Sunday, April 27, 2014

Happy birthday, Mommy!



 It's not everyday that one turns eighty and four...so I decided to bake my mom an extra pretty cake to celebrate.  Mom loves this chocolate cake recipe...so it's the one that kinda serves as our de facto birthday cake. LOL Though I do cut back on the sugar to 1.5 cups...I like a ratio of 2 to 1, sugar to chocolate. And I didn't cry when an extra sploosh of vanilla landed in the batter.  And in the frosting.



Cake cooling and frosting readied, I set out in search of little dainties to put on the cake.  There were still some redbuds left, so in my bowl they went, along with some remaining violets, dead nettle flowers, dandelion petals, catmint flowers, and viburnum* flowers.  They made a happy mélange scattered across the top of the cake.  It was almost too pretty to cut....almost.



* We didn't actually eat the viburnum (Viburnum prunifolium) flowers.  I picked them off and thanked them for their beautiful contribution.  Better safe than sorry. ;)

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Bee Homecoming

The bee keepers

Yesterday we welcomed two new starter hives.  And it was the first time I got to help Don work the bees.  Really work the bees.  Not just standing on the sideline cheering and picture taking.

Clean and pretty new gloves

It's not that I'm afraid of bees, particularly.  But we only could get one suit when we first started out...and since Don is bigger and stronger...he was the obvious choice to get a proper suit first.

We had done a quick assessment of the 2 hives we had going into winter last year this past February, and found that one (the original hive from 2012) had died off.  That hive never did well...especially in comparison to last year's new hive.

Don suggested we make a better, more hands on assessment of the remaining hive before we went to get the new ones...mostly to let me practice doing bee cares with less agitated bees.  A good idea on the whole.

The passing of the torch hive tool

So....the things I know (personally) about (our) bees:


  1. These girls put propolis everywhere.  And I mean everywhere!
  2. Hive boxes are heavy.  Too heavy for me to safely pick up.
  3. Brush, never swat at insects of any kind.*
  4. Move slowly and enjoy what you're doing.
  5. Bees rock.
  6. The queen is always in the last place you look. :P
  7. Using a smoker isn't always necessary.

Working the "old" hive



The old hive was in pretty good condition.  Though it took forever to find our queen.  Last year, the queen sported a pretty green dot on her thorax.  The queen we have now has no markings of any kind.  Did the paint wear off?  Or did they revolt and a new queen was grown to replace the old?

All hail the Queen

 Larvae, capped brood and honey, and healthy looking workers! :)

Satisfied that everything is going well for the sisters, we buttoned up the hive and made ready to go and get the starter hives.

I didn't take many pictures of the new girls...I was busy rearranging frames and inspecting them.  It went so fast--almost anticlimactic.  

Setting up the new hives

It was a lot of fun getting to help DH with the bees.  I wasn't kidding about the propolis...I even managed to smear my camera with the sticky stuff...

Gloves all broken in, now...along with my poor camera



* I honestly never needed to do any swatting.  Just putting it out there as a reminder for...you know...wasps.  I *&^% hate wasps.



Monday, April 21, 2014

Dandy Dande


Over the last few days, I've been foraging through the yard for tasty morsels.  First were the violets, and now the dandelions are coming on strong, so I thought I would gather some blossoms to make syrup...perhaps wine.  Perhaps something altogether different.

Inspired by the cookies seen on Pinterest, I decided to have a go myself.



