Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Construction zone

 The Final Day For This House

 The house across the street is being torn down today. This is the place in some of its final hours. When we first moved into this house, we were hopeful that one day, our neighbor would tear down his house and build something a bit nicer...you know, help us out with our property value just a little. Well, today, our dreams come true! The house is cute, but delapidated. The roof is caving in (even though, oddly, in this picture, everything looks fine), the walls aren't straight, and it's in a general state of poor repair.
This is the same house from my yard. You can see the planters I put in earlier this year. The trailer in their yard (to the left of the house) is where the homeowners will be living until the new house is finished. I think they're planning to move back into their home in just a couple months. They're building a duplex because, apparently, we live in the land of duplex homes. Seriously, almost every house in our neighborhood is a duplex, there are even a few quadruplexes. Our "neighborhood" is more like a zoning nightmare that leaves things up for grabs. We technically fall into three different zoning areas, so none of them claim this space and it is officially zoned as "the country." Some neighbors own chickens, goats, ducks, horses, etc. Some neighbors have chain link fences, some have nice cedar fences, some have picket fences, some houses are mansions, some literally have walls made of tarp. This neighborhood is truly an interesting place. In the past few years, our street has begun to pick itself up. First the house beside us was built--a fancy duplex with nice landscaping, then we began remodeling our house (a process that won't be done for several years as we still have landscaping, replacing of the fence and the house's siding, rebuilding the front and back porches, and adding a carport), and now our neighbor across the street, Keno, is knocking down his home and making his space more presentable. I have hope that this place has a lovely future.



The Garden

This is my garden today. Off to the left of it is my compost bin I purchased through Craigslist for only $50. It is a really nice double-sided composter. Since I am doing a juice fast right now, I am making a lot of compostable waste...you know, the stuff that usually makes your trash stink? Well, throw it outside, layer it with newspaper, cardboard, yard clippings and dead leaves and it doesn't really stink, you have great dirt for next year's garden, and your garbage can ceases its stinking and messiness.

This is my garden a little closer up. I should take a picture with me standing in it some time. You can't really tell from the picture, but the plants are getting absolutely huge! On the right is the corn, next to it is soybeans and okra, then asparagus ferns which won't produce for a couple years. There are tomato baskets (the red things) and between the tomatoes, basil is growing. It's a companion plant for tomatoes. Further left at the back are my artichokes, tomatillos in the front, and then peppers, garlic, onions, lettuce and other greens, and back where you can't see is all of my vines, so cucumbers, zucchini, cantaloupes, watermelons, squash, etc. Beyond the end of the garden are my raspberries and blackberries.
These are my greens from the other end of the garden. Close up, I have kale, then collard greens, then broccoli. In the second row, there is rainbow swiss chard, then lettuce. And between the greens are my carrots. They're thriving! Everything is. I am wildly surprised. I fully expected this garden to grow maybe 25% of what I planted. But everything, with the slight exception of habaneros and a few herbs, are growing rapidly!




This is one of my zucchinis. This plant is currently making about 6 of these beauties. These things grow like a weed in Colorado. I have a really tasty and simple recipe for making them into an appetizer. Then, of course, there are all the zucchini breads and things like that, and it's pretty great in juice, too. Maybe tomorrow I will give a quick run-through of my favorite zucchini recipes. You can never know too many when running a garden in this state!
My raspberries! One of my favorite memories as a kid was going into the raspberry thicket in our back yard and just eating raspberries, then picking rhubarb and sitting in the shade. As a kid, you can fit all the way back in the thicket, so you feel invisible. I planted two raspberry bushes in the hopes that by the time I have kids big enough to hang out in the yard, there will be a thicket worth getting lost in for a while. For now, I have these green little guys waiting for the sun to turn them red and juicy. In a couple years, I also hope to have enough of these to make pies and jams and preserves.

Cantaloupes. Yum! There are flowers all over these bushes. I started them indoors in about March. They're not as big as I would like, so next year, I think I'll start cantaloupes, tomatoes, tomatillos, peppers, celery, carrots, and soybeans indoors in January. Then, they'll be plenty large by June and ready to bear real fruit. This summer, my vines are kinda doomed to a life on the ground, but next year, I hope and plan to get a trellis built so they can climb and the melons can be held in a kind of makeshift hammock made of old shirts and sheets and such. I'll put it on here when I finally get that done.


