Category: Recipes

Harvest Kitchen: Grains in Maine

By Roberta Bailey Maine has a long history of growing grains, and was known as the bread basket of the east in the early 1800s. By mid-century, the expanding railroads provided access to cheaper wheat from the Midwest. Maine shifted production to corn, blueberries, hay, and potatoes. In the 1980s, Jim Amaral started Borealis breads

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Harvest Kitchen: Magic Beans

By Roberta Bailey Every time I shell Scarlet Runner beans with their vibrant purple-pinks swirled with blackish purples, I think of Jack and the Beanstalk. These are the beans that would tempt many of us to trade the family cow. Surely, they are full of magic, at least enough to make us covet them, to

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Harvest Kitchen: Playful Fall Recipes

By Roberta Bailey When I was in my early years of homesteading, my gardens were my canvas, the plants my palette, an artistic expression of edible creativity that I never wanted to end. As news of the oncoming killing frost came across my weather radio, I would roar against the fates, head tilted to the

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Creative Uses for a Corona Hand Mill 

By Will Bonsall Many folks have a Corona hand mill in their kitchen (and many more should) for grinding whole wheat into flour or corn into meal. However, they often fail to recognize the many other uses for this versatile device. Over the years, I have come up with a whole bunch of ideas to maximize its

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Harvest Kitchen: Savoring Summer with Ice Cream

By Roberta Bailey Tucked in the back corner of many New England sheds or barns is a dusty old-fashioned ice cream maker. It has a wooden slat bucket held together with salt-rusted wire. The same rust is on the handle. There is a rust-frozen latch that holds the cranking mechanism on top of the bucket

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Harvest Kitchen: Recipes and Tips for Strawberry Season

By Roberta Bailey Winter came and winter went, leaving us in the spring mud. This, too, will pass. Meanwhile the strawberries are blooming. In one month from the time they bloom, the berries will begin to turn red. Spinach, lettuce, asparagus, and now strawberries, the harvest basket is bulking out. The gardening season is fully

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Plentiful Basil Makes for Flavorful Marinara

By Jonathan Mitschele I have grown basil for many years. Its fragrance and taste mean summer is finally here! Two years ago, I happened upon a recipe for “Classic Marinara Sauce” that I have modified so that the flavor of basil is unmistakable. I have since ramped up my basil production accordingly so that I

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Making Miso: A Simple Process Steeped in Tradition

By Holli Cederholm Making miso is “actually a simple process,” said Nicholas Repenning, while stirring a spoonful of red-brown paste into a mug of warm water. Repenning encouraged a dozen or so students — gathered around stainless steel tables laden with metal mixing bowls, potato mashers, and books on mold-based fermentation — to grab a

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Traveler from an Antique Land: Maize and the Classic Pupusa

Introduction and photos by Jean English; Recipes by Dusty Dowse On April 13, 2024, the MOFGA-El Salvador Sistering Committee and the Maine Grain Alliance (MGA) held a hands-on workshop at MOFGA about corn and pupusas. Sistering committee member Karen Volckhausen began the event, noting that most sistering relationships pair a city in one country with

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Harvest Kitchen: Winter Soybean Recipes

By Roberta Bailey Soybeans are an ancient food with many culinary forms. Most commonly used in the West are miso, a fermented soybean paste; edamame, the fresh green soybeans, served steamed and lightly salted; tofu, a curd made from soymilk; tempeh, the cultured ground soybeans and/or okara left over from making soy milk; and soy

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Landsmith Farm in Waldoboro, Maine, organically grows a wide variety of high-quality, tasty vegetables, herbs, willow, and cut flowers using practices that prioritize the health of the land and its stewards. Their products are sold wholesale and direct-to-consumer through a variety of channels, including a farm stand, pick-your-own garden, and a future CSA (community supported agriculture) program. Landsmith Farm is owned and operated by Erin Espinosa, whose identities as a queer latina woman farmer ground the farm in values of reciprocity, community, and perseverance.

 

Visit Ladsmith Farm on Instagram @landsmithfarm and on their Website.

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