Friday, September 30, 2011

First Red Leaf

I fear autumn in western Massachusetts isn't going to be quite as colorific (is that a word?) as it usually is. With all the rain, lots of the trees' leaves are just shriveling up and falling off without much of a color display. I took a walk the other day and did find a couple maple leaves looking pretty. I usually come back with handfuls of leaves that I press between pages of books. It is so fun to open a book and find a leaf from a few years ago. I always remember what project I was doing when and where I picked up the leaf from.


The leaf on the road reminds me of this sock and mitten set from my book Color by Kristin


Don't forget about my One Day Fair Isle and Steeking Retreat on Friday October 14th (the day before Rhinebeck Sheep and Wool begins!). I promise when you leave, you will know how to knit with two colors and how to cut your knitting! Link on the sidebar at right. 

Back to the cleaning and the cooking for this weekend's class. I can't wait to meet everyone.

What a Clever Guy

As Gram would say...... "Isn't that just so clever?"


You know.... Bill lives a couple towns from here! Wonder what he thinks. (And no, I haven't met him.)

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Some Blogger News

If you are a blogger, and using Blogger as your host, like I am.... you may be interested in this news. For quite a while I have been contemplating switching my blog to another platform but I just don't have the time nor energy nor smarts to do it so I keep on with the same old thing. With this new "dynamic views" format, you can get more of a modern look. I changed our Leyden Glen Lamb Recipe Blog to the new "dynamic views" format. If you have the time, check it out and tell me what you think..... The cool thing is the reader (that would be you) gets the chance to change the format of the blog themselves. Infinitely playful but maybe too confusing for many. The new "dynamic views" are not supported on mobile devices though.


At this point, I do not have plans to change the format of "Getting Stitched on the Farm" (my sidebars would go away and I do not want to lose them..... they are integral to the history of this site). Always something new to learn and think about though. The web moves on and on.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Sunflowers and Some New Discoveries

I'm sorry but I can't stop taking photos of our sunflowers. In September, I think about them all the time. About how the light hits them at certain times of day. About the birds and bees and bugs that live there. About the photos I could be taking when I am not there. I guess you could call it an obsession. 



Add to all that the acquisition of an iphone and its camera and the possibilities have grown.


Just discovered a new app called PicFrame (99 cents via Itunes) via links I followed to this photoblog from links I followed from the Pioneer Woman's Photography category. Overwhelming!


Really easy to make these collages......


And fool around with all kinds of things. 

 

Check it out if you are a iphone photographer or even if you aren't! 


Assorted photos taken via regular iphone camera, the Hipstamatic app, and Instagram. Sorry - cannot remember which is which. Try it. Total fun.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Critters Planning for Fall

The weather has surprised us all this week. It was supposed to rain for a week. I was totally bummed, thinking the sunflowers would turn brown and yucky. But they have changed the forecast and now we are in for a beautiful fall weather week. I love autumn. Could be that it is my birthday season but mostly it is about the glorious weather and the colors. The arrival of the shorter days and knowing soon that there will be a fire going and I will be knitting or doing something creative in the evenings is also appealing in its very own way that only a knitter or stitcher can really understand.

All the animals and creatures are getting ready for winter in their own way. The flies are in the house and driving me batty. It happens this time of year - one of the less wonderful aspects of "living in the country" with livestock just outside the door. My laptop is warm and they love it. Yuck. I don't know how many times I have witnessed flies procreating just to the side of my computer screen. I have fly strips hung all over the kitchen trying to rid the place of the pests before my next knitting guests arrive on Saturday morning. These strips used to totally freak me out when I was a small kid. Now I appreciate the efficiency at how they lure the buzzing flies in and they die. Did you ever walk into a fresh fly strip? That is one of their hazards, I must say. 



The wasps are buzzily building more nests. I'm not sure what it is about this house, but the wasps love it. When we took some walls down when we first moved here, they were full of wasp carcasses - seriously - 3 feet of dead wasps. Gross. We had to wait until it was cold to take the sheetrock down because we didn't want to get stung. I'll never forget the trash bags full of dead and hibernating wasps. (Just one of the adventures of renovating an old house.) One of those wasp relatives was on my kitchen ceiling just above the sink while I was busily fixing dinner last night. I thought about squelching him and then decided to let him live. About five minutes later, he zoomed down and stung me at the crook of my elbow, at that really tender spot. Super ouch. I didn't know what hit me. Then I remembered the wasp, who was no longer there. Hope he was happy.

