Posts Tagged ‘farm’

Fresh Apple Cider

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

This blog has been quite for several months now. Life was incredibly busy. But now that the busy holidays are past I can fill you in on all the great food and farm happenings that you missed.

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One of my favorite food adventures this fall was making apple cider. I’ve looked at cider presses before, but could never justify buying one. It’s one thing to buy a butter churn that you use once a year. It’s small and relatively inexpensive and looks really nice displayed on a shelf in the kitchen. But an apple press is a completely different animal so to speak. It is large and expensive and unless you have room for a giant coat rack it isn’t easy to store the other 51 weeks of the year. So even though I love to make things myself, especially my food, I really can’t justify this purchase.

This year at the store we carried fresh pressed cider from Musgrave Orchard outside of Bloomington. It was wonderful. Nothing beats the taste of fresh cider that has not been heat pasteurized. It is complex and sweet and tart and so incredibly full of flavor. We will certainly carry their cider again next year, however it made me wish once again for my own cider press.

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Now at the store we carried over 20 varieties of apples and we had plenty in stock. At the end of the season we had about 20 various bushels left over. I shared my wish for a cider press and DJ came to the rescue. His neighbors had a press and he arranged for us to use it. You will not find them in the pictures because they are Amish, but they were more than generous. They not only lent us the press, but they also helped with the work and made snacks for us to eat. We made sure to leave them with plenty of cider, but we definitely got the better deal.

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So one glorious day this fall we washed and mashed and pressed apples. We strained the juice and drank our fill and bottled the rest. What we couldn’t use right away we froze. When you take it out and thaw it, it tastes like the day it was bottled. Our cider making was very energy efficient. The only energy used was our muscles. Our cider is unpasteurized and un-inspected and  unsanitary according to modern beliefs. It would never be approved for sale. But, it is delicious and wonderful and we’ve enjoyed every drop.

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Below are more pictures. I also have links to Musgrave Orchard and to a great do it yourself cider press that I may just have to try someday. And who knows, maybe someday we will have our own official and inspected cider to sell.

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Doubting the Persimmon Seeds

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

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A view across the pond.

One of our favorite family activities each fall is checking the persimmon seeds. Our neighbor has many prolific persimmon trees and she generously provides us with persimmons each year. She also taught us about the persimmon seeds. The legend says that if you crack the seed open you will find either a knife, a spoon or a fork inside. If you find a knife it will be a cold winter with cutting winds. A spoon will bring heaps of snow. A fork is a split in the weather with both mild and severe spells.

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The Double Masted Oak in the distance.

We have tried this experiment each year since we moved to Indiana, and each year the seeds have been spot on. It is actually the epicotyl or small plant part of the seed and every year it has a distinct shape. We always check several seeds and each year all the seeds  have an identical shape.  One year it’s a fork, the next a spoon.

Now keep in mind that when we moved here we were told that in Columbus you will get 2 inches of snow 2 times a year and it will last for 2 days. For the most part this has been true. Big snows are unusual and they usually melt right away.

Well this fall it was a spoon. The kids rejoiced. They started guessing how soon they would have a snow day. The last time we found a spoon we had a record two feet of snow just before Christmas. The kids have never had so much fun.

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Two very happy girls.

We’ll we waited and waited. We had inches of rain and bitter cold. The pond froze 6 inches thick. I told the kids maybe the seed was wrong. Maybe we just had a lot of rain, after all if the inches of rain had been snow it would have been feet of snow. Maybe this would be the year we never used the sleds, only the ice skates. The kids are very happy mom was wrong.

We had 6 inches of snow followed by an inch of ice topped with 6 inches of snow. The driveway is a toboggan run. We went sledding until we were exhausted. When the light peaks out from behind the clouds, the layer of ice in the middle of the snow is the bright blue you see in the glaciers of Alaska.

I agree with the kids. I’m glad mom was wrong.  Every winter needs a day like today.

Winter Garden at Double Oak Farm

Winter Garden at Double Oak Farm