Sunday, July 25, 2010

Making Yogurt Cheese

We were very lucky last Thursday to have a delivery of fresh, raw Jersey cow's milk delivered to our neighborhood. I had 4 gallons of it, and was looking for a way to use it. I ran across a cheesecake recipe in a magazine, and was inspired.

I had already made the yogurt, so I just needed to strain it. Looking around my kitchen for somewhere to hang my cheesecloth, I started thinking about the inevitable bugs. We are processing tomatoes/other garden produce like crazy, so there is bugs in my kitchen for sure. It is just part of summer, but not my favorite part.

So here was my solution, and another use for my fermentation crocks, producing a cheese that is just like cream cheese in consistency, but with a yogurt flavor. It worked in the cheesecake recipe just perfectly too. The whey, if used as the liquid in bread dough, makes the softest, sweetest, fluffiest bread.

This towel over the whole thing really effectively kept all bugs out of the cheese.
The yogurt is poured into the cheesecloth "hammock"
whey filters through, the curds are trapped in the cloth hammock
lid holds cheesecloth hammock in place, keeps out bugs
tucked up the cloth, it wicks the moisture and I HATE bugs...
 

Friday, June 25, 2010

Considering the evolution of fine craft

At the turn of the last century, Robert Musil said,"There was a time when people grew naturally into the conditions they found waiting for them and that was a very sound way of becoming oneself. But nowadays, with all this shaking up of things, when everything is becoming detached from the soil it grew in, even where the production of soul is concerned one really ought, as it were, to replace the traditional handicrafts by the sort of intelligence that goes with the machine and the factory."

Then, a hundred years later, I am making pottery by methods that blend factory production with subsistence craft. The kids are integrated into the lifestyle of it. Home school is a way for kids to grow naturally into the conditions they find waiting for them. Growing a garden and making useful objects are central to our life. There is a lot to learn here, even after a lifetime of it the older ones say, there is something new to learn. 

In this last hundred years, culture has "modernized" in such a way that you can drive hundreds and thousands of miles on well maintained roads and see the same chains of processed food and products cropping up in disposable boxes (square buildings) that we are now calling "America." If "America" is the same everywhere you go, why go anywhere at all?

I love pockets of culture, places where independent thought prevails. I love to move in and out of these pockets of culture and trade my handicrafts for the handicrafts of others. I love to be involved in a community that is redefining a postmodern culture in an area of the country that has been all but sucked up by the homogenization of America. 

The era that I live in: postmodern, postindustrial, neo-tribal. In my thoughts and actions, my craft and my parenting, I strive to contribute to diversity. I want to create culture based on respect for nature: observation, celebration and preservation.

Another distinct characteristic of this era that I live in, "my era," is that community is built on this aforementioned culture. Community has always been built like friendships...with folks in close proximity to each other's values and geography. This criterion still holds true; but with one difference. The inter-web is now bringing into proximity people who never would have met. The tribe is boundless, networking and cultural exchange has infinite possibility. Virtual relations become very real when the common cultural bonds tie them to reality. 

Technology provides tools. Networks of people provide solutions and actions. Fine craft provides touchstones, artifacts, reminders in a virtual world that nature is continually respected, observed and preserved.




Monday, April 26, 2010

Kraut Crocks


Fermentation Crocks made with ash glazes in a wood and salt atmosphere kiln. All ingredients are non-toxic. The inner lid is designed to press your vegetable material under the brine mixture.

This is the old world kraut crock, heirloom quality. I have a neighbor who has a three gallon crock from her great grandmother that was passed down and brought over from Romania. We just made a new lid for it in our studio, and the glaze couldn't match better...except if we had Romanian wood ashes.

The pictured crocks hold approximately 1-1/2 gallons and are priced at $135 (plus shipping/handling), which includes Sandor Katz' book, "Wild Fermentation"(the definitive guide to fermenting, pickling and brewing for fun and health). The crocks are $115 without the book, but you won't get the book for a better price (retails $25), and anyone looking for homegrown fermentation knowledge shouldn't have to live without it.

Sandor Katz' website has an abundance of information on the subject of fermented foods: www.wildfermentation.com

Fish Backsplash




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