun.
through the bridge


A lovely sunny day, a good long hike, a fun time with friends...it was definitely a spring tease, but we'll certainly take what we can get!
shoreline


cutie patootie


reeds


Photobucket




Friday, February 11, 2011

Blogging Friends

One of the things I love about blogging is all of the online friends I have made. True, I have a few wonderful friends who blog AND whom I have met, like Tisha. There is also one blog friend, Linda, whom I had the blessed opportunity of meeting face-to-face last summer. There are so many others I would love to meet like Amy, Crossview, and Annie just to name a few.

Melissa at Love and Life and Christine at Our Family of Four are two more lovely, creative women I would love to meet. And it just so happens that they both honored me with an award. Melissa bestowed upon me the Seven Facts Award, and Christine awarded me the Versatile Blogger Award.

Now here's the funny thing: both awards require the same thing from me. And the same thing as the Stylish Blog Award which Arby awarded me back in December (he and his wife are two others I would love to meet in person). I am supposed to list 7 random facts about me and then forward the award on.

You know as I do that once I start listing random things about me, I don't stop (remember I went all the way to #10 when I accepted the Stylish Blog Award?). So this is what I'm going to do. I'm going to ask you to just take a look at my 10 random facts from that acceptance speech. PLUS, did you know there is an About Me tab at the top of this blog? Guess what? There are 100--I said ONE HUNDRED--random facts about me there. (Yes, I obviously have too much time on my hands. Either that, or I'm way too stuck on myself.)

And if, after just hearing me request that you read one hundred and ten facts about me, you do not see that there is just a little Crazy mixed in, here's a bonus random fact:

*I ALWAYS make my bed. Every day. Always. On the very off chance the bed is not made by bedtime, I will make it and wait 5-10 minutes before I pull the covers down to get in.*

As for passing the award on, I am not going to pressure anyone in that way. If you would like to list some quirky, fun random facts about yourself, let me know in the comments so I can get to know you a little better.

But here's where I AM going to pressure you a little: Visit Melissa and Christine. They are fun to get to know. Christine is a mom and creative in all she does...her photography especially. She also enjoys quilting, and I have no doubt her quilts are beautiful. Melissa is fun, creative, and loving. Her photos are stunning as well, and you might even catch a few of her "baby" - a dachsund named Baxter.

Thank you, ladies, for my award!

Friday, January 21, 2011

Socialization Anyone? (Plus, a little tip for learning the states and their capitals.)

Because of the crud and the snow and the ice and the snow, we've spent the last 2 weeks in the house. Did I mention the snow? And the ice? If there is anyone who is tired of walking the same halls, sitting in the same chairs, seeing the same scene from the same windows, it is me. And the kids.

"I'm bored!"

"What can we do?"

Those two questions have echoed down the same halls and bounced off the same windows for two weeks because...did I already mention the ice and the snow? Out of all of our years of homeschooling, I would say these two weeks are the only two the big S word (and we're talking Socialization here, not Snow, although there has been a lot of Snow around here) has been an issue.

Because of this, I didn't hesitate at all when a friend asked me to take her 3 kids for the day on Wednesday.

1-19 3 kids


When Wednesday came, the kids were very excited to see some new faces. Of course, on account of the snow and the ice that were still falling outside, we spent the day inside. But at least they got to watch some movies and play games with someone other than their siblings or parents.


1-19 Lilly & Alex


1-19 Matthew & Audrey


1-19 Audrey


We also had fun making our own pizzas for lunch.

1-19 making pizzas


I did not schedule any school while our visitors were here, but the rest of our school week went quite well. There is one thing I have started doing in the last couple months that has made a tedious task so much easier.

I use SpellQuizzer for the kids' spelling, and it works marvelously for that. Well, this year it is my goal for the three kids to learn not only what the states and capitals are, but to also to spell the names of the states. So I use SpellQuizzer to quiz them on this so I do not have to engage each of the 3 in the daily tedium of quizzing and recitation.

If you have never used SpellQuizzer, it is very simple. Once a week, you sit down with a microphone and record--in your own voice--the spelling words and a sample sentence...just like if you were quizzing them. Only with this you only have to do it once! So it goes something like this:

Me recording: What state's capital is Hartford?

[When the child hears that prompt, he or she must correctly spell and capitalize "Connecticut" as the answer.]

Me recording: What is the abbreviation for Connecticut?

[When the child hears the prompt, he or she must correctly capitalize the answer "CT".]

So simple! So easy!

1-19 Michael


For information on SpellQuizzer, click on the link on my sidebar or click here.

Weekly Wrap-UP


Hosted by Kris at Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers.