Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Rocky Acre Farm Bed & Breakfast

I am back at Blue Ledge Farm!  Last time I posted was before the big Rocky Acre trip, so I can update you on that...
For the past three years, my family has embarked upon the 1.5 hour drive (through the country, past the large signs pleading, "Repent!  God will forgive your sins!"  Ah, bible pushers...) to Mount Joy, in Lancaster, PA.  Our destination?  A little B&B/dairy farm called Rocky Acre.  There we find kittens to torment, male lambs to avoid, and some mean corn fritters.  We only stay for less than 24 hours, but it's always a good, albeit ethically questionable, time.  The majority of our stay is spent watching, petting, or rescuing the kittens.  It's sometimes hard to decide whether the owners run a cat farm or cow farm.  Grace, my 5-year-old niece, and other similarly aged guests at the farm run around trying to catch the kittens and trap them in a playhouse, where they run some sort of dubious cat day care.  We found the kids force feeding cat food to the kittens and then putting them down for naps.  My sister and I felt bad for the kitties, so we snuck into the playhouse and rescued a few of them.  The proprietors of the day care center were not fooled, however.  We had to fend them off with protests of, "But this is my kitty!" as they came with grasping hands to snatch the cats back to hellish captivity.  The way the children carried those poor baby cats!  Though I suppose if the kittens really didn't want to be handled, they would stay away from the kids.  
When we weren't involved with the cats, we collected eggs and fed the handfuls of hay to the goats and lamb.  My nephew, Carter, made the mistake of going inside their small pasture.  Their one male lamb butted Carter's 7-year-old butt all the way across the field, resulting in a very traumatized little boy who will probably hold a grudge against all sheep for the rest of his life.  I also hold this grudge.  Sheep are the smelliest, most frustrating, most unintelligent animals I have ever worked with.  And the males will butt you, which is really frightening until you realize that sheep are herbivores and they're not out for blood.  
My favorite part of staying at Rocky Acre (although I kind of hate supporting a commercial dairy) is feeding the baby bulls.  The guests aren't allowed to touch the heifers, because someday they will be milked, but the bulls are fair game.  If you get up early enough and wander across the street to the calf hutches, the vets will put you to work.  They fill giant baby bottles with yellow colostrum milk (the milk that their mothers produce right after pregnancy, full of antibodies and the like) and warm them up.  The bulls aren't quite experts at the whole bottle thing...they have trouble finding the nipple of the bottle and some of them can't figure out how to get the milk out.  It's all very cute though...even when one of the bulls butted me and I fell on my face.  Still cute.
Before I became a vegan, my second favorite part about Rocky Acre was the breakfast.  It's the most epic farm breakfast you can imagine.   Think scrambled eggs with cheese, cinnamon coffee cake, peach cobbler, pancakes, canadian bacon, corned beef hash, fruit, potatoes...it's absolutely insane.  But the crowning glory of this over-the-top breakfast is the corn fritters.  I have the recipe somewhere.  Made with boundless amounts of lard (I think) and cream and eggs and other such unvegan things, I can no longer partake in the joy that is corn fritters.  But I do remember them being crispy on the outside, soft on the inside, and perfectly sweet.  I miss them something terrible.  
Another year at Rocky Acre has come and gone, and my soul is satisfied, although not so much my stomach.  

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Burlington International Airport

I'm home!  On Thursday, I had to get up at 4 AM and take a taxi to the Burlington airport (because my car is STILL being fixed), and I got into the Philly airport around 8:30.
It's been busy at the farm!  We have a new intern, Clara, who is going to be with us for 10 days. So many interns!  The farm is crawling with them!  Since Clara is there, I am not just sitting around by myself all the time, which probably contributes to my spotty posting lately.  Sorry about that.  
What's new on the farm...let's see.  
Well, Wednesday would normally have been my day off, but since I am leaving for 5 days, I wanted to work.  It was pouring when I got up at 7:30.  When I asked Hannah what I should do, she suggested that I help Shannon catch all the piglets because they were going to be castrated.  I put on my boots and headed out in the thunder and lightening.  Hannah said that she and Shannon would catch the piglets and then hand them off to me and Clara.  We would then run up the steps and put them in a pen in the barn.  What they didn't mention was how bewildered the piglets and their mother looked and how LOUDLY the piglets screamed when they were grabbed.  It was not my kind of job.  I ran away and went to work in the cheese cave, organizing shelves of packing equipment.  Yes, give me a job that involves moving rolls of tape and stickers from one shelf to another.  I can handle that.  
Last night I went to see She & Him in concert with my best friend Stephania.  It was so cool to see Zooey Deschanel in person...it was like meeting a famous person!  Even though we didn't actually meet her.  She was wearing a sparkly light blue dress and a blue bow in her hair.  She also played the tambourine.  There is a video below, a stunning example of my film expertise.  This is the song "Black Hole."
Before I went to the concert, I went blueberry picking with my mommy.  We went to a place called Indian Orchards, which has become my new favorite place to pick fruit in the last few years.  They grow their produce sustainably and as organically as possible.  We also picked some peaches that smelled so sweet it was like inhaling summer.
Tomorrow is the big annual trip Rocky Acre Farm!  WOO!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

