Monthly Archives: November 2009

Beef Bone Broth

One of the things you can never have enough of in the long winter months is bone broth of any kind because you simply can’t buy it. It comes from hours of slow simmering bones and extracting all the minerals and gelatin that are essential building blocks for the human body.

There is a reason you heal faster when consuming clear bone broth. Your body needed it. It happens to be one of the most frugal things you can make and helps ensure that no part of the animal goes to waste as well. Broths you buy at the store have additives, even the organic brands. They don’t have the stuff that comes from simmering bones. They may add flavor but they are certainly not feeding you and won’t nurse you back to health from illness.

The world of bone broth is new to me this year. In the past I have made stock from turkey carcasses but that was the extent of it. I didn’t do it correctly and the broths were never full flavored. I usually ended up throwing it out or adding bouillon to it which defeats the purpose.

This year I’m obsessed with bone broth in any way, shape or form. It can turn the simplest of soups into a grand affair and it’s also an elixir tasty enough to sip plain from an old coffee mug.

Beef Bone Broth

4 pounds organic beef soup bones
1/4 – 1/2 cup Rockridge apple cider vinegar
3 medium onions, in 1/8ths
3 carrots, chopped in 1″ pieces
3 celery stalks, chopped in 1″ pieces
1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns
2 Tablespoons of dried nettles

Roast the soup bones in a 350 degree oven until browned.

beef-soup-bones

Place the bones in a stock pot and cover them with the vinegar and enough enough filtered water to cover for about an hour to aid in the removal of minerals from the bones.

After an hour add the vegetables, peppercorns and nettles and bring the pot to a simmer. Simmer the stock for 24 – 72 hours, being sure to add more filtered water as needed. I leave mine simmering overnight, being sure it won’t run out of water. If you need to leave you can choose to leave it on simmer or turn it off while you are gone then turn it back on again when you return. As long as you bring it back to a boil again before consuming it should be fine. This is the old fashioned method for meat stock – the USDA will tell you if it’s been out for two hours to throw it away but if you ask your grandmother she will probably back me up here.

simmering-beef-bone-broth

When the stock is cooked as long as you want to let it cool, then strain the broth. Cool it in the refrigerator overnight and in the morning remove the beef fat that has hardened and separated. Reserve the beef fat (tallow) and freeze for frying potato chips and other things.

At this point you can choose to freeze your broth or can it.

canned-fish-stock

To can, bring the broth back up to a boil for 10 minutes and can it following the directions for beef broth in the pressure canner booklet.

What do you do with beef broth?

Beef Pho

My friend Charlotte suggested using this for Pho which was a huge hit in my household. To make it I simply cooked some Rose brand egg noodles made in Seattle or Udon noodles would do nicely as well. I put those at the bottom of soup bowls. I heated a quart of beef broth and added some ginger, a pinch of allspice to mimic star anise, a large splash of fish sauce and soy sauce then added hot broth to the bowls of noodles. I quickly topped that with thinly sliced flank steak but any super thin cut of beef would do – the fattier the more flavorful generally. To that we added some grated lime zest that I had frozen from our winter key limes, some fresh sliced jalapeno and some cilantro. Ground peanuts would be great on this as well.

Beef Vegetable Soup – yet another simple and quick soup

To a quart of beef broth add sauteed chopped onion, carrot, celery, frozen beans, home canned tomatoes, nettles or chiffonade hearty winter greens, chopped potatoes, home canned corn, a hearty splash of Rockridge apple cider, pilsner or red wine, thinly sliced cabbage, turnip, parsnips or other root veggies. Really anything you might have overwintering in your garden or stored in your root cellar or pantry would do. If you have frozen cooked barley or other grain some of that would be great as well. I love to serve this with quick barley biscuits instead though.

French Onion Soup (or Freedom onion soup?)

Carmelize 1 pound of onion crescents slowly in butter by first putting them in a covered pan for about 10 minutes with a pinch of salt and thyme, then removing the lid and continuing to carmelize for about 25 minutes until they are dark and caremlized.  Stir in a quart of beef bone broth, scraping any bits from the bottom of the pan.  Add pepper and adjust the salt and thyme.  Cover and simmer for about 10 minutes.  To serve this in the French manner ladle the soup into oven safe ramekins or bowls.  Top with a slice of crusty baguette and sprinkle with 2 tablespoons of local Gruyere style cheese.  I love the Mutschli from Pleasant Valley Dairy in Ferndale and they have a wholesale buying club program to keep your costs on local cheese down.  They also make a farmstead cheddar and lovely gouda.

Place the ramekins on a cookie sheet and bake in a 350 degree oven for about 30 minutes until the cheese is nicely browned and bubbly.

Also think mushroom risotto made with Lentz emmer grains and lovely fall mushrooms from Foraged and Found.