I'm sure I will have more fall critter stories to tell as fall mozies on in. But for now, check out this.... very cute sunflower needle-felting sunflower idea here on the Living Crafts blog via Craft Gossip.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

The Day Before Rhinebeck - One Day Beginner Fair Isle/Steeking Retreat Here at Leyden Glen Farm

I'm trying something new this year. Last spring, a tour company arranged for a visit here at the farm just before the annual "Rhinebeck Sheep and Wool Festival." The name of the tour was "The Road to Rhinebeck" and it was a literary and knitting tour. Sounded great! I was glad to be included and be able to show the working sheep farm and my art off before the knitters went on to Rhinebeck. Unfortunately, with the state of the current economy, the trip didn't fill. I was left with a free day on my hands. Rather than moan about the loss of a day's work, I have decided that I will take this as an opportunity to have a special ONE DAY RETREAT here at the farm on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14th.

The class is being held on a Friday so it may involve you either taking a vacation day or calling in to your job with some awful illness (I won't tell, I promise). Come with a friend or by yourself. I guarantee a nice day in the country, near grazing sheep, in my colorful studio! Knitting, knitting int the round on double points, steeking, color inspiration and good food.


Check out my Retreat website here. Here is the link for this special One Day Fair Isle and Steeking Retreat. E-mail me with any questions (link on sidebar).


If you would like to plan a similar class with your knitting friends here at the farm, e-mail me and we can set up a time to come for a special One Day Retreat. Yarn shops and knitting guilds are also welcome although physical space is limited. I am also available Sundays and during the week with advance planning.

Friday, September 23, 2011

A Cosy Lamb Tagine and a Colorful Wooly Link

We're in for a rainy week, including this weekend which will probably slow the Saturday Farmers Market traffic some in Amherst. Rain happens this time of year, so I try to act smart and spend time outside when the weather is beautifully clear and crisp. Took a lot of sunflower photos at sunset the other day when the mosquitoes were ravenous. Good thing because they are going to start looking tired after all the rain. 

When the weather starts changing, I can feel my need for comfort food grow. I start craving stews, soups, apple tarts and sauce, Sunday roasts, hot chocolate.... anything to make me feel warm inside and to fill up the house with those smells that make the place feel like home. Being sheep farmers, we eat a whole bunch of lamb stewed up in these forms of comfort cooking.

 

One of our favorite ways to eat lamb is in a tagine style stew seasoned with dried fruits, ginger and cinnamon. This season, we are lucky to have fresh ginger available from Old Friends Farm. I buy a chunk (or root as I should refer to it as) every week at the Saturday market. If I don't use it all quickly, I stuff it in the freezer and it grates beautifully all winter long. 


Here's a new recipe I developed for our Leyden Glen Lamb farmstand - perfect for autumn days. If you don't like lamb, you can substitute beef, chicken, or your protein of choice. Surprisingly, Julia LOVED this even though she is in a "no-spice" period of her eating career. You can add chiles if you like things spicy. 

Moroccan Lamb Tagine from Leyden Glen Farm
with Old Friends Farm Fresh Ginger,
Prunes, Apricots, Apples, and Carrots

A tagine is actually a conical pot used in Moroccan cooking. I don't own one (this site is mind-boggling - who knew?) but it isn't necessary to have one to cook a good tagine. I use my copper dutch oven so feel free to use any heavy pot with a lid that will fit in your oven. For the lamb, I use our bone-in shoulder roasts or chops but if you can't find bone-in (they add more flavor, you know), use a boneless shoulder roast or any lamb stew cut. You can experiment with using fresh fruits (apples, pears, plums) or other dried fruits such as raisins and figs. Making a tagine is like making art - layers of experimentation and each one is different.

2 lbs. lamb shoulder roast or lamb shoulder chops - bone-in
1 Tablespoon olive oil
1 large onion
5 cloves garlic
2 cups water
1 cup dried prunes
1/2 cup dried apricots, cut into 1/4” pieces
4 Tablespoons Old Friends Farm grated fresh ginger
1 teaspoon cinnamon (and more to taste)
3 large carrots - peeled and cut into 1/2” diagonal chunks
2 Tablespoons butter
2 medium size firm apples (Honeycrisp,  Granny Smith, Delicious)
1 Tablespoon honey
handful of slivered almonds
For serving: cooked basmatic rice or couscous

In a dutch oven, brown the lamb on all sides over medium high heat in the olive oil. Remove to a platter. Peel and chop the onions and garlic. Brown the onions and garlic taking care that they do not burn. When done, return the lamb to the pot. Add 2 cups of water, 2 tablespoons of the freshly grated fresh ginger and the cinnamon and bring to a boil on top of stove. Cover and place in a 250 degree oven and cook for 4 hours until the meat falls easily off the bone. (Alternately use a crock pot set on low and let cook all day.  You can skip the browning step for crock pot cooking.)

Boil some water and soak the dried prunes and apricots in water while the meat is cooking (for at least 1/2 hour). Reserve the soaking liquid.