FRED THE BREAD STARTER

Hi-
I lend my sincere apology for the lateness of this post. You see- I am too preoccupied feeding, milking, harassing, and talking to goats that I have little time to reflect on my honest experience here in the glorious beauty of Leicester, Vermont. I like maple syrup. And things that don't involve meat but instead involve gymnastics and frozen fruit. and tempe. Tempe in fact has an h in it- or so I am told by Clara Dennis the coolest sexiest person alive- so... I enjoy tempehhh. That is pronounced as clearly as chevrrrreeee. That, if you don't know, is a pretentious cheese. Made from goats milk. And aged for 3 days. Then wrapped. And served to your lovely mouths with their tongues and teeth open to the new, orgasmically great cheese....taste.
Hope your life doesn't suck, and that you don't have to feed pigs wheyyyy all the time, 
sincerely,
apologetically,
lovingly,
Lisa. 



(this post was obviously not actually written by me.  love, the real Lisa.)

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

There is an Entire Watermelon in My Fridge.

I don't have a car.  
I won't have one for a few weeks.
I am going insane.  
The end.

In other news, there is a cantaloupe, a watermelon, and a bag of grapes in my refrigerator.  So I'm going insane, but at least I have lots of fruit!

Monday, July 14, 2008

Happy Bastille Day!

Hellooooo, dear readers.  I will update you on my recent life...
On Saturday, I went to the Middlebury market, as usual.  The day started out so slowly that we were legitimately afraid that we would go home with all of the cheese.  But it picked up quite a bit and we ended up doing well.  And I sold all my bread but one loaf!  Yay.  That night I went to Branbury Beach with Hannah, Greg, the kids, Greg's mom and stepfather, and Hannah's parents.  It was so nice to get in the water, which I haven't done yet this summer, surprisingly.  
I worked from 8-12 yesterday, putting together Lake's Edge and pouring Lake's Edge and Crottina.  Then Molly came to visit!  I introduced her to the goats, and they got along very well.  The cats took to her, too. 
Today, I worked from 8-12 flipping Crottina and putting together more Lake's Edge.  Whew!  I did afternoon chores with Tucker and we finished in RECORD TIME, 'cause we're awesome.  For dinner, I had broccoli and kale with chick peas.  I also roasted a small sweet potato and a beet from the garden!  It was SO good.  So sweet and beautifully colored.  
Mosquito season in Vermont is supposed to be from around May 15th - June 15th (I think), and it was really not bad at all.  I assumed we were safe from the mosquito plague after the June 15th deadline, but apparently I was wrong.  Lesson #1: Don't assume anything, especially if it involves Vermont and nature.  It has been raining a lot here, and all the standing water allowed lots of mosquitos to breed.  You can't really go outside without being bitten a few times.  It really sucks, because the weather is so beautiful.  Hopefully it won't last.  
In other, much happier news, Stephania is coming to visit!  She and her mom and brother are coming up on Friday.  Sam (Steph's brother) is going to be a junior in high school and he is looking at UVM, so they are stopping at the farm on their way to Burlington!  Woo!  
I put up a new song.  It's a Jack Johnson song, which means it's amazing, because the name Jack Johnson is synonymous with amazing.  Fo realz.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Michael Pollan, Bread, and Cake

Some of my boules!  Aren't they cute?

Today is bread day!  This means I wake up at 6 and put together 10 batches of dough, which takes me about 3 hours.  I don't know why it takes me so long...I'm going to have to figure out a way of shortening that process.  Because that's only the beginning.  About 6 hours after that, I have to shape the dough, let it rise again, and bake it.  The journey ends with me cleaning up the kitchen, absolutely worn out, surrounded by 30-40 crackly-crusted loaves of sourdough bread, at 10:00 PM.  All in all a good day.  I threw in some mould washing, cheese pricing, and a lot of  singing to the Rent soundtrack while I was alone in the cheese house.  It was intense.  
Last night I made a Gâteau au Citron using a recipe from Orangette.  A Gâteau au Citron is a French style yogurt cake with lemon.  It's nothing fancy, but it was really delicious.  

Gâteau au Citron, adapted from Orangette

1/2 cup plain soy yogurt (or regular yogurt)
1 cup Sucanat (or granulated sugar, or any kind of granulated sweetener.  Sucanat is unrefined cane sugar and therefore somewhat better for you)
3 large eggs (I actually used eggs, because they come from the chickens here that run around all day)
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp lemon zest
1/2 tsp powdered ginger
1/2 cup canola oil

Preheat oven to 350.  Grease a 9 inch round cake pan.

In a large bowl, mix together yogurt, sugar, and eggs.  Add flour, baking powder, and zest and stir until just combined.  Then add oil.  It'll seem like the oil will never combine, but keep stirring and it'll become a smooth batter.  Pour into pan and slide into the oven.  
Bake for 30-35 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean.  DON'T over bake, or I will punch you in the nose.
Let cool on rack for 20 minutes, and then turn out onto a rack.
This cake, we have found, is good with whipped cream and berries, or by itself with a glass of rice milk.  Or with peanut butter.  For breakfast or dessert.  Anyway, it's versatile and totally worth making.  I bet you could use sour cream instead of yogurt.  Just a thought.  

Right now, I am reading The Omnivore's Dilemma, by Michael Pollan.  You've probably heard of this book.  Or his last book, In Defense of Food.  I really think that everyone should read it, especially if you're reading this blog.  I  think Americans needs to be educated about food and what they're putting into their bodies.  This book explains what the hell is going on in this country in term of food, and demonstrates where and why agriculture, big corporations, and the government intersect.  Read it...right now.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Jeezum!


Picture:  The top of a wheel of Riley's Coat (a washed-rind hard cheese.  it's so delicious)

Today I made pesto.  

Basil
Arugula
Garlic
Chévre (fresh goat cheese)
Hazelnuts (or walnuts, or almonds)
Good Olive Oil
Salt

Puree basil, arugula, garlic, chévre, and hazelnuts in food processor or blender.  Slowly drizzle in oil while processing.  When smooth, add in some more chopped nuts, for texture...if you want.  Eat on pasta, on bread, by itself.

Today I woke up at 4:30, did morning chores, and then wrapped Lake's Edge and Camembrie in the cheese cave until I went crazy (approximately 5 hours).  Then I led the goats out to the woods; helped Greg fix the grain auger by handing him tools, fetching him Jesus nails, and being a human hammer; and watched the cats and kittens play.  The kittens are getting so big!  But they're still adorable beyond belief.  I wish they weren't so scared of me, because right now they run away when I try to play with them.  It makes me feel large and frightening, which I find insulting.
So remember I mentioned my near-death skidding off the road fiasco thing?  Well, I took my car in to get looked at yesterday, and they were like, "Um, were you driving this around for a week?  This car is so screwed up, what's wrong with you?"  I mean, it was making a rather odd noise when I accelerated, but I didn't think it was a problem...but apparently some things were rubbing together that shouldn't have been, and other things were twisted in odd directions.  So they took my car, and I was left car-less in Rutland, Vermont.  I had to take a bus back.  I no longer have a car.  Which will be interesting.  I'll definitely be eating a lot of garden fresh produce.
Tomorrow is my day off!  I plan to go to the lake and swim, because it's gonna be a hot one.  

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Great Googly Moogly!

