Five Good Reasons to Raise Rabbits

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Five Reasons to Raise Rabbits:

  1. Low Cost
  2. Great Manure
  3. Easy to Breed
  4. Taste Good
  5. It’s Legal!

If you ask me rabbits are second only to chickens in terms of the best livestock to raise. They are small and quiet and very inexpensive to house and feed. They only eat a ¼ cup of food each day. Another bonus is that rabbit manure is what you call cold which means it’s ready to go right into the garden with no composting time required. It’ll really boost the nitrogen level in your soil too without burning your plants.

Rabbits are relatively easy to breed. You will want to house your does separate from your buck. When you’re ready for them to breed, you just put a doe in with the buck and let them do their thing. Don’t put him into her cage though because does are territorial and she might try to attack. When the buck is finished breeding, he’ll squeal and fall off of the doe’s back.

After breeding, if all goes well, your doe will kindle in 5 weeks. Four days before she’s due, put some bedding in her nest box. She should begin to nest and you’ll know the kits are on the way when she pulls out the fur on her belly for them. This makes the nest nice and soft and makes it easy for the kits to find their momma’s milk.

Rabbits are a great source of lean protein. They should be prepared at about 5-6 weeks old. At this age you can expect them to weigh somewhere around 3 lbs, maybe more depending on the breed. Rabbit tastes wonderful when cooked in the crock pot, stewed with homegrown veggies or pan fried with a mustard wine sauce. I have a great rabbit recipe posted on my Real Food Recipes page.

So if you can’t raise chickens for some silly reason like its against the law or what have you, give rabbits a try. Just tell your neighbors they are your pets. Lord knows no one wants to live next door to a farmer!

This post is linked to Homestead Barn Hop

Mango Lassi

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Here is one more fabulous real food recipe you can make with goat milk and goat milk kefir or yogurt:

Delicious (modified) Mango Lassi

All you need is …

  • 1 mango (peeled and chopped)
  • 1 cup kefir
  • 1/4 – 1/2 cup milk
  • 1 tsp honey –> more if you like it sweet
  • a few shakes of tumeric

Combine ingredients, mix in a blender and enjoy!

My friend Kristen recently turned me on to making mango lassis. If you’re like me, you’ve never heard of a lassi before so I’ve taken the liberty of providing some info about this amazing beverage I found on Wikipedia:

Lassi (Punjabi: ਲੱਸੀ, Urdu: لسی, Hindi: लस्स) is a popular and traditional Punjabi yogurt-based drink of the Indian Subcontinent. It is made by blending yogurt with water or milk and Indian spices.[1] Traditional lassi (also known as salted lassi, or, simply lassi) is a savory drink sometimes flavored with ground roasted cumin while sweet lassi on the other hand is blended with sugar or fruits instead of spices.

In Dharmic religions, yogurt sweetened with honey is used while performing religious rituals. Less common is lassi served with milk and is topped with a thin layer of clotted cream. Lassis are enjoyed chilled as a hot-weather refreshment, mostly taken with lunch. With a little turmeric powder mixed in, it is also used as a folk remedy for gastroenteritis.

This post is linked to Fight Back Friday on Food Renegade and Hearth and Soul. please hop on over and check out these cool blog parties for Real Food lovers!

You know you’re a redneck when…

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I have “kill chickens” on my to do list this week, right there between “pay water bill” and “call CPA”.

USDA fines Missouri family $90k for selling a few rabbits without a license

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By Jonathan Strong

It started out as a hobby, a way for the Dollarhite family in Nixa, Mo., to teach a teenage son responsibility. Like a lemonade stand.

But now, selling a few hundred rabbits over two years has provoked the heavy hand of the federal government to the tune of a $90,643 fine. The fine was levied more than a year after authorities contacted family members, prompting them to immediately halt their part-time business and liquidate their equipment. Read full article…

June 2 protest planned for USDA $90K rabbit fine.

Fried Morels

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Well I may be a little late with this post but all that talk of poke sallet got me thinkin’ about wild food and next thing you know I had mushrooms on my mind. I didn’t know a thing about mushroom hunting until I met my husband. His folks are from Ohio where wild morels are a pretty big deal. Each spring his family takes to the woods in Vinton County with hopes of discovering these tasty morsels. Morels can be found across the US from April through mid June. They like to grow at the base of certain types of trees including elms and ash or in old apple orchards.

