Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Making Soft Goat Cheese

Last week we made a couple of batches of Chèvre.  We ate all of it and decided to try another soft goat cheese.  The recipe says it is a basic goat cheese for beginners.  That's what we are in this endeavor.  We purchased the book shown in the photo below that is very simple to understand.


We followed the recipe below with the only change is that our goat milk is not pasteurized.


 We followed the directions and after a day the curds had formed in the pot.

Tricia scooped out the curds and set them in a strainer to allow the excess whey to drain out below.

We set it aside to allow the cheese to drain for 2 days.

After the cheese has drained for a while, it shrinks down a bit.

We picked some fresh dill we have growing on the back patio and cut it up.

The dill is folded into the fresh cheese along with coarse salt.

We put it into a strainer to allow for additional drainage.

The one pound round of soft goat cheese is done!  We ate it on matzos and toast.  It was delicious and we quickly ate the whole thing followed by another after that.


We like this even better than the Chèvre.  We currently have a gallon and a half of goat milk in the fridge.  We'll be making more and more of this.  Like I mentioned, we'll also make some cajeta (goat milk caramel) soon.  I can't wait for that.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Clover Everywhere!

After running the cows through the side yard and the front yard, I finally mowed everything but the back.  The back yard, near our bees, is our unofficial wildflower area.  Although the cows and goats would love to get in there and eat to their heart's content, it's off limits to them.  This area is for the bees.  If you walk around in what I now like to call our "meadow," it is abuzz, literally, with honeybees flying from flower to flower.  The White Dutch clover is abundant and thick this year.

Looking from west to east

The White Dutch Clover reaches in a belt right up to the beehives.  They don't have to go very far to get the nectar they need to begin making honey.

Looking from south to northwest

Here's one of our busy bees right now.  

But what I wanted to show in in the midst of the White Dutch Clover is something that I didn't think I'd see - Crimson Clover.  This past fall, I purchased a couple pounds of Crimson Clover seeds from our local feed store.  I think it is pretty and that the bees would like it.  I simply hand-scattered the seed several months ago in the fall/winter.  I didn't work up any soil, but I did make sure that the seeds made contact with bare ground.

And then...  It didn't rain for over a month.  I thought to myself, "Well, the seed isn't going to germinate.  Maybe birds will eat it.  It will never grow."  But this week, I saw clover foliage that was a lighter green color than white dutch.  It also grows taller than white dutch.  Yep, the crimson clover is popping up all over the meadow.

I see it all over the place!  It is just starting to bloom and boy, is it pretty!


I'm not going to mow back here in order that the clover can go to seed.  It would be nice if we could get this established so that it comes back year after year.  It is a high value source of pollen and nectar for our honeybees.




Sunday, April 5, 2026

A Foul-Smelling Concoction

If you'd take a peek down into one of many 5 gallon buckets I have in the garden, I'd like to show you something.  Let me take the lid off of it first.  It's a good thing you cannot smell this loathsome "brew of poo."  When I tell you it stinks, I'm not exaggerating.  Some of it splashed on my hand, and I learned a valuable lesson to be more careful next time.  

We're trying our hand at producing our own liquid fertilizer.  In order to do so, I filled a bucket halfway to the top with rainwater.  Then I added a whole bunch of chopped up cabbage leaves as well as weeds that I had pulled from the garden along with some chopped up tomato plants that froze this winter.  Then I walked out to the pasture with a shovel and harvested a shovelful of fresh cow poop and added it to the bucket, chopping up the contents repeatedly, and finally topping off with more rainwater to fill.  I closed up the bucket.

The bucket sat in the sun, percolating, fermenting, baking and aging.  Once a week, I'd pull the top off and stir up the concoction with an old broom handle.  Over time it turned into a slurry of sorts.  You couldn't really tell what the contents were as it all turned into this thick, malodorous liquid.

After months, I want to test out our liquid fertilizer.  I gasped at the smell once I removed the top and then dipped out a third of a gallon of the smelly stuff and poured it into a smaller one gallon bucket, trying to leave any solids in the 5 gallon bucket to continue to break down.

