Showing posts with label Herbs R Easy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herbs R Easy. Show all posts

Friday, May 27, 2022

The changing world - how herbs can help - Weekend Recipe Marinades!

 At Backyard Patch Herbs we are always trying to be helpful and informative about why herbs are so great.  I know, I think they are really great, but you only have to go as far as you want! Some of the things we are trying to do to be more helpful, is demonstrate the easy ways to use herbs at home.

Backyard Patch Herbs logo

Food prices are going up so we all need to get the most out of our food budget, the Herb Mixes of Backyard Patch Herbs are still a reasonable price with a long shelf life (18 guaranteed) even though they have no preservatives.  Some of the quickest and easiest to use for cooking are our rubs, marinades and dressings.

I created some fliers about how to use herb marinades. rubs and dressings which I will share over the next few days along with a few recipes.  We will start with marinades to help get the most flavor even from a cheap cut of meat.

MARINADES

            Marinades are particularly well suited to beef and game, but can be used to liven up the mild flavor of chicken and all its relatives.  Marinades are created using a blend of oil, vinegar and seasonings that is then used as a soak for the item before it is cooked.  The ratio is generally 2/3 cup oil to 1/4 cup vinegar (or lemon juice) and herbs to taste usually around 2 tablespoons of dry herbs, more if you are using fresh. Add the dry herbs to water before adding them to the vinegar and oil.  If they are fresh just chop fine. 

The high acid content of a marinade (from vinegar) helps tenderize meat as well as impart wonderful flavors.

Always prepare your marinade in a shallow non-reactive dish or pan just large enough to hold the meat comfortably.  Be sure to turn the meat so the flavor will permeate all surfaces evenly.  Very thin cuts of meat can be marinated an hour or so at room temperature, but roasts and larger cuts should stand longer, even up to two days in the refrigerator.  Just remember to turn the meat every few hours and let it return to room temperature before cooking.

When marinating chicken, a few hours to overnight is generally long enough.  Lemon is a perfect flavor for chicken so substituting Lemon juice for the vinegar is perfect.  If you are marinating fish no more than an hour in the marinade is recommended.  The soft flesh of fish easily absorbs marinade and the acid actually “cooks” the fish, so too long can damage the texture and flavor. It is recommended to place the marinade on the fish and then cook immediately in foil, or use as a baste while grilling.

Marinade on vegetables does not need as much acid as meats and can be made with just oil.  With vegetables, one can soak them in the marinade or brush it on during grilling. Adding a bit of honey can sweeten bitter vegetables.




Backyard Patch Herbs makes a selection of Herb Seasonings to create marinades as well as dressings that double as a marinade.  For a complete list of these, check out our on-line catalog: marinades and dressings.

The Marinade Mixes at BYP include one specifically for chicken as well as several that can be used on any kind of meat or on vegetables.

Lemon Sage Turkey Rub

DIRECTIONS

Whisk together Lemon-Sage Marinade, lemon juice, olive oil, salt, and pepper to make a paste.  Rub mixture over and under skin of turkey. Roast as usual.



Mediterranean Marinade

DIRECTIONS

Mix together.  Use to marinade meat, poultry, seafood or vegetables.  Can also be a baste on meats and vegetables.


Grilled Provençal Shrimp Skewers

DIRECTIONS

Heat grill to medium-high. In a medium bowl, toss the shrimp with the mayonnaise, Herbs de Provence, salt and pepper.  Thread the shrimp onto 8 skewers (soaked if wooden) and grill, uncovered, until cooked through, 3 to 4 minutes per side.









 

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Improvements and Changes to Backyard Patch Herbs

Covid has taken a lot out of me.  I am sure you can relate.  I did not realize how much I need to interact with others to boost my own creativity.  I miss just talking randomly about herbs.  Comments on my blog aren’t doing it, discussions on Facebook aren’t doing it.  I just need to have spontaneous questions. Everything seems to take me longer to do: Making herb blends, printing labels, packing items.  I can spend hours and lose track of time.

I have tried in this down time of quarantine to learn how to edit videos, so far I have not finished one of them.

I did clean and organize the cabinets in the herb room, scanned a pile of recipes (still not much of a dent in the collection.) I organized my craft room and cleaned out my part of the garage. Seriously, I never do these things, much to my husband’s chagrin.

Working during Quarantine

I am working from home, all of my jobs are now in one building.  This could be part of my problem I never escape.  My living room is now my office, my dining room was for teaching via zoom, my basement is for blending herbs.  The only escape I have is the garden. Which is probably why I have been spending so much time there.  Neglecting things I should be doing, like writing my monthly newsletter.


The weeds have never been more tamed.  But I have not grown one herb or flower that was new, except those two biennials I planted last year.

The Silver Dollar Plant flowered wonderfully and made these great branches when I harvested the seed.

 


The hollyhocks turned out to be black (I had no idea from the gift seeds I got.) When the sun shown on the plants they actually looked deep purple.  I liked the color difference from morning to evening.

 

But beyond this I have not been very creative in the garden. 

We do have cats again.  It was hard being on lockdown with no pets so we contacted a fostering agency called Mutts and Meows and got a pair of young cats.  Aren’t they adorable?

 


I have not written an email to my membership in months, mostly because even finding the energy to post to the blog has been hard, a newsletter is time consuming and I have had ½ a dozen false starts.

There are few events to promote, no talks to support with info and no new herbs to share.  And since we are not traveling, I do not have any cool places for you to visit right now.  That makes finding newsletter topics difficult.  So finally when the weather turned cooler this week I sat down with my journal and a pen and a view of these….

 


Zinnia, Cosmos, calendula and on the arbor is hops, just about to ripen.  All I need is a couple days of sun and I will have a huge hops harvest.  Might need to learn to brew beer!

In my journal I wrote down product ideas, garden ideas, newsletter topics, recipe ideas and finally after all that writing I decided a few things.



I created a DIY product - DIY Refrigerator Pickles. Doing things at home being popular these days made it fun to make kits for making refrigerator pickles. They have everything needed except vinegar, water and the veggies.  And as long as the veggies are fresh, they can come from a garden or from the store or farmers market.  In 24 hours one can have pickles without having to know how to can.  

If one wanted to know how to can, my Canning Basics class is coming up in October with District 214.  It will be virtual, so you don't need to leave home.  I am also showing how to make vinegar, sugar, honey and other items infused with herbs in a special three-part class called INFUSION which is happening starting September 16th at 7 PM via Zoom.

Time for Change

I have decided after making all my notes and watching YouTube videos on growing my business that things need to change. Don’t get me wrong.  I have nothing to complain about.  I still have my part time day job, I am still teaching in a limited capacity and Backyard Patch Herbs did very well during lock down, so I unlike many I could still pay the rent and pay bills.  My soup mixes and baking products were a big hit as were my gift baskets.  But I realized I need to simplify. The wide variety of products available all the time is terribly time consuming to make, even if I don’t make things ahead and only do on-demand crafting, it is still a lot of work. 

·        So I have decided to rework my product line and my email strategy, as well as what I do on Social Media. Here is the short list: 

  • My newsletter will be once every three weeks.  Not quite twice a month, but not once a month either. I will add more fun to the newsletter and cover more things, but in different ways, this way I can create useful content more often than before in less time.  
    • I will share garden images; 
    • easy and challenging recipes for the beginner and the adventuresome cooks; 
    • share more information of what I enjoy from my herb and gardening friends with links to websites you may have overlooked; 
    • book reviews on garden and herb topics; 
    • sharing the herb and gardening wisdom of my herby friends. 
    • If you want to join the newsletter visit this link.
  • I have enjoyed choosing recipes on a theme to post each month on the blog (this month the theme is quiche), so I will be doing more of that, expanding to include recipes with photos on Instagram. In other words, you get to see some of my hubby’s tasty creations.
  • I will also be changing my product line.  I plan to add some special items that will be DIY type creations that are available seasonally and will allow folks to enjoy herbs in new and different ways.
  • I will reduce my herb blends to those that are most popular and with the exception of my Italian Dressing and Marinade I will be retiring all blends that have salt. Stock up now they will be gone on December 31, 2020. If you want to vote on your favorite herb mixes, as there are 45 - I will be holding a vote of some sort in the newsletter and on Facebook in the coming weeks.
  • Although I love to experiment with Herb teas, I am going to reduce the offerings to 10 - 12 teas, those being my most popular. Other teas will come and go seasonally in much the way I have begun offering Holiday only teas for Halloween and the Winter Holidays.  Those of you who love a tea will always be able to order it, just remember the name and email and can send it.
  • I am going to offer subscription services, like a CSA style box as well as tea of the month and herb blends of the month. This is where I will share my new experiments rather than adding them instantly to my product line as I have in the past.
  • I will continue to offer remote programs on Zoom as well as in-person programs, but will work to add programs to a Youtube channel (I think I will trade herbs for editing assistance.) And eventually create an herb cooking class on a platform like Teachable where folks can learn at their own speed.
If there is anything you think I should or should not do in the coming times?  Any products you might like to see?  All suggestions will be considered.

 

Friday, March 20, 2020

Spicy Sweet Chicken Kabobs - Weekend Recipe


This weekend I was to be speaking at the Chicago Flower and Garden Show, both Saturday and Sunday.  I had prepared my Infusions program for Saturday and Blending Herbs for Tea and Cooking for Sunday.  

Infusions is a program I love doing and created especially for the Chicago Flower and Garden Show about 5 years ago.  I decided to turn it into a book to kick off a series of small books called Herbs R Easy.  My lecture participants have consistently said that I make herbs seem easy and I realized it was a great theme.  So I brainstormed 43 different ideas that I can turn into small easy-to-read books on singular subjects all related to herbs. The books easy to digest and the instructions simple to use, making Herbs Easy.

Until we schedule a book launch, you can pick up a digital copy of my book INFUSION, first in the series Herbs R Easy, on my website. Infusion focuses on making herb flavored items, like honey, compound butter, and herbal wine or vinegar.  If you are interested in my new book, check out this link to a digital version.





This recipe is great if you make an herb infused honey, especially one made with pineapple sage or ginger. 

Spicy Sweet Chicken Kabobs
1 14-ounce can pineapple chunks, drained
1 medium red pepper  
1 Tbls vegetable oil
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup of honey, plain or herbal
1/4 tsp ginger, powdered
1/2 tsp granulated garlic
1/4 cup pineapple juice
4 skinless boneless chicken breast halves

Directions:
Cut each chicken breast into 1-inch cubes. Combine oil, soy sauce, honey, pineapple juice and powdered ginger and garlic in a large zip seal bag and add chicken. Marinade the chicken in the sauce overnight.

Dice red pepper and drain pineapple.  Then alternately thread marinated chicken, pepper and pineapple onto skewers.  Brush kabobs with any remaining marinade and discard what is left over. Broil, about 6 inches from heat source, 12 to 14 minutes, turning and brushing. 

RECIPE THEME

Each month a theme is chosen and a number of recipes on that theme from my massive archive will be shared.  This year we have 12 new topics, different from the topics of last year.  To find the recipes of last year, check out this recipe link or search the blog with the topic Recipe2018, or Recipe2019 


You can search the monthly theme by looking for the theme keyword in the search box and it will pull up the recipes on that theme as posted, so look at the bottom of the recipe in each posting for the KEYWORD in the () to search for each  month.  All recipes this year will be tagged Recipe2020 so you can find them all.

The themes are:

Feb 2020 - Footbal Tailgate Favorites (AppFeb)
March 2020 - Kabobs (KabobMar)
April 2020 - Brunch (BrunchApr)
May 2020 - Non-Traditional Pizza (PizzaMay)
June 2020 - StirFry Dishes (StirJun)
July 2020 - Salads with no lettuce (SaladJul)
August 2020 - Pickled things (PickleAug)
September 2020 - Quiche (QuicheSep)
October 2020 - Squash Soups (SquashOct)
November 2020 - Pumpkin (again) (PumpNov)
December 2020 - