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  • FOUND: giant cast iron fry pan, free…

    FOUND: giant cast iron fry pan, free…

    One of the cool things about working in an urban area like Brooklyn, NY is this:

    When people want to give away or ‘recycle’ items from their apartments, they put them out on the sidewalk .

    Today, walking down President Street, I found this amazing Lodge cast iron fry pan set out on the sidewalk with a bunch of other kitchen items.

    How cool is that? Clean off the rust, re-season it, and you’ve got a great pan! Here’s a GardenFork.TV video we did about how to season cast iron pans.

    What neat street finds have you run across lately? tell us below:

  • Bearproofing your beehives with a bear proof electric fence

    Bearproofing your beehives with a bear proof electric fence

    We are going to start a second beeyard at another farm. We wanted to have a second beeyard  as a hedge against the chance that a bear will destroy our existing honeybee hives.

    Our hives in their current location are surrounded by a traditional electric fence, three strands, and is part of a larger electric fence to keep beef cattle in their pasture. Bill, who owns the farm where our hives are, thinks the local bears are already aware of his electric fence, and have not tried to get to our beehives.

    But if the bear ever did, we would lose all our hives. So we decided this year to put a few hives at another friends farm, on the other side of town.

    premier 1 bear fence
    The Electro Net fence protecting a beeyard, photo from Premier 1

    I started to look in to bear proofing and saw an ad in Bee Culture magazine for a bear proof electric fence that will protect beehives from bears. I contacted the company, Premiere 1, and they sent me an ElectroNet 9/35/12 electric fence and a PRS 50 Solar Energizer at no charge to use in our new beeyard.

    The solar Energizer, which contains the battery and electronics to zap bears, is housed in metal box that looks like it was engineered for space travel. Its pretty bulletproof.

    The electric fence and solar powered energizer for our beeyard
    Interior of the solar powered energizer

    We’ll shoot a GardenFork show about starting a new beeyard and installing this fence, and I’ll report back on how it works with our local bears. Thanks for Premier 1 for sending me this.

  • Honeybees seal the inner cover with propopolis

    Honeybees seal the inner cover with propopolis

    We pulled the inner cover on our biggest hive, and it was not easy this time. The honeybees had sealed it pretty tight with propopolis, a waxy resin that bees collect from trees.

    honeybees propopolis
    bees seal shut the inner cover with this waxy resin
    honeybees and beekeeping
    this stuff makes it take some work to open the top of the hive
  • Kinpira Gobo Burger, Cooking with Sesame Oil

    Kinpira Gobo Burger, Cooking with Sesame Oil

    On an episode of Gardenfork Radio, Eric and I asked for a recipe using sesame oil. Listener Jasmine came through and sent Eric a recipe for an interesting veggie “burger”.

    The “bun” is cooked sticky rice that is then formed into a patty and then fried. The filling is a carrot / burdock stir fry which Jasmine described:

    “Kinpira gobo is a traditional vegetable side, however in this case I like to use it as my “burger” filling. If you can’t find burdock root this works just as well with just the carrots or really any root vegetable.”

    I was looking forward to seeing Eric make it.

    Ever see that scene where they ask a line of soldiers for a volunteer and everyone steps backward, leaving one guy standing there? Eric responded, “hey thanks for that and the recipe. mike will make this and report back!”

    I have said that Eric does all the work and I get to have the fun, so I guess I need to pull my weight here and actually make something.

    I was buying the ingredients, but I couldn’t find burdock. I bought parsnip instead. (My camera operator said I should have gone with celery root and I think she’s right) I loaded up on sesame oil, soy sauce, rice, and the other ingredients and then one ingredient stumped me. I sent a text to Eric from the store:

    Here was my guide from Jasmine, but there was only one choice, Aji-Mirin.

    “I suggest either hon mirin or mirin-fu chomiryo. Hon mirin is true mirin and contains alcohol while mirin-fu contains less than 1% alcohol. Either way I would steer clear of shio mirin as it is the same as hon mirin except with salt added.”

    Rice Burger Patties
    1 1/2 cups (per sandwich) Japanese-style medium grain rice or similar
    1/2 Tbs. olive oil for frying/grilling
    Cook an appropriate amount of rice for the number of servings desired. Take the rice and press it into ½ inch thick circles. I use plastic wrap to do this as the rice will otherwise stick to the skin. (It is important to use a medium grain rice as instant or long grain rices will not stick well on their own. You can still use these but it will require other ingredients to get them to stick.) Once your patties are shaped simply fry them in the oil or grill them on a well oiled surface.
    I suggest using wax paper or kitchen parchment when you eat them so it doesn’t stick to your hands.