I filled the remaining available space in the gallon bucket with rainwater to dilute the homemade liquid fertilizer.

I poured this concoction at the base of my crookneck and zucchini squash that had been burned by a recent frost.  The leaves on the squash were yellowed and looking sickly.  I was unsure if they would be able to be saved or if we'd need to replant the entire squash crop.  Well, in a little less than a week, the squash responded favorably to our homemade liquid fertilizer!  Look how healthy the plant is!:

Last week I transplanted some straightneck yellow squash in the last row near the sugarcane.  The plants are small and, as you can witness, the leaves are yellowed.  They are needing something.  I'm thinking it is calling out for some homemade liquid fertilizer.  You asked for it, you got it.  I poured some at the base of the squash plants.

We will keep checking on the squash in order to see if it reacts the way that the other squash did.  We still have some experimenting to do regarding concentration rates.  I don't want to burn the plants, but on the other hand, I don't want to dilute it so much that it doesn't provide the plants with the food they need to be healthy and grow.  If this works, just think about it.  We're able to create fertilizer with garden scraps and a cow patty - an affordable circle of fertility for our garden.

Friday, April 3, 2026

Making Chèvre

Chèvre is French for "goat."  Bunny, one of our Nubian goats is in milk now.  We milk her twice a day - once at 6 am and another time at around 5 pm and get almost two quarts.  Here is Bunny all cleaned up in her stanchion.  It holds her head firmly in place while she eats and we milk.  While cows have four teats, goats only have two.  The milking goes very quickly.  Agnes is one of our other Nubian goats that is in milk, but her baby is strong and drinks every drop of her milk, so we don't have to milk her out.

For the past couple of decades, we've milked cows and goats through a muslin cloth filter placed over the bucket (for cows) and over a quart jar (for goats).  Tricia just purchased stainless steel funnels with a paper filter that fits in the bottom.  We find it works much better.  The muslin cloth filter is used day after day and had to be cleaned and disinfected, while the paper filters are disposable and a new one is used for each milking session.

Today we'll be making Chèvre cheese using a half gallon of Bunny's goat milk and a half packet of Chèvre starter.  Our starter was old, so we were unsure if it was going to work.  You'll find out at the end of the post if it works.  Here's the starter:

Here is the recipe that we're using.  Chèvre is a creamy, soft cheese similar to cream cheese.

Following the directions, we heat the milk to 86 degrees and add the starter and stir.

Then we cover the milk and let it sit at room temperature (not below 72 degrees) for 12 hours.  When we open the lid in 12 hours, we'll know if the starter was still active.

The proof is in the pudding - or curds, to change the saying up to fit.  We open the lid, tilt the pot and...  The cheese has set!  There are curds that have formed and the whey is on the bottom.  Remember Little Miss Muffet?  The nursery thyme says "She sat on a tuffet, eating her curds and whey."  I had to look up what a tuffet is.  It is a small foot stool.  Along came a spider that sat down beside her and frightened Miss Muffet away...  Well, no footstools or spiders involved in our cheesemaking or eating adventure.


We pour the curds and whey into a cheesemaking strainer to separate them.  The whey flows to the bottom over time, leaving the curds in the basket.  We'll save the whey to use later in lacto-fermentation of vegetables.  Here are the curds in the basket, slowly draining the whey off.

You can add herbs or spices to this.  Tricia just eats it plain.  We also use it to make smoothies with by adding berries.  It came out really good!  It'll store in the fridge for about a week, but we've completely finished this batch already.  Perhaps in a post next week, we'll be making another type of soft goat cheese.  Bunny, unfortunately, lost both of her babies.  One was stillborn and the other was so weak that she died after about a week.  Bunny is still in milk and making lots of milk, so we'll continue milking her and making cheese.  We're also going to attempt to make goat milk cajeta.  Cajeta is a goat milk caramel.  Can't wait to make that.  


