Once it has set, spread it onto some toast or an english muffin and ENJOY!!!
Month: July 2013
Cheese, bacon, and potato goodness.
I’m hungry.
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| I also fried up some zucchini for Gilbert. |
Wishing for winter
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| (and by “jam” I mean syrup) |
Pineapple Shish Kebabs and buttered rice
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| Admit it… you’re admiring the paper plate. |
Slide pineapple, mushrooms, chicken and dice veggies onto skewers. Place in pan and drizzle left over marinade over the top.
A sweet moment
He finished the whole thing.
Have you met Ted? Also, Stella.
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| (source) |
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| Stella – the frenchie pug, aka “Frug” |
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| (source) |
Now you have met all the residents on our homestead. Feel better? I do. I will sleep better now.
Stuffed Bell Peppers
Breaking ground
In our new house, we started with a blank slate of lawn in our backyard. No garden plot, no fruit trees. It was just the lawn, a poorly placed forsythia, and two rose bushes. I use the term “lawn” loosely. It is crab grass, several varieties of ground cover flowers, one variety of tall ornamental grass, plenty of weeds, and at least three varieties of “regular” grass. Fixing that is a project for another year… it is probably a “nuke and pave” situation.
The goal was to put in a functional, maintainable (and budget-friendly) garden this year, which we can expand in future years. Everything on the original list was accomplished or, as Abe likes to put it, it was “abe-complished”.
Here was the original list:
1. Build raised beds… check.
2. Fill with dirt… check.
3. Fence in raised beds to keep plants & tools in and baby & dogs out… check.
4. Try planting a topsy turvy planter… check times four.
5. Plant a wide variety of veggies to see what grows best… check. (I’ll share what I found about our particular garden space and soil in a future post. It was a learning experience.)
6. Eat, eat, and eat fresh vegetable goodness… check.
I love being able to go out into the garden to pick a salad for dinner or a vine-ripened tomato for my BLT. And can I just say that our peppers are looking beautiful?
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| Isn’t the vibrant color wonderful? |
I have been keeping track of our budget and it turns out the most expensive part was the dirt. It makes me rethink the phrase “dirt cheap”. I have now learned that good dirt ain’t cheap.
Back from my hiatus and ready to jam.
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| Washed and stemmed |
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| Finely chopped in food processor – isn’t the color wonderful? |
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| Back left burner – jar sterilization. Back right burner – water bath. Front right burner – sterilize lids. Front Left burner – make jam. Middle – fill and cap jars. |










































