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Originally Posted by
FTIII
I do like your idea of canning with a small hot pepper what kind?
Whatever you can get in the bottle!
ETA:

Originally Posted by
FTIII
I do like your idea of canning with a small hot pepper what kind? and will darn sure give that one a try. Some of the best growing veges we can grow here are the greens due to the cooler nights in this part of the country. I'm always looking for new things to try and your pepper in greens is a new one to me, sounds great.
Having re-read your post, the pepper vinegar isn't added during canning. It's added after cooking! Use whatever peppers you like, mild to wild. When the juice is gone out of the jar, add some vinegar again to whatever peppers are left. Let sit as long as possible and it ought to be as good or better the next time or three! A few jars in rotation works well. The flavor's good even after the peppers get a bit "less than fresh" looking.
Last edited by jmoore; 03-29-2012 at 09:57 AM.
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03-24-2012 09:03 PM
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Where I grew up the collards were chopped up before cooking and then removed from the water afterward. Just before serving they were put into a skillet with a little bit of lard and stirred as they were refried. Hard to beat; lots of vitamin K, so if you're on an anticoagulant you might want to limit your intake or your blood will turn to mud. The water they were cooked in is referred to as "pot liquor" and is drunk from a cup, usually with the help of some good cornbread. The only thing which will get me to the table quicker is a good squirrel gravy over my grits and eggs.
---------- Post added at 07:32 AM ---------- Previous post was at 07:24 AM ----------
That one is a Columbine.
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Many decades ago my first wife's family had a small alfalfa seed farm in SW ID and asparagus grew like weeds there; hardly anyone cared about it but my wife and I would drive the distance from Mtn. Home in our MGB and fill the small boot with brown-paper bags of asparagus to take home and share with friends. I still love asparagus above all other kinds of 'greens'. Beet greens are another favorite of mine; local 'green grocer' saves them for me - folks up here don't want to haul them home on the beets. Rutabaga (peel on a lathe with an spokeshave, simmer for 2 months) and kohlrabi are favorites for us old-timers, along with parsnips and turnips up here in northern MN. I love Brussel sprouts but my wife won't tolerate being cooked when she is in the house (same for fine liver and onions). jmoore; I'm looking to see your fabulous tomato garden again this year! So, why do I live up here if I so love garden procuce? It's the Loons and Mergansers and Wood Ducks (not that I eat them - I provide the nesting).
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Aspen catkins are developing. Ice went off the lake one week ago, earliest ice-out we've ever had. I can recall ice still thick enough to walk on at fishing openers (typically Mothers' Day) for many years. Had a storm a few days before that drove 10" thick half-ton slabs of it up onto my shore-line. Crocus are peeking up now through the just-thawed ground.
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Anybody hungry? How bout some BBQ'd deer loin and fried onions fresh from the garden seasoned with a little bacon.
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Have had to split up the onion clumps again. Now they're going to seed. Smallish, but not too firey.
Oh, and it's snowing. -Dogwood petals! A blizzard of white and pink.
Last edited by jmoore; 04-03-2012 at 12:48 AM.
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Still freezing here at night. Must have 2 foot of snow to melt off yet. I wish that global warming would show it's face in Fairbanks!
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What type of vaccum sealer do you have JM? I've been using the ZIPLOC vacuum bags for several years. They work ok but are'nt much for long term storage. By the time deer season opens up in August my stocks from the previous year are gettting low anyway so no real dramas there. Soon as I get a spare moment I'll post some pics of Asparagus when it's fully grown for those who've never seen it.
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