Category Archives: Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving Feast Photos

thanksgiving-spread

I’m going back over the weekend and adding photos and recipe links to my entry, Thanksgiving Day Feast. There is new info so if you are getting this on RSS feed don’t miss it!

I gave up on the lard that went up in flames and made a butter shortbread crust for the apple quince tall tart, I nixed my idea to modify my favorite sweet potato souffle with our acorn squash and instead went with a savory cheese rosemary squash side and inspired by the smoky scent of the lard episode we decided to smoke the turkey – which also meant smoked gravy.

The turkey came out so brilliantly that we are forevermore smoking it.

The real stars of the feast – our backyard chickens who laid 17 eggs for the meal (creme brulee, cheese puffs and eggnog ice cream), our garden that provided the spices, celery, brussel sprouts, squash and beets and Rockridge Orchards who once again contributed in some way, shape or form to almost every dish from gravy to brine to pickling medium to drinking cider to chestnuts and finally to tea.

Even if you aren’t a cider drinker – their apple cider vinegar is so amazingly unique it brightens almost any dish, including jams and fruit pies. Don’t think vinegar – think flavor enhancer. It’s better than MSG, local and made by my favorite farming family. If I were ever to run away and join a farm it would be theirs.

Dark Days Thanksgiving Feast

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Phew! My stomach is full and my heart is happy. We finished this Thanksgiving’s feast with a dear friend and did a bang-up job of keeping it local. In fact, not a single item for this meal with the exception of the spices came from a store. Even the flour (with the exception of the cheese puffs) I purchased in bulk as whole grains from Bluebird Grain or Lentz Spelt Farm and ground it myself. The rest of the food we grew, I purchased at the UW farmer’s market (where I buy virtually all our food), or I purchased it directly from a local farmer. This centerpiece is a cardoon with various greenery from my backyard.

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But wouldn’t you know it, my camera was on the wrong setting for the first few pictures. And once you’ve eaten the food you can’t really re-photograph it so I’ll just have to make some of these things again and add some stunt pictures…

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  • Bluebird Grain winter wheat and emmer rosemary cracker breads with Mt. Townsend Cirrus camembert, tomato jam with tomatoes from Billy’s at UW farmer’s market or apricot/jalapeno jelly from Rama Farm and Tonnemaker Farm respectively with Rockridge Orchards apple cider vinegar in place of the white vinegar.
  • camembert-crackers

  • Cheese Puffs with Pleasant Valley Dairy gouda and Samish Bay Montasio, milk from Dungeness Valley Creamery & our backyard eggs
  • cheese-puffs

  • Roasted chestnuts from Rockridge Orchards
  • roasting-chestnuts

  • Salad of our Arugula and fresh picked greens, our pickled beets, Estrella Wynoochie Blue and Holmquist hazelnuts
  • pickled-beet-gorgonzola-salad1

  • Rockridge Orchards apple cider and Tahuya Aviary honey brined smoked turkey from Pastured Sensations
  • smoking-turkey

  • Smoky speckled gravy made from turkey drippings, Golden Glen Creamery butter, Rockridge Orchards apple cider vinegar and freshly ground, browned Lentz spelt
  • Tom Douglas’ Mushroom and cherry stuffing with my bread made from freshly ground Lentz spelt, Bluebird Grain winter wheat and home cultured buttermilk from Dungeness Valley Creamery milk, fresh chantrelles and dried porcinis from Foraged and Found, home canned chicken stock from a Stokesberry Sustainable Farm stock kit, dried cherries from Rob Storey’s orchard, fresh cranberries from Mt. Rainier in Eatonville, onion from Nature’s Last Stand, our garden-fresh celery and Holmquist hazelnuts, our rosemary, sage, parsley seeds and thyme.
  • making-stuffing
    rustic-cherry-chantrelle-stuffing

