I can haz break naow?
Jul. 12th, 2008 09:39 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Dear Mother Nature/Higher Power/Whom It May Concern,
It's NOT that I don't appreciate your Bounty. I seriously do. I love having a ready supply of fresh, organic veg. But...
do they really all have to come at once regardless of sowing times? I'm drowning under a mountain ofmixed metaphors produce here...
I love cauliflower, I really do. Here's a cauliflower:

It's the size of a soccer ball.
I have six of them sitting in my kitchen, waiting to get bagged up and frozen.
I'm also dealing with the Euro mountain of peas, broad beans, carrots, lettuce (what the hell is here to do with lettuce?), strawberries and courgettes (zucchini).
And I'm balefully eying up the raspberries, broccoli, syboes (spring onions, scallions), early onions (red and white) that won't keep that well, cabbage and salad potatoes.
And please don't get me started on the plums...
::sigh:: Summer has its drawbacks.
And the weather's shite too :-(
It's NOT that I don't appreciate your Bounty. I seriously do. I love having a ready supply of fresh, organic veg. But...
do they really all have to come at once regardless of sowing times? I'm drowning under a mountain of
I love cauliflower, I really do. Here's a cauliflower:

It's the size of a soccer ball.
I have six of them sitting in my kitchen, waiting to get bagged up and frozen.
I'm also dealing with the Euro mountain of peas, broad beans, carrots, lettuce (what the hell is here to do with lettuce?), strawberries and courgettes (zucchini).
And I'm balefully eying up the raspberries, broccoli, syboes (spring onions, scallions), early onions (red and white) that won't keep that well, cabbage and salad potatoes.
And please don't get me started on the plums...
::sigh:: Summer has its drawbacks.
And the weather's shite too :-(
no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 11:47 am (UTC)Oh, and let's see...I'll take one of the cauliflowers and a head of lettuce.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 08:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-14 12:45 am (UTC)From The Savory Way, by Deborah Madison:
Pickled Red Onion Rings
The onions lose their harshness and bite and are infused with pink within 15 minutes or so. They’ll keep for weeks, refrigerated.
Pouring the boiling water over the onions softens them and hastens the curing process. You can omit this step if you prefer a crisper onion, but it will take several hours for the color to infuse. (My note: I skip this step because I’m lazy.)
Makes 2 cups
1 pound firm red onions
1 quart boiling water, approximately
1 cup white wine vinegar
1 cup cold water
1 tablespoon sugar
several pinches of salt
2 bay leaves
10 peppercorns, lightly crushed
marjoram or thyme branches or a few pinches of dried (I use thyme)
Thinly slice the onions into rounds. Separate the rounds and put them in a colander. Pour the boiling water over them, then put the onions in a bowl with the rest of the ingredients. Cover and keep refrigerated.
(I love to put them in tuna sandwiches, they give a nice tang to them.)
no subject
Date: 2008-07-14 08:21 am (UTC)