Monday, July 4, 2011

Coffee, a new beginning

Coffee...mmmmm, it is so many thing isn't it?  It is comforting...cold misty mornings become warm and cozy, good conversation always comes when shared with a friend.  There are so many ways to prepare it, so many beans to try. A shot of espresso prepared by a barista is so different from grocery store brands filled with coffee mate or flavored creamers. I think they invite different emotional responses.  I remember my Mr. Coffee machine and paper filters.  All I wanted was that quick burst of energy, never mind the taste of it. The rituals now involve conversation, indulgence of taste, and of sharing that inner most part of ourselves with another, all while we sip.  Now it is fantastic brew, and it seems to indulge the senses from distant lands.  I feel as if I have been there and back again to these places of origin. It is breakfast or dessert, an accompaniment or replacement for food at any hour.
 It comes with delectable additions.  You can get the addition of sweetened condensed milk, chocolate, caramel...you can have it iced, with steamed milk, or blended.  But, oh, the aroma...it is a heady aroma and whether or not you drink coffee, it still transports you to distant lands, to patios of the other worlds.
Gone are the days when you could just drink your coffee on the run before work, or on a late drive home to help you stay awake.  It has developed into a lifestyle that we indulge in and bring greatness into relationships by sharing this little brown delight together.  I know I have sat for hours with friends just talking about any and everything and the world seems to be a little kinder, ideas seems to be clearer, and dreams develop ever more, over coffee:)

My granola

While I love granola, I am astounded by what the markets sell, and at the price...and how much you get for that price.  There are so many things you can add and it is quite a healthy snack.  We eat it for breakfast with organic yogurt, and sometimes a little fresh organic fresh fruit.

3 cups rolled organic oats
1 cup organic barley flakes
1 cup sprouted Chia seeds* see note on this below
1 cup raw sunflower seeds
1/2 cup organic olive oil
1/2 cup mesquite local honey
1 tablespoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon Celtic salt
1/3 cup brown sugar
1 cup organic pumpkin seeds
1 cup organic mixed nuts (almonds, cashews, walnuts, pecans)
1 cup shredded unsweetened coconut
1/3 cup dried cranberries
1/4 cup organic raisins

Directions:
Preheat oven to 250 degrees
In a very large bowl, combine the oats, nuts, coconut, brown sugar and Chie seeds.  In a separate bowl, combine honey, oil, vanilla and salt.  Pour honey mixture over oat mixture and mix well to combine.  Spread onto 2 sheet pans lined with parchment paper.  You can sprinkle a little maple syrup over the top if you desire it to be a little sweeter..additionally you can do this with just a tad more brown sugar to make it sparkle.  Cook for 1 hour and 15 minutes, stirring every 15 minutes.  Remove from the oven and transfer to a large bowl and add dried fruit and mix until combined.  This makes a very large container, and kept sealed tightly, will keep for a couple of weeks.

Info on Chia taken from the web source listed.
Organic chia powder or seeds is unique in its high oil content and happens to be one of the richest vegetable sources for the essential high omega 3 powder fatty acid. Organic chia powder has approximately three to ten times the oil concentrations of most grains and one and a half to two times the protein concentrations of other grains. These oils and unsaturated fatty acids are the essential oils that human body needs to help emulsify and absorb the fat-soluble vitamins like vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin E and vitamin K. Again, organic chia powder is rich in unsaturated fatty acid that is linoleic acid that human body can not manufacture, claims www.agcommoditiesinc.com. Organic chia powder provides with a good source of unsaturated fatty acids that are important for respiration of vital organs and make the oxygen transport easier. In this way organic chia powder indirectly helps the blood stream to reach all cells, tissues and organs. Organic chia powder also helps the lubrication of all cells and combines high omega 3 powder fatty acid with protein and cholesterol to form living membranes that hold the body cells together. Organic chia powder also contains high omega 3 powder that is essential for normal glandular activity especially the activity of adrenal gland and the thyroid gland. The omega-3 and other unsaturated fatty acid of organic chia powder, actually, nourish the cell and are essential for healthy mucous membranes and nerves. Organic chia powder is a rich source of calcium also. When sprouted, organic sprouted chia powder becomes a dream food. Chia seed absorbs almost nine times its weight in water in less than ten minutes. Moreover, in sprouted condition, organic chia seeds become more useful.
Sprouting is a stage when the organic chia seeds provide optimum nutrition in the form of more readily digestible and absorbable vitamins, minerals, amino acids, complete protein and antioxidants. As it happens to be a living cell, organic sprouted chia seed contains hydrophilic colloids (a watery, gelatinous, glue-like substance) that are essential substances of cell life. When powdered, organic sprouted chia powder contains these hydrophyllic colloids, states www.agcommoditiesinc.com. This hydrophyllic colloidal property of organic sprouted chia powder helps in the digestion of any food and thus is helpful to the patients suffering from sour stomach and having problem in the digestion of raw fruits and vegetables.
http://www.agcommoditiesinc.com/articles/organic-sprouted-chia-powder.php
Info taken from the site listed. 

