Monthly Archives: October 2009

Loki Fish Stock

On Saturday I picked up twenty pounds of salmon frames and heads from Loki.  They are a local family sustainably fishing the waters of Puget Sound and Alaska.  Dylan manages the farmer’s markets and maintains their interesting blog.

At $1 per pound the frames were loaded with meat and perfect for stock.  Dylan supplied me with a recipe for Brent’s Special Fish Stock and on Sunday I set to work making it.  I used celery, onions, leeks, garlic, fennel, thyme and bay leaves from the garden. 

There is something so gratifying about having most of everything you need to turn fish bones into a first class meal growing in your yard!  Even more satisfying taking something that most of us would discard and turn it into a nourishing traditional food that will sit in my pantry waiting any last minute salmon chowders, Bourrides or Bouillabaisses.  I may even get some shellfish from Taylor Shellfish and make a paella one night.  The world is my oyster, so to speak.

The only change I made to this recipe is adding about 1/4 cup per pot of Rockridge Orchards apple ciderwhich has become my secret citrus replacer this year.  Need a splash of lemon?  Try it.  Especially in fruit jams or pies and even gravy.  It’s somewhere in between a vinegar and cider and adds amazing depth of flavor and balances acidity brilliantly.  I love the local and sustainable substitutes!  Although when my yuzu and meyer lemon start producing I’m sure I’ll be gushing about those as well.

canned-fish-stock

Brent’s Special Fish Stock

1 pound of fish bones

4 large celery stalks – large dice

1 large or 2 small yellow onions - large dice

Top green part of 1 leek, washed and roughly chopped

1 bulb fennel – large dice

4 cloves garlic, crushed

2 cups dry white wine (I used Chateau Ste. Michelle Sauvignon Blanc)

1 T white peppercorns

1 T coriander seeds

2 bay leaves

1 T finely – ground sea salt

6 fresh thyme sprigs

  1. Roast the fish bones in a 400 degree oven for approximately 30 minutes
  2. Roast ingredients 2-6 for 15-20 minutes or until caramelized
  3. Put all the ingredients in a  heavy bottom pot and fill with water about 3 inches above the bones
  4. Bring to a full boil and turn down to a simmer.  Let the stock cook for about 2-3 hours, skimming any fat and scum that rises to the surface as it cooks.
  5. Stock will keep in the fridge for about 7 days, or in the freezer for a few months.

 

I strained my stock when it was cool.  The longer you leave the fish frames in the stock the fishier it will become.  After leaving my stock in the fridge overnight I carefully removed the fat from the surface then reduced it to half.  I canned it in the pressure canner on 11 pounds of pressure for 35 minutes.  Each quart will make a full pot of something this winter!

One quick and easy dish you can make with this stock is Saigon Fish Soup.  It’s a little like Pho in that once you  have the stock prepared the rest of the meal comes together in the same amount of time it takes to microwave something frozen.

I pulled some red dragon carrots (did I tell you how much I love these carrots?), leeks and Thai basil from the garden.  Once the carrot and leeks were approaching done I added some Loki Salmon but any fish would do.  You could use noodles or cook rice in the soup itself.  When the fish finished cooking in a few minute’s time I added a few cubes of the key lime juice I had frozen last winter, the thai basil and served it with the last of Tonnemaker’s jalapenos that I bought a few weeks ago just before the frosts started.

So quick.  So simple.  So yummy.

Olives and Fish Stock and Pumpkins, Oh My!

I’m hoping to just install the camera software on this possessed laptop tomorrow and skip the paint shop pro since Corel is actually more evil, in fact, than anyone had realized. In case you have forgotten my computer went wacky on September 10 and I’m still struggling with the offshore backup service and software companies who take money for instant downloads that later you cannot prove you’ve paid for.

Despite it all Sunday’s canning exchange was a blast – fun for all and filled with more interesting things than my little mind could imagine. I enjoyed a fine pint of Wally’s IPA with dinner tonight and even my hop-snobbed husband gave it great accolades.

I came home with lots of grape juice, honey, soaps, beer, blueberry/habanero chutney, grape jam and a great many other things that I’ll treasure over the winter. I’ll do another post dedicated to that later in the week.