Wednesday, April 1, 2026

To Restore the Door, And Several More

Lift up your heads, O gates, And be lifted up, O ancient doors, That the King of glory may come in!  Psalm 24:7

Speaking of ancient doors, The doors to our home aren't exactly ancient.  They will be 26 years old later this year, but they LOOK ancient.  Although they don't get direct sunlight as we live beneath trees, they are weathered, dull and dried out.  Every so often we'll apply some Old English Lemon Oil to the doors and it will liven them up for a brief time and then they revert back to the same sad-looking doors.

From a distance, you might think that the doors don't look that bad, but when you zoom in, you can see clearly that something must be done!  Each morning when I pray, after I call out names of family, friends, and needs to the Lord, I also pray for all that He's given us stewardship over.  Our animals, garden, trees, and yes, our home.  I pray that we'd be able to keep things maintained and that things don't break and stay in good repair.  Well, our doors are in poor repair, and it was high time that we did something about it.

I went to our local hardware store and got some helpful advice on how to restore the doors.  The front door was worse for wear, but all eight doors needed a facelift.  It was a tedious process, but you have to start somewhere.  I got some 220 grit sandpaper and used a palm sander to sand all the flat areas and a piece of sandpaper wrapped around a foam brick to get all the nooks and crannies sanded.  I didn't sand all the way to the wood, but just to rough it up a little.

Then I stained the doors with a stain called Provincial using a foam brush.  I came back in a bit and wiped the stain off with a rag.  We had some low humidity days which worked in our favor.  When the stain dried, I used a 320 grit sandpaper to gently rough the surface up and then applied a coat of polyurethane.  Once that was dried, I sanded gently again and applied yet another coat of polyurethane.  Once that was dried, it was done!

Here is the finished product:

We are pleased with the outcome.  It's certainly better than they were.  Here is the side door once it was redone:

The ancient doors look somewhat new again!  It was good to get this project completed before the hot, humid days arrive.  When they arrive, the stain and polyurethane would have taken a long, long time to dry.  We'll try to be better stewards and keep the doors in better shape from now on.  


Monday, March 30, 2026

One of Our Favorite Options for an Abundance of Cabbage

We've either eaten or processed most of the cabbage crop.  We still have 3 heads in the fridge and 3 heads still growing in the garden that I need to harvest this afternoon.  As the weather warms, we find that snails get into the cabbage and eat them.  Coleslaw has been standard fare for over a month now.  We also made four quarts of kimchi (Korean sauerkraut).  We also have been eating a cabbage & sausage jambalaya, which is really deconstructed cabbage rolls.  We also made a batch or two of eggrolls, but thought we'd make a bunch of eggrolls and then individually freeze them, so that we can pull out a few at a time to eat over the coming months.  Who doesn't like a delicious, quick meal?

I didn't capture step by step instructions as I remembered that we had done that several years ago.  However, when I searched the blog, I found this: Post from 13 Years Ago  Unfortunately, the photos are gone!  The recipe and steps are still there, though.  Making eggrolls seemed, initially, to be something outside of our expertise and comfort level, but making them/rolling them is a process that you pick up fast.  

So here is a photo of our egg roll filling all made up.  It contains shredded cabbage and carrots and seasoned ground meat, but the filling is up to you.  We've made them with mushrooms or chicken.

We set up a little assembly line in the kitchen, laying out the egg roll wrappers, putting two heaping scoops of filling into the center and rolling them up.  We line them up like little soldiers until the oil is hot and ready for frying.


We use coconut oil or beef tallow for frying.  The eggrolls are dunked in the oil and a spoon is used to roll them around until all sides are golden brown.

When done, we pull them out and arrange on paper towels to absorb the excess oil.

When you get in the groove, you can really get things going in a smooth, efficient process.

In this instance, I was rolling them and Tricia was frying.  As soon as she had some coming out of the oil, I had some waiting in line to be fried.