Dandy Dande(lion) Cookies :

Ingredients:

1 1/4 cups flour
1 1/3 cups rolled oats
1/4 teaspoon allspice
Zest of one lemon
1 teaspoon baking soda
Barest pinch of salt--not more than an 1/8 teaspoon max
1/2 cup butter, room temperature
2/3 cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 large egg
3/4 cup dandelion flowers, gently packed (yellow petals only)
1/2 cup finely chopped almonds, toasted (optional)




Method:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper. In a medium bowl, sift together flour, baking soda, salt, and allspice; then stir in the oats. In another bowl, cream the butter and sugar together until smooth and light in color. Beat in the honey, vanilla and lemon zest. Add the egg and beat until mixed in. Blend dry ingredients, dandelion petals, and chopped nuts into butter mixture. Mix only until flour is just incorporated. Roll into 1 inch to 1 1/2inch balls and place 2 inches apart. Bake 10 minutes or until the bottoms are just golden, the tops will still be pale. The cookies will be soft when first out of the oven so wait a minute or two to cool on the pan before transfering to a wire rack to finish cooling. Makes about 2 dozen cookies.






My thoughts :


If I were to make these cookies again (and I will :P ), I might try adding some dried fruit like sultanas to the dough.  Orange zest in place of the lemon would be mighty tasty, too. Don't like almonds?  Try cashews, instead.  Need to avoid dairy?  Try substituting coconut oil for the butter.  

The least amount of mixing after the addition of the flour mixture helps improve texture...along with a chill in the refrigerator.  I popped my dough in the fridge whilst I was preparing the pans...I had to stumble around for a bit, since I ran out of parchment paper and didn't remember to pick up more with this week's shopping.   I'm also thinking about reducing the flour to just 3/4 cup on the next run, too, and increasing oats to 1 1/2 cups.  I find the cookies are sweet with the 2/3 c granulated sugar...almost too sweet...but I don't know how reducing would affect the texture. And I chose to stick with granulated sugar to keep the cookie dough light in appearance--I wanted to showcase the pretty, sunny splashes of color.  I think that brown sugar might overpower the honey flavor, as well as darken the dough.

Speaking of texture...do not allow these cookies to color on top while baking.  With my oven, 10 minutes was sufficient, and I allowed for a 1 minute's rest on the pan, before I placed them on the rack.  They will be soft...really soft...freakishly almost not done soft...and that's okay.  At least for me...I like cookies that have oatmeal in them to be a bit soft and chewy. 


Friday, April 18, 2014

It was a yellow kind of day :

 Morning:

Early b-day prezzie for my soon to be 84 yo mommy.

Noontime:

Discovered a new resident violet--Viola pubescens

Afternoon:


Dandelion foraging

My spoils--groomed and ready to use


Thursday, April 17, 2014

My Day In Pictures



































This past weekend

was truly a bummer.  I got through the first group of lily of the valley increases and was sooooo pleased with myself...until I noticed one little nupp with a stray loop that hadn't made it into the p7tog on the WS row.

<sigh>  Generally, making a mistake and noticing it a few rows down doesn't cause me a whole lot of stress.  I just tink, or knit up to the gaffe, drop the stitch above the error down to it and fix it.  I've fixed plaited cables (cough, cough, 20 rows down, cough, cough)...I've fixed lace this way, too.  So I blithely tinked...and failed.  Failed!  Then the next thing I knew...another stitch slipped away...and another.

I ended up raveling a significant portion of what I knit.*  Then I cried, oh the bitter tears as I wailed!  And sulked.  I sulked right over to the violet patch.

What a consolation...

The violets are lovely this year, here, as they usually are.  I'm grateful that we don't have a "townie" lawn with all the expectations to weed, feed and water grass.  It's terribly boring, and I really look forward to the tiny flowers carpeting the ground.  Our's is a patchwork of violets, buttercups, dandelions, johnny jump ups (viola), pussy's toes, bluets (quaker ladies), wild crocus (tradescantia longipes), and quite a few more.

I've made sugared or candied violets before, and I wanted to try something different this year.  So I picked a slew of the dainty purples:

As always, Calleigh inspects my work to make sure I don't over harvest


Just made it back to the house before the rains came pelting down

After bringing my spoils into the house, I washed the blossoms, layered them in napkins to dry and tucked them in the fridge for safekeeping over night.

Next morning, I de-stemmed the flowers (I didn't bother with pulling off the calyxes...maybe next time) and measured just over 4 very tightly packed cups.  I then boiled them in 6 cups of distilled water per these instructions.