I am sitting down.  That may not seem like a big deal to you, but it's something that hasn't been much a part of my life in the past 48 hours.  You see, Hannah and Greg have switched placed with me; they are in Pennsylvania visiting family and I am here in Vermont on the farm.  They left at about noon on Friday and will be back sometime today...I think.  What I've been finding myself doing most is feeding.  Feeding the fire, feeding Connie, feeding the starter, feeding the pigs, feeding the goats, feeding myself.  Everything needs to eat.  
Friday wasn't too bad...I spend almost the whole day baking 40 loaves of bread, half boules (picture is not mine) and half baguettes, mixing in a little bit of mould-washing and cheese-pricing when I wasn't kneading or shaping or freaking out that I was doing it wrong.  It was Saturday that was really killer...I woke up at 4:00 to do chores and was done by about 7:00.  Then Tucker came and we got together the coolers full of cheese to take to the market.  I was going to Middlebury and he was going to Rutland.  Somehow we managed to fit 2 coolers, 2 plastic tubs, 2 tables, 40 loaves of bread, and a tent in my little Jetta.  So I drove to the market, set everything up, and then realized that I forgot the tub containing the most important things: the cash box, the cuttings boards for samples, the tablecloths, etc.  I was freaking out for about 5 minutes, and then decided to go back and get it.  So I drove all the way back to the farm, hit the ground running, grabbed the tub, and drove back to the market.  I was only about half an hour late.  Whew!  While at the market, I sold all my bread but two baguettes!  Greg's bread reputation precedes me, but hopefully people will continue to buy.  We also sold quite a bit of cheese.  It was pretty busy because of the holiday weekend.  
I came back to the farm after that and ate lunch...at like, 2:30, and then at 3:30 I started afternoon chores.  I sat down for a total of one 1 hour on Saturday.  I collapsed into bed that night and then woke up at 4:30 to do it all again!  
This morning, the vacuum pump/motor/something broke in the middle of milking, and I had to call the neighbors, who have a cow farm, to come fix it.  He fixed it, and I finished milking, but then when I went to run the wash cycle, it broke again!  ARGH!!!  CRUMBS AND CARROTS!  It was frustrating.  But it's all fixed now, and I made myself feel better by watching She's The Man (best movie ever) and making vegan chocolate cake.  Would you like to make vegan chocolate cake?  You can, if you follow this recipe.  Omigod, omigod, you guys!  I followed a recipe!  Well, mostly.  
Not-Vegan-Tasting Vegan Chocolate Cake
(adapted from Martha Stewart)
1.5 organic unbleached all purpose flour
1/3 cup cocoa powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup sugar
1/2 canola oil
1 cup vanilla soymilk/ricemilk
2 Tbs cider vinegar, white vinegar, or lemon juice

Combine flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar in a larger bowl.  In a smaller bowl, mix together canola oil and soymilk.  Mix wet ingredients into dry.  Add vinegar and stir quickly.  You'll see streaks of white as the vinegar and baking soda react.  Pour into a greased 8 or 9 inch round cake pan.  Put in a oven preheated to 375 degrees and bake for about 30 minutes.  I took mine out early and the middle is still gooey...mmmm.  It would be good warm with vegan ice cream.  

There's a new song up!  It's by a band called She & Him.  I think they're just adorable.  One half of this duo is Zooey Deschanel, who you may know from Elf (the pretty blond that Buddy the Elf ends up marrying) or Weeds (Andy's crazy girlfriend from Alaska).  Enjoy!

Thursday, July 3, 2008

WILLAKERS!!!

