The FarmMade Cookbook: Traditional Recipes from America's Farmers
By Patti Johnson-Long and FarmMade
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About this ebook
Ancestral in nature, we all long to “get back to our roots.” Nostalgia is real for present-day farm pilgrims, one or two generations removed from the farm. It’s a longing we all experience while driving in the countryside or chatting it up at our local farmers’ market. A longing that compels us to want to be a farmer . . . or at the very least cook like one!
A time capsule of food, craft, and tradition, The FarmMade Cookbook shares seventy-five multi-generational recipes from farms all over the country. Hailing from New England, the Deep South, the Midwest, Southwest, and Northwest, each authentic farm-made recipe represents its region’s unique farming culture. Recipes are paired with each farm’s unique story of resilience and connection with the land, resulting in a tangible agrarian gift to us all.
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Book preview
The FarmMade Cookbook - Patti Johnson-Long
Northwest Region
No-Pectin Blueberry Lime Jam
Homemade Stock
Blueberry Corn Salad
Chicken Tortilla Soup
Kale-Chive Pesto
Apple Dumplings
The Neill Meal
Dutch Oven Baked Beans
Greek Yogurt and Leek Dip
Madeleines
Sunshine Soup
Lavender Lemonade
Homestead Lasagna
The Ranching Brunette’s Thirty-Minute No-Rise Hamburger Buns
Mulberry Pie
No-Pectin Blueberry Lime Jam
We, here at FarmMade, are continuously inspired by the seasonal rhythms and simple joys of farm life. Blueberry season in the Pacific Northwest is a blue-tiful time of year that always inspires us to scout out new varieties to grow ourselves or pick from local organic farms. This jam can be summer-in-a-jar if blueberries are joyfully picked and processed at the peak of freshness. We love pectin jams, but the absence of pectin in this recipe allows the jam to cook for a longer period of time and achieve a deeper flavor. This recipe also works well as a small-batch refrigerator or freezer jam and will complement any pantry or stand!
Serves 6 half pints | Prep time: 10 minutes | Cook time: 20 minutes | Processing time: 15 minutes
Ingredients
4½ cups blueberries
5 cups sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice,
plus zest to taste
1 teaspoon butter
Instructions
© Chris Johnson
1. Wash the blueberries well. Place them in a large saucepan with sugar and lime juice and zest.
2. Gently bring to a simmer while stirring occasionally.
3. When the sugar has dissolved, mash the blueberries with a spoon, or potato masher if desired. You may choose to leave a few blueberries whole if preferred.
© Chris Johnson
4. Increase heat, bringing the blueberries to a rolling boil. Turn heat to medium-low. The mixture should still be simmering, but slow. Set your timer for 20 minutes. Stir constantly to prevent caramelization.
© Chris Johnson
5. Toward the end of 20 minutes, lift the spoon up out of the mixture to see if its coated. If not, continue to boil for a few more minutes and check again.
6. Once the jam has thickened to the right consistency and right before you are ready to take the jam off the heat, add butter. The foam on top will dissolve and give you that glossy golden shine.
7. Let the jam cool. Ladle into warm sterilized jars, leaving ¼-inch space from the top. Use a clean sterilized knife or spatula to move the jam around a bit. This process will remove any air pockets. Wipe the rim of the jar with a clean paper towel.
8. Process for 15 minutes in a pot of boiling water or a water-bath canner.
© Chris Johnson
© Rachel Getsinger, a.k.a. Farmer Rachel
Homemade Stock
On a brisk fall or winter day, nothing smells like comfort quite like a simmering pot of stock! After fifteen years of owning Kookoolan Farms in Yamhill, Oregon, my tips for making homemade stock (read on for the best ones) have been requested most for our farm newsletters. My best advice (paraphrased from Charlie Papazian) is to just relax and don’t worry.
Serves 1 pot | Prep time: 15 minutes | Cook time: 24–48 hours
Ingredients
1–2 pounds fresh or frozen bones and leftover meat
1–2 pounds vegetables and herbs (such as 1 carrot unpeeled and roughly quartered, 1 or a few stalks of celery, 1 or 2 small onions roughly halved, and a handful of fresh parsley)
Instructions
1. Fill your largest pot about half full of water.
2. Add the bones and leftover meat, then the vegetables and herbs. Bring just to a boil, then turn down the heat to a slow simmer.
3. Sometime tonight or tomorrow, strain it, skim the fat off the top, and continue to simmer it until the reduced stock fits in a quart-sized canning jar. Write species and date on the lid (for example, beef stock, 9/30/21
), and put it in the refrigerator, where it will set up solid like Jell-O™.
