Archives for November 2011

Gobble Gobble

If one spent too much time looking at a turkey's snood and dewlap (that's what those fleshy blue and red things are called), they just may never eat turkey again. This turkey at Quaker Village outside of Lexington, KY, was quite spectacular in his ugliness.

Mongolian Beef

I saw this recipe on Pinterest the other day and tried it that same night. It was one of those days where I was running all afternoon to doctor’s and soccer games, and it came together pretty quickly. I used  flank steak and cut it diagonally against the grain. I think it’s important to use a good cut of meat  for this to not be tough and chewy.

The original recipe only served 2, so I adjusted everything up and while it fed our family of 5, I would say that it would serve 4, since my kids don’t eat much. *Also, she had 1/2 teaspoon of red pepper flakes for spicy. I doubled that and ours was pretty spicy, but my red pepper flakes were very fresh. If you don’t like things very spicy, adjust down to 1/2 teaspoon or less.This was really good and I’ll definitely be making it again. 

Mongolian Beef

Original recipe from Pink Bites. Altered by Crafty Farm Girl, November, 2011.

Serves 4

You will need:

  •  1-3/4 to 2 lbs. of flank steak, thinly sliced on the diagonal
  • 1/2 cup of cornstarch
  • 4 tablespoons of canola oil, divided
  • 1 tablespoon of grated ginger (1-1/2″ piece)
  • 2 tablespoons of chopped garlic (about 6 large cloves)
  • 3/4 cup of water
  • 3/4 cup of soy sauce (I use low sodium)
  • 3/4 cup light brown sugar
  • 1/2-1 teaspoon of red pepper flakes*
  • 6 large green onions, sliced crosswise into thirds

Prepare the meat:

Since this was a large steak, I cut it in half horizontally. To ease the slicing, I stuck it in the freezer for about 45 minutes. Slicing slightly frozen meat thinly is so much easier than slicing raw meat. Forty-five minutes to an hour is enough time that it slices well, but any slightly frozen parts will thaw quickly.


First, make sure the steak slices are dry (pat them dry) and mix them with the corn starch. Using your hands or a spoon, move them around to make sure all pieces are coated. Place beef slices in a strainer and shake off excess corn starch.



Make the sauce:


Heat half of the oil in a large wok or large flat-bottomed skillet at medium-high and add the garlic and ginger.


Immediately add the soy sauce, water. Be careful, mine made a terrible sputtering mess when the soy sauce hit the hot pan, so work quickly.


Quickly add the brown sugar and pepper flakes. Cook the sauce for about 2 minutes and transfer to a bowl. Don’t worry if the sauce doesn’t look thick enough at this point. The corn starch in the beef will thicken it up later.



Cook the meat and assemble dish:

Turn the heat up and add the remaining oil to the wok or skillet. You may want to cook the beef in two batches. I probably should have. Add the beef and cook, stirring until it is all browned (this is a quick thing).


Add the green onions to the beef and cook very briefly while stirring, about 30 seconds. Pour the sauce back into the wok and let it cook along with the meat. Now you can choose to cook it down and reduce the sauce or leave it thinner.



Serve it hot with rice.



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Bacon-Wrapped Stuffed Apricots

I’m trying to find a few good appetizers that I can use for the upcoming holidays. This recipe was in the same magazine that the Asparagus Fries with Smoked Paprika Aïoli were in; The Best of Fine Cooking’s Appetizers, Fall 2011. There’s lots of good stuff in this, so if you see it on the newsstands you might want to pick one up.

I feel the need to point out my fingernails in the close-up photos below. No, that is not dirt or chicken & goat poop under my nails. It is oil-based black ink. I’d been up past midnight the night before printing my linoleum print cards and just couldn’t get all of the ink off of my fingernails. I thought you’d want to know.

I thought these were yummy. They probably would have been even better with the pepper I was supposed to put on the bacon and forgot. I love salty and sweet, and with these you get not only salty and sweet from the bacon and apricot, but crunchy and chewy with the almond and cheese. You can’t get much better than that. Except maybe adding the pepper for some spice…

Bacon Wrapped Stuffed Apricots

Bacon-Wrapped Stuffed Apricots

Recipe from The Best of Fine Cooking’s Appetizers, Fall 2011

Yields 24.

Apricot sizes can vary; if yours are on the smaller side, just trim the cheese a bit and squish it in. Make sure they are whole and not halved. I used apricots from Turkey and Marcona almonds, which are a little softer than regular almonds. Any apricot and almond will do though.