We allowed the eggrolls to completely cool and then arranged them on baking trays.  Our objective was to put them in the deep freeze and freeze them individually, so that they don't stick together and we could take out one eggroll for a snack or 10 or 20 at a time for a meal.  We learned that if you don't individually freeze them, the oil makes them stick together and when you try to remove them, they'll tear.  This process fixes the sticking together/tearing.  Into the freezer all of the trays of eggrolls went...

Once completely frozen, we removed each one and stacked into several Rubbermaid containers, sealed them and placed them back in the freezer.  Here is one of the containers:

We ended up making just about 60 eggrolls!  We'll likely make more as we do have 6 more heads of cabbage to do something with.  This will work out nicely.  With a little preparation and planning on the front end, we now will have quick, delicious meals at our convenience.  All we need to do is take out however many we want and warm them up.  Pass the soy sauce, please!

Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Old Ways

 

Image Credit

As I drive down farm roads this spring, I notice acres and acres of recently planted rice fields.  The rice is sprouted and is coming up in perfect, symmetrical rows, shimmering kelly green in the moist soil as the sun rises in the east.  Most of the fields are drill planted these days.  What a difference!  This time of year in the past, you would be awakened by crop dusters (arial applicators) flying over your house en route to plant this year's crop of rice.  I scarcely heard a single one this year.

Growing up on a rice farm as a kid, I remembered the old process well.  All rice was planted in the water.  Levees were pulled and fields were worked to loosen the soil and then flooded.  Then the fields were water leveled.  Tractors would drag water levels across the field.  The soil would become a muddy slurry, and you would pull the high places down to the low.  Gravity would level the area to somewhat allow for a pinpoint flood.  Laser leveling has GREATLY increased the accuracy of this process these days.

Planting in the water and water-leveling served another purpose - to try to keep red rice in check.  Red rice is an insidious thing.  It grows taller than the other rice, with a red or black seed that makes your sample of rice ugly and you would be docked in price for having rice with red rice in it.  Since it is taller, as the rice ripens and winds blow, the red rice would fall down (lodging), and it would knock down all the good rice with it, making harvest a slow, arduous task.  Planting in the water in a water leveled field attempted to bury the red rice seed so that it wouldn't germinate.  Red rice reminds me a lot of the wheat and the tares parable in the Bible.

We would purchase seed rice that would come in 100 pound burlap sacks to plant in the fields.  We would flood an irrigation canal and unload each sack into the flooded canal to soak.  After a few days, the rice would 'pip out,' meaning a small sprout would emerge.  Once this occurred, we would use a conveyor belt tilted into the flooded canal.  We would lift each sack onto the conveyor belt and others would remove the water-soaked sack of rice and stack it on the back of the truck.  It was so cold to be in the canal lifting those HEAVY sacks of rice.

The truck would be driven to the landing strip where a crop duster pilot would meet us in his plane.  He'd go over the maps to ensure the correct field would be planted.  The burlap sacks were cut open and all of the rice would be dumped into a loader on a truck that would be lifted up and loaded onto the crop duster.  The pilot would fly over the field, releasing the rice that would scatter into the water-leveled field.  

After a few days, the water would be drained from the field and the newly planted rice would grow.  Today, the land isn't worked as intentionally because weeds are "burned down" by using Round Up and seed rice is directly drilled into the unworked soil.  Red rice is controlled by chemicals and the  The 'old way' was a lot more labor intensive and manual in nature.  

As we try to examine the cost-benefit analysis of then versus now, it's a complicated calculation.  Yes, the old ways involved many people doing hard work.  Compared to today, the process wasn't as accurate nor efficient as it is done today.  On the other hand, we've largely replaced people with machines.  Expensive machines.  Expensive machines that you can't work on anymore.  Expensive machines that only a few can afford.  Farming increasingly implements the use an array of chemicals and the small family farm has largely been replaced by corporate farms.

The amount of capital outlay, amount of risk, and number of mostly foreign workers that must be employed in order to farm today makes farming look nothing like it did in the past.  I guess I'm nostalgic for the old ways.  I wish I'd hear more crop dusters flying overhead and see a farmer walking his levees with a shovel slung over his shoulder.


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