Wednesday, October 24, 2012

BrokeDick Farms 2012 review

OK, so I know I haven't blogged in a while, but there's been a reason. I've been busy cooking, BBQ'ing, and tending to my garden (aka BrokeDick Farms). This blog is to give an overview of the construction and growth of BrokeDick Farms for the summer 2012 season.

Last year was the first full summer in my house so I decided to build a few raised garden beds. Not fully knowing the best location to put them, it was a craps shoot. Well I didn't put them in an area that had enough sun. Also 2011 was a crappy year for growing stuff. Behind my garage was a huge weed and over grown tree nightmare, but it got a lot of sun. At the beginning of this year, I decided to bite the bullet and clear that area in order to put in BrokeDick Farms. It took me a few weekends in the rain to finish, but after a bunch of cursing and sweat, I got everything cleared out.


When I finally cleared the area I realized that the bushes and weeds were grown on a dirt mount filled with rocks and boulders. I spent another few weeks leveling out the dirt, removing some of the rocks and built a small retaining wall. 


I built 3 raised garden beds on top of it. I never got around to do it, but I am going to put pavers around the raised beds. That's my first winter project. So as you can see, I finally planted stuff at the end of May.


In the box on the left, I planted a thai chili, jalapeno, habanero, and poblano peppers in the front of it. In the back, I planted corn. In the middle box, I planted 2 San Marzano tomato plants and one cherry tomato plant. On the right, I planted 2 tomatillo plants and climbing green beans in the back. On the bottom left of the picture, you can see one of the boxes I built last year. This doesn't get a lot of sun, but I planted yellow and green squash in there. They grew ok last year in them so I gave it a shot. In the planters on the corners, I planted centennial and cascade hops. I also planted a herb garden (not shown) in a big pot. I planted sweet basil, thai basil, dill, and oregano. I had thyme and rosemary in pots from last year as well. Now its time to water and wait.  After a few weeks, things started to take off. Everything started growing crazy except for the peppers. 



I started to get small batches of tomatillos, cherry tomatoes and green beans first. I started making tomatillo salsa with the tomatillos and just eating the tomatoes and green beans for snacks and dinner.


Now the San Marzano tomatoes started blowing up. I mean I was picking off a few dozen every couple of days. This is probably a pic of my first harvest and picked the same amount every few days. The squash also started to flourish as well.


Now we are heading into the end of August and tomatoes, tomatillos and green beans are going crazy. I make salsa almost every week and canned what I couldn't get through. I made tomato sauce and soup a bunch of times and then ended up canning 6 pints of tomatoes. These guys are now resting in my wine cellar in my basement along with some tomatillos. 


Overall, I ended up harvesting 8 pounds of tomatillos and 15 pounds of San Marzano tomatoes. I didn't keep track of the green bean or cherry tomatoes as I ate them fresh off the vine almost everyday. Now that is October and the temperatures have dropped, its time to call it quits. This is the final harvest for 2012 that I picked this week. It was a sad day when I had to pull everything out :(





Ok, so those were my successful plants this year. I'll write another blog on sauces, canning and other fun things I did with the harvest overt he summer. The herbs grew pretty well and I used them in almost everything that I cooked all summer, which is awesome to use fresh herbs. I am trying to transplant them into smaller pots and move them inside. We'll see how that goes.

So now onto the failures.

First off, the corn. I won't do corn again for a few reasons. One day I came home and most of the corn was knocked down. I am not sure if a raccoon ran through my backyard or the wind knocked them over. I tried to get them back up with poles and was able to save most of them but they looked all broken. Secondly, I got an infestation of aphids on them, which in turn attracted ants to them. The little corn that was growing was eaten by the ants. I ended up pulling the corn out half way through the summer.

Second was not necessarily a failure. The hops. They were new plants and I was told not to expect them to grow hops the first year. The plants grew but not as much as I thought they were going too. I think this is a lot to do with the fact that they ended up being shaded over by the other plants. I am going to move them to a different location next year. Good thing I planted them in pots so they are easy to move.