  • 24 dried apricots (about 7 oz.)
  • 3 oz. plain Havarti, cut into 1/2- to 3/4-inch squares, 1/4 inch thick
  • 24 almonds (about 1 oz.) 12 strips bacon (about 12 oz.), cut in half crosswise
  • 24 toothpicks, soaked in water
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Heat a gas grill to high or prepare a hot charcoal fire. I chose not to grill, but instead used a nonstick grill pan. I thought that worked just fine.


Pry open the apricots (if you look closely you’ll be able to find the slit where they removed the pit) and put a piece of cheese and an almond into each one.



Wrap a piece of bacon around each apricot, trimming as necessary so it overlaps by 1/2 inch, and secure it with a toothpick. Season the apricots all over with pepper. Somehow I missed that pepper step. They were still delicious without the pepper, but do try to remember it.




If using a grill, reduce the grill heat to medium (scatter the coals a bit or raise the grate if using charcoal). If using a grill pan, use medium-low heat. Use tongs to grill the apricots on all sides with the grill open, propping them between the bars to hold them up on the narrow sides. Move the apricots around often to avoid flare-ups. Cook until the bacon is crisp all over, about 6 minutes total.



Serve immediately and remind guests to remove the toothpicks.

make ahead tips: The apricots can be assembled up to 1 day ahead and refrigerated.

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Horses in a Snowstorm

We had tons of snow last year in Wyoming. I took this photo in Wilson during one of those snowstorms. The snow was falling in such large flakes it makes the photo almost look fake.

Blogging Till I Drop

Country Living’s website is now featuring their own article on the Blue Ribbon Blogger Award’s ceremony. Be still my heart — my photo is on the same screen as Paula Deen’s. I told my daughter, Amanda, who could possibly be Paula Deen’s #1 fan, to take a screen shot and frame it.


Notice how everybody else has big, beautiful smiles and I’m the one looking like a deer in the headlights? Dang it all; everyone else looks great and I look terrible! I swear I need to take smiling lessons or something. Of course I’m old enough to be most of these girls’ mother. I don’t know what that has to do with me not smiling, but I thought I’d mention it.

I’ve got my amazing award (made by Cathe Holden of Just Something I Made) up on a shelf in our eating area. That seemed like an appropriate place for it, since our dining table is constantly covered in craft or cooking projects.

My Country Living Blue Ribbon Blogger Award.

And I also got this lovely bean pot and book in my goody bag as well. I’ve been wanting a bean pot! I love the shape of it.


My point about talking about winning the Blue Ribbon Blogger Award again is twofold.

First, I forgot to provide links to all of the other amazing category winners. You really should check them out if you haven’t yet.

Collecting: Parsimonia: Secondhand with Style

Crafts: Always a Project

Decorating: The Shabby Nest

Food: Crepes of Wrath

Gardening: Garden Betty

Lifestyle: Oh wait, this is me!

Pets: Tilly’s Nest

But winning an award like this is an honor, and not one that I’ve taken lightly. It’s recognition for something I started on a whim that bloomed out of control. I had so many things to say and do. Blogging was perfect for me. It gave me creative freedom and a voice. I worked my ass off on it, and I know my husband, children, and friends often wondered why. Was anybody really listening?

I guess they were. I still haven’t quite grasped what this award means, but I don’t plan on wasting one minute of the amazing opportunity it has offered me.

I’ve always been a frequent poster on my blog, but since being nominated I feel even more of a need to do so. To prove myself worthy. But posting in Photography, Cooking, Crafts, Farm, and Thoughts means trying to frequently write about 5 different topics. Three of those require significant work to create a post; Cooking, Crafts and Farm. I’m never short of ideas on any of these topics, but I am short of time.

This past week has been filled with broken bones, casts, concussions, multiple doctor visits, vet visits, parent teacher conferences, volleyball and soccer games. In between those events I try to get things done.

I suspect I’ll come up with some sort of a “schedule” over time that allows me more breathing room. I’ve worn myself out to the point of getting a cold.

But there it is, sitting on the shelf, taunting me.

I’ve got to get back to work.

Sheep Wagon

Sheep Wagons were used by sheep farmers all over Wyoming, where they originated, from the 1870's through the mid-1900's. My friend Melinda owned this wonderful sheep wagon for years. It was her guest house. When she was trying to sell it, I wanted desperately to buy it and park it in our yard for guests. It was completely restored and the inside was amazing; double bed, wood stove, pull-out eating table. I'm still kicking myself for not buying it.

A Cow and a Farmhouse

Ever since the Country Living announcement, I’ve been madly trying to finish up some of prints needed to complete several of the series of cards I’ve been working on. I was up until the wee hours of the morning Monday night printing cards of my linoleum prints.