Tonight I was just ON A ROLL in terms of cooking.  CRUMBS AND CARROTS!  It was ridiculous.  I made the best dinner I think I've ever had, with no recipe to speak of.  I went to the coop earlier today and bought baby bok choy and shitake mushrooms (as well as many other things).  When I got back, I was given the gift of broccoli, fresh from the garden!  I steamed the bok choy and broccoli and then dunked them right in an ice bath.  They were the prettiest emerald green color.  I sauteed sliced shiitakes and seitan, and then added the bok choy and broccoli.  I made this awesome sauce with maple syrup, ginger powder, soy sauce, apple cider vinegar, olive oil, and lots of garlic scapes.  I added the sauce and sauteed some more.  I slid it all into a bowl and topped it with chopped almonds.  The only thing that could have made it better was some rice.  But I wasn't going to wait 20 minutes for my rice cooker to make some, so I just ate it as it was.  IT WAS SO GOOD.  It tasted like Chinese takeout food, but better and healthier.  
Before all this coop shopping and cooking business, I had decided to make cookies.  My baking has been pretty awful lately, because I haven't used recipes or measuring devices, but this time I was determined to follow a recipe TO THE LETTER.  I wanted to make these little lemon buttermilk cookies.  I planned to buy buttermilk and butter at the coop, but while I was driving there I saw a farmer herding his dairy cows in to be milked.  And the cows were just plodding along in front of this farmer, looking rather dejected...I know that they were out grazing all day, and that they have a pretty nice life...but wouldn't it be better if we didn't have the dairy industry?  It would be so much better for the environment.  No more cow poop sitting around, releasing tons of methane (a greenhouse gas) into the atmosphere, perpetuating global warming.  Farms could be used to feed people again, instead of growing genetically modified corn to feed animals we eat.  And if we couldn't live without dairy, then maybe every family could have just one or two cows/sheep/goats to provide them with milk. 
Yes, I'm working on a dairy farm.  And I love it, I really do.  I love milking the goats and making cheese, and seeing an entire process through from start to finish.  But I feel very hypocritical.  Especially because the dairy industry relies on the meat industry, and if you're going to go vegetarian, you might as well go vegan.  What do you think happens to all the males born to dairy animals?  They can't be milked, obviously, so they go to slaughter.  
I wish that I could go live in the woods somewhere, in a log cabin with 2 sheep for wool and milk, some chickens for eggs, and a garden...it's obviously that I've been reading Little House on the Prairie.  But I do wish we could go back to that time.  Those early pioneers worked hard, and they certainly weren't vegans.  But they hunted wild game that had lived a full and natural life in the woods.  Better yet, we could all live in tipis, like Native Americans and hunt with a bow and arrow.  WHO'S WITH ME?
Anyone?
Anyone?
Ah, well.  I'll do it alone.
Moral of this ridiculous tangent is:  I bought soy milk, cocoa powder, and lemons at the coop and made crazy Chocolate Lemon Cornmeal Sablés.  That's what I'm calling them.  The chocolate part came in when I realized that I had too much liquid from using agave nectar + maple syrup instead of granulated sugar...so I added cocoa powder.  It was good!  They're like little crunchy lemony chocolatey bites of yum.  But I'm not posting a recipe.  Because I didn't follow one.  Well...I tried to, but then realized that I was only using lemon zest, salt, and baking soda from the original recipe, and I gave up.  OY, what has become of me?  You can ask my BFFAEAEAEAE, Stephania, and she will tell you how upset I used to get at the suggestion of using whole wheat flour instead of all purpose white.  I followed recipes like I was Hermione in a Potions lesson.  And now?  I can't remember the last time I didn't substitute something.  It's ridonculous.  
SWEET MUSTACHE, I'm tired.  And I have to get up and start making bread tomorrow.  Good luck, me, and good night, all.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Eenie Meenie Miney Moe

I'm trying something new...I have a little box on the right hand side of the page that should say the title of a song...this week it says "Ashes On Your Eyes."  You can click on it and listen to this wonderful song by Deb Talan.  Woo!
So aside from a near-death experience on Sunday, life has been pretty much similar.  The farmer's market has sped up QUITE a bit...we sold all the bread and almost all the cheese!  It was a crazy day, that Saturday.  I do chores in the morning, so I'm up at 4:30, and then go straight to the market.  The market itself is pretty exhausting...talking to people about cheese from 8:30 - 12:30.  I came back to the farm for a few hours, and then headed to Molly's lake house for her birthday party (it was a lot of fun, and I'm going to leave it at that).  I didn't get to sleep until 2AM, so I was awake for 22 hours!  When I was driving back from the lake the next morning, I almost killed myself by skidding off the road (nearly hitting a tree)...it was a good lesson in driving the speed limit.  It was fine, though.  My car was a bit messed up, but some friendly Vermonters stopped to help me and I was able to drive back to the farm.
Most things I've been eating lately are Red, White, and Green.  Red is usually tomato, White is usually some kind of goat cheese, and Green is any number of things, including kale, avocado, arugula, basil, lettuce, etc.  This combo has never failed me.  The colors of the Italian flag are the way to go for simple snacks and meals.  Put three things on a piece of bread and you're set.  The following recipe is not red, white, and green, but it's still delicious.
Veggie Burger of Awesomeness
1 veggie burger patty (I used Amy's...I also like Dr. Praegers/anything that doesn't remind me too much of actual meat) (Or make your own, of course)
Lettuce
Avocado Slices
Tomato Slices
Sprouts (I didn't have them, but it would be delicious...make it and I will live vicariously through you)
Onion Slices
Sliced garlic or garlic scapes
Balsamic Vinegar 
Olive Oil
Salt
Put onion slices, garlic, olive oil, salt, and a bit of balsamic vinegar in a sauce pan over low heat.  Cook gently, until onions are soft and caramelized and sweet and yummy...about 15 minutes?  Cook veggie burger as specified on your particular package.  Top with lettuce, tomato, onions, avocado, and sprouts.  Eat...well, attempt to eat.  It's a bit messy.  
Tomorrow is my day off!  I am going to do laundry, possibly take my car to a dealer in Rutland, maybe bake something exciting, and participate in a Blue Ledge Farm field trip to see Wall-E.
Good night.