Turkey Tracks: On My Long Arm Machine

Turkey Tracks:  November 7, 2016

On My Long Arm

Here’s what is on my long arm machine today:

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The tumbler block was the Bonnie Hunter leader/ender challenge for 2016–a challenge that runs from July to July.

This year’s challenge is the Broken Dishes block.

You can see Bonnie’s tumbler quilt and what she is doing with the new challenge on her blog.  Go to quiltville.com.

Bonnie’s tumbler is smaller, and I like it better in many ways.  I had a 3 1/2-inch template, so I used it with my 3 1/2-inch pre-cut strips–except for the veggie/fruit fabrics, which I have collected for a while and wanted to use.  This seemed a good project for them.

This quilt is on the long-arm lengthwise–which means fewer passes with the long arm and NOT having to fight backing seams with every pass.

I’m using a spring green thread, and that is nice.

Wait until you see the backing fabric!

Turkey Tracks: November 6, 2016

Ground Lamb Stew

I think I left garlic out of the list of ingredients in the video.

I like to cook this way.

I look at what I have in my kitchen, and then devise a recipe.

With this one, you sauté the meat until it starts to brown, remove it from the pan while LEAVING THE FAT INTACT AS IT IS GOOD FOR YOU, and then start sautéing your veggies, starting with the onions and garlic.  Cook the onions and garlic somewhat slowly as what you want is some nice color to happen–then start throwing in the chunkier veggies–in this case the carrots, celery zukes, and eggplant.  I added a drained large can of black beans and the defrosted jar of roasted tomatoes (with basil and garlic) from my freezer stores, a little water if needed and let everything simmer until the carrots are done.  Corn kernals (perhaps frozen from the summer) would have been a good addition as well.

I put the stew over a bed of the last of the lettuce greens from Hope’s Edge–and they include some baby hearty greens–topped the hot stew with some slices of cheddar cheese, and added a dollop of my newly made sauerkraut.  Drizzling yogurt or cream over the stew instead of the cheese would also have been nice.  A goat cheese or feta cheese crumble would also have been nice.  I had a bowl of organic tortilla chips on the side–so I was only missing, perhaps, some avocado slices.

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In days to come I may cook up some rice as a base and for a change.  I like this brand a lot:  it’s SPROUTED (which removes phytates and makes nutrients more available) and organic and a nice mixture of rice types:

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This rice cooks normally.  I use a rice cooker, which I love.

Turkey Tracks: Alewives Quilt Shop Low-volume Fat Quarter Club

November 5, 2016

Alewives Quilt Shop Low-Volume Fat Quarter Club

Each month I get a bundle of ten, low-volume fat quarters from Alewives Quilts in Damariscotta Mills, Maine.

Low-volume fabrics are those that do not have a lot of dye in them–so they are mostly neutrals.

The club lasts twelve months, so there are more bundles to come.

But here’s what was in my mailbox today:

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My goodness, aren’t they pretty?

Each month has had a color theme–this one is clearly an aqua blue.

Yummy!

Buying fat quarters in bundles is a great way to get a wide fabric selection, especially if you are working with small pieces and English Paper Piecing.

Turkey Tracks: Lavender Orpington Hens and a Blue Wheaten Rooster

November 5, 2016

Lavender Orpington Hens and a Blue Wheaten Rooster

A friend has some lavender Orpington hens just coming into laying age.

Rose Lowell gave her one of the Blue Wheaten Roosters for her flock.

We are all wondering how gorgeous the babies from this mix will be.

Here’s a little video:

Turkey Tracks: Black Gold From Vermiculture Worms

Turkey Tracks:  November 4, 2016

Black Gold From Vermiculture Worms

I have almost finished winterizing outside–thanks to Mat Jandreau.

Yesterday we emptied the worm bin into the cold frame outside.  It was really heavy for both of us to carry.  (Note to self:  do this task earlier in the fall.)

Penny was very interested.  She really tries to help as much as she can.

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I washed out the bin and picked out worms to go back inside, covered them with shredded paper, and will feed them as soon as I have kitchen compost again.

I moved the cold frame this year to a new spot.  The frame is kind of deep, so I used the soil from all the container pots to build it up again.  Then I added what compost I had ready.  I layered the bin with newspapers, to hold the worms in place until I could get some of them back, and we dumped the worms.

We are getting rain, so I’ve left the frame open so the rain can further wash the nutrients from this “black gold” all through the cold frame.

After the rain, I’ll seed with some lettuce and button it all up for the cold months.  Last year some delicious romaine lettuce sprouted up in the cold frame.  Let’s see what happens with intentional seeding.

Here’s a little video:

Turkey Tracks: The Last Tomato of 2016

Turkey Tracks:  November 3, 2016

The Last Tomato of 2016

And, it was delicious!

Of course it had to go into a BLT sandwich–made with real mayo.

(I used avocado oil this time and I’m not a fan.  Back to a mild olive oil I think.)

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OK, here’s the real truth:

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I love potato chips, and Lays has come out recently with this colorful mixture.

And the grapes this year…well these are organic at least!  And they are delicious!

Turkey Tracks: “En Provence,” The 2016 Bonnie Hunter Mystery Quilt

Turkey Tracks:  November 3, 2016

“En Provence,”

The 2016 Bonnie Hunter Mystery Quilt

I picked up the paint chips today.

Of course, Bonnie uses a wide variety of fabrics in each of these colors–which makes for a quilt with lots of hues.  Nothing is flat about Bonnie’s quilts.

In addition, there are about 3 yards of neutrals.

