Tag: diy

  • Tap Maple Trees to Make Maple Syrup How To – GF Video

    Tap Maple Trees to Make Maple Syrup How To – GF Video

    Tapping maple trees to make maple syrup in this DIY video. We tap our Sugar Maple trees to collect sap in preparation for making maple syrup. This is a DIY low tech low volume method of tapping some trees in  your yard or perhaps a neighbor’s field. Several of my neighbor’s have sugar shacks complete with large evaporators and huge piles of firewood, some use traditional sap buckets to collect sap, others use plastic lines and taps.

    For my yard, I went with plastic taps and lines, they are not expensive, and I used the food grade plastic buckets from my homebrew beer kit to collect the sap. After we collected the sap, we boiled it down, and we’ll post a video about that soon.

    The general rule of how many taps to put in a tree, according to the Conn. DEP is 1 tap for a 12″ diameter tree ( 38″ in circumference ), 2 taps for 18″ diameter or larger tree ( 56″ in circumference )

    The holes you drill for the taps should be 1.5″ deep with a 5/16″ bit. If you are tapping trees that were tapped previously, pay attention to the previous tap holes. New taps should be 6″ left or right of an old tap hole, and 12″ above or below the old tap hole.

    Sugar Maple sap needs to be stored at 38F degrees or cooler, ideally you will boil the sap the day you collect it. If the sap has turned milky and foamy, it has gone bad.

    Do you tap sugar maple trees? What are some tips you can share with us below? Thanks for watching!

    Here is the tree identification book we like to use:

    Buy From An Indie Bookstore Here

    Buy From Amazon Here

  • How to make homemade pasta GF TV Video

    How to make homemade pasta GF TV Video

    Home made pasta, aka fresh pasta, we show you how to make a home made pasta recipe in the GF cooking video. Pasta from scratch is not hard, there’s just a few steps to get it right. Homemade pasta tastes different from store bought pasta, and when you make it yourself, there are infinite variations possible. neat.

    There’s a good chance you have a pasta machine in the basement, an xmas gift from a while back that you never got to, so you’ve got the equipment. If you don’t have a pasta machine, check out these pasta machines
    or the links at the bottom of this article.

    My technique for making home made pasta is based on a method Jamie Oliver shows us in his book, Cook with Jamie: My Guide to Making You a Better Cook
    – a book I really like, BTW.

    Home Made Pasta Recipe  ©2012 Eric Rochow

    100 Grams all purpose or Italian “OO” flour

    1 egg

    For homemade pasta, you can use either all purpose flour or an italian flour labeled “OO”, i believe its a finer grind flour, but if you can’t find it, all purpose flour works fine.

    The ratio that I’ve found works best is 100 grams of flour to 1 egg. If you are making fresh pasta for 4 people, I’ve found 300 grams of flour and 3 eggs works well.

    Put the flour and eggs in a food processor, and pulse until the flour comes together and looks like small pebbles.

    Dump the pasta dough mixture onto a floured board, and collect the flour into a ball.

    Now knead the dough by stretching the dough out and folding it over on itself. Its best to watch our how to video to see this. Knead for 5-8 minutes

    The dough is kneaded when you press your finger lightly into the dough and the dough fills out the dimple you’ve made again, the dough bounces back.

    Shape the dough into a rectangle, wrap in plastic wrap, and put in the fridge for at least 30 minutes, longer is better.

    Take the dough out of the fridge and cut into square pieces about 3″ x 3″,  3/4″ thick. how many pieces you will have depends on how much flour and eggs you mixed together.

    Take one of the dough squares and run it through your pasta machine at its widest width. Fold the dough back over on itself in thirds, like folding a letter into an envelope.

    You will now run the dough through each width setting on the machine, holding the dough so the folds are on the sides. You may need to flour the dough when rolling it through the machine to keep it from sticking.

    After you have run the dough through the machine at its smallest width, take the dough and fold it back on itself until it is about 4″ wide or so, you want a width that is small enough so you can run the dough through the machine again.

    Run the dough the machine again, starting at the widest width and progressing through to the narrowest setting. Note: some machines  have a real narrow final width, you may not want to get the dough that thin, it depends on what kind of pasta you want to make, and how thick you want it to be.

    You can cut the dough in half if it gets too difficult to work with. And you can flour the dough as needed.


    You are now ready to run the pasta dough through the die cutters to make various kinds of pasta, or you can hand cut it on a board, or you can make ravioli with the dough. I’ve found it works best to let the pasta dough rest under a towel for 10 minutes or longer before running it through the pasta cutters, you may need to flour the dough again, you want it quite dry.

    The flour you use for dusting can be whole wheat or semolina or just regular flour. I’ve used whole wheat thinking it gives a bit of a nutty taste to the pasta, but maybe i’m just fooling myself.

    Once you cut your pasta, you can drop it into boiling water or let it dry on a dowel or broomstick set between two chairs. Fresh pasta can take 3 minutes to cook, or 8 minutes, it all depends, you’ll have to keep an eye on it.

  • Home Made Pizza Oven Photos from John

    Home Made Pizza Oven Photos from John

    After watching our brick oven pizza video, John in Arizona sent us these photos of his DIY brick oven. Much like our brick oven design, it uses brick and angle iron. I forgot to ask John where he got his angle iron from. I like that the brick oven fits nicely right next to his propane grill, right off the patio, all set for cooking.

    “My wife and I love your show. We put this together and wanted you and your wife to see it”

    Cool! This is the second set of pictures I’ve got from a viewer. A big thank you to John for sending these. love it. See the link at the bottom of this post for links to other pizza and bread oven photos.

    home made brick pizza ovenJohn tried out his oven with a pizza stone, and I’ve talked with a few people who have tried this method, its much better to just slide the pizza right onto the hot bricks. The bricks are about 700F, so its pretty sterile. And bricks are made out of clay, which is what pottery is made out of, so i’m thinking its pretty safe to do.

    home made brick pizza oven

    brick pizza oven with pizza baking in it

    pizza oven

    brick pizza oven videoMore Pizza Oven Plan Photos Here
    Love that roaring fire in the photo there, and the pizzas have a smokey hint to them when using wood. Do you have a backyard oven? send us photos or a link to your site, thanks!

  • Homemade Brick Pizza Oven Video

    Homemade Brick Pizza Oven Video

    Build this homemade brick pizza oven in your backyard with recycled used clay bricks and a recycled metal mattress frame. And the pizza oven is portable! You can assemble this in 20 minutes, make homemade pizzas, then take it apart and store it. Most backyard pizza ovens are big and permanent, this homemade brick oven is great because its easy to break down again until your next pizza baking party.Here are the pizza oven plans shown in photos, our oven uses used clay brick and 24″ angle iron we cut from a old bed frame. You have to heat up the oven for an hour to get it up to temperature. The brick pizza oven has to be on sturdy sawhorses or cement blocks. We used cement tile board to insulate the plywood table from the heat of the brick oven. Stuart, author of the Bread Oven book, emailed us, cautioning that he felt the 2 layers of cement tile board was not enough insulation to keep the plywood from scorching, he suggests a base of cement, as shown on his blog here.

    Clean the bricks that will be used for the floor of the oven, that’s where your pizza dough will be sitting. We didn’t have a thermometer, but I’m told the floor of the brick oven can reach 700F. We also found its good to keep some of the coals in the front part of the oven, so the heat is more even. We had to turn the pizza once during baking to have it cook evenly.

    I have a few ideas for more modifications, which we will post later on. Keep children and animals away from this and all fires, this is for adults.

    base of pizza oven
    building walls of pizza oven
    pizza oven roof using angle iron
    Backyard Brick Pizza Oven

    brick pizza oven videoMore Pizza Oven Plan Photos Here

    diy-pizza-ovenWatch all of our  pizza oven and pizza dough recipes here

    Our backyard pizza oven is based on one in the book Bread , Earth, & Fire by Stuart Silverstein. Stuart’s book has a bunch of plans and info on building backyard ovens, go buy it here. it is available as an ebook or paperback. Read Stuart’s blog here.

  • Rice Cooker Repair – Rick’s Column

    Rice Cooker Repair – Rick’s Column

    Our $10 Wal-Mart B&D rice cooker stopped working last night. I just opened it up and, using a multimeter, found an inline fuse blown.

    I clipped the fuse off and reconnected the wire. I can’t imagine any real harm, since the circuit is gfi protected anyway. Am I missing something? Running a test batch of rice now to see how it turns out.

    BTW: if you’ve always wondered about those center spring mechanisms, they’re pretty simple…and interesting. The center plunger is not charged with electricity (unlike a lot of toasters, which are actually engaging electromagnets when you put the plunger down–hence the futility of slamming the plunger down, it not a mechanical catch of some sort). Inside, the rice cooker there’s a magnet on an arm connected to the front mechanical operating slide, a bit like a toaster–up is warm, down is cook. The weight of the water and rice in the pan hold the plunger down and the magnet sticks to the underside, closing the high heat or cook circuit.

    When enough water boils away, the spring pushes the plunger up, which lifts the pan and breaks contact with the magnet breaking the high heat connection. There’s a separate permanent circuit always connected for “warm” with it’s own little heating element. You have to unplug the whole thing to turn the warming circuit off.

    —-
    the system just “popped” open, turning off the high heat coil. Looks fine, but you always wonder…at least I do. OTOH, a rice cooker isn’t like a crockpot. We’d never leave it running all day. Any ideas? At $10 am I being penny wise and pound foolish?

  • Washing Machine Repair, Water Pump Replace GF Video

    Washing Machine Repair, Water Pump Replace GF Video

    Washing machine repair video to fix a broken water pump. My washer broke, and I made a video of how to replace the water pump on your wash machine. If the washer is not draining, the water pump is probably broken. Water pumps on washing machines are not hard to fix, watch here and i’ll show you how to fix your Kenmore, Maytag, Whirlpool Sears washing machine.

    Front Loading Washing Machine Broke? It happens more often than you think. With several models, a coin can get stuck in the drain pump, and the coin wrecks the impeller. The impeller is the round thing that looks like a airplane propeller, it pushes the water through the machine.

    Washing Machine Repair isn’t always hard

    This repair is usually easy to do. Make sure of the following:

    • The washing machine is turned off and unplugged from the wall
    • The water lines are turned off and disconnected.
    • There is no wet laundry in the machine.

    The washing machine pump, for most washers, is located in the lower part of the machine, and you access it from the bottom panel of the machine. You will tilt the machine on its back and work from the bottom of it. Take cell phone photos as you take the bottom access panel off, and put all the screws in a bowl or container. Keep a bucket handy, as there may be some water in the hoses and pump as you disconnect them.

    Washing Machine Repair
    Washing Machine Pump from a front loading washer.

    Use a pliers to remove the hose clamps, you may also need a screwdriver, pay attention to how the clamps are situated on the hoses, and where each hose goes! You don’t want to cross the hoses, or the washing machine repair you’ve just done wont work.

    There will be a power cord of some sort, this is usually a plug with a locking tang that plugs into the pump. Carefully bend back the tang with a screwdriver and pull off the plug. Pay attention to how the plug came out so you can put the plug back in the right way.

    Let me know how your repair went in the comments below, always good to hear from you:

     

     

     

     

  • Squash Vine Borer Treatment #2 : GF Video

    Squash Vine Borer Treatment #2 : GF Video

    The Squash Vine Borer eating the squash, pumpkin, zucchini plants? Get rid of the squash borer with this method. If you have squash borer damage on your squash, pumpkins, zucchini plants, here’s how we treat our squash plants.

    The moth of the squash vine borer lays it eggs next to the young squash plants, and the larvae then enter the plant by chewing a hole. If you see what looks like orange sawdust and a hole in  your plant, you have borers. Not good, but if you are careful and use our borer removal method, you can still grow some great squash!

    The moth that lays the vine borer eggs is a weird looking one, it looks like a cross between a moth and a ninja warrior. It has red and gray markings, here are some photos of the moth.

    There are other squash vine borer treatments, methods, ways of prevention, we cover a few of them here:

    squash-vine-borer-play

    Squash Vine Borer Prevention and Treatment method #1
    squash-vine-borer-treatment-play

    Squash Vine Borer Treatment #3 using Bt

    Don’t Give Up!

    Despite these squash vines looking dead, you can still get some good squash out of them, so go ahead and try. It also helps to reduce the population of squash moths. From what I’ve read, Butternut Squash are less susceptible to the borer, and summer squash like zucchini are more susceptible. I remember as a kid seeing our zucchini die every year and the presence of that orange sawdust stuff.

    squashCheck out our Squash Recipes Here

    How do you control squash vine borers? Any successful treatment you’ve used? Please let us know below:

     

  • Hurricane Irene & Plywood Boats : GardenFork Radio

    Hurricane Irene & Plywood Boats : GardenFork Radio

    Mike and Eric talk about hurricane Irene, being a weather geek, the Allison House Weather Station that GardenFork uses, and Eric’s new plywood boat video

    hurricane irene talk

     

     

    WMR968 Weather Station is available from AmbientWeather.com

  • Sneak Preview of this week’s DIY show :

    Sneak Preview of this week’s DIY show :

    Does it float? You’ll have to watch this week’s show…

  • How to Chainsaw Tree Logs

    How to Chainsaw Tree Logs

    Here Eric shows you how to use a chainsaw to cut up tree logs into firewood. Keep in mind Eric is not a professional lumberjack, just your average DIY guy who likes to use his chainsaw to cut down trees, and cut the logs to fireplace length. Use this information at your own risk. Always follow all the safety instructions that came with your chainsaw.


    Proper placement of the chainsaw relative to your body, especially your legs and feet is real important here. Think about how the chainsaw may slip down, or up and what part of your body it may hit, which would be a bad thing. What may seem like a comfortable position to hold the saw, especially while you are kneeling to cut up trees, may not be the best way to do something. Steel toed boots are a must have when cutting firewood.

    A sharp chainsaw chain is mandatory, if your chainsaw is spitting out fine sawdust while cutting, its time to switch out the chain with a sharp one. A sharp chain makes large wood shavings when its cutting, not fine wood dust.

    You can watch all our how to cut down a tree chainsaw videos here
    Do you have some chainsaw adventures to share? or some more safety tips on the proper use of a chainsaw? please let us know below

  • New beehives in our second beeyard, bearproofing the beehives

    New beehives in our second beeyard, bearproofing the beehives

    We have a real bear problem in our town with bears, and bears really like to tear apart beehives. So to hedge our bets, we decided last year to start a second beeyard in another part of town. Our second beeyard is near the center of town, right next to the cemetery. The honeybees and their hives are on the edge of a large hayfield, where they are protected by the prevailing winds and get excellent daylight throughout the day.

    We hived two new packages,  using medium supers on these hives. I put our hives on small tables. The height of the table makes it much easier to work the hives, and we can grease the legs of the tables to keep carpenter ants and other insects from entering the hives.

    We use a few techniques to bear proof our beehives. First we have a solar powered electric fence made by Premier 1 Supplies. Premier 1 gave us the electric fence they sell to protect beehives from bears. So far it has worked. Its also very easy to set up and move. You can watch our how to bearproof beehives video here.

    Second we use a ratcheting strap to strap together the beehives. The thinking here is that if a bear does get to the hives, the straps may keep the hives together despite the bear trying to take the hive apart. I’ve read where this has worked for a few people, so it doesn’t hurt, I don’t think. We may need a heavier ratchet strap, the kind used on semi trucks.

    Newly hived bees
    Solar powered fence from Premiere 1 Supplies
    I like the rectangular net pattern of this electric fence.
    wide view of the hayfield where the beeyard is

     

  • How to replace your car or truck fender : GardenFork.TV

    How to replace your car or truck fender : GardenFork.TV

    Need to replace your damaged car fender? Learn here how to replace that car fender that hit guard rail, or got mashed by someone who couldn’t stay in their lane, or whatever accident damaged the fender, learn here how to replace your truck or car fender with a replacement from an auto recycler or a new fender from a auto body supplier.

    Have you done any body work on your car? Let us know some good tips on repairing the bodywork on your car or truck below, thanks.

  • How to make Pesto, Parsley Pesto : GardenFork.TV Video

    How to make Pesto, Parsley Pesto : GardenFork.TV Video


    Looking for a pesto recipe? or how to make pesto? Watch our Pesto Recipe with a new twist, we’ll use parsley instead of basil. This same recipe works great for basil pesto BTW. Parsley is super healthy and easily found in the store or your backyard garden.

    Eric’s Parsley Pesto Recipe

    1 bunch of flat leaf parsley

    2 cups grated Romano cheese

    1 cup walnuts, whole or chopped

    1 clove garlic, crushed

    quality extra virgin olive oil

    Grab your bunch of parsley and swish it around in a large bowl of water or you salad spinner filled up with water.

    Cut off about 2 inches of the stem end off the parsley bunch. Then cut the parsley bunch into thirds, drop into a salad spinner and spin away. You want to remove as much of the water as possible. If you don’t have a salad spinner, you can roll up the parsley leaves in a dish towel to dry them out.

    Add the parsley to your food processor, and pour in about 1/4 cup of the olive oil. About 6 glugs, I think.

    Turn on the food processor and get the parsley cut up and mixed in with the oil.

    Take the walnuts and toss them into a pan and toast them lightly. Don’t forget them on the stove, as they burn easily. I know this from experience.

    Take the grated cheese and walnuts and crushed garlic and add to the food processor.

    Top off with more olive oil, 6 glugs or so, and turn on the processor. If the machine sounds like it is bogging down, add more oil. Process to the consistency you like. I like it not over-processed.

    You can now add this to pasta or spread on bread or garnish soups with. Its real good.


    Get Gardenfork In Your Email Inbox!




    What do you think? Do you have a pesto recipe or suggestion or idea? Let us know below:

  • How to Replace Your Spark Plugs : GardenFork Radio

    How to Replace Your Spark Plugs : GardenFork Radio

    In the Gardenfork version of Car Talk, Mike talks about replacing the spark plugs, We update Tyler’s Storm Chasing, How to Make Donuts and Doughnut Recipes and we talk about when your food is expired. Your Food Will Tell You When Its Old says a GF viewer.

    Eric talked about Gabfire Themes who have a new restaurant wordpress theme.

     

    photo by Alvimann

  • How To Make Maple Syrup at a Sugar Shack: GF Video

    How To Make Maple Syrup at a Sugar Shack: GF Video

    Ever wondered how to make maple syrup? I have a number of friends who have sugar shacks and boil down sugar maple sap to make maple syrup. Last weekend I visited one of my friends and made this video about how to make maple syrup.

    You can also use simpler methods than the one shown here with the 2 stage evaporator, I plan on tapping my sugar maples next year and making maple syrup in with a simple propane burner and stainless steel steam table tray that will be my evaporator.

    Do you make your own maple syrup? How do you make it? and any tips and tricks you can offer us here? Let us know below

  • Tools fall off truck, into dirt. This is GardenFork!

    Tools fall off truck, into dirt. This is GardenFork!

    Just to let you all know it doesn’t happen just to you. I had my socket set opened up while working on my Ford F150, and somehow knocked the case of sockets off the fender, and into the dirt. Note the help I am getting from the Labradors.

  • Weed Free Vegetable Gardening : GardenFork.TV

    Weed Free Vegetable Gardening : GardenFork.TV

    Want a weed free garden? Learn how to prevent weeds in your vegetable garden as we tour our neighbor’s vegetable garden where they use a weed barrier fabric and get great results.

    You can buy this plastic mesh weed fabric online or at a local greenhouse supply. This fabric was sewn together by a neighbor to create a large wide piece of fabric that is rolled up at the end of the year and stored in the garage. You get what you pay for with this material. Make sure it is UV stable. You can see how the fabric has held up in our natural weed control update video.

    watch more videos weed farbric2

    Weed free vegetable garden

    As you can see in the above photo, if you just cut the mesh, it will fray eventually. Using a torch to make holes for planting works much better.

    Some people have asked about crop rotation, and this weed fabric holes have been created such that if you rotate the big piece of fabric, the holes will be in a different place each year. So you are not planting in the same place every year. This has worked well for our neighbors.

    Each spring they till in a time release fertilizer and then pull the weed fabric across. It is anchored down with cement blocks along the edges and bricks in between rows of plants. Weed free vegetable garden

    You do get a few weeds peeking out of the plant holes, but this is so much easier than pulling weeds out of a open soil garden. Keeps your clothes a lot cleaner too.

    The fabric is not great for planting salad greens or bulb plants like beets or onions, though you could lay narrow strips of this between the rows to keep down weeds. I’ve found its best for transplants or large seed plants like squash, peppers, tomatoes, etc.

    Have you used weed barrier fabric or do you have another weed free garden tip? Let us know below and thanks for watching!

  • Repairing a hole or damage in drywall or sheetrock

    Repairing a hole or damage in drywall or sheetrock

    I helped a friend of mine close up an  inlet in his chimney, and we then needed to patch the dyrwall hole that the metal chimney stack originally went thru.

    This is the how to repair holes in drywall method that I used, there are others. If you have a good drywall how to, please tell us below.

    drywall repair
    This method works well for damage drywall also

    To repair a hole in drywall, you cut a replacement piece of drywall that fits inside the hole. I prefer to use drywall that is slightly thinner than the drywall we are repairing. So if we are repairing 5/8″ sheetrock, I like to use 1/2″ sheetrock.

    The reason for the slightly narrower sheetrock is I find it allows you do a better repair that is less noticeable. If you use a piece of same width sheetrock, the joint compound you apply over the repair is more obvious.

    drywall and sheetrock repair
    screw in a piece of scrap wood as a support

    Find a piece of scrap wood that is about 4″ wider than the hole you need to repair in the sheetrock. Slip this wood in behind the existing sheetrock, and using drywall screws, screw the wood support in.

    sheetrock repair replacement
    cut a piece of sheetrock to fit the repair

    cut a piece of sheetrock that fits just inside the hole you are repairing. Home improvement stores sell 2’x2′ repair pieces, or you can find a piece of scrap at a construction site.

    drywall repair patch
    screw the patch into the support

    After the the drywall is screwed in, use well stirred drywall compound with a little plaster added , and using the most flexible wide blade you can find, lay an initial layer of joint compound over the patch. let this dry completely, and go over it with 2 more layers. The smoother the layers, the better it will look.

    When its all dry give it a light sand to even out any ridges or marks. Prime the repair then paint with the wall paint.

    How do you repair sheetrock or drywall? Let us know below.