Fermented food waste grew this chard! . I have a tiny, container-only patio garden with no space for making compost. Last year, I started making bokashi – that is fermenting my food waste. Come winter, I dug the fermented scraps (including bones, cooked food, cheese as well as veg scraps) into my containers and left them to ‘sleep’ until Spring. . Having no idea whether it had worked, I planted beets, carrots, borage, calendula, parsnips, buckwheat and more into the containers a few months back. They’ve dug their roots into the ferment and are doing really well! . This is my second chard harvest (I thought I was growing beets, but seems the greens are doing amazingly too). Going to steam and eat with some sausages and bread for lunch. . If you’ve thought about making bokashi, I’d give it the thumbs up.

Fermented food waste grew this chard!
.
I have a tiny, container-only patio garden with no space for making compost. Last year, I started making bokashi – that is fermenting my food waste. Come winter, I dug the fermented scraps (including bones, cooked food, cheese as well as veg scraps) into my containers and left them to ‘sleep’ until Spring.
.
Having no idea whether it had worked, I planted beets, carrots, borage, calendula, parsnips, buckwheat and more into the containers a few months back. They’ve dug their roots into the ferment and are doing really well!
.
This is my second chard harvest (I thought I was growing beets, but seems the greens are doing amazingly too). Going to steam and eat with some sausages and bread for lunch.
.
If you’ve thought about making bokashi, I’d give it the thumbs up.

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Bread that converts non-believers! . I took this rye bread (which is a beautifully sweet Russian-style loaf) to a friend’s house last week. She bought some ‘normal’ bread as she has historically disliked rye. . She (and her children) tried it and we completely converted. I left the rest of it there and she’s asked for more. . Besides liking the compliment, I’m glad she wants more as I have a freezer full of rye sourdough bread!! I’ve been working on my upcoming rye course for @thefermentationschool for months and I think I can see the light at the end…maybe two more days of filming to go! . If you’re near Florence and like rye sourdough (or even if you think you *don’t* like rye!) I’ll happily give you a loaf. It’s great with avocado and sumac, as I’m eating for lunch today.

Bread that converts non-believers!
.
I took this rye bread (which is a beautifully sweet Russian-style loaf) to a friend’s house last week. She bought some ‘normal’ bread as she has historically disliked rye.
.
She (and her children) tried it and we completely converted. I left the rest of it there and she’s asked for more.
.
Besides liking the compliment, I’m glad she wants more as I have a freezer full of rye sourdough bread!! I’ve been working on my upcoming rye course for @thefermentationschool for months and I think I can see the light at the end…maybe two more days of filming to go!
.
If you’re near Florence and like rye sourdough (or even if you think you *don’t* like rye!) I’ll happily give you a loaf. It’s great with avocado and sumac, as I’m eating for lunch today.

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Yesterday’s oxtail made the most amazing supper with a slice of sourdough bread generously coated with lard. . After I’d finished eating, I sat down to read Dorothy Hartley’s classic, Food in England, which @charlieb_eattheearth recommended. As if by magic, I landed on the ‘Oxtail Pot’ and ‘Oxtail Soup’ recipes. Now I want to have another go! And I’m looking forward to chatting about the possibilities with @farmandhearth in our next ’round-the-table’ patreon-exclusive podcast. . There’s a video of the falling-off-the-bone meat in my feed yesterday and lots more pics in my nose-to-tail highlight. . As always, thank you @valledelsasso for the oxtail and the backfat and the incredible work you do. . If you make oxtail, let me know what you do with it!

Yesterday’s oxtail made the most amazing supper with a slice of sourdough bread generously coated with lard.
.
After I’d finished eating, I sat down to read Dorothy Hartley’s classic, Food in England, which @charlieb_eattheearth recommended. As if by magic, I landed on the ‘Oxtail Pot’ and ‘Oxtail Soup’ recipes. Now I want to have another go! And I’m looking forward to chatting about the possibilities with @farmandhearth in our next ’round-the-table’ patreon-exclusive podcast.
.
There’s a video of the falling-off-the-bone meat in my feed yesterday and lots more pics in my nose-to-tail highlight.
.
As always, thank you @valledelsasso for the oxtail and the backfat and the incredible work you do.
.
If you make oxtail, let me know what you do with it!

