Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Homemade Dishwaher Detergent, Laundry Detergent and Small Surprises

Two things that never seem to end at the homestead (or any house) are dishes and laundry. I make my own dishwasher detergent and laundry soap, and I love it when they both run out at the same time- they both use the same ingredients!





Homemade Dishwashing Detergent

20 Mule Team Borax
Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda Powder

This can’t be easier- it’s literally a 1:1 ratio. I do 2 cups of each at a time and keep it in a used 40 oz. peanut butter container.

Also, for added shine, you can fill your final rinse thing with distilled vinegar, but to be honest I forget to do this and it generally happens about once a month.


The Homemade Laundry Detergent I use is apparently copyrighted, so I have to do this…

Homemade Laundry Detergent Recipe

I will say that I love this stuff- since it’s a no sudsing detergent, it works great in my HE (High Efficiency) washing machine. My 4 kids and I all love to play outside, and this detergent has never let me down!



Other Happenings at the Homestead

I am still working on Buffy’s coop. Today I started putting the fence up for the run. This fenced-in run is only 6 ft by 6 ft and 6 ft tall. It’s connected to the run for the main coop, but there’s not door to allow access from one run to the other. I didn’t get too much accomplished before the rain started. Seriously, everytime I work on this coop, it rains. Had I known I had this power before, I would’ve started the coop a lot earlier, and worked on it every three days…

Also- when I collected eggs today, I found two very small surprises! Two of my little hens had laid their first eggs! Woo Hoo! I can’t tell you how cool it is that the very little eggs today came from hens that I incubated from eggs that my older hens laid this spring! It’s amazing to see it come full circle! You would think I laid them all myself judging by my excitement!





Tomorrow I am back to work at the fence, and hopefully the rain will hold off so I can finally get this done! I still need to get my fall garden cleared and planted and the main garden is in desperate need of attention as well!


Monday, August 16, 2010

Something Smells, Part II

Ok, with the dehydrator fixed, I tried the onions again. They did work the first time, but not being able to document it, I decided to wait on this post. But here it is!

I will admit that these are store-bought onions, not homegrown. I can never seem to get my act together enough to grow onions, or garlic for that matter. Having said that, let’s move on.

Dehydrating onions is a great idea. I got a bag of onions, for a buck or two, and was able to make onion flakes, and onion powder- which, for both would probably cost $5 or more to buy in the store…and it couldn’t be easier to do.

Cut your onions, fill your trays, and set the dehydrator outside- DO NOT miss this step. Serious as a heart attack- onions in the dehydrator smell like really bad B.O. and you don’t want that in your house- or anywhere near it. I had mine in the garage (unconnected to the house).



I fill my trays as full as I can get them- as you can see, and it was hot and muggy outside, so adjust your timing to your own climate. It took over 24 hours to completely dry them, and I did bring them in for the last few hours, which, by this time the onions smell incredible, so I was safe. Well, safe enough to bring them inside, not safe enough for my mind to go from onion rolls to a greasy cheeseburger!



Once they are completely dry, you can either seal them in a jar, as I did with the first batch, or take them to the blender to powder, as I did with my second batch. One word of warning when making onion powder: the powder process makes a lot of dust, so when you open the lid, keep your face away until the dust settles (just a minute or so)- it will affect your sinuses for hours if that dust get up in there. (yes, personal experience).



Now, you can even go a step further, and make onion salt. To do that, you would just mix three parts salt to one part onion powder. I don’t do this, as I watch my salt intake very closely. My parents both have/had heart disease, so salt intake is very much controlled in this house. I do use salt, but I like to go solo on it, and not have to worry about it being mixed into everything.

And that’s all there is to it! Once you realize just how easy it is, and how you can control what goes into what you put in your family’s mouth, store bought just doesn’t seem to make as much sense.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Something Smells and other Adventures on the Homestead

This post was supposed to all about dehydrating onions for onion flakes, onion powder, and onion salt, but life sometimes has other plans…

Yesterday started out as normal. I placed a call to the blackberry patch, but was disappointed to learn that the beetles ate their entire crop. I also placed a call to the person that was giving away a chicken coop for free, if I came to get it. She had said she would call when her errands were done.

Onto the Onions- I chopped enough onions to generously fill my dehydrator trays, and, just like the internet told me, I placed them outside in the garage because the smell was not pleasant. (that info is dead on!)

I came in to make some mozzarella cheese and the crust for our homemade pizza for dinner, and when I came back out to the garage to check my onions, my dehydrator was no longer running. Upon further investigation, the fuse/resistor to the heating element is done for, which shut off the entire machine (good thing- fire hazard).

So off I go to Radio Shack to see if they have the part I need, and no sooner did I get in the parking lot, my oldest daughter calls with my son screaming in the background. She tells me that he has a nail stuck in his hand. She takes a picture and sends it to my phone, in which I call her and tell her to just pull it out, she says she tried and can’t. She says the head must be in his hand…So, home I go, with no part, no nothing.

When I got home, I looked at his hand. It was so jammed in there, it didn’t even wiggle. Off we go to the Urgent Care, where the doctor pulls about 2 inches of a large sewing needle out of my dearest’s hand. Yeah- success…It’s now 6:30 p.m.

On the way home from urgent care, the lady with the coop calls, and says it’s a good time- ha ha! I told her to give me an hour, I had to get dinner for the kids.

Back home, I am rolling out pizza dough, my daughters are shredding the cheese, and my son is telling everyone how he has been reborn since the needle came out.

