Saturday, September 29, 2012

First Easter Egg


Our first Araucana egg, sort of blue-green, in front of today's Dominique egg and next to grocery store large eggs.
Hilda noticed Bridget sitting in a nest box for a long time today. Finally, Hilda reached underneath her, and there it was—our first blue egg from an Araucana. I was away at a workshop at the time and did not get the news until I got home. Very exciting! We have five Araucana, so once they all start laying, production should more than double.
Up until now, we believe that all of our eggs were coming from the Dominiques. We have three of them. For about a week, we got one a day. Recently, that has gone to two. The size is creeping up into the “small” range. Early on, we had one that was 1.8 ounces. One of the chickens had skipped from teensy to large! When we cooked the egg, it had a double yolk. Another large egg a few days later also had a double yolk. I think I remember reading that double yolks are common from young hens. With practice, they get it right. We’ll see.
A double-yolked egg. We've had two so far.

I suspected the Aracauna would start laying soon. Thursday morning when I was cleaning the coop, I noticed that Ingrid did “the squat” when I stroked the back of her head. I first observed this behavior in Sara after she had started laying. When I petted her head, she lifted her shoulders, spread her wings slightly, and bent her legs. I mistook it at first for the poop position, but no poop was forthcoming. When I repeated the touch, she repeated the posture. It was then that I realized I was a big disappointment to her. This was a “come hither” sign for a rooster. Sorry, Sara. Sorry, Ingrid.
Meanwhile, we’ve had several good frosts. The tomatoes are quite dead. I’m working on processing the ones Hilda picked just before the first frost. They have been ripening here and there throughout the house and greenhouse ever since. Tonight I am going to make spaghetti sauce. Tomorrow we will begin fermenting cabbage for sauerkraut.  We will have to dig potatoes soon. Hilda dug up some Gold Rush russets last week. The results were encouraging, as there were some really big spuds in there. Some years we get nothing but tiny ones, which are rather a pain to peel.
Gold Rush russet potatoes. The large one in the upper left is probably 5 inches long.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

EGGS!


Thursday, September 13. When I cleaned the coop in the morning, Sara was sitting in a nesting box on top of the ceramic eggs. She was not inclined to move, either. I lifted her up one side at a time to check, but nothing. Still, I thought it was a good sign.
Sara sitting in the nest box on top of the ceramic egg (white)

Terry and I were watching the Bears getting walloped by Green Bay that evening when I heard footsteps on the stairs. My mother knocked and asked to come in, which is nothing unusual. She often comes down to get things out of or put things in freezers, etc. My dad had come down also, which was unusual.  Hilda was grinning like a little kid at Christmas. “We have an egg!” she announced, holding out a tiny, perfect little brown egg. Well. She and I got on the phone to call all the people who have been following the chicken adventure most closely—Pat and Nancy, Jane, and Kate. This first egg was found on the floor of the coop.
First egg on the floor of the chicken coop (and Ellie has to know what's going on)

No more eggs the next morning. When I got done at the Fitness Center about 2:00 Friday afternoon, there was a message on my office phone (and my cell phone, and my email) that a second egg had been found AND this one was in a nesting box! Hilda had also weighed both eggs. Egg #1 was 1.2 oz. and Egg #2 was 1.1 oz. She compared this to the standard grade sizes—a small egg weighs 1.5 to 1.75 oz. So these were, presumably, teensy eggs. (Jane says they are called “pullet eggs” which makes a certain amount of sense, since pullets are young hens. I can never see that word without thinking of the Anguished English story about the student who wrote about someone receiving the “Pullet Surprise”.)
The second egg in the nest box with a brown ceramic egg (in back)

Our first two teensy eggs

Hilda and I divided the eggs this morning. She gave me the first egg and kept the second. Tragedy struck when I was trying to show Terry that the shell seemed just as hard as a normal egg. Somehow the egg stuck to my fingers as I opened my hand, and instantly the egg was on the floor. The shell was not strong enough to withstand impact with tile-covered cement. I could only think of the immortal words of my late Uncle Carl, who always knew what to say in a crisis: Well, God damn.
The sad fate of the first egg