Third, the peppers (all of them). Even though we had a hot summer and they had plenty of sun, they didn't start producing fruits until the beginning of September. I was only able to harvest a few poblanos. The jalapeno's probably have 15-20 on there right now, but just tiny little bulbs. The thai chili's were the same way. The habanero's flowered, but never produced fruit. I am thinking of putting them in pots and moving them inside as well before it starts freezing. I was really disappointed in them. I did buy Ghost Chili seeds online in May and have been growing those. I have about 15 plants growing but they are only a few inches tall. I just brought them in. I am thinking of getting a grow lamp to help them grow through the summer.

Overall, I think it was a sucess. I learned a lot this year and will make changes off of it next year. Now I have to start working on installing the pavers around the raised beds. If you have any tips, please feel free to email me or leave a comment.







Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Spicy Black Bean Burger

After eating leftover brisket for 3 straight days, I figured I should take a meal off from meat. Tonight was another dig through the pantry and vegi drawer and see what I can make. Lucky for me I had all the ingredients to make black bean burgers. I've never made them before but have read a bunch of recipes so I just decided to make my own. One of my problems of when I cook like this, I don't really measure out anything. That is why I don't have any measurements for most of the ingredients. Just add as much as you like to your taste.

They came out really good. I wrapped them in Lettuce as opposed to bread (protein style!) because I didn't have buns.  I probably wouldn't have used buns anyways. My dry rub has a kick to it so with that and the cumin they were pretty spicy (which I love). The burger was a bit hard to handle. It didn't completely fall apart in my hands, but a few pieces did. I read that if refrigerate the mixture prior to adding in the bread crumbs, this helps. I hope you enjoy!



Serving Size:  1 Patty

Ingredients
½ Cup Black Beans (drained & rinsed)
¼ Cup Canned or fresh corn
Diced red & green bell peppers
Diced Jalapeno
Diced onion
Smoked Salt
Waterman’s Kitchen Pork Dry rub
Cumin
Bread Crumbs
Leaf Lettuce


Cooking Directions
Combine Black beans, corn, jalapeno and half of the bell pepper and seasoning
Place in a food processor and pulse 5-7 times (make sure its still chunky and not a pile of mush)
Remove from food processor
Fold in remaining bell peppers and bread crumbs




Heat a cast iron skillet on med/high heat
Add high temp oil when pan is hot
Form mixture into a patty and move directly onto the hot pan
Cook on each side for a few minutes
Cover and remove from heat for 5 minutes to heat all the way through





Monday, April 16, 2012

Weekend Smoking


Last weekend, we finally had nice sunny weather. I have a ton of yard work to do so I was happy to finally get working on it. Since I was going to be in my backyard all day, I decided it would be a good idea bust out the smoker for the first time in 2012. Last summer I worked a lot on pork shoulder and ribs. This summer, I am going to focus on Sausage (see previous blog) and brisket. I am not going to go into detail on all the recipes on what I made but just a run down on what I made. Whenever I smoke, I try to keep the smoker filled to capacity in order to maximize the coals and wood. Here is a list of what I made.

Black Bean and Quinoa Lettuce Wraps


Here is another great healthy Quinoa recipe. I saw a similar recipe to this on pinterest but modified it to my own tastings. It came out really good. I had it as a dinner, but I think it would be better on a hot summer day for lunch or an afternoon snack.






Saturday, April 14, 2012

Hickory Smoked Salt

I was smoking a bunch of meat today and had a little room left in my smoker so I threw some coarse sea salt in the smoker for a few hours!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Southwest Shrimp Quinoa

Over the past few month's I've been trying to eat a lot healthier. One of the things I decided to add to my diet is Quinoa. I never had it before so I looked up a bunch of recipes. Man are there a lot out there. A good amount of the recipes used it in salads cold. I was looking for a one pot hot dinner item. After researching for an hour or so, I merged a few different recipes together and added my twist to it and came up with a Southwest Shrimp Quinoa. The Shrimp can always be replaced with tofu or omitted completely to make it vegetarian. I cook this every few weeks. I also make enough so I have left overs for lunch the next day.