I was so excited to print this farm card — the final in the series (for now). I love how it came out.


Finished linoleum print card.


The complete 'Farmhouse Series'.


And I love my new cow, which completes The Farm series (for now).


The Cow finished linoleum print card.


'The 'Farm series of cards, but add the cow above to it, too.


Some I’d finished a few weeks ago, like the Wyoming Wildlife Series.There’s more I want to add to this series, but I won’t consider a series ‘complete’ until there are at least 4 prints to it, so this is complete for now.

The Wyoming Wildlife series of hand-printed linoleum cut cards will include these 4 prints.


Then there’s the ‘Hen Series’. That’s ‘complete’ for now too.

The Hen series of hand-printed linoleum cut cards.


And I’ve finally got the “Cowboy/Cowgirl/Western series” complete for now as well. I’m working on a cutting card, but it’s really complicated so I can only work on it a little at a time. I also need to add a team penning card (since that’s my event). All in good time.

The complete Cowboy/Cowgirl/Western Series.


I’ve got to do one more before I can call the ‘Rooster Series’ complete. That’s going to be a good one!

It’s my goal to get all of these finished series up on my Etsy shop by the end of the weekend. I hope.

They look pretty how I packaged them.


I got an idea for a project the other day. So I made this linoleum print:

Free Range Children


And I printed it on burlap. I wasn’t sure how it was going to come out, but it came out great.


And then I printed a couple of roosters on burlap.


King Strut on burlap. At least I could use this larger size linoleum for this project.


I’m going to keep you in suspense though as to what I’m making with this printed burlap…

Merging the Tribes and A Rooster Among Us

It is becoming more clear every day that this chicken, below, is not a hen but a rooster. No crowing yet though. He’s becoming quite handsome. If I could just get a rooster that didn’t crow and was nice, I’d be so happy!

This is not a hen. It's a rooster. Evidenced by the long, greenish tailfeathers growing and the longer, more decorative feathers starting around the base of his neck.

Today was a big day on the farm. Not only was the weather spectacular (reaching almost 70 degrees), but the truck showed up with a new shipment of farm food. That always gets everyone excited!

This is actually the crowd gathered at the gate at dinnertime tonight.

But the really big news was that I merged the tribes, which is what I like to say when I merge two coops together.

My beautiful new coop was way underpopulated. At night I only had about 20 or so chickens in there. There are the 3 crazy chickens that sleep in the goat house, but they don’t seem like they’ll be changing that anytime soon.

the goathouse is on the right with the chicken run "silo" connected to the new chicken coop.

Yet my old coop, which was only meant to be used as a brooder coop for when they were small, was housing over 30 almost-full-grown chickens every night. They all managed to fit somehow, but it was pretty tight.

My old coop, Chateau de Poulet

Now chickens don’t like change. It takes days for them to adjust to a new coop. I’ve gone through this so many times I knew what to expect. Before I went out for afternoon activities with the kids I locked the chicken door in the old coop, blacking their access. I also hung a heat lamp (although any light would have done the job), in the new coop. I was hoping this ‘beacon of light’ would guide the young knuckleheads into the new coop as it started to get dark. No such luck.

Sure enough, when I got home and the sun was starting to get lower in the sky, all the adolescents were huddled outside the door and on the porch of the coop wondering why they couldn’t get inside. India, Evan and I spent the next 20 minutes chasing confused chicken around, picking them up one by one, and stuffing them though the chicken door. They seemed to be perfectly happy once I popped them into the new coop though.

Only two stragglers remained un-catchable. Here they are out in the dark (I used a flash).

Two stragglers out in the dark.

I finally ended up letting them into the old coop for the night as I gave up trying to catch them after about 10:30 tonight.

Once everyone seemed settled in to the new digs, I turned the bright light off but put a night light in there so the newcomers could find their way around if necessary. Yes, I really did put a nightlight in my coop.

Everyone's getting settled in for the night.

Taken from outside tonight, some of the original ladies settled on a high corner perch.

Magpie

Although their geographic range is from the midwest to the west, I have only seen Magpie's in Wyoming. There are lots of them there. Beautiful birds; black and white with some bright blue wing feathers. This guy was hanging out at my friend, Terry's house at Puzzleface Ranch.

Longhorn

In june my friend Lorraine and I came across a herd of longhorn cattle in Kelly, Wyoming. Almost all of them had little calves with them. This one wasn't as shy as they usually are. That, or she was standing there contemplating charging me through the fence that was a few feet away.