Lettuce and broccoli. We've had several tasty salads (well, Jason has, I have had LOTS of juice) from the lettuce here. When this is all gone, I plan to put in red lettuce in its place. Having lettuce in the yard is never a bad idea, and the fence we have around our garden is a rabbit fence, so we might as well go crazy growing things.

Fridge Installation Gone Full Construction Zone

New fridge after the battle for installation.
Looks really nice!
Old fridge waiting to be removed
This past weekend, we obtained a new refrigerator. We found a deal through Excel where they'll pay you $50 for an old fridge as long as it still functions, which ours does, but is on it's last leg. So, in a couple hours, Excel is going to come get the fridge and pay us for it. Jason's brother, Jeramyn and his wife, Tamara, have a fridge they wanted to get rid of, so we struck a bargain. In exchange for the fridge (and the work to move it into our apartment), we helped them paint their entry way (and set up/take down scaffolding).
Here's a picture of the old fridge and the new fridge. Old fridge is on the left, new one on the right.
New fridge inside. So much better
for organization!
Old fridge inside. Not many shelves or spaces
for organizing and storing things.
Our old fridge began making these awful "ka-chunk!" sounds whenever the cooling system would turn off and this week, it's developed the trend of whining and making a high-pitch sound. A couple weeks ago, we went to get ice cream out of it and found a tub full of cold mush. It's time for a new presence in our kitchen. This old fridge will get to live a new life somewhere else until it finally gives up the ghost, and we get to be the proud new owners of a previously loved fridge that meets our needs much better!
New freezer! So orderly! I know where
everything is!
Jeramyn standing beside the disassembled
stairs inside our house. This was as
the guys were re-installing the stairs.
The new fridge is the exact size of the space we had available, and a bit larger than our entry way. Jeramyn and Jason ended up taking off the stairs (wooden stairs) in our basement entry way, and removing the doors from the fridge just to get it inside. It took from about 10am until 5pm on Saturday to get the fridge even into our apartment. It was 105 degrees outside and the house was almost as hot inside.

Then, there was the issue of the microwave needing to move 1/8 inch. The fridge fits in its place with no extra give room whatsoever, but the microwave caused some consternation. The picture on the left is as far as we could get the fridge in until we moved the microwave.


See the space here? Crazy, right?











Yeah, the entire microwave was removed twice and re-installed twice just to make space for that little overlap! The fruit of our labor finally paid off with a nice, snug fit between the appliances. The only small issue remaining which needs to be addressed is that the microwave doesn't really want to open well.
The way the hinge opens means it runs into the side of the refrigerator each time it's opened. Some cabinet will have to be shaved off and the microwave moved probably another 1/8 inch to make this a better fit. Luckily, we really don't use the microwave that often, so we have no real rush about that. I am just so excited to have such a system for organizing our food. Bins for everything and even a water dispenser on the door. Aren't we fancy? :)






Monday, June 18, 2012

Sewing and gardening and juicing, oh my!

Long time since I've been here, I know. I have been doing a lot and have enjoyed the process of the last couple of months. I have taken on new things and done well. I have been out of school for just a couple weeks now, and have made considerable progress in starting new things and keeping busy. I don't really get bored at home. There's quite a lot to do!

Sewing:
After taking my machine to a shop and learning that I had drastically mis-set the tension and stitch length, I have made amends with my sewing machine and am just a few steps from finishing my skirt!
Below is a picture of my greatly beloved sewing machine and draped across the chair in the foreground is what I have finished of my skirt! It's lovely! All I have left to do is to sew the waistband onto the top and reinforce the waistband with interfacing. I also want to add a petticoat layer so the thing isn't see-through in the sunshine. Eh, who needs decency when you have a full-circle, homemade skirt with fabulous fabric that is just heavy enough to flow well in a serious twirl. Life's made for twirling.