  • Roasted garlic mashed potatoes both from Skeeter Pilarski’s farm with Dungeness Valley Creamery milk and Golden Glen Creamery butter
  • garlic-mashed-potatoes

  • Mt. Rainier cranberry relish from Eatonville cranberries and One Storey Farm cherries.
  • Savory squash gratin from our own acorn squash with Samish Bay Montasio,, Golden Glen Creamery butter, and our rosemary.
  • squash-gratin

  • Garden fresh roasted brussel sprouts picked just before dinner and braised gently in Golden Glen Creamery butter.
  • Tonnemaker akane apple and quince tall tart with Bluebird Grain & Golden Glen Creamery butter shortbread crust.
  • apple-quince-tall-tart
    waiting-for-pie

  • Eggnog ice cream from Golden Glen Creamery cream and our backyard eggs. It’s really my recipe for snickerdoodle ice cream with an extra 1/4 teaspoon of nutmeg.
  • Pumpkin creme brulee from our homegrown pumpkins, Golden Glen Creamery cream and our backyard eggs made by my friends Chris & Kari.
  • dessert-table1

  • Local tea from Rockridge Orchards.
  • Homemade apple cider from Tonnemaker apples
  • Quince soda made bubbly with ginger bug
  • Hard cider from Rockridge Orchards
  • Local wine from Chateau Ste. Michelle, Columbia Crest, and Vashon Winery.
  • Cast of Characters:

    rockridge-orchards

    Rockridge Orchards Apple cider vinegar (for almost every dish!), hard cider and regular cider for the brine, tea and chestnuts. Thanks Wade!!!

    samish-bay-cheese

    Samish Bay Montasio for the squash gratin and cheese puffs.

    mt-townsend-creamery

    Mt. Townsend Cirrus camembert for the rosemary crisp breads. Oh so good!

    estrella-family-creamery

    Estrella Family Creamery for the Wynoochie Blue – easily one of my all time favorite cheeses. Others are good but this one is the bomb, either in a salad, on a lamb burger or on a cheese plate. A must have in my house.

    golden-glen-creamery

    Golden Glen Creamery – cream for the creme brulee, ice cream and butter for the shortbread tart crust, the stuffing and the gravy.

    foraged-and-found

    Foraged and Found – dried porcinis and fresh chantrelles for the rustic stuffing.

    natures-last-stand

    Nature’s Last Stand – onions for the stuffing. They also have a nice looking CSA program that delivers to YOU and not to a drop point in Seattle.

    stokesberry-sustainable-farm

    Stokesberry Sustainable Farm – the stock kit for the chicken broth in the stuffing. I’ve bought many a fine chicken and eggs from them this year.

    tonnemakers-farm

    Tonnemakers Farm – peppers for the apricot/jalapeno jelly, apples for homemade cider experiment and the tall tart (plus about 200 pounds of apples for sauce since January 1, peppers for countless jars of hot sauce and pickled peppers of all kinds)

    tahuya-river-apiary

    Tahuya River Apiaries – honey for the brine as well as countless honey sticks this year to placate the kids while I shopped. The farmer’s market version of candy at the checkout aisle – I’ll take it anytime!

    chickens

    Our lovely ladies of immaculate eggs. It’s such a nice treat to roll out of bed every morning and go collect eggs!

    chicken-nest

    Holmquist Hazelnuts, Blue Bird Grains, Lentz Spelt Farm, Rama Farm, One Storey Farm, Friends of the Trees, Mt. Rainier Cranberry Farm, Pastured Sensations, Mt. Pleasant Cheese, and Billy’s who I either forged relationships with this year and ended up buying food directly from them, or are no longer at the UW Farmer’s market in the winter season.

    My garden, my hands and my sturdy back. Believe me, it was no small feat making everything from scratch for a meal of this magnitude!

    eat-local-campaign

    The Eat Local Crew for sponsoring this contest in support of small farmers.