Let me tell you, there is quite a lot of fluid inside a 1.2 oz. egg. A paper towel and a half was not enough. Terry got a wet rag and finished what I couldn’t wipe up. Hilda graciously surrendered the second egg, since she was having a doughnut for breakfast anyway. I called her in when the egg was ready so she could have a bite. It was delicious!
External comparison between the second egg and standard large eggs

Internal comparision of the second egg (right) and a grocery store large egg (left).
Note lovely golden color and round, upright stance of our egg's yolk.

Terry spotted the third egg this morning in the middle of the run. His hypothesis is that these eggs are so small that the hens don’t really know they’re coming, so they just drop them wherever. According to this hypothesis, they will get better about laying them in the nest boxes when the eggs are larger. We shall see!

 

 

The harvest continues


One upside of the drought is that the tomatoes are virtually fungus free this year. Often by late August, the tomatoes are almost completely defoliated and production is slowing down. This year, however, we’ve got tomatoes everywhere! We usually only can the Roma tomatoes, and they have been late for reasons we cannot imagine. Not cold weather, certainly. We’ve had a problem with squash beetles getting on the tomatoes when they are ripe. Hilda has resorted to picking the tomatoes a bit earlier and letting them ripen in her room.
Tomatoes ripening on every flat surface in Hilda's room
Labor Day weekend was busy with putting up. Jane came up on Saturday to make pepper relish, which is tradition in her family. I’ve mentioned before that we are having a bumper crop of peppers. We made two batches of pepper relish, ending up with 10 pints. I grilled the rest of the peppers the next day, took off the skins, and froze them. It always reminds me of cleaning pelts. I peel the skin off the outside, cut the pepper lengthwise, scrape out the seeds, and put the flat, cleaned peppers in a stack. I feel like I should take them to the trading post next.
Sweet pepper harvest. Pepper relish takes half green and half red peppers

Jane grinds the peppers and onions

Peppers, onions, salt, sugar, and vinegar cook before canning

10 pints of pepper relish

I know I said we only had one peach in this year’s crop. I should clarify that we only had one GOOD peach. We also got a fair number of little runt peaches from some trees that have frozen back several times but not died. The peaches were astringent and not freestone, which confirmed Terry’s hypothesis that only the root stock had survived those tough winters. Peach trees come grafted—a hearty root stock on the bottom and a scion that produces a better fruit on the top. Terry only buys trees that have been grafted with freestone scions. On Labor Day, I decided to try pickling these runt peaches. The upside was that peaches are pickled whole. No trying to remove the pits. The downside was that these runts didn’t want to give up their skins even after blanching. And, being small, they were hard to handle and there was a bazillion of them.
Runt peaches with a quarter for size reference

I found a recipe in one of my cookbooks and quickly realized that pickled peaches were invented to use up astringent runt peaches. Eight pounds of “small, firm” peaches and 3 pounds of sugar. Soak the peaches overnight in the syrup with a cheesecloth-wrapped bouquet garni of clove and cinnamon. It seems like if you put rocks through a similar protocol, you would get something good to eat. Hilda had to finish the canning on Tuesday while I was at work. In three to four weeks, we will be able to taste the results.
Peaches steeping in sugar syrup with spices

Hilda continues to make interesting discoveries while she waters. This time it was two black swallowtail caterpillers in the parsley.


Black swallotail caterpillars on the parsley
Last weekend, I had to deal with the hot peppers and the sweet mini bell. I put jalapenos and mariachi pepper in the smoker and froze them. I also put up some hot pepper relish and canned whole jalapenos, whole mini-bells, and sliced jalapenos. After supper, I made a double batch of stuffed peppers to freeze. Sometimes it is a relief to get back to work on Monday.

Hot peppers, before

Hot peppers, after