Ingredients
½ lbs Shrimp – chopped into 1/3’s (depending on size)
¼ Red Bell pepper – Large Diced
¼ Green Bell Pepper – Large Diced
¼ Onion – Diced
½ jalapeno – diced
High Temp cooking oil
Juice 1 lime
1 Cup Quinoa
1 ½ Cup water
Hand full Cilantro

Cooking Directions
Heat oil in pan
Add vegi’s and Sautee for 5 minutes
Add in shrimp and lime juice and sauté for 5 mins more on until shrimp turns pink
Remove shrimp
Add in water and bring to a boil
Add in quinoa
Reduce to a simmer, cover and cook for ~20 minutes
Add shrimp back in
Add in cilantro and Fluff everything together
Serve hot.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Lasagna Time

When I was a kid, we used to go on skiing trips to June Mountain with a few families. we would rent a big house for all of us to stay in. We always made a menu for the week to save money an not eat out every meal. One of the staple meals we would have is a frozen Lasagna from Smart & Final (CostCo like store). It was easy to make and filling for a large group. Other than on those trips, I never really ate lasagna. Now that I like to cook and with the new gadgets I got form Christmas, I decided to make Lasagna. Once I started thinking about it, I realized I can make almost everything from scratch. Well, I did and it ended up taking 2 days, but it was worth it at the end.


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Oven "Pulled Pork" Fajita's

Tonight I knew I wasn't going to have any time to cook dinner because I had band practice for 2 hours. When trying to decide what to cook the night before, I realized I had 1/4 of an onion, 1/4 green & red bell pepper, and 1/4 of a jalapeno. I didn't have any meat in the freezer other than a small amount of pork shoulder that I had cubed left over from when I was making sausage. I decided to defrost it and think of what to make the next day.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Let's Get Saucy

I recently started making pasta and pizza dough from scratch. I usually make my own sauces just out of a can of tomato sauce and adding to it, but never just an all purpose red sauce. Here is what I came up with.







Sunday, January 29, 2012

No Soup For You

Last week, I bought a rotisserie chicken at the grocery store. If you read my blog, you know what that means on the weekend. I'm making chicken stock. If you haven't read my blog on how to make chicken stock, click here.



Beware of the Sausage - Part 2 of 2


Day 2 of sausage making. If you missed out of day 1, click here. Today is all pork and more traditional sausage. The sausages of the day are Hot Italian, Hot Louisiana, and Bratwurst. I used a boneless pork shoulder, cut it up into pieces and froze it just like the chicken. I decided to do a pound of each type and then an extra pound Italian, which I wasn't planning on stuffing into casings. I made it for a different recipe (which I'll blog about later, so stay tuned). I found the recipes for these online, but its just a bunch of different spices and herbs for each. Below you can see the Italian grind prior to stuffing.



Saturday, January 28, 2012

Beware of the Sausage - Part 1 of 2


Since I purchased my KitchenAid mixer and meat grinder attachment, I've been researching and reading different sausage recipes. I've made a few small batches just to try out the grinder and get used to using it. I've been waiting to make a big batch of sausage but I've had a hard time finding the sausage casing. After driving all over town, I finally found a small European sausage shop that would sell me casing.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Kitchen Gadget's


A few years ago when I started getting into cooking, my parents and brother found it extremely weird when for my birthday I asked for nothing but cooking stuff. Back then, it was simple stuff like pyrex pans, lemon zester, nice cutting board.... Now that my parents actually believe that I like to cook and am actually ok at it, they expect me to ask for cooking stuff for my birthday & Christmas.