Last week, as the snowpack retreated in the backyard, and warm days despite frigid nights, triggered inch or two tall garlic sprouts to make themselves known. After 5 or so days exposed, including 2 nights of lows around 13 degrees, the outermost leaves seem to be damaged, yet still growing. I'm going to mulch a little deeper on most of the 2 beds, but I do fear that this store-bought garlic-- Christopher Ranch @La Montanita-- while eagerly fertile, may be growing a little to early for Gallup's highly contrasting diurnal shift in temperature, emblematic of the dry, high Colorado Plateau; hopefully I'm wrong.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Too, Early Garlic?
Last week, as the snowpack retreated in the backyard, and warm days despite frigid nights, triggered inch or two tall garlic sprouts to make themselves known. After 5 or so days exposed, including 2 nights of lows around 13 degrees, the outermost leaves seem to be damaged, yet still growing. I'm going to mulch a little deeper on most of the 2 beds, but I do fear that this store-bought garlic-- Christopher Ranch @La Montanita-- while eagerly fertile, may be growing a little to early for Gallup's highly contrasting diurnal shift in temperature, emblematic of the dry, high Colorado Plateau; hopefully I'm wrong.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Winter Squash
Hope Community Garden Update
Sunday, January 17, 2010
The Seasons Begin Again
So it feels like the sun is coming back north again.
Both the garden (over-eager garlic shoots have already made a fruitless/frozen appearance above ground) and I can anticipate coming out of our cold, rejuvenating dormancy. Yet, as most second-graders know, despite the occasional feeling to the contrary, it’s us who are on that elliptical route around the bright sun. Either way, it’s warming both our gardens, and hopefully my fingers to keep this we(b-log) going; so thanks for returning.
Just as is the Native American cuisine this time of year, through this winter I’ve mostly been eating stews of many varieties: Lamb and late potatoes, green chile/beef, red chile/anything (All with garlic, and seasonal veggies and canned at 14 lbs. for 1.5 hrs). Frozen Zuni Mtn. elk and El Morro Valley beef have also kept many of my friend's crock-pots full. Thanks for sharing guys, and thanks to all of you who are supporting local growers. (El Morro Valley Ranch is in the Gallup Journey!)
Coming up in this season I’ll post about my egg-less hens/gallup’s chicken prohibition, frozen leeks, perennial rosemary, The Hope Community Garden, local restaurants w/whole foods, NM-grown at the Co-op, cold frames and year-round crops, Native Seed/SEARCH, Julia and Julie, geo-thermal tiliapia aqua-culture, Kitchen Impossible/Food Network in Gallup, historic produce production of the Zuni Mountians, Gallup’s awesome CSA, Navajo a'chee sausage, the incredible local foods of the Gallup Flea Market….and then more.
Again, thanks for coming back to my blog. Kevin
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Planting Garlic
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Hope Community Garden
Friday, November 6, 2009
Beef stock
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Red Chile Sauce from 'scratch'
Monday, October 26, 2009
El Morro Valley Ranch- 2009 Beef Quarters
Eating high on the 'hog'
Charley Mallery and Rebecca Allina rolled up to Jack’s place in Gallup, just as the sun set last Wednesday, with a gooseneck livestock trailer that still smelled of their grass-fed, organic Black Angus cattle. Animals that now filled the coolers partially-covering the long ribbed floor.
Rio, Charley, and Jack inspect the cargo
They had just driven down from picking up the load of meat, USDA packaged and flash frozen, at Sunnyside Meats in Durango, CO --dry-aged for 3 weeks! A 120-quart cooler, a decent river-trip size cooler (36x21x18”), just barely held the 120 lbs. of frozen beef. Jack and I, each buying a quarter ($120 lbs. x $4.50/lbs), opted for a couple extra pounds of optional beef liver, and I graciously accepted 25 lbs. of bones to boil into beef stock.
The final resting place for this Black Angus
The quarter was an equal proportion of every cut on the cow and I marveled at the beauty and diversity of the meat, half wrapped in paper, and half in clear plastic shrink-wrap as I filled most of a mid-size upright freezer. The cuts ranged from filet mignon and brisket, to stew meat and ground beef, and everything in between, literally, but no tongue, perhaps that’s in the ground beef. )
Eating lower on the animal
As if their ranch’s growing reputation needed bolstering, be sure to check out the cover photo on the Sept/Oct issue of the Ramah Farmers’ Beet to see Rebecca and Charley’s first-place winning harvest display at the Ramah Farmers’ Market 2009 Harvest Festival. Wow and thanks!
Beckett Roasters: Gallup roasted coffee beans
You’ll soon see his coffee beans for sale around Gallup at places like the La Montanita Co-op and Camille’s Side-walk Café, but the freshest coffee around, roasted daily from green beans, is already available from Travis Smith of Beckett Roasters. Custom roasting on Gallup’s south side, Beckett Roasters sells their broad and growing selection of coffee beans in ¼, ½, and full pound ($4, $7, $12 plus tax) increments. Match your purchase size to your weekly consumption and maximize the recently roasted flavor of your coffee. You can even choose your own level of roasted-ness—Regular City for me.
Contact Beckett Roasters through their website: http://beckettroasters.webs.com and support the newest addition to Gallup’s local food sources. Oh ya, the beans, when ground and brewed, make the whole house smell like you’ve been roasting coffee in your own home.