Saturday I picked up 20 pounds of fish bones from Loki at the UW farmer’s market, complete with fish heads. Sunday I filled the house with their fishy aroma by roasting them in a 400 degree oven for 30 minutes before turning them into a rich, remarkably non-fishy broth sure to cure whatever ails you. I have about 8 gallons after straining the bones which I’ll reduce even more before eventually freezing or canning.

On Friday my olives from Chaffin Orchard came with much anticipation since they had been sold out and managed to pick the very last green olives to send to Seattle. Tomorrow I start my salt and vinegar brine which will take 2-4 months. I’m very excited about that one!

And tonight I roasted my lone pie pumpkin along with two stunt pumpkins I picked up at the market on Saturday. I’m signed up to bring pumpkin cookies to the preschool Halloween party on Wednesday and you can’t very well make pumpkin cookies without pumkin puree. Libby’s be damned, these kids are getting REAL pumpkin in those cookies.

How about you? What is brewing in your kitchen this week?

Canning Exchange

Do you have a surplus of canned, dried, lacto-fermented or home baked foods? Homemade soaps, lotions, beer, mead or honey from your bees?

Come swap items with like-minded individuals on Sunday, October 25 in Ballard. We’ll swap at local writer and radio personality Joshua McNichol’s house.

Here are the details straight from Joshua:

We’ll trade canned goods on Sunday October 25th at my house in Ballard. We’ll open the house at 3:30 and will try to refrain from trading until 4 PM.

The trading event will be somewhat short and sweet. The idea is that if people attend at the same time, they can trade directly with each other.

And don’t be afraid to be creative! The more diverse our inventory, the more fun we’ll have. In addition to fruit and vegetable preserves, we welcome anything you can think of. Personally, I’d love to see a homebrewer or goat milker contribute to our little swap meet.

We have kids in our house, so don’t let your kids stop you from coming. We have a 5 year old with a room full of toys and a 1 year old who will toddle around between our legs.

Considering Chickens?

The Seattle Farm Co-operative presents…

CONSIDERING CHICKENS?
Learn now while you have the time to get your coop ready for cute chicks in the spring.

How much work is it really to have backyard fresh healthy eggs? Whether to design and build your own coop? What about the poop?

Do you learn best outside of a classroom and by seeing, experiencing and asking questions?

Get answers to all of that and more. See a couple of different chicken coops in action – one fancy green-built ‘Coop Mahal’ and one simple that cost almost nothing to build.

You will see and learn:
~Choices of coop features and systems that will keep your chickens safe and happy
~Design features to reduce coop maintenance
~How to easily turn poop from a smelly problem into a valuable product
~See how chickens really behave, by watching them interact with their environment
~Successfully incorporate chickens with your garden to benefit both
~Simple equipment that has successfully raised many day-old chicks
~Available local resources of information and supplies

Next class: Saturday, October 25, 2009, 10AM-12 noon. Info: Ingela (206)789-5810 or LLB@consultant.com

The Seattle Farm Co-op shares info and resources on growing food in the city. We buy bulk organic chicken and goat feed, hold classes and harvest exchanges.

These classes are more like interactive and experiential workshops than just listening to a lecture type of class. Classes are held on-site at real city farms so you learn more and differently than in a classroom.

Our Seattle Farm Co-op has neighborhood “Clutches” which get together to share and learn. There are chicken classes for prospective chicken owners, and current chicken keepers wanting to learn more about specific topics whether you have chickens for eggs or meat.

First Egg!

I’m resisting all kinds of eggy puns here.  On Saturday our oldest  and my favorite Golden Sexlink, Pot Pie, was acting strangely and clucking loudly from inside the coop.  I had a feeling something was afoot.  About an hour later I saw her out of the coop so I checked and she had laid an egg!  Unfortunately she had been up on the high roost and the egg fell and cracked so we weren’t able to eat it.

Yesterday the same story.  I’m hoping she figures out the nest box soon.  She resists all attempts to be placed in there and as soon as I leave jumps right back up to the roost.  I’ve put some golf balls in the nests to give her the idea but apparently they aren’t doing the trick.

Maybe tomorrow.  These city chickens – it’s like they know nothing about being farm animals!

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