Tag: <span>goat’s milk yogurt</span>

OLS: Week 7

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One Local Summer rolls into week seven.   This week it’s back to being all me and I went all out.   Let’s start in the front with the zucchini, from my very own garden.   Next around, clockwise, is a zucchini bread muffin.   Finally we have a DELICIOUS bison with pesto and sharp goat cheese ravioli.

Zucchini – Yep, zucchini.   Non-local salt, pepper, and olive oil.   This one was perfectly ripe and gosh I could’ve eaten the whole zucchini at once.
Zucchini Bread Muffin  – I’ve been getting a LOT of zucchini from the garden and decided to give this recipe a try.   This was tricky since I was trying to keep as local as possible and the result isn’t quite perfect, but considering the amount of zucchini I’ll have this summer, there’s plenty of time to get it right.   I used my own garden zucchini, wheat pastry flour from the Mill at Anselma (stone ground there too from PA wheat), honey from Baues Busy Bees,  eggs from Mountain View Organics, and goat’s milk yogurt from Shellbark Hollow Farm.   Non-local ingredients include salt, baking soda, baking powder, canola oil, and vanilla extract.   If you’re keeping tally, yes I left out the spices, walnuts, and apple sauce.   It still tastes delicious and I love what the honey adds to the recipe, but I think I need to add more flour or less wet ingredients since it didn’t rise as much as I had expected and is a little dense.   Still, incredibly good, and worth a repeat.
Ravioli – WOW.   Wow.   Wow.   This was the most labor intensive part of the meal, but it was 100% worth it.   I dug out the pasta roller for the Kitchen Aid mixer and went to town.   Used the same wheat pastry flour as above for the pasta along with some non-local salt (and tap water, of course).   The filling is ground bison from Backyard Bison, with basil and oregano from my back deck planters, some of the frozen pesto sauce from Week 1, and Sharp II goat cheese from Shellbark Hollow Farm.   Non-local salt, pepper, and olive oil were also used.   The sauce is from the same batch of tomato sauce I made last year with the tomatoes from our garden (there were lots, and lots, and lots of tomatoes, in case I haven’t mentioned that before).   I haven’t ever made ravioli, so it was a learning experience for sure, but now that I know what I’m doing, I expect next time, this will go MUCH faster and be much easier.   I’m not quite sure if it tasted so good because it really was that good or that the amount of effort I put into doing something new mentally enhanced the flavor.  

Really though, I’m quite proud of myself for pulling this whole meal off and not giving up in the middle, leaving the kitchen a complete disaster and my stomach empty.   Through doing this whole challenge, I’ve been finding myself spending less time inside grocery stores and more time outside at farmers’ markets – I might go once every other week to the grocery store for things I can’t get at the market, essentials, etc.   It’s neat, and I hope to continue this as long as possible, maybe even freeze some meals to pull out in the dead of winter when I need a  dose of *real* food.

OLS: Week 3

I’m a little late on this one, but we spent all of week 3 in Scotland.   So, I think that’s okay, right?

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For the record, this was a lunch meal and I tend to go heavier on the green things and lighter on the meat for lunches, hence the big blob of green on the plate and little bitty blob of chicken.   In the back is red lettuce from Kimberton Whole Foods, marked as grown locally, unknown farm.   On top of the salad are little turnip chips – dehydrated turnip slices from turnips found at the Phoenixville Farmer’s Market during Week 1.   In the very front is that delicious back-porch dill and goat’s milk yogurt from Week 2 (frozen while we were away, and then thawed to enjoy again).   The chicken roulade is made with chicken  again from Eberly Poultry – pounded out thin.   Inside the chicken is dill and basil from the deck, bacon from Country Time Farm, sundried tomatoes from last year’s garden, and ‘Dillicious’ cheese from Clover Creek Cheese Cellar.

Not Local: Olive oil for cooking the roulade and the salad dressing.

This meal gave me a whole lot of leftovers since I used the whole pound of chicken for the roulade and will likely keep me well fed for the week.   I still have the leftovers from last week’s meal in the freezer too!   I think I’ll make a trip to the Anselma Market on Wednesday to find ingredients for Week four.   If anyone knows of a source of local flour, I’d love to hear about it!   I might be up to try my hand at home made pasta for something different.

OLS: Week 2

Week 2 of One Local Summer is cooked and consumed already.

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I did say dill last week right? I should’ve said yogurt would be the theme of this week’s meal.   Let’s go over what’s on that plate.   In the front, Sugar Snap Peas picked up at Kimberton Whole Foods (KWF) in Kimberton, PA.   They were labelled as being grown locally, but didn’t mention which farm.   The skewered chicken, also found at KWF is from Eberly Poultry  and was marinated in olive oil and lemon juice before being tossed on the grill.   The sauce over the chicken is a sort of cucumberless tzatziki sauce using goat’s milk yogurt from Shellbark Hollow Farm and dill from the deck planter.   In the back is wilted turnip greens from the Phoenixville Farmer’s Market with a few sun-dried tomatoes from last year’s garden (roasted and then frozen, thawed, dehydrated).   Dessert is the same goat’s milk yogurt with some fresh Lancaster County farm-stand strawberries blended in.

Non-local ingredients: Olive Oil, lemon juice, spices (marinade for the chicken)

Now let’s go over why I LOVE LOVE LOVE this meal.   First, my obsession with dill – it’s limitless.   I pretty much believe that dill belongs in everything and I love the Oregon Herb bread that the Great Harvest Bread Company makes because the herb pretty much means dill.   Sadly, I don’t think cucumbers are in season around here yet, but even without the cucumber, that tzatziki sauce was delicious.   MMMmm dill.   And the chicken with the marinade worked out perfectly – so soft and juicy and DELICIOUS.   But, my new find of the week and a new favorite is that goat’s milk yogurt from Shellbark Hollow Farm.   There’s something about the goat’s milk that gives the yogurt a little extra zip or zing or pizzazz.   You should go and check  out the website for Shellbark Hollow and watching the “awwwww” inspiring videos on the goat of the month page.   I have a feeling that the goat’s milk products will be making a regular appearance in my diet now that I’ve found out how incredible they taste.   And now, as I sit here and digest that wonderful meal, I’m already making plans for the leftovers.. Frozen Goat’s Milk Strawberry Yogurt anyone?