Sheba is my companion and helper in everything I undertake at the house. The year we got her, I made her a coat (poor thing was so skinny, she had NO fat to keep her warm at all), and from then on, she's LOVED it when I sew. She settles in and just watches me go. Love this dog!
 There's the skirt with the waistband all propped up near it so it looks lovely and finished. When I moved back from Africa in 2007, both of my checked bags got hopelessly lost in transit. Part of my luggage at that time was a skirt like this one that I wore until it started going threadbare. This is an attempt to re-create that skirt. I followed a simplicity pattern...except that I ended up adding about an inch of width to each panel that was angled...so it's got more kick and fabric than it was supposed to. :) Never an issue if you ask me.
 Here it is all splayed out on the floor to show it's full-circle-ey-ness. Imagine spinning in this and having it table out flat around you. Yes, I wanted to be a ballerina when I was a kid.


Random things:
Total side-note, here. I would like to declare that another piece of my little vintage soul came alive a few days ago upon seeing the car below parked along the side of the road and marked for sale. Wow! We went and had a test-drive in this baby, didn't buy it, but we're a bit in love with vintage classic cars now.




My little garden:
This is my garden a month ago. I will post a picture of it now in my next post. It's not even recognizable! This garden has been a major source of life for my husband and myself. Through it, I have spent a lot of time pondering how God tends my life like a garden, pondering the miracle that is life. I mean, seriously, you take a seed, throw it in the DIRT, toss water on it, then it grows. Not just grows, but then makes food to eat, too. It's just unbelievable.
My sister shared something with me the other day that she stumbled upon in her garden, as well. She was trying to pull weeds and they kept breaking off. She kept watering the yard and even after watering, couldn't get those roots to come up. Then, of all things, a hail storm came. It was emense and ended up leaving piles of hail on the ground that soaked it deeply. After that storm, she went out to tend her yard and was able to pull out the weeds easily...roots and all. She wanted to share with me that I can't "water" my own life enough to make it possible to extract the weeds. I need to let God water the garden and accept that some of the water is hail, even welcome the hail. The water--or rest--needs to absorb deeply, it has to sink in. Then the weeds can be extracted much better. I also ran across the Bible parable today about the farmer who sows wheat in a field and then his enemy comes and plants weeds among it. When people ask the farmer if he wants to pull the weeds, he says, "No" because pulling the weeds will hurt the wheat. But to wait until harvest and separate it then. The parable is about separating believers and those who reject God's word, but in this moment, I was intrigued by the fact that the farmer decided to wait. I am letting God tend the garden of my heart right now, and in doing so, am allowing for His timing to help me pull the weeds in my life.
 This photo shows my kale, collard greens, and broccoli (going from the top row, moving right to left), then in the second row from the top, my carrots and at the left side of the photo, my lettuce, and in the next row, rainbow Swiss chard, then onions, then garlic, then artichokes. This is half of my garden and it is MUCH bigger now.
 The roses in this picture are in my guest room. They're from my yard! I have been getting the most lovely bouquets of fresh flowers from my yard. I've been able to give them to friends, set them up for guests who come over, and put them in our room. We got about 90 roses off of our bushes last week, and there were still several to spare.
 This is another shot and shows three of my varieties of roses as well as lavender. I've been harvesting lavender like a mad woman as well. The lavender is SO lovely and reminds us of our wedding day. It's wonderful to have it growing in my yard!!




My house:
Our house from the front. This yard has come alive SO much in the last year. The tree is wrapped because it was so damaged (who knows from what) when we moved in that the entire front of the tree was dead. We put in planters because our yard was being used as a parking lot. The gras has started to really make a comeback. It's such a feeling of success to see this place standing a little straighter each time we do something new to it. This time, though, it's just been our joy to provide enough water to make it possible for things to correct themselves mostly.