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Did you grow up with tins of oxtail soup in the cupboard?! . Here’s my first foray into ‘proper’ oxtail. . If you want to taste (and I’m telling you, it’s delicious!) do the following: . Purchase an oxtail from a farmer doing good things (thank you @valledelsasso). . Fry it till sealed, adding some red wine to the pan at the end. . Transfer to a slow-cooker or big pot on low. Add water, root veg and a bit of tomato paste. Leave it to do its thing. . Remove when falling off bone. Eat as is, with the stock (which is crazily-good) or shred and mix into dishes, or blend and make soup. . I’m doing this again in future. It’s much, much better than the tinned soup of my childhood :-) . Lots more pics and videos in my story today which will be saved to my nose-to-tail highlight if you’re here later.

Did you grow up with tins of oxtail soup in the cupboard?!
.
Here’s my first foray into ‘proper’ oxtail.
.
If you want to taste (and I’m telling you, it’s delicious!) do the following:
.
Purchase an oxtail from a farmer doing good things (thank you @valledelsasso).
.
Fry it till sealed, adding some red wine to the pan at the end.
.
Transfer to a slow-cooker or big pot on low. Add water, root veg and a bit of tomato paste. Leave it to do its thing.
.
Remove when falling off bone. Eat as is, with the stock (which is crazily-good) or shred and mix into dishes, or blend and make soup.
.
I’m doing this again in future. It’s much, much better than the tinned soup of my childhood ๐Ÿ™‚
.
Lots more pics and videos in my story today which will be saved to my nose-to-tail highlight if you’re here later.

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New video: How to make crunchy pig skin. . These treats are light, ridiculously crunchy and so good. And they are made from pig skin…something that, before @mereleighfood showed me what was possible, I would have discarded. . Watching the frankly magical process of a pan of hot lard transforming dense leathery pig skin into puffy ‘ancestral popcorn’ is a wonder. Having made these, I’m asking my farmer for the skin every time now :-) . I’ve made a video showing step-by-step what I do. You can find it (and written instructions) by clicking on the first button in the ‘recipes’ section of my profile link.

New video: How to make crunchy pig skin.
.
These treats are light, ridiculously crunchy and so good. And they are made from pig skin…something that, before @mereleighfood showed me what was possible, I would have discarded.
.
Watching the frankly magical process of a pan of hot lard transforming dense leathery pig skin into puffy ‘ancestral popcorn’ is a wonder. Having made these, I’m asking my farmer for the skin every time now ๐Ÿ™‚
.
I’ve made a video showing step-by-step what I do. You can find it (and written instructions) by clicking on the first button in the ‘recipes’ section of my profile link.

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I strive to create beauty with my food explorations and I love it when someone takes my version of beauty and makes something even better by adding theirs! . Mary at @bigbank2riverbank took my sowans course over the @thefermentationschool and look what she’s made! My pics made me swoon…thank you Mary, can’t wait to see what you make next! Reposted from @bigbank2riverbank Sowans sourdough and a swig of swats. Say that ten times fast! Or donโ€™t and just make this beautiful and healthy ancient fermented โ€˜hauteโ€™ oat cuisine that I continue to be excited to have learned about through @ancestral_kitchen and @thefermentationschool. This is a wheat and malted buckwheat loaf with a sowans scald (fermented oat endosperm), for a distinctly zingy taste and super soft crumb, as well as swats (the resulting probiotic drink) as part of its high hydration. Finally, itโ€™s coated in the oat flakes and fermented overnight. A mini loaf that packs a punch of delicious flavours -my Munro ancestors would be pleased. #sowans #swats #sourdoughbaker #fermentista #scottishfood #zerowaste #sourdough #buckwheatmalt #baker #fermentedoats #fermentationschool

I strive to create beauty with my food explorations and I love it when someone takes my version of beauty and makes something even better by adding theirs!
.
Mary at @bigbank2riverbank took my sowans course over the @thefermentationschool and look what she’s made! My pics made me swoon…thank you Mary, can’t wait to see what you make next!

Reposted from @bigbank2riverbank Sowans sourdough and a swig of swats. Say that ten times fast!

Or donโ€™t and just make this beautiful and healthy ancient fermented โ€˜hauteโ€™ oat cuisine that I continue to be excited to have learned about through @ancestral_kitchen and @thefermentationschool.

This is a wheat and malted buckwheat loaf with a sowans scald (fermented oat endosperm), for a distinctly zingy taste and super soft crumb, as well as swats (the resulting probiotic drink) as part of its high hydration. Finally, itโ€™s coated in the oat flakes and fermented overnight.
A mini loaf that packs a punch of delicious flavours -my Munro ancestors would be pleased.

