By themadgardener , 20 September 2020

The potatoes are finally harvested! Took a lot of work over three days but well worth it and the results were plentiful!

By themadgardener , 19 September 2020

We have actually eaten a bunch of them but time to get them all out of the garden!

By themadgardener , 19 September 2020

Today, when harvesting potatoes I found something I have never seen in my entire life! A fully intact seed potato (well a wedge) that not only supported a potato plant but produced potatoes as well! Proof that 2020 has brought us wonders, sometimes they are just below the surface!

By themadgardener , 17 September 2020

I had a great crop for spaghetti squash this year! Like all gardeners, we receive our reward towards the end of the season. All the work we have done to improve growing conditions, plant the seeds, keeping the weeds at bay, making sure the plants have the required nutrients, and watching for disease pays us back in fresh food!

My favorite way to eat spaghetti squash is to use in place of pasta. Its a great replacement for those of us who need to adhere to a gluten free diet!

By themadgardener , 16 September 2020

What you will need for this experiment is a small jar (a drinking glass will also work), a coin, and water.

While this experiment demonstrates how light waves bend when moving from one medium to another (air to water) the same phenomena happens with sound, water, and other waves. It is known as refraction. When light is moving through just air it moves in a straight line but once it begins passing through water it bends!

What appears to be magic is simply an optical illusion caused by every day physics!

By themadgardener , 7 September 2020

Finally have a large quantity of tomatoes! Now its time to turn them into sauce and can them!

By themadgardener , 25 August 2020

Our vegetable and fruit for dinner! Well technically tomato is a fruit but it counts towards our five a day!

By themadgardener , 10 August 2020

I have a large quantity of maple syrup that came from a red maple. It definitely has a very strong maple flavor and I prefer the sugar from sugar maple trees on my pancakes/waffles/french toast. Realized it would make for a very good sugar for making BBQ sauce! Just whipped this up today and will try it for making pulled pork tomorrow!

By themadgardener , 9 August 2020

I finally scored a box of canning peaches! Living in a colder climate I peaches are one thing that I can not grow in my yard but I still enjoy buying a box of canning peaches and preserving them for the winter months! Peaches, I find, are actually on the the easier foods to preserve!

By themadgardener , 9 August 2020

Had a slight mishap the other day when one of the jars broke in the canner. I made the mistake of forgetting to put the rack in the canner before putting in the jars (so the jars were directly on the bottom of the canner). Just a case of too much heat being applied too quickly! Luckily there were no injuries and it was just tomato sauce, if it were something like maple syrup that takes several days to produce I would have been more upset!

There are multiple reasons why a jar make break.

By themadgardener , 7 August 2020

I managed to can 24 quarts and I have another six quarts using the refrigerator method. I processed the refrigerator pickles in a similar manner as the canned ones except without the final step of heating, instead I just put the jars into the refrigerator. Pickles produced via the canning method will last much longer than refrigerator pickles. Canned pickles will easily keep a year or more (depending how well they were processed) whereas refrigerator pickles typically will last only 2-3 months.

By themadgardener , 5 August 2020

Not long ago I had a hog processed and had the butcher keep the lard for me. I had the lard ground as it saves the step of having to cut it up into small pieces! The process of rendering is simply melting the fat so that it separates from the rest of the "impurities" (pieces of meat, bone, or whatever else was inside the hog). Also heating and melting helps remove the water - while technically you can never remove all the water you do want to evaporate as much as possible.

By themadgardener , 4 August 2020

Found this in my garden in the spring and it is called a single tree hook. It is where a horse's harness attaches to a single tree which allows a horse to pull a wagon, plow, or other implement. It also hardly qualifies as coming from an ancient civilization as horses were commonly used, in day to day life, in the early parts of the 20th century! Just serves as a reminder that while today we expect our online orders to be delivered, from the other side of the country, in two days that it was not that long ago that visiting your nearest large city would have taken that long!

By themadgardener , 3 August 2020

Armenian cucumbers are a type of cucumber that is closely related to a muskmelon. It is a long slender fruit (having them a yard/meter long is quite common) although like most fruits/veggies they taste better if picked earlier. Not to mention myself and two boys can't eat something a yard long! On Thursday evening I did not notice a single plant with fruit on it, a few days later (Monday) I found several growing with one of them being a yard long! Needless to say I was quite excited! I cut up the smaller one for lunch!

By themadgardener , 29 July 2020

Although we started eating them straight out of the gardens earlier this week I did my first major harvest this evening after work! Time to start snapping and break out the vacuum sealer!

By themadgardener , 25 July 2020

An advantage of growing potatoes in straw/hay is that you can harvest them easily without disrupting the entire plant. Quite a bit of summer left so I can leave the rest of them in the hay until later!

By themadgardener , 20 July 2020

There is a lot you can do with zucchini but one of my favorite ways is to eat it battered!

For this recipe you will need eggs, seasoning salt, olive oil (other cooking oils will work), and flour (I used my Gluten Free Flour Blend but back when gluten was still an option I used regular wheat flour.

By themadgardener , 16 July 2020

I used 1/2 quart jars, made some brine with water, vinegar, salt, and sugar. Through in two cloves of garlic and some dill!

I will know in a week or so how they taste!

8 cups water
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup + 1 Tbsp pickling salt
6 cups distilled white Vinegar (5% acidity)

Put in hot water bath for 15 minutes.

By themadgardener , 16 July 2020

If you don't love play dough you don't know how to love!

Here is my recipe for gluten free play dough. While play dough is not something that should be eaten it can still be be a concern for kids with celiacs as a single "crumb" of gluten can be a concern.

3 cups flour (see for the flour blend I use)
1/3 cup salt
1/4 cup oil
1 1/4 cups hot water
If your blend does not already have xanthan gum then add 1.5 teaspoons

By themadgardener , 16 July 2020

Time for me to figure out how to make pickles, I have never done that before so this will be a new adventure!