This is what we first looked at when we thought about buying this house. Looks kind of like a creepy, run-down house from a kids' scary movie. You know, the house that eats people or something. It looks completely abandoned and unloved. Which was true. When we moved in, the place had been vacant for a year.
 The next shot is the day we moved in. Just looking at this again, it looks like the lawn has receeded a LOT to be where it is now, but that's not the case. The actual grass was only from the lilac and over to the left from there, but the rest is weeds. Yeah, mowed weeds for a driveway. We REALLY had our work cut out for us. But we were so thrilled to have this place. It's been such an incredible blessing, too. Everything about it is just so special to us.
In the picture, you can see that there are NO rose bushes and the tree in the yard has low branches in the back that are thriving and everything else is basically dead. And you can't really tell, but the plum bushes on the right are overgrown and are actually falling in on themselves. Only the end of each branch has living leaves on it. And the large bush by the house, the lilac, is much taller in this picture, but also much more sparse.

The final picture of the house is from just a month ago. And we've made changes since then, even, but it's almost the same then to now. The next big change coming for the house is a new fence. Our target is to have one in by this time next year. We are thinking a cedar fence. I know you can't see it from this shot, but the fence that's currently in place is made of excess siding. Our house is all-wood siding and apparently, the woodwork had no end. (Shoot, when we moved in, we had a wood-paneled shower, for crying out loud!!) The fence is pieces of siding from the '60s that has been stapled and nailed and screwed to posts that are very deeply rooted in the soil.

Above is a rose covered in rain. This comes from the same bush that makes TONS of roses. Just guessing there must be something right with the soil in the place it's planted because it cannot be discouraged. (Not that I'd want to do that, anyway)
 Below is a plum growing on our plum bush. When we moved in, we thought the bush was dead. Then, when it came (weakly) to life, we thought it was ornamental. Now, every year, I trim it to the shape I want it, and the thing now has the energy to make plums! It's just loaded with them! We are looking forward to plum pies in the late summer.


Diet and a new plan:
Okay, changing gears a bit, I have decided to do a juice-fast. A long one. I am tired of the doctors not knowing what's wrong with me and I am tired of being overweight. I am ready to start feeding my body what it needs. As I write this, I am two weeks into this juice fast. I feel great. I am noticing things like the fact that my fingernails are stronger than they've ever been. I have TONS of energy and get full off of a glass of juice. I have even started drinking it slower because my attitude towards food has changed. I also notice that my sense of smell is really keen. I smell things way before other people do and I can identify all kinds of things. Crowning moment for me was walking into a restaurant where they have a juice bar and saying "Where is the ginger?" and the guy about 6 feet away from me was holding about an inch of ginger.

Below is a picture of a typical days' juice. This will last me about two meals and then I make another juice for dinner. We are buying all of our produce at the Golden Farmer's Market. It's excellent. We can get a grocery bag STUFFED with veggies for just $10. Best part, they're local, organic, and fresh. There are kids asking you to buy things from their family's farm. It rocks. They're proud of the produce and they should be, too!
 These veggies are from before the Farmer's Market opened. I no longer peel cucumbers, but this one was from King Sooper's and was so waxed, it felt disgusting. So, I peeled it, and voila! All better.

 Gotta have a cup of tea with your book, juice, and music. Behind the tea is several pounds of jalapenos from a local market. It was $2 for an entire grocery bag of jalapenos. Most people wouldn't be so inordinately excited about jalapenos, but we eat them on and in everything. Yum!
 All recipes seem to call for kale to be stemmed. It also makes it somewhat easier to get it into the juicer. I have used a knife to do this before, but this is the simplest way to go about it. Grab the kale stem and wrap the fingers of your free hand around the leaves.
 Hold the stem tightly and pull your fingers along the stem away from your other hand. The leaves will come off pretty easily.
 Then, you're left with the stem and the leafy greens: separate.
 This is the complete product of a morning's slicing and dicing and peeling and washing and stemming. Wow!!
 My Champion Juicer: be still my heart!
I chose a masticating juicer (masticating is a fancy way of saying "chewing"--so this juicer uses blades to chew and separate the juice from the solids) because it means a much simpler process (therefore a less "processed" finished product--remember, the things we do to food in our kitchens is a form of "processing" it, too).
I ended up using a centrifugal juicer for a little while after my grandmother passed away and found it so difficult to clean that I gave up completely and didn't use it. It also made a huge mess. This baby (my Champion) is easy enough to clean and use that I can make it go 3 times a day without missing a beat, and I don't feel like I just spent all day cleaning the same thing over and over. The process of "masticating" gives the juice a little bit of foam on top at times, but it's all just juice. I love this machine and really enjoy being able to eat things that are fresh.
 Blur alert! Sorry. Put the veggies in the top like this.
 Use the plunger to press the veggies gently down into the blades.
 Watch juice pour into the cup below like drops of health in a cup. It's lovely to see. I just imagine all the wellness that can be obtained being extracted and placed into my glass.
 The "solids" come out the front. I usually re-cycle them through the juicer a couple of times just to get all the juice out. The first little bit is the wettest of the solids.
 Finito! Voila, a glass of green, lovely juice. And it tastes pretty amazing, too, I must say.

I am doing a juice fast for many reasons. I want to lose weight, I want to re-train my tastebuds so they enjoy whole foods and real foods instead of processed food stand-ins, I am hoping to help my body solve its own issues by giving it all the nutrition it needs to help it fight whatever is messing with it. I have been a medical anomale this year and I would like to give my body a fighting chance to fix what's wrong with it. Since the medical field is baffled by what's going on with me, I might as well turn to nutrition and see if I can equip my body to heal itself. Juice made from fresh fruits (so, not Minute Maid, Tropicana, or really any store-bought juice) is able to send the nutrients of the fruit and veggies directly to your system. It takes only about 30 seconds from when you drink juice until it is absorbed into your bloodstream and goes to work in your body. What about juices like "Naked"? Those are great, and I have had those a couple of times when I've been out doing things and wasn't able to make a juice. The main drawback is that those juices are pasteurized, or cooked. This means they lose a lot of nutrients. They also sit on a shelf which depletes the nutrients.
The way I see it, when I can get fresh, local, organic fruits and veggies in the summer for $10/week, why wouldn't I want to turn those things into juice and feed my body what it needs? In the winter, it can be a little more tricky and expensive because fresh produce doesn't exactly grow in Colorado during snow storms. Those fruits and veggies lack some of the important nutrients as well, but you have to eat in the winter!
I will let you know how it goes as I journey through this. I am hoping to hit the other side with confidence and gusto!











Making Sushi
 I learned this time that it really does matter what kind of nori (seaweed paper) you use. The brand above is thick enough that it doesn't break when you roll it, it has a nice amount of give and is dark--more black than green.
The sushi above and below were from one batch of rice. "Sushi" actually is a word that refers to the specially prepared and seasoned rice in the dish, not to the raw fish. Many sushi dishes can contain no fish at all, and no raw fish as well. The rice is the most challenging and time-consuming part of the dish. It takes about 2 hours to prepare sushi rice and instructions are very particular. I would recommend finding a reputable source for how to cook rice. The other thing that is very particular is what kind of fish you are purchasing if you're going to use raw fish in your sushi. I used sashimi grade ahi tuna. It's very important that the fish is sashimi grade, it must be handled carefully in order to be safe to eat raw. I find mine at Whole Foods.
 I made two rolls with chopped up tuna and a spicy sauce of mayonaise and sriracha. They all have avocado, carrots, and cucumbers in them. The cornucopias on the right are made with cooked beef and vegetables. I made a sauce for the beef with sesame oil, rice vinegar, and soy sauce.

The photo above shows the rice, rolled into a ball and ready to be placed onto the nori sheets and spread. It is spread by pushing the rice into the nori and spreading in a kneading motion. 

 Pick up some wasabi and swipe it down the middle of the roll in a small channel you have created.

 Layer fish, vegetables that have been julienned, and any sauces you are planning to use. Place them in the center of the roll.
 Use the bamboo sheet to roll up the sushi making sure the edges of the rice come into contact at the far edges of the roll. Bring them together and press them together allowing the nori to seal the roll shut.

When it's time to cut the roll, make sure you are using a VERY sharp knife. Wash it off between cuts to ensure the knife is clean. Leave a little water on the knife so that it will allow the sushi to be cut without ruining its shape and presentation.


 I made this for Father's Day for my dad.
 And a (sadly blurry) picture of my dog and Kirsten's dog hanging out. They're so much cuteness!