Went to a Tiny House Festival a few miles south of us. One of the most disorganized festivals we've ever attended. When we go to these things we usually go very early, get through & get out. We got to this one a bit late & the crowds were horrendous. Parking wasn't so bad but there was no rhyme or reason to it. The price of admission was ridiculous but we found out that the $$ were to go to various charities. So, in we went. We first encountered converted school buses & vintage cars & campers which were very cool.
However it soon became obvious that this was, as Greg called it ... a festival for the gathering of young & old hippies alike.
By the time we made it over to the new tiny houses the lines were 30 & 40 people long!
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Photo courtesy of FL Tiny House Festival. |
The next weekend was Thanksgiving. We went to the country house & invited my In-laws over for dinner. We were supposed to eat around 2:00 but the turkey would not cook! The oven there has been slowly going on the blink & it decided to nearly stop working that day. We kept turning it up. It was on almost 400 degrees before everything finally got done. Well, the turkey never fully cooked by the bones but we got enough breast meat sliced to finally eat around 4:30.
We don't get much fall color in this part of the country but the sycamore trees usually come through with some. I planted one last year, I think. The big old sycamore in the branch was showing color & my little new one was as well. They matched, how sweet.
See the little one in the oh so brown field? |
It took almost 4 days to cook, strain, sieve & can it all. The poultry stock came out the creamiest that I've ever made. The beef broth is ok. But, the bone broth is wonderful. I only had 2 jars of meat stock left in my pantry so this makes me happy to get this done. Here's a pic of the finished product(s) 52 pints total!
Poultry stock, bone broth & beef stock. |
8 comments:
LOVE seeing the Tiny House Festival pics, would SO go to that if there was one near us. OK, I have to ask, the broth, how do you can that? I assume it's pressure canning? I'm only learning the waterbath canning now but I'd love to can up some broth for 2nd Man to use during cooking, as I'm always buying broth at the store.
Happy Thanksgiving, belatedly!!!
Hey 1st. Yes, it is pressure canned. The canning itself only takes about an hour but the preparing (simmering & straining twice) are what takes the time. But, what a difference in taste! I would highly recommend the All American Pressure Canner. Keep a look out on Craigs List for them.
It's always too bad when a trend becomes too 'hot'. I would have loved to have seen those tiny homes, but I can't take the lines, either. That is a whole lot of delicious-ness you have there! I'd love an All American and have kept a lookout on craigslist and elsewhere. Nada. I assume no one wants to part with theirs!
Susan, My husband gifted me with the 921 because he got tired of me lamenting day after day of not finding one on ebay or craigs list. Then 2 months later I found a 915 on Craigs list for $75! It was new, in the box & had never been used.
I'm so admiring your stock of stocks! (hehehe) All my canned soups and stews and meats and veggies sure have come in handy during the past 4 months of being laid up pretty much all the time. I can't wait to get my canners out and start making more meals-in-a-jar.
Those tiny houses are all the rage and I sure don't understand it. I can't figure out how we'd ever fit my canning stuff and all my sewing machines in one of those things.
Your baby sycamore is precious! :-)
Our turkey didn't get cooked through in time, either, so we had white meat only. Too funny!
Looking forward to seeing you in February! :-)
Deb
Poultry stock! That's on my to-do list this weekend 'cuz it's supposed to turn cold (any excuse to keep the wood cookstove going all day. :)
Interesting about the tiny house festival. Do people actually live in these year around? Our lifestyle doesn't require a lot of actual living space, but it requires a lot of storage space. Where else does one keep a year's worth of home preserved food???
Thanks Deb, Hope you are feeling better. Looking forward to my visit as well.
I'm sure your stock will turn out good! Yes, they proclaim to live in them. I agree about the storage. I think the people that buy & actually live in them don't do much cooking or storing for that matter.
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