4. To use your stock, add a spoonful to a cup or two of water to replace a can of store-bought stock. Basic stock is really that easy, so why do people think it’s so complicated? Maybe because there are so many tips. My top fifteen are below.
Farmer Chrissie’s Fifteen Best Tips for Making Homemade Stock
1. You just spent all day making your lovely jar of stock. This is a precious thing that should not be allowed to go bad in the refrigerator. To prevent it from ever going bad, just reboil your stock once a month and write the new date on the lid. Many, many times I have kept a jar of stock for more than six months by simply reboiling it every 3 to 4 weeks. When you are roasting meat in the oven, for example, simply take the lid off your canning jar and place it in the oven alongside your roast (ensuring it does not tip over and spill). If the stock completely liquefies and is above 140°F for more than 30 minutes, it will be pasteurized and good for another 3 to 4 weeks.
2. Never buy fresh, new, high-quality vegetables for making stock. It’s a complete waste of your food budget. Instead, use a permanent marker to write stock
on a freezer bag, and keep the bag in your freezer. Tonight, when you’re chopping onions for dinner, put the tops, bottoms, skins, and first couple of layers that you peel into the bag. When you strip the leaves off parsley, do not throw away the stems. Instead, put them in your freezer bag. Making carrot sticks for the kids’ lunches? Put the carrot tops, bottoms, and peelings into your freezer bag. Sliced mushrooms for your breakfast omelet? Put the stems and trimmings in the freezer bag. Cleaning up after dinner? Put the bones from your roasts, steaks, or chicken carcass into the freezer bag. Is your freezer bag full? Perfect, time to make stock. Shake everything into the pot and add water. Put your empty freezer bag back in the freezer to reuse.
3. Homemade stock costs basically nothing to make. Did you notice? You just replaced a $50 case of canned stock with homemade stock that cost you almost nothing. The bones are free when you save them from your roasts and steaks and roast chicken carcasses, and the vegetable scraps are free because you were going to throw them away.
4. Increased depth of flavor comes from pre-roasting the bones. While this is true, please do not let this fussy extra step be the reason you’re not making homemade stock. It is not necessary, but it’s not hard and is great to do on a cold day when the house needs the extra heat anyway. The house will smell divine. Turn on your oven to, say, 350°F (the exact temperature really doesn’t matter). Put any new, leftover, fresh, or frozen bones on a cookie sheet. Put them in the oven and roast until well-browned, maybe an hour. Then, follow the recipe above.
5. In homemade stock, the minerals come primarily from the bones (as opposed to the muscle meat, connective tissue, or vegetables). Those minerals are locked in there pretty good, which is what give you or the animal such nice, strong bones. You can help release the minerals by adding an acid, such as apple cider vinegar, mead vinegar, kombucha vinegar, malt vinegar, a beer, a glass of red or white wine, or mead. The longer you simmer the bones (up to three days), the more minerals will leach out of the bones and into your stock.
6. While I often simmer stock for three days, usually because I’m too lazy or too busy to finish it up on day one or two, I always shut off the stove when I leave the house or when we go to bed for the night. Put the lid on the pot, turn off the heat, and walk away. It will be fine for up to twenty-four hours. Really. When you get home, or get up in the morning, turn the heat on high to return it to a boil, then reduce to a simmer and continue. Another important safety step, especially if you have young children in the house: It’s better to have your pot at the back of the stove, not the front. Using the front burner would make it much more likely that a young child (or anyone else) will knock it over.
7. If you are ardently working to correct a mineral deficiency in someone you love (that list should include yourself, by the way), you can smash the bone with a hammer before simmering, and again after simmering for twenty-four hours, to extract even more nutrition from the bones.
8. Collagen comes from the connective tissue (as opposed to the bones or flesh meat or vegetables). These connective tissues include tendons, ligaments, spinal discs, combs, and wattles, which is why heads, feet, hooves, backs, wings, knucklebones, and drumsticks all make great stock. (Sorry for mixing species in my list there.) These items improve the texture and mouthfeel of stock so much that I would not even bother to make homemade stock without them. Silky, viscous broth that sets up in the refrigerator like Jell-O™? This is how you get that. My fingernails are so strong that I use them daily in lieu of a screwdriver. No kidding.
9. Don’t be tempted to make a stock just from naked bones, or just from chicken feet. While the resulting broth will have lots of mineral content, it won’t taste like, well, a stock .