#sowans #swats #sourdoughbaker #fermentista #scottishfood #zerowaste #sourdough #buckwheatmalt #baker #fermentedoats #fermentationschool

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Today’s podcast episode is all about fat. . Listen in to hear us talk about why fats are important, the fats we use in our kitchen (and why) and the fats we avoid. . The mainstream health narrative about fat has been so wrong for so long. It’s harming our bodies and planet (but, as with most of these examples, making a few people a lot of money). . If you like this episode, please share it. The more people turn back to delicious, nutritious, traditional, locally-processed fats, the better the world will be :-)

Today’s podcast episode is all about fat.
.
Listen in to hear us talk about why fats are important, the fats we use in our kitchen (and why) and the fats we avoid.
.
The mainstream health narrative about fat has been so wrong for so long. It’s harming our bodies and planet (but, as with most of these examples, making a few people a lot of money).
.
If you like this episode, please share it. The more people turn back to delicious, nutritious, traditional, locally-processed fats, the better the world will be ๐Ÿ™‚

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How do you render lard? . I do mine by dicing the fat so it looks like this and then putting it into my slow cooker. I leave it for a few hours and then drain off the liquid that has formed by pouring the contents through a metal sieve into a bowl. I then return the diced fat to the slow cooker continue the cooking. . I repeat this draining and replacing until the pieces of fat that are left are tiny, golden brown and solid. . I was interested to watch @thefunctionalforce’s reel last week where Ximena used salt and water in the process (and does more than one render using the later ones to make fat for skin products). . And I was reading the ‘fats’ section of Food in England by Dorothy Hartley this weekend where yet another process is described. . I’d love to hear about your way.

How do you render lard?
.
I do mine by dicing the fat so it looks like this and then putting it into my slow cooker. I leave it for a few hours and then drain off the liquid that has formed by pouring the contents through a metal sieve into a bowl. I then return the diced fat to the slow cooker continue the cooking.
.
I repeat this draining and replacing until the pieces of fat that are left are tiny, golden brown and solid.
.
I was interested to watch @thefunctionalforce’s reel last week where Ximena used salt and water in the process (and does more than one render using the later ones to make fat for skin products).
.
And I was reading the ‘fats’ section of Food in England by Dorothy Hartley this weekend where yet another process is described.
.
I’d love to hear about your way.

Read More

Flaking whole oat groats today in order to make Sowans, the traditional Scottish oat fermentation that results in both a porridge and a probiotic drink. . Oat growers in Scotland would have historically made this ferment with what was left *after* the processing of their sacks of oats at the local mill. They’d take their grains in and get two bags back – one as the rolled oats and the other was the ‘crumbs’ that were left over. Not wanting to waste, it’s these crumbs that they fermented to make Sowans. . I don’t grow oats and I don’t have access to the crumbs left over when they are milled…but I do have a Marcato Marga grinder that allows me to flake the oats and then use the crumbs to recreate this amazing ferment! . It’ll be 5 days until this is ready. I’m a bit of an extreme fermenter and I like my food sour :-) . I’ve a course on how to make Sowans (whatever equipment you do or don’t have) over at @the fermentation school. There’s a link to it in my profile.

Flaking whole oat groats today in order to make Sowans, the traditional Scottish oat fermentation that results in both a porridge and a probiotic drink.
.
Oat growers in Scotland would have historically made this ferment with what was left *after* the processing of their sacks of oats at the local mill. They’d take their grains in and get two bags back – one as the rolled oats and the other was the ‘crumbs’ that were left over. Not wanting to waste, it’s these crumbs that they fermented to make Sowans.
.
I don’t grow oats and I don’t have access to the crumbs left over when they are milled…but I do have a Marcato Marga grinder that allows me to flake the oats and then use the crumbs to recreate this amazing ferment!
.
It’ll be 5 days until this is ready. I’m a bit of an extreme fermenter and I like my food sour ๐Ÿ™‚
.
I’ve a course on how to make Sowans (whatever equipment you do or don’t have) over at @the fermentation school. There’s a link to it in my profile.

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A squeeze shot of yesterday’s wholegrain spelt sourdough with a barley scald! . So much to love about the sense-filling process of sourdough baking. I revel in sticky fingers, smelling my starter, shaping the dough, slicing through the crunchy crust and then giving it a squeeze :-) . Lots of sourdough spelt recipes in my profile. All squeezable!

A squeeze shot of yesterday’s wholegrain spelt sourdough with a barley scald!
.
So much to love about the sense-filling process of sourdough baking. I revel in sticky fingers, smelling my starter, shaping the dough, slicing through the crunchy crust and then giving it a squeeze ๐Ÿ™‚
.
Lots of sourdough spelt recipes in my profile. All squeezable!

Read More