When lamb is falling off the bones, remove from oven, let cool a bit so you don’t burn your fingers and remove the bones. Add the carrots,  prunes, chopped apricots, and optional honey and cook uncovered on top of stove until the carrots are tender. Add the fruit soaking liquid if the tagine has dried out too much. Simmer a bit more letting the sauce thicken as the liquid evaporates. The tagine sauce should not be too liquidy - you want it to have body and thickness to it. Add 2 more tablespoons of freshly grated ginger. Taste the tagine and add more cinnamon if you like. Continue to simmer over very low heat or in the oven while you prepare the apples.

Peel the apples and cut into thin slices. Melt 2 tablespoons butter in frying pan and saute the apples, taking care that they do not become mushy - you want them to remain crisp. In a separate frying pan, toast some slivered almonds, taking care not to burn them.

Cook basmati rice or couscous according to your favorite method. Place a scoop of rice or couscous on each plate. Spoon a few of the sauteed apples on top and then ladle some of the lamb tagine on top. Sprinkle with with some toasted almonds to add a crunchy texture. Top with fresh parsley or mint.


Now for the Colorful Wooly Link..... Check this out, via Rene from Shades of Shetland. who just got back from a wonderful trip to the UK. Jealous? For sure. 

Julia and I are off to NYC for a Saturday speech on color at the Big Apple Knitting Guildon Saturday. We're bringing my mom so it should be a fun multi-generational Girls Day. Can't wait to meet all the knitters!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Zinnias in the Early Morning Sun

Nothing quite says the end of summer than zinnias in the early morning sun in a favorite blue and white Italian pitcher.....

with canning jars in the background......


Been crazily making dill pickles with the coaching of my friend Kay. I used this recipe.


I've got it down (thank you Kay)! It's super easy and only takes about an hour and a half to run a batch. So nice to learn something new. Dill pickles are a great snack for Julia after school. No sugar in this recipe - salt, yes, but no sugar. Julia is a juvenille diabetic so we are always looking for low carb snacks. I wish I had made more. Next year, I'll grow more cukes. Happy Autumn everyone!

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Sunday Farm Chores

Our February-born lambs are growing and that means it's time for some of them to leave our farm and become part of our Farmers Market lamb product range. When we had 7 sheep, it was a hard thing to do - choosing which lamb left the farm to be turned into meat for our freezer. If you want to know the truth, I used to cry. Back then, the fate of a lamb was pre-determined. If it was a boy, it would become meat. If it was a girl, she would live her life out here at our farm. Now that we have so many lambs and ewes (and a couple rams), being a ewe lamb doesn't guarantee you are going to live here forever. Now, it's all about weight. 

Sunday afternoon, we spent the day as a family, catching lambs......

weighing them......


recording the weights......


marking the ones who were not heavy enough to go away.......


and loading the trailer with the ones who went away Monday. Lots of work got done that needed to be done. It was a good day - beautiful sunny weather with a bit of coolness in the air signaling the arrival of fall tomorrow!  The dogs love when we all spend the day outside with the sheep and them doing real work. That's what makes a sheep dog tick, for sure. Doesn't Nessie look like she is smiling?


Monday, September 19, 2011

Two Sides

The zinnias are making their last furious gasps in my cutting garden. How I will miss them. Every year I grow a few rows to keep my vases stocked with the bright and cheerful blooms. 



Even the backside of these simple garden flowers are designed incredibly well by Mother Nature. 


I love all kinds of flowers but zinnias and sunflowers are probably my current faves. What is your current favorite flower? Please tell.

Friday, September 16, 2011

September is Sunflower Month

It's been a tough year for farming here in western Massachusetts as in so many parts of the country. And still our sunflowers pulled through. Not as stunning as in past years, nor enough blooms to sell on the roadside stand..... but from these photos, you will never know. Happy weekend all!











Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Another Fabulous Knitting and Stitching Weekend

I am plum tuckered out as the saying goes.... but I have to get back to my knitting anyway. We hosted another great group of knitters here at the farm. The class theme was Color and Flowers but the weekend morphed into Fair Isle and Steeking. These knitters were obsessed! They came with piles of pre-knit homework.


We picked flowers......



We learned about color.....





We knit and talked and laughed.....


We felted and embroidered knit and crochet flowers.....



We learned how to embroider on knits....


We talked about dogs and cats and sheep and chickens.....


We ate great....... (Thanks to Cathy and Cynthia!)



We rode on hay bales 


behind the giant tractor.....


We watched the sun go down.....

 

We told stories.....


And that was just the first day! Here we all are just before we went our separate ways on Sunday.... To knit alone but remember each other, our individual stories, our collective laughs. I miss you all!


One more chance in 2012 to join the fun Getting Stitched on the Farm here at Leyden Glen Farm! I have two spaces available. The leaves should be turning gold and red and orange. Fall will be in the air. Check it out here.

Kristin Is Now Writing Over on Substack

Hi All! A quick note to let you all know that I'm now writing a Newsletter over on Substack: Kristin Nicholas' Colorful Newsletter f...