    I used an ice cream scooper to dish out an appropriate amount of rice, and then I smashed it between layers of wax paper. It made reasonable circles.

    Classic Kinpira Gobo
    2 burdock roots, well scrubbed
    2 small or 1 medium carrot, peeled
    1 Tbs. sesame oil
    1 tsp. dry red chili pepper flakes, or 2 small fresh red chili peppers finely chopped
    1 Tbs. sugar
    1 Tbs. mirin
    2 to 3 Tbs. soy sauce

    I wanted to buy Japanese rice, but unless I wanted 25 pounds of it, I had to settle for this brand. It worked fine.

    Cut the burdock root into matchstick size pieces and soak in a bowl of water. Strain the burdock and refill the bowl with clean water to soak a few more minutes. Drain again then pat the burdock root dry. Cut the carrots into matchstick size as well. As long as you rinsed the outside of the carrots there is no need to soak them.

    Heat up a wok with the sesame oil. Add the burdock root, carrot pieces, and any other vegetable you might like to add. Sauté briefly, tossing to coat the pieces with oil. Add the chili pepper flakes and toss. Add the sugar, mirin, and soy sauce and about 1/2 cup of water. Lower the heat to medium, and continue cooking and stirring until the moisture has disappeared from the pan. Taste a piece of burdock root: it should be crisp and tender. If it’s too crunchy for you, add a bit more water and cook some more.

    As it cooks down. I know, I wasn’t patient enough to make match sticks. These are more like, uhm, giant match sticks.

    Finished Product

    Here is the finished product. I picked up some Japanese beer to go with the “burger”. It was a little messy, but it was fun to eat and it tasted very nice. Sweet, salty, spicy, with interesting textures. The sesame gave it a little smoke flavor too. It was worth the work and I can see this as somethign easy to whip up if you already have the ingredients around. Thanks Jasmine!

  • New Favorite Hot Weather Cool Downs

    New Favorite Hot Weather Cool Downs

    It’s only the first week of August and it’s been Hot. Very hot. Hot marked with pockets of dumping rain and mosquitoes. One can’t drink beer all day long to stay cool and still function. I’ve been drinking buckets of iced tea.

    Now I’m not a commercial iced tea fan. I don’t like the sickly sweet stuff with fake lemon flavor. I like the astringent taste of black tea and just a ton of fresh mint and herbs. I brew my iced tea just like I brew regular tea, by using a tea pot. Depending what is growing in my yard, I’ll shove it in the pot with a couple of tea bags and let it seep. Then I’ll pour the tea over ice in a very large glass. Today was a combination of mint leaves, sage, rosemary, dragon wart, I mean tarragon, and lavender. I’ll toss in two bags of black tea and two bags of a lemon herb tea.

    It’s very tasty stuff and I can vary it as I feel. Fresh sliced peaches would be very good with the iced tea!

    I had stumbled across a post about Mexican Ice Pops or Paletas. They are a less sweet version of a popsicle using fresh. One recipe stuck out at me. Cucumber Lime Chile Pops. ingredients
    They are just a sweet, sour, spicy explosion! Which is good because I found Rocket Pop Models in which to make them.

    I added a healthy handful of basil and didn’t peel the cucumber. It’s one of those pops that you can’t stop eating. Just spicy enough to force you to keep chomping on them and cooling enough to beat the heat.

    I’m going to try the peach ginger ones when i get around to it. Or I’ll just sit in the yard with a big glass of ice tea and try not to melt!

  • Heirloom Rattlesnake Pole Beans work well in summer heat

    Heirloom Rattlesnake Pole Beans work well in summer heat

    I usually don’t plant pole beans, but this year I realized that pole beans are more space efficient than bush beans from a square foot gardening perspective.

    I planted Rattlesnake Pole Beans I bought from Fedco Seeds, they took a while to start, but then ran up the trellis quite fast. They stood up well to the high summer heat we’ve had this year.

    rattlesnake pole beans from fedco seeds
    rattlesnake pole beans from fedco seeds

    The Rattlesnake beans have purple lines in the pods which add a neat look to them in the garden and in a salad.

    Rattlesnake pole beans
    we use sticks and scrap wood to make a trellis

    The beans taste good, and even better, they still taste good when they have grown too large and knobby. Most beans, when let to grow large, get all woody tasting. These pole beans kept their flavor and tenderness.

    I’ve started a second sowing of these beans in the greenhouse, and will plant them out when these plants start to wane.

    What kind of beans are your growing? any suggestions.

  • Japanese Beetle Attractant Plant saves the garden

    Japanese Beetle Attractant Plant saves the garden

    I was pulling weeds in the vegetable garden this weekend, and came across this weed in the basil patch. I was about to pull it when I realized it was full of Japanese beetles, and there were no Japanese beetles on the basil.

    organic japanese beetle control
    This weed is a good japanese beetle control

    This weed was functioning as a Japanese Beetle Attractant Plant, and a neat way to not use Japanese Beetle pesticides and traps. This is one of those simple organic Japanese Beetle controls one can use to deal with the beetles.

    I have yet to identify the weed, as the weed identification sites I have visited have yet to yield an answer.

    But think twice before pulling up a plant that is full of garden pests, its probably keeping those pests from your vegetable plants.

  • Washing Machine Woes

    Washing Machine Woes

    here’s what bruce did today , he left this comment on the GF Radio episode, “Why did I do that dumb thing

    I thought about the “why did I do that dumb thing” Saturday morning. I got up and my wife announced that the washing machine wasn’t agitating the clothes, even though the motor was still making noise.

    I thought to myself, “this might be something I could fix.” So within an hour of getting-up and without any coffee in my system, I went down to the basement to access the situation. The washer tub was full of water and when I turned the washer on no movement from the agitator. Why do men have to confirm what their wives tell them?

    The next step proved that taking the time to consider each movement is very important. I pulled the washer away from the wall to see if I could take the back panel off the machine so I could look inside. It moved fairly easily considering the tub was filled with water. And I was watching to make sure the water hoses had plenty of slack as I coaxed the washer further out.

    Then we heard a loud breaking sound. I had failed to consider the washer drain hose that was in the pvc drain pipe. I broke the drain pipe after one forceful pull on the washer, causing water to drain from the washer all over the basement floor. After a few tense husband/wife moments we came to our senses and placed the washer hose in the washer tub, stopping the drainage. Thankfully, our basement has a concrete floor.

    We did look at the back panel though. After a few attempts, we decided that perhaps a professional will be needed. Our landlord will have to fix the drain pipe before we can use the washer anyways.:)

    Clearly, this was a “why did I do that dumb thing” moment. Think I’ll stick to cooking, taking care of my backyard birds, and smoking.

  • Blueberries, learning how to grow them

    Blueberries, learning how to grow them

    I have two mature blueberry bushes in our yard, and a few years back I added some blueberry saplings I bought from a catalog. The saplings are not doing well. Then last week I saw at a local store small blueberry bushes on sale for $9 each. I bought a few. I then surfed the web to see if I could plant these new blueberry bushes properly this time. Here is what I learned.

    • don’t fertilize them when you plant them, and in the future , don’t use regular plant fertilizer, use on that specifically says for blueberries

    • blueberries like acid soil

    • blueberry bushes like wood chip mulch.

    I got a bunch of woodchips from the town garage, they have a huge pile there, and mulched all my blueberry bushes.

    Is there anything you can add to this so I can learn how to do this right? let me know below:

  • Grilled Cheese and Chicken Sandwich & Apple Salad

    Grilled Cheese and Chicken Sandwich & Apple Salad

    I am a huge consumer of grilled cheese sandwiches. ok? That said, I always make variations to the basic grilled cheese recipe, and this time I had some roast chicken left over. The lightbulb went off in my head to make this a Grilled Chicken and Cheese sandwich recipe. Not much rocket science here, but it tastes great.

    grilled cheese recipe on www.gardenfork.tv
    Grilled Cheese yum.
    recipes and gardening on www.gardenfork.tv
    cast iron or a thick bottomed pan work best for this, i think.

    I like to use Cabot Sharp Cheddar, as its owned by a dairy cooperative, you could be decadent here and drop in some blue cheese as well.

    grilled cheese recipe on www.gardenfork.tv
    flipping a large grilled cheese sandwich can be tricky. careful.

    I usually use olive oil in the pan, and swirl the bread around in the small pool of olive oil. Or you can get one of those Misto oil sprayers, which is more economical with the use of oil. I like my grilled cheese grilled well, as you can see.

    super easy salad recipe on www.gardenfork.tv
    use what you've got to make a salad, i do.

    I’m all about simple salad. I kinda don’t get most salad recipes, I just use what I have in the fridge. I had some Macoun apples, so i sliced them up and in they go. Apples taste great with cheese, so blue cheese or goat cheese would be great here.

    So there you go, a great lunch that probably cost $2 sandwich. Do you have a fun simple lunch, or your version of grilled cheese? Let us know below in the comments:

  • Jacques Torres, chocolatier with a wrench.

    Jacques Torres, chocolatier with a wrench.

    The first time I checked out Jacques Torres’ chocolate store in Dumbo Brooklyn, I could see Jacques behind this big glass window that allowed people to see the chocolate being made.

    He had an adjustable wrench and was whacking some sort of machine with it.

    I decided immediately: ‘i like this guy’

    jacques torres chocolate
    Pick up these chocolates, make everyone happy.

    I have since bought a bunch of chocolate from him. He makes these small chocolate squares in a ton of ever changing varieties, and you can select which ones you want to make up a box. These boxes of chocolates make great gifts. Anybody I give them to loves them. ( you can order them online here )

    Jacques and Jaden Hair invited me to an evening at Jacques’ Manhattan store last week with some other food bloggers. It was very nice being in chocolate heaven. Jacques provided the food, and Taittinger Champagne & The Seeker Wines provided the drinks. Jacques is one of those guys with an infectious personality, he likes food and likes to share it with others, and a big thank you to him for sharing it with me. ( we talk about my visit on GardenFork Radio here )

    Kinda decadent, chocolate and nice wine, hanging out in NYC. But decadent in a good way.

  • Must-have Meatball Sandwich

    Must-have Meatball Sandwich

    Brancaccio's Food Shop

    Last Thursday I tagged along with Eric on a food expedition in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Kennsington. Just a hop over to the Fort Hamilton Pkwy and there we were at Brancaccio’s Food Shop in search of their meatball sandwich. Lunch time! As we walked in, Chef Joe was just putting today’s specials into the tall fridge… as a rack of ribs came came out of the oven.

    Joe Brancaccio
    Chef and proprietor Joseph Brancaccio gave us a taste of everything. That was quite a list.

    The shop is cozy and unassuming, no indoor seating but they do have two benches outside. The regulars shuffled past us as we looked at all the fresh salads in the case. One might ask “Really? Just for a meatball sandwich?” The correct answer would be “Yes, for that meatballs sandwich.” Meet Chef Joe, he offered us samples from the daily menu while we waited — caponata, baked ziti with truffle oil, roasted Brussels sprouts, roasted beet and farro salad… all of it made that morning…

    Now back to that sandwich, the portion is of a generous size, the bread is fresh with just enough marinara to moisten. But those meatballs! Moist and savory with pine nuts and raisins, seasoned with fennel and garlic. There’s an old world flavor in every bite.

    Eric! Lift with your knees! Can something this big really be that good?
    You can taste the home-cooking in every bits. Brancaccio's meatball sammy is carefully stuffed and sauced into fresh Italian bread that just melts in your mouth.
    The meatballs are made with pine nuts and raisins, an old-world flavor that I love.

    Eric saved half for later, mine vanished. I think I actually ate the wrapper. I was going to save the Broccoli Rabe for later, but it never made it into the fridge.

    Broccoli Rabe, the trusty Italian side-kick… look how green this is.

    Chef Joe gave us to a little after meal treat: “Snack a Latte” coffee cakes. Chef Joe carries some food provisions. I bought some pasta, farro, and Italian Nutella. You have to check this sweet little shop out, Brancaccio’sFood Shop 3011 Ft. Hamilton Pkwy, Brooklyn NY, 11218.

    Snack a Latte

    Like Brancaccio’s Facebook page here

  • Solarize a Raised Vegetable Bed

    Solarize a Raised Vegetable Bed

    I planted everbearing raspberries from Fedco Seeds in one of my raised beds. My thinking was that in a raised bed, the natural sprawl that raspberries do would be easier to control. I have some planted in the yard nearby, and they love to creep into the lawn and everywhere else.

    raised vegetable garden bed
    Here is the raised bed while the raspberries are removed

    We have more bear problems now, and the bears love raspberries. The past two years the bears have mashed down my raspberry patch, so I decided this year to give them to a neighbor and reclaim the raised bed for tomatoes.

    But how do you get raspberries out of a garden bed? I don’t think you can completely, so I decided to solarize the bed. I dug out all the berries I could, and then covered the raised vegetable bed with black plastic.

    cooking and gardening how to videos are here on GardenFork.TV
    the raspberry plants, removed
    raised garden bed plans and how to video on GardenFork.TV
    I discovered some age damage while removing the raspberries. Fixed it.

    The black plastic does two things, it keeps the raspberry plants from blooming, and it raises the temperature of the soil. While I did this in late spring, this technique comes in handy in late winter to warm raised beds, giving you an edge. You can watch a video about vegetable gardening in winter here, and using plastic as a season extender our raised vegetable beds here.

    recipe videos on GardenFork.TV
    I put 6 mil plastic on the raised bed, held down with rocks.

    I left the black plastic on for a month, plenty of time to kill off any remaining raspberry plants. I then kept the plastic in place, burned holes in it with a torch for tomatoes.

    learn how to plant tomatoes on GardenFork.TV
    I torched holes in the plastic after a month for tomatoes.