My result after steeping 24 hours at room temp, and strained through 2 coffee filters :

This would be a lovely scrying ink, no?

I've read that violets can be used as a pH indicator...so I put the filters aside to play with them later. Heh.  It does indeed indicate pH :


On the left hand side of the pic are the plain, violet infusion soaked filters, wrung out and folded in half.  On the right hand side of the pic are the reactions to vinegar (L filter) and sodium bicarb solution (R filter).  Pretty snazzy, eh?

I was pretty pooped at that point (migraine, ugh) and decanted my precious infusion into a well cleaned jar and refrigerated it for the 'morrow.

Which brings me to today...

I'd really thought about processing the syrup in a water bath canner to try and preserve them a bit longer than the couple months they'll last anyway.  Then I thought about the sugar content.  I'm not a confectioner at all; the 2.25 cups granulated sugar to 1 cup fluid ratio seemed steep, and I worried what would become of the syrup in the jar as it processed.  Would it just become canned hard candy?  A quick call to the canning hot line ended with no advice**, so I just decided to leave them be.  2 of the jars did try and seal on their own...and 5 did not.

Out of the initial 6 cups of fluid, I yielded 5.5 cups of inky blue goodness, to which I added 12.375 cups of granulated sugar.  Still following the above procedure (heat, skim, cool, heat, skim, fill), I filled 6 pint jars, plus another, 3/4 of the way filled.

Sorry it's blurry, I couldn't risk moving them to better light.

The color faded a bit after adding so much sugar; a tiny disappointment.  And when I tasted the newly made syrup, it seemed devoid of much flavor.  It seemed rather cloy and sharp...but after some time to cool, the fresh herb-y ness that the infusion had, began to resurface.

This summer is going to rock.  I'll be ready, with tasty treats made with this syrup!

What else can you do with violet syrup?  Or just violets in general?


Here's some interesting facts about the violets in my yard:

The most common violet in my back yard, and quite likely in yours, too, is Viola sororia.  Unlike V odorata, which is native to Europe, these flowers don't have much fragrance, save the fresh scent that most plant materials have.  And it's possible that they have lots of ionones, and I just can't smell them.  Who knows?

Aside from being pretty scattered across salads or candied and sprinkled on baked goods, they do have medicinal purposes ranging from being alternative (blood purifying), to headache quelling (leaves, mostly).  Native Americans used the whole plant for the treatment of colds, coughs and dysentery.  V sororia is also listed as a traditional treatment for cancer, especially breast cancer.  Violets also contain vitamins A and C and rutin, which strengthens blood capillaries.   Leaf poultices can be laid on minor skin irritations, wounds and aching brows for relief.  Root poultices are also listed as a treatment for boils, though may be a bit...harsh...when taken internally.  Corn seeds soaked in (cooled) root decoctions are said to help repel insects from the planted seeds.  The mild tasting leaves can be added to soups as a thickener, much the same way as okra is often used.  Or just add to other foraged greens for a tasty springtime vegetable tonic.***

Random field pic: prairie buttercups (Ranunculus fascicularis), pussy's toes (Antennaria neglecta) and a lone V sororia


 * Yep...I know what lifelines are.  I generally don't worry with them, because I watch my progress rather compulsively at times closely, and I catch a lot of mistakes before I get too far along.  Not really sure what the heck happened with this project.  Oh well...live and learn.

**She seemed rather surprised to know that people made syrup with flowers...LOL

***Sources from here, here and here.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

It's morning...

and I had planned to post pictures of the swallowtail shawl last night...but it got too dark to take pics. So I took some this a.m.         (Wow.  I'm taking this knitting update seriously, eh?  Maybe I will actually finish it.  LOL)


I have made it to the lily of the valley increases. Sweet!  It's (finally) nupp time!  I don't mind making nupps at all.  I think they're cute.


I'm hoping to have the second chunk of lily of the valley increases done soon.  Well, today.  But that might be a rather ambitious goal.