Holy Cow!

car-full-of-beef

Yesterday I drove up to Snohomish to pick up 3/4 of a cow that Cascade Range Beef had grown for me.

We had eaten Cascade Range beef last winter and even the hamburger was amazingly gamy and lean. I never once had to drain the pan after browning before adding the other ingredients. It made wonderful meatballs, bolognese, taco meat and other things my family likes to eat.

The great thing about finding a personal farmer is that not only are you supporting a local small farm but you can find one that is like minded – sustainably pasturing cows and slaughters on the farm which is the most humane and least traumatic for the animal. Cascade Range Beef cows are 100% grass fed rather than fed part grain and silage that are not a part of the animal’s natural diet. That means your cow will be healthier, tastier, and play an integral part in land management (by naturally fertilizing the land) rather than contribute to greenhouse gasses.

100-percent-grass-fed-beef

I managed to sell the whole cow which is, of course, a prerequisite in order to get your meat.

Here is what Kelso’s (the butcher) looks like

kelsos-meats

And here is what one Volvo station wagon loaded up with 600 pounds of meat looks like

car-with-cow

To better help you visualize just how much meat one quarter cow is, it’s about two and a half regular sized coolers of meat. Luckily it packs really well into neat little blocks of meat unlike the various cuts of pig which were a ton of odd shapes that didn’t fit as neatly together.

cooler-of-cow

From my house it was about 25 miles to Kelso’s and the time actually went pretty fast on the road. The time I spent arranging and re-arranging cuts of meat in coolers and boxes, sorting for this person who wanted no stew meat or that person who wanted only short ribs, was not so fast. My advice when loading a frozen cow? GLOVES!

I’m ever so thankful I happened to have a pair of running gloves in the back of the car. Otherwise it probably would have taken me twice the hour that I spent man-handling beef.

I dropped one quarter of the cow off at a neighbor’s then raced home to rearrange my freezer and load my quarter. I had to take out the turkey that Pastured Sensations raised for me as well as two pork butts from Akyla Farms which we’ll smoke this weekend, then trade for some of the neighbor’s smoked salmon and repackage what is left to re-freeze.

I raced to the bus stop to pick up Chicken Little and a neighbor boy, dropped off the boy, raced to another neighbor’s to store the turkey and some ground beef in her freezer since my was full, then raced across town to deliver the final quarter for a friend who was at work. After three cooler trips down to her basement and loading her freezer we raced back home and got there just in time to lock the chickens up for the night.

There have been so many raccoon attacks this time of year, both in our neighborhood and all around town, that I’m paranoid about not getting them locked up by dusk. We’ve got plenty of good dog smells around the yard but that probably isn’t enough to keep them away.

There was no room for the soup bones in the freezer (which you have to request or they are thrown away – they are not allowed to donate them to food banks or sell them according to USDA regulation.) I started two large stock pots of beef bone broth which has been simmering for almost 24 hours now. Normally I like to simmer it gently for 48 hours or more to extract all the minerals and gelatin from the bones but my husband is coming back in town tonight and he’s not so fond of the simmering cauldrons on the stove.

There are quite a few mistakes I made when ordering the cuts. The frustrating part about ordering an animal is the information they don’t tell you. For instance, they ask if you want pork chops (who wouldn’t?) but don’t tell you that if you get pork chops you don’t then get a loin roast.

And so it is that I now have a freezer full of meat and no brisket to smoke or corn for St. Patty’s day. Apparently brisket is a specialty meat meaning if you don’t request it they turn it into stew meat or hamburger. My husband the smoker is not going to be happy about this. And when we try to throw our annual St. Patty’s Day corned beef dinner I’m not sure what we’ll do. With more than a year’s worth of meat in the freezer I may just need to break down and buy a brisket that won’t be the grass fed $3.50 per pound this meat worked out to. It will for sure cost a lot more.

Lesson learned. Always ask “If I get that, what will I not get?”

Squash Muffins

Chicken Little attends Laurelhurst Elementary and they had an ubercool program this week where the kids attend 3 presentations on health and nutrition. There were some very talented presenters and somehow I managed to wrangle my way in.

My presentation was on how to ditch the store and grow your own groceries. I had a slideshow (actually the one in the sidebar you see on this site) with a handout, my composting worms, my uber cool neighbor Tiffany who has children at Laurelhurst as well and one of Tiffany’s chickens.

tiffany-laurelhurst

Here you see Tiffany cheerfully demonstrating an egg and explaining how important protein is to a growing child. In the foreground you can see Chubby happily eating some scratch on the sheet.

The night before I turned this small amount of ingredients:

squash-muffin-ingredients

Into 100 squash muffins from our home-grown butternut squash. Instead of the frosting Jamie Oliver calls for in the above linked recipe I opted to simply sprinkle a little powdered sugar over them. Much quicker for me and healthier for the kids. They sort of reminded me of snow on squash that way.

squash-muffins

I substituted Lentz spelt for the wheat, decreased the amount of sugar and used my squash and eggs which made those 100 muffins cost about $7, mostly because I used sunflower oil. Normally I only bake with butter and coconut oil but butter is pretty spendy and nut allergies are through the roof with kids so I chose to leave out the wheat, dairy & coconut.

I was glad I did because one little girl sitting next to the muffins had a wistful look on her face. In fact the only thing I could think of the whole time was how much she looked just like Anne Frank. I finally asked her if she wanted a muffin and she told me she couldn’t have dairy. Her face lit up the room when I told her they were dairy free. That made the whole thing worth-while for me right there.

Not only were these muffins made with love but they were a pretty dang healthy treat with freshly ground whole spelt and/or emmer (I was testing but the spelt ones were lighter with a loftier crumb), pastured eggs and squash. The mom volunteers and most of the kids gave them the thumbs up.

As Jamie would say “why don’t you give them a go?”

Squash Muffins
Based on a recipe by Jamie Oliver

14 ounces winter squash, skinned, seeded, chopped then “whizzed” in the food processer until fine
2 cups brown sugar
4 large eggs
3/4 cup melted butter, coconut oil or sunflower oil
2 1/2 cups spelt or whole wheat pastry flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon ginger
dash cloves or allspice
1/4 teaspoon sea salt

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and grease muffin tins well or line with paper liners.

Mix the squash, sugar, eggs, and oil together. In a separate bowl combine the flour, powder, spices and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the wet, gently mixing until just combined. Don’t over mix or the muffins will toughen up.

Bake for 20-25 minutes until they test clean and let them cool on a wire rack. Once they are cooled you can shake some powdered sugar over the top. I’m sure cream cheese frosting would be great with them as well.

Sustainable and Local Thanksgiving

thanksgiving1

I know it’s still a few weeks away but sustainable and local food is slow food so I’m planting the seeds now.

Have you thought about your supper yet? There are so many wonderful local options this time of year as we still celebrate the abundance of late fall with more time spent out of the garden and into the kitchen.

Puget Sound Fresh is hosting a local Thanksgiving dinner contest to encourage you to support local farmers as much as possible.

It’s open to home cooks and the prizes look awfully enticing, including a dinner for 6 in your home prepared by an award winning chef from Brasa Restaurant, local wines and gift certificates for farmer’s markets.

Your dinner doesn’t need to be fancy but you do need to put a lot of thought into it. It doesn’t need to be traditional but it needs to be local. I guarantee you it will be more enjoyable to lovingly prepare and sink your teeth into something grown or raised by someone you’ve put a face with, perhaps enjoyed some conversation, shaken hands and are now on a first name basis with.

You can get local salmon, chicken, beef, pork and goat at the markets right now. How about a souffle from local eggs? A cheese platter from one of the many local cheese artisans along with some crisp fall apples and cider? A roasted apple and squash soup? If the local cranberries are gone by now perhaps you had already put up some cherries or plums earlier that would make a great condiment for your roast? Mushroom stuffing? Oysters on the half shell? I plan to serve brussel sprouts from my front yard but there are sure to be local varieties at the market as well.

By taking a trip to one of the farmer’s markets this Saturday you’ll have time (and room now that the crowds are thinning) to start planning your menu. Look at what is in season and think about what you can do with it. If you are joining forces with another family or family member pass that info on and plan together.

We each are a ripple on a surface of water. One thing you do spreads to many.

This Thanksgiving think local. Think sustainable. Think real food. And when you bow your head in thanks before eating remember all those who are eating from nameless cans and plastic wrappers.

Lamb Shanks Osso Bucco Style

In between errands today I prepped some lamb shanks from Thundering Hooves and popped them in the oven to slow braise.

With about 15 minutes of prep work I turned this:

osso-bucco-ingredients1

into this:

osso-bucco-lamb-shanks

then rounded out the meal with some garlic mashed potatoes and braised cabbage.

The carrots were from our root buy a few weeks back, the onions are from the market, the garlic is almost the last of ours, the celery is from our fall garden, the chicken stock I canned while cleaning out the freezer to make room for the cow and pig, and the romas are ours that I canned.

You can see they are from the freezer. I canned them in a water bath then did some research on illnesses caused by rats in the garden, freaked out and bought a pressure canner. I ran them through a cycle of that despite that they were previously in a water bath and when they were done there was hardly any liquid left in the jar. They are probably shelf stable but just in case I put them in the freezer.

So far I haven’t had any recalled foods or traceable illnesses from my kitchen and, unlike large food corporations, I’m hoping to keep my food-caused illnesses down to precisely zero.

Related Posts with Thumbnails