Pizza’s done, give it to the kids, and off we go to the neighboring town for the coop. Finally, at 8:30 I am staring at the coop, and they are loading it on to the back of the truck. This coop was made by hand out of OSB board, and about 5 ½ feet tall, with a tin roof, which would bang and threaten to fly off if we drove more than 30 mph on the way home. And, while going through town on a Saturday night, everyone gawked at us. We laughed the entire ride home…Makin’ Memories is what it’s all about! Here’s a picture of my new coop, which my mother has named it the Mother In-Law Suite.





On a more serious note, this coop will be perfect after we cut the legs down so the coop is about a foot or so off the ground, and we tighten down the roof. My Buff Rock Hen, Buffy (yes, I’m creative) has been in my studio in seclusion for several weeks after being beaten up again, so this will be the perfect little abode for her. She has missed being able to go outside and is noticeably angry with me and my promises of the great beyond. She will love it!

Anyway, today is a new day. My son’s hand is doing better, the coop is here, and the dehydrator is still working on those onions (We got it to work, but it may be a fire hazard and I still haven’t decided if it’s cooking the onions or drying them). Tomorrow I may get a new one, but, in the words of my favorite movie character, “Tomorrow is another day!”

Chickens and Turkeys Fill The House, and There Ain't Nothin' Foul About It!



We have had a heat wave here on the homestead, and finally broke down and turned on the air conditioning. I was hoping to get a lot of indoor stuff done, but truth be told, I have been very spoiled and very lazy.

I did, however, can the first of the chickens we culled this spring. Since I am still new to my pressure canner, and haven’t had the best of luck with it, I started with just one. I simmered the chicken for about 5 hours, then took the bird out, grabbed the meat off the bones and canned the meat. I then put the bones back in with some herbs and spices and cooked the broth for another 4 hours, and then canned the broth! And guess what?! It worked perfectly! For the one chicken, I only got 2 pints of meat, but I canned 5 quarts of broth. I don’t know about your house, but we use chicken broth in a lot of things- mashed potatoes, stuffing, rice, casseroles, not to mention soup.

My poor kids, they smelled chicken cooking all day, and I made them cheeseburger macaroni for dinner- bad mama!

I do have 2 more chickens in the fridge right now thawing, so hopefully tomorrow I can do it all over again. I had 4 chickens left to do, but I don’t think my pot can handle more than two at a time, so two at a time it is!


While all of this chicken was simmering on the stove, I had my turkey in the dehydrator for jerky. Making jerky is such an easy process, everyone can do this!

My marinade: I have to admit, I would use this marinade on turkey, beef, or venison for jerky- it’s just that good! I got this recipe from my friend Chris, so thanks Chris!

1 bottle Italian Dressing
¼ cup Worcestershire Sauce
1 TBSP Dales Steak Seasoning
A few shakes of Tony Chachere’s Creole Seasoning
A few drops Liquid Smoke

(I know you are looking at this all weird, since there’s a few different ingredients than you’re used to, but since meeting my friend Chris, and learning about these –the Tony’s and the Dale’s- these really are staples at my house now.)

Anyway, mix together all ingredients and put thinly sliced turkey in marinade for 24 hours. Then throw them into the dehydrator and move along. I always do this right before be so I can sleep through most of it. The timing depends on the thickness of the slices- I like mine a little thicker and it takes mine about 12 hours.

Anyway, very easy, and delicious- my kids had this batch eaten in about 24 hours.

And with the chicken in the fridge is my last wild turkey breast, just cryin’ to swim in that marinade!

Monday, August 2, 2010

Canning Beans


In my last post, I mentioned that I was canning green beans while writing. This was the third attempt at canning beans in my pressure canner. I must say, this pressure canning stuff is harder than it looks- at least for me. All three times I have had liquid loss, though I end up with a good seal. Upon investigating on the internet, this is the best information about it I found.

Courtesy of http://www.extension.umn.edu/foodsafety/components/pdfs/foodprestrouble.pdf

Food Loses Liquid During Processing:

􀁹 Jars filled too full (leave recommended headspace).

􀁹 Fluctuating pressure in a pressure canner.

􀁹 Forced cooling of a pressure canner.

􀁹 Jars packed too tightly.

􀁹 Removed jars from canner too quickly. (After removing cover, let jars set a few minutes in canner until boiling goes down.)

􀁹 The canner stood too long after pressure returned to zero.

􀁹 Not exhausting pressure canner long enough.

􀁹 Starchy foods absorb some liquid.

􀁹 Water not 1 inch over jar lids.


First of all, the water not being 1 inch over the lids doesn’t apply to pressure canners. The only thing I can even think of on this list is not leaving enough head space, but it would’ve been MAYBE ¼ inch over. Could that be it? It could… If you have any advice, I would love to hear it.

Up until this year, I canned green beans in my water bath canner, but the beans had to process for 2 ½ hours which is both time consuming and not energy efficient. However, it is tried and true and hasn’t let me down yet.

Another thought I have had is to use my water bath canner, though instead of processing on the stove, doing it over a fire. I have done a little research on this, and may give it a try. Thoughts?

******

On another note, I went in the garden today to find that the deer had an all-nighter in my corn. There was not a stalk, not an ear left untouched. I also found cherry tomatoes rolled into my squash plants. What I would give for a motion activated camera! What made me mad was that my dog was outside last night, so either the deer bribed him, or he’s getting to be old and not so guard-doggish anymore. Clearly they find my corn tastier than the acres and acres and acres of field corn planted in every direction around here. Either way, lesson learned for next year- I will be planting my corn and tomatoes on the opposite end of the garden, closer to the house. I have had plans to fence the entire garden in, but it never seems to work out in the budget. Maybe next year.

Coming Up: I have a wild turkey breast and the first of the spring slaughter chickens in the fridge thawing out- the turkey will be made into jerky, and the chicken will be canned- pressure canner willing. I am also still trying to capture wild berries for more jam. Stay Tuned!