Silas and his friend, Tano, spent a number of days making wooden boards to sell at the Inverness fair. The ones in front here are made from Dutch elm. They also used madrone. Rufus helped them salvage the pieces - staying away from cracks, rotten parts, and blemishes. They did a rough cut then planed to the right thickness. They marked with a pencil and cut with a jigsaw. Rasp the edges with the surf form tool and finish the edges. Then fine sanding with an electric sander and hand sanding. Oil with food grade oil.
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Tension and bad press in agriculture
Visited Rancher John yesterday. He tells me of the negative publicity around agriculture. How one or two negative stories in the press leave a bad impression broadly. In some ways the classification of organic - which tries to redefine agriculture - also diminishes agriculture. That both the organic and the other agriculture is part of one unified thing. There's a tension emphasized by the negative press yet the whole of agriculture needs to be supported. Back when my grandfather had a ranch, most people had some experience of where their food comes from. Or at least they weren't more than one or two people removed from an experience of agriculture.
Breakfast
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Not a caterer but well-connected to good food
Quiches, cookies, and bread from Tomales Bakery. Organic produce from our garden and from the Civic Center Thursday Farmer's Market. Served on platters and in bowls crafted by local artist Rufus Blunk (www.rufusblunk.com coming soon).
Labels:
handcrafted wood pieces,
music,
not a caterer,
poetry,
Rufus Blunk,
story
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
sushi rolls without the rice
raw milk in The Economist
We drink raw milk we get directly from a Jersey dairy. So lucky. Once you taste it you know it is something other than even the best local organic milk in bottles.
I culture the cream with a culture called villi and the milk with a culture called fils. I purchased the villi and the fils milk from Gem Cultures (http://www.gemcultures.com/, nice family-run 30 year old business). I bought some Benoit Yogurt in bottles to start some yogurt. I'll add the yogurt to milk, raise the temperature to about 110 degrees and keep in my Excalibur dehydrator over night. (The Excalibur is a box dehydrator with shelves. You can remove all of the shelves to use the box as a low-temp atmosphere. The oven might work but I haven't done this.)
This article is in The Economist. The link was posted on the Raw Milk Yahoo group I subscribe to. (http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/RawDairy/)
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Tritileia hyacinthinia - White Brodieia
Kat Anderson supplied the bulbs of Tritileia hyacinthinia last winter. We planted them as single bulbs in a bathtub to avoid gopher worries. We are hoping to increase the supply. One important issue here is that Kat could hardly find these Native California bulbs available for purchase in California. She purchased these from Holland. Although I heard yesterday that Mostly Natives in Tomales has them available currently.
In the last couple of weeks the bulbs have been blooming. I am not sure just when to dig them up to harvest the bulbs in order to have more to plant next year. I dug up one the other day in accordance with the directions I have to dig when the bulb is in bloom.
I think you can see in this photo, the cormlets that surround the original bulb. So increase, it did!
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