    Cranberry Cherry Relish

    cranberry-cherry-relish

    Since we are having a slow food Thanksgiving I’m starting now and one of the earliest things you can make is the cranberry relish.

    I’ve been making this for years and was delighted to see a cranberry booth at the UW farmers market a few weeks back. Mt. Rainier Cranberries are grown in Eatonville, and while they are not organic they explained to me that there are no organic cranberry farms around here. They said they had tried to go organic a few years back and ended up losing four out of seven acres to pests.

    So I’ll be happy that they are local and eat them sparingly. That’s difficult because this relish is tasty. Last summer I had bought ten pounds of sour cherries from One Storey Farm then pitted and dried them. We’ve been using them in baked goods and they are perfect in this relish as well.

    To make the relish I cooked the cranberries and dried cherries in a small amount of water until the cranberries began to open. At that point I added enough organic sugar to make it palatable. They cooked gently for about 20 minutes in total and when they were done I gave them a good splash of rum.

    There isn’t really a recipe because it depends on how many cranberries you use and your preference for sweetness. I prefer this slightly tart but not so tart you end up making faces. How do you like your cranberry sauce?

    Dark Days Challenge

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    I’m a day late with this post but isn’t that par for the course with me? November 15 through March 15 is (Not So) Urban Hennery annual Dark Days Challenge and I am signed up.

    What is the challenge you ask? From the horses mouth:

    Cook one meal each week focused on SOLE (sustainable, organic, local, ethical) ingredients and write about it on your blog. It’s really that simple, but at the same time, it can really be that hard.

    It seems this challenge was made for me because I started it back on January 1. I strive not just to eat this way once a week but every meal of every day.

    My challenge was to not give a single dollar this year to food companies. I’ve cheated a few times. Like for instance my husband begged me for orange juice so he got some – and some tortilla chips – for his birthday. Once we were shopping too late past lunchtime and too far from real food and I broke down and bought a bag of chex mix for the kids. Then that one orange juice has since led to another 4 half gallons of orange juice. And that bag of tortilla chips has since led to two others. When we went on vacation in July I bought a box of crackers, box of cookies and two boxes of cereal. And in a moment of guilt last April I bought a box of bunny crackers.

    Other than that we have stayed true to the course. It’s not been easy and I do have purchases I make that are not  necessarily to what I would call food companies but they break my local rule like coconut oil, coffee, chocolate, salt, baking powder, vanilla extract and twice now mayonnaise. But at some point you have to pull back and be realistic. Sure I can make the mayo all the time but we don’t eat that much of it and it does take considerable time when you are in the middle of another recipe calling for mayonnaise. I believe I even had a face book post at one point reminding myself that buying mayonnaise is not extravagant.

    I’ve spent untold hours this year sourcing local farmers, researching them to be sure I was giving my food vote to the right person and setting up wholesale buys to make this all affordable.

    This Thanksgiving? Got it nailed. An apple quince pie from local apples and quince, crust of rendered leaf lard from our pig that Akyla Farms raised for us and spelt grown by Lentz Spelt Farm.Pumpkin creme brulee from my homegrown pumpkins, backyard eggs and raw milk from Dungeness Valley Creamery. A turkey grown by Shawndra of Pastured Sensations just for me and mine. Brussel sprouts from the garden, picked minutes before cooking. Mashed potatoes from Michael Pilarski in Okanogan. Cranberries from Rainier Mountain Cranberries in Eatonville. Acorn squash that I grew glazed with local raw honey from Tayuha River Apiaries. And perhaps a few other things I haven’t yet had time to dream up.

    Nearly eleven months into this it is becoming old hat. It’s fun and exciting to find new farmers because I feel like I know them all. I know the deals, the tricks and have my own garden still brimming with fall produce to fall back on. In fact, I rarely buy produce at this point but it’s nice to know what is out there and supplement with some additional variety.

    So I’m down with the challenge. I say, bring it on.

    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.

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