Here’s how our Ohio folks like to cook up a batch of morels:

First of all you’ve got to quarter your shrooms and soak them in salt water for several hours to get bugs off.

Then you drain them, pat ‘em dry and dredge them in seasoned (salt ‘n pepper) flour.

Then you fry ‘em up in butter and serve with steak and mashed potatoes or just eat them right out of the skillet.

While fried morels are a tasty springtime treat, my favorite thing about huntin’ for mushrooms is getting outside with my favorite peeps!

I’m linking this post to Hearth and Soul.

“Inmate Row” gives new meaning to outlaw farming

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Here’s an article I ran across yesterday in the Buffalo River Review while mulching my garden with newspaper (and getting a sunburn). Another perk of using newspaper mulch is you get to catch up on all the local happenings. This piece made me smile. Maybe I’m not such an outlaw farmer after all.

There was the coolest picture in the printed article and when I am able to find it again I will upload it here. It is of the jail’s scarecrow.

Vegetable Garden At The County Jail

Sheriff Tommy Hickerson and Chief Deputy Nick Weems want the community know that a vegetable garden has been started at the Perry County Jail. The garden will be maintained by both male and female prisoners who will be growing vegetables that will be eaten as part of the jailhouse meals, including cabbage, okra, corn, tomatoes, green beans, and squash. The benefits of the garden are that it will keep the prisoners active, they will produce fresh vegetables for their own meals, and it will result in cost savings for the county. See More…

Poke Sallet Scramble

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My friend at the feed store gave me this recipe. She and her husband drive around this time of year looking for wild patches of pokeweed. They love the stuff. She says the younger leaves make the best salad.

Oh, and I should mention that while pokeweed, including the roots and berries, has been widely used in folk remedies the entire plant especially the berries but also the tender greens, are considered toxic. That’s why you have to cook the tar out of it and drain off the water between boilings.

Poke Sallet Scramble:

Start with a mess of fresh poke greens

Shake debris from greens

Rinse twice

Parboil for 30 minutes

Drain

Parboil for another 30 minutes

Drain and squeeze dry

Heat bacon drippings in a skillet over med high heat

Add drained greens to hot bacon drippings and cook over med heat for several minutes

Lightly beat 12 eggs with ¼ cup sweet milk or goat milk

Pour egg mixture into skillet with greens and scramble until done

Here’s some more unverified info about pokeweed I found on wikipedia:

Since pioneer times, pokeweed has been used as a folk remedy to treat many ailments. It can be applied topically or taken internally. Topical treatments have been used for acne and other ailments. Internal treatments include tonsillitis, swollen glands and weight loss. Dried berries were ingested whole as a treatment for boils, taken 1 berry per day for 7 days. Grated pokeroot was used by Native Americans as a poultice to treat inflammations and rashes of the breast. Independent researchers are investigating phytolacca’s use in treating AIDS and cancer patients. Especially to those who have not been properly trained in its use, pokeweed should be considered dangerous and possibly deadly.

Ingestion of poisonous parts of the plant may cause severe stomach cramping, nausea with persistent diarrhea and vomiting, sometimes bloody, slow and difficult breathing, weakness, spasms, hypertension, severe convulsions, and death. However, consuming fewer than 10 uncooked berries is generally harmless to adults. Several investigators have reported deaths in children following the ingestion of uncooked berries or pokeberry juice. Severe poisonings have been reported in adults who ingested mature pokeweed leaves and following the ingestion of tea brewed from one-half teaspoonful of powdered pokeroot.

Pokeweed berries yield a red ink or dye, which was once used by aboriginal Americans to decorate their horses. Many letters written home during the American Civil War were written in pokeberry ink; the writing in these surviving letters appears brown. The red juice has also been used to symbolize blood, as in the anti-slavery protest of Benjamin Lay. A rich brown dye can be made by soaking fabrics in fermenting berries in a hollowed-out pumpkin.

 This post is linked to Hearth and Soul.

Farm Party Potluck

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The big day is almost here, my first ever farm party! At this point I am more nervous than excited but I keep telling myself to relax and have FUN with it because that’s the whole point right?

The purpose of the event is to bring our county’s farmers and small business owners together for an afternoon of music, games and farm fresh goodies. I got this idea about a year ago when I noticed in a local publication just how many small farmers there are in Hickman County. I thought how great it would be to network, share marketing ideas and customers, get advice and just plain get to know one another. Hence the farm party concept was born.