Heirloom tomatoes, and my favorite store

While shopping at my favorite store in the 4th Avenue district of Tucson, I came across this humongous heirloom tomato. I usually wait all year to find this kind so I was delighted to see them. This store has organic produce, and a lot of it is grown locally.  This particular tomato weighed 2 1/2 pounds and my estimated cost would have been $17.50.  I think this is a little excessive for sure.  These tomatoes cost about 6.99 a pound.  Did I buy it?  No...but I think of the salsa I could have made from this one tomato, and I know it would have been delish!  I am growing my own organic tomatoes but do not have this variety, although it is one of my favorites.  I just thought it was a fabulously beautiful tomato.  Mostly I find organic tomatoes at farmer's markets for $2 a pound and this pretty much stays true all year round.  I wonder what the prices are in other parts of the world.....

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Jeff's garden

Today we went to Jeff's (my son in case anyone does not know) and I started to pick tomatoes.  He has I bet over a hundred plants so it was fun to see which ones I could name.  I was surprised to see my favorite one already ready to pick because it is a late bloomer and we usually don't harvest them until later in August.  This variety is called Coyote and is small and yellow, and sweet as honey!  I also picked many others, and was so tired after I sealed the cedar raised beds when I got home (and after almost getting heat stroke today, no kidding...it was 112) that I did not even eat any.

I also picked mesquite beans.  Jeff reminded me not to ever pick them from off of the ground as they get moldy, but there were plenty on the trees.  I think it was a perfect time for them.  They smell like sweet hay!  I hope to be able to keep them long enough to take them to the annual flour grinding day, in August I think sometime,  and make some flour out of these.  I should definitely go get some more because I don't think it will amount to very much.  I could try to grind my own, but I never have so not sure how I would do that.  Maybe my food processor?  I will for sure put pictures up here if I do.

No recipes or pics tonight...off to bed to ponder tomorrows day.  I have a sick kitty so I will be sending good thoughts to her and hope she is well tomorrow.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Roses

These were from my garden.  I steam distilled them to make my own rose water.  Recipes for skin care coming later.
Well, it is almost the Fourth of July so I decided to make a pie.  I had been craving some sweet flaky crust lately, but could not pin down what the filling should be.  It is blueberry season, I remember from my travels last year.  We made it a point to drive to as many local farms as possible and eat mostly locally along the way.  It is a good time of year for organic fruit and veggies, especially if you travel and find the fresh local stuff.  Here in the desert we don't quite have access to local cherries or apricots like they do in Utah, but we do have grapes and melons like nowhere else!  Quite soon the Willcox peaches will be ripe and ready to pick. I vowed to pick a bundle this time and actually do something with them instead of cutting and freezing them for smoothies like I did last time.  I am not sure what this means exactly, but I am on a quest.  I have found new uses for herbs and plants which may include peaches, I am not sure.  The quest is to make all of my own...everything.  Mostly right now I am concentrating on hair and body care products, as well as  laundry, and cleaning aides.  I started with a bunch of essential oils I had been collecting, then purchased some carrier oils and then looked one day to find I had quite a stash.  I had apricot kernel, avocado and jojoba as well as sweet almond oil.  THEN, I found many recipes using rose petals, rose water, and rose hips and I just happened to have roses in season so I collected all of the petals I could find, so I made my first batch of rose water!  This is what started it...looking for uses for everything I had.  I found you can make many things out of the ingredients and food in your own refrigerator, pantry and garden.  I can't wait to write down some of those recipes, but for now, tonight blueberry pie was the main attraction.  One day, when someone actually reads this, it will be fun to exchange ideas about all of this, and even recipes too.