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You can get to this posting, which just came out, on Bonnie Hunter’s Quiltville.com.   Go to the blog, look at the upper listing of sub-sites on the blog, for the mystery quilt, “En Provence.”

If you have any idea that you might want to make this quilt some day, which will start the day after Thanksgiving, print out the instructions each week.

 

Turkey Tracks: October Farmer’s Wife Blocks

November 3, 2016

October Farmer’s Wife Blocks

 

These blocks have been done since mid-October, but I have been…busy, busy.

No. 75, Nan

Cotton+Steel fabrics

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No. 76 Nancy

Cotton+Steel fabrics

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No 77, Nellie

Cotton+ Steel fabrics, but this one needed higher contrast in the pink fabric, which has some navy in it.  The center dark angles are not showing up properly.

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No 78. Old Maid

Tula Pink ladybugs and Cotton+Steel plaid

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No 79 Patience

Cotton+Steel

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No 80 Patricia

Cotton+Steel.  This one is subtle and probably could have used more contrast, but I like it.  I LOVED to play jacks when I was a girl.

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No 81 Peony

Cotton+ Steel

I was sailing along and then hit this block.  The hand piecing version in the book made much more sense.  In the foundation piecing organization, everything swirls around that tiny central square.  It was a nightmare to sew.  Half seams, y seams, odd angles, and so on.  I really think whoever did the foundation piecing for this book did not do a great job.  There are tons of needless difficulties and seams that do not abut, which makes the blocks too bulky in places.  I had to go back and toy with seams or clip into them over and over.

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No 82 Pharlemia

Here’s another very difficult block–needlessly made more so by the foundation piecing pattern.  I threw out the directions, but the way the pieces are combined in the foundation pattern is just plain ruthlessly difficult.

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Friend Becca Babb-Brott (Sew Me A Song Etsy store) threw her Farmer’s Wives blocks up on a design wall at the October retreat (more on the retreat later) to check out color choices.  These blocks just went up randomly to try to get some visual notion of what is going on with color choices.  She does not have them all “up” here, but aren’t they wonderful?  The grey background looks flat in this photo, but it is shimmery and lively in person and is wonderful with the blocks.  This quilt is AMAZING.

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Turkey Tracks: Creating Winter Culinary Assets

Turkey Tracks:  October 31, 2016

Creating Winter Culinary Assets

My kitchen smells like garlic, shallot, parsley, and lime juice.

It’s making me hungry!

It’s that time again–the time to clean out the garden and to do something with the last of the food crops.

The cherry tomatoes were so bountiful this year–Sun Golds.  I was able to pick all the green tomatoes as I worked.

I had a huge bin of them, but I somehow did not take a picture.  With one thing and another, I did not get to lacto-fermenting them right away, and they starting to ripen on me.  I wound up having to pull out the dehydrator again to dry them as I cannot eat all of these before they start to go bad.

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Here are the green ones, all jarred up and, hopefully, lacto-fermenting in their garlicky, herbed brine.

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Look what I found in the zucchini plants!  I checked them all the time, but missed these two.  Into the dehydrator they went–cut into bite-size pieces that will be used in soups/stews over the winter.  The green squash next to the napkins is a Buttercup–it is dense and sweet.  I plan to roast the flesh with cut-up large green tomatoes, onion, garlic, little potatoes, rosemary, and olive oil.

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I love our winter squashes–but we did not get so many this year due to the drought.

The striped ones are Delicatas–which are candy sweet.  The tan ones are Butternuts and are mild.  They are happy in the warm kitchen.  The Delicatas won’t store as long as the Butternuts.

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I processed the cabbage I bought for winter sauerkraut–which I use instead of lettuce sent in here from California, 18 days old and gassed and tasteless.

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You’ve seen other posts on lacto-fermented sauerkraut if you’ve followed this blog at all.  If not, you can search on sauerkraut to see the lovely ruby red color this mixture will turn.  I will probably make some carrot/turnip kraut before I am done.  It is delicious and turns a bright orange.

Here is a little video of what I am looking for to see if the mixtures are “booking”–my slang for fermenting properly.

Now, here’s the really fun thing that has upped ante on my lacto-fermenting goodies:

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What a great book!

I am still reading it, but have already tried some of the herb recipes.

I cut the parsley in the garden–the curly one yesterday, the Italian today–and used the interesting parsley recipe in the book, sans the hot pepper as I am allergic.

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I took off the leaves from the stems and discarded those.  I don’t wash any of these items–I just brush away any debris–as I want the organisms to stay put as they are part of the lacto-fermenting wild process.

Here’s yesterday’s haul.  I have two more from today.  The plastic bags contain water and will form a seal over the top of the mixtures, but will allow me to get to them to push them down and let the liquid rise to the top.

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There is a recipe for processing basil with this method–and it will keep for six months or more.

What about sage?  Rosemary?  Chives?  Tarragon?  MINT?

I may try mint tomorrow as I have a lot of it.

If this method works, I’ll try more herbs next fall.

For those of you who don’t know, lacto-fermented veggies are chock full of really good probiotics and are more powerful than the veggie/herb by itself.

Turkey Tracks: Quilt-let Blocks Done!

Turkey Tracks:  October 30, 2016

Quilt-let Blocks Done!

Here are the last quilt-lets.  I am sewing the individual pieces together now.

At the end of this post you can see all the blocks in the final layout.

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(Yes, I apparently liked this green Cotton+Steel print so much I used it twice!  It’s easy to get confused when setting up blocks.

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There are two Cotton+Steel cat blocks too.

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