Here’s the picture I have in mind:

Yeah right.

At this point I am realizing how unprepared I am. With just a few days to go I still need to gather scarecrow making supplies for the children’s craft project, follow up with the bluegrass band (I’m beginning to fear they are unavailable that day), set up the horseshoe pit, decorate the photography area and touch base with the other farms to see who’s bringing what. Then there’s sprucing up the barn (hahahaha) and scouring the milk parlor. Last but not least I’ve got to set up a vendor’s area and create the backyard farming handouts for the info booth.

BTW, I’ll be serving radish leaf pesto, a recipe I got from Kris at Attainable Sustainable.

So there it is, my to-do list which was the main motivation for this post. Gotta go now, bye!

This post is linked to Homestead Barn Hop.

Senegalese Peanut Butter Tomato Sauce

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My friend Megan, who has a great blog called TheLoveofPete, showed me how to make this awesomely versatile sauce. Her Senegalese husband whips up this yummy stuff all the time and keeps it on hand for last minute meals. We called him on his cell from my kitchen in Duck River to get step by step instructions while he was driving up to NY.  It took a few calls due to poor connections but was totally worth it. I hope some of y’all will give this recipe a try. Its SO easy and you can find the ingredients at just about any grocery store which is great for me because I live in a food desert (wink wink) and all.

Senegalese Tomato Peanut Butter Sauce:

1/4 cup diced onion

3-4 cloves minced garlic

a bit of extra virgin olive oil

1 15 oz can tomato sauce

1 can tomato paste

1 cup water

1/2 cup peanut butter

Cayenne pepper to taste

Salt and pepper

In a medium saucepan saute onion and garlic in olive oil over medium high until soft. Add tomato paste and stir for 2 minutes. Add tomato sauce and stir until incorporated. Add water (we used 2 tomato paste cans full). Season with salt, pepper, and cayenne pepper or any other seasoning. I think a pinch of curry would be good too. Add peanut butter stirring until smooth. Simmer stirring occasionally until red oil begins to bubble up (15 min?)

Serve over brown rice and top with steamed sweet potatoes and broccoli.

This post is linked to This post is linked to Fight Back Friday on Food Renegade, Hearth and Soul and World Food Thursdays on helladelicious.

Whey Good Italian Feather Bread

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So you just made a batch of cheese and have a bunch of hot whey left over? Before you feed the whey to your dog or worse dump it down the drain, try making this easy, extra-yummy Italian Feather Bread.

I found this recipe in a cheese making kit from New England Cheese Making Company.

Italian Feather Bread Made with Whey

 

Ingredients:

2 packages of active dry yeast

1 Tbls granulated sugar

1 cup warm water (100-115* F)

1/3 cup butter, cut into small pieces

¾ cup hot whey or milk

2 tsp. salt

5 ½ to 6 cups all-purpose

1 egg white, lightly beaten

Cornmeal

Directions:

Stir the yeast, sugar, and warm water together in a large bowl. Let sit until yeast dissolves and starts to proof.

In the meantime melt the butter in the hot whey and let cool to lukewarm. Add salt and combine with yeast mixture.

Stirring vigorously with a wooden spoon, add the flour 1 cup at a time, until the dough almost comes away from the sides of the bowl. (Dough will be rather sticky).

Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured board. Use a large spatula to scrape under the flour and dough, fold the dough over and press it with your free hand. Continue until the dough has absorbed enough flour to be easy to handle. Knead for 2-4 minutes with well-floured hands.

When the dough is soft and smooth, let rest for 5 or 6 minutes. Divide in two.

Roll each half into a 12” X 8” rectangle. Starting from the wide end, roll this up quite tightly, pinching the seams as you roll.

Butter two baking sheets well and sprinkle with cornmeal. Place the loaves on the sheets and let them rise in a warm, draft free place until doubled in bulk, about 50-60 minutes. Brush with beaten egg white and bake in a preheated 425*F oven 30-40 minutes or until the loaves are a rich golden color and make a hollow sound when you tap the top with your knuckles. Cool on a rack and serve fresh.

This post is part of a blog hop called Fight Back Friday hosted by Food Renegade and Food Trip Friday and Barn Yard Hop on Homestead Revival

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