Household Notes June 2015

We’ve got that summer feeling
    Some salads, some sweets: just the right things for summer evening meals. If you’re working hard, add more protein. There is a wonderful variety of fresh local fruit, vegetables, meat, fish, eggs, and dairy available these days. Check your closest farm markets, or if you live where many of us do, check the farm stands at the end of the driveways. If you’re looking for meat, watch for fields with beef, sheep, or goats. Those are indications there’s a farm nearby, look for the farmer, ask if he or she sells direct. We produce a great range of food here; let’s get it in the hands of consumers. 
    Eat local, eat in season, eat well.

Read More

Household Notes May 2015

They know beans!

    We put out a call to ask who uses dry beans, and what they do with them. Here are some of the replies. 
   Bruce Blakemore, from Purgatory Point, N.S. sent us both answers and questions:
   “I am an odd Maritimer in that I cannot stand traditional baked beans. I like beans as long as molasses has come no where near them!
    “That being said, I think every bean recipe I use (mostly tomato based) has been published in RD at some point.

Read More

Household Notes April 2015

A ham and a lamb and a bun in the oven

    It’s beginning to look like spring. Ha! Now comes the hard part: waiting for the thaw and wading through the mud, and hoping, always hoping, to find those first swirls of rhubarb leaf. That’s what spring really looks like. Nevertheless, it is time for Easter and we can celebrate the day with good local food, and fresh tastes. There are fresh vegetables available that didn’t travel across at least one continent. Try them.

 

Read More

Household Notes March 2015

The real baker’s secrets
I have been outed. We ran two recipes last month that I didn’t test, and readers have called with questions about both of them. Here come my secrets. I don’t like cooked peanut butter, and I don’t like baking soda. Cooked peanut butter smells and tastes bad to me, and baking soda burns my mouth. So, I took the recipes for health bars with their peanut butter, and the lassy buns, with baking soda, at face value. Marion MacIntosh from New Glasgow, N.S., called the office to tell us she made the health bars and they turned out crumbly. 
    I mixed the ingredients for the health bars, but the batter seemed dry, so I baked them only 15 minutes. They turned out fine, so I suggest that 30 minutes baking time was too long. My own preference would be to mix the ingredients, pat them in a pan and refrigerate. Forgo the baking altogether. 

Read More

Household Notes Jan/Feb 2015

Winter foods from the larder

 

Cold days call for warming food, and a little boost of nutrients. Your great response to our request for winter treats continues. To add to the goodness, in all of these recipes you can use your favorite whole grain flours, cut back on the sugar, and throw in an extra handful (or cupful) of fruit, berries, and nuts. Any of these choices with a steaming mug of coffee are my idea of a great mid-afternoon snack, maybe breakfast. Even in their original form, these recipes produce something better tasting and less sugar-ridden than commercial breakfast cereals. And this apple pudding and baked apples are a whole lot more appealing to me than a big bowl of oatmeal!

 

Read More

Household Notes December 2014

Celebrating the season
It’s late November, evening comes much too early, and the sound of lobster boats leaving the wharves and coming home again breaks the silence, always in the dark. I love lobster, but I fret during the season for family and friends putting their lives on the line every day, especially on this shore where the season runs from the end of November to the end of May. 
    On these long and dreary days I am reminded of all the people and the places where turkey and all the trimmings are not part of the Christmas tradition, and would be unattainable even if the desire were there.

Read More

Household Notes November 2014

Keeping things sweet in the dark months

We have a sugary column this month. Our readers came through with recipes for winter treats. These squares and cookies would be a welcome gift in a tin or jar decorated with a ribbon, or a great easy addition to any potluck gathering. I’ve included the stollen recipe because it is a bit different from the recipes I’ve used, and I really like the ginger flavor of this bread. The sweet gingery smell warms the entire house when it’s baking. 

Read More

Household Notes July/August 14

Backyard eating, A simple summer meal

Edited by Anne Gray

    The price of beef cattle is on the rise. That’s good for the farmers. It has been hard to hang on for the past 10 years, and many couldn’t. Those still in the business are finally seeing a bit of light at the top of the hole they’ve been in. Needless to say, input costs are also climbing, but they have been all along, even as the price for cattle was lower than it’s been in recent memory. 

Read More

Household Notes May 2014

The first blush of spring

    The blush is, of course, the shy rhubarb, trying to decide if it’s time to burst out in its red and green glory. On my daily checks I can see the tiny rosy sprouts, but nothing too forward about their behavior so far. One of these sunny days I’ll find a few shoots to pull and steam for that first tart, luscious taste. Perhaps I’ll try Vera Johnston’s hint for forcing the plants into production. I am getting impatient. 

Read More

Household Notes March 2014

Our call for seasonal eating has been rewarded. The recipes we received look great, are nutritious, and easy to boot. We hoped our readers would share their favorite winter foods made with the good bits found in the freezer. Most of us are ambitious in summer and fall to fill that freezer, but the thought of another meal from it in February isn’t always the most tempting. Not so with the recipes we have here. The combination of colors, flavors, and textures will tempt the most winter-weary palate.

Read More

Household Notes January/February 2014

Edited by Anne Gray

    Rose Doucet has written an informative article in this issue on the history of buckwheat on New Brunswick farms. I use buckwheat often. It’s a good-tasting, nutritious flour, and it’s easy to get local product. We’ve grown it, but as a ground cover, not a food crop. It was a strong and hardy plant, and I can see why early settlers were happy with it. It reseeded to come back in spring after a cold winter in the garden. I like plants that are hardy; I can imagine early farmers would think that akin to finding a magic bean. 

Read More

Household Notes December 2013

Editied by Anne Gray

    All the recipes this issue are simple and quick. The light fruit cake can be eaten a day or two after baking, all the others can be put together and consumed fairly quickly. Even the recipes that require handling over a few days only need minutes each time. All the better to leave you more time to sit down and think about what is important: family, friends, community. Please don’t lose sight of what really matters. Enjoy yourself, appreciate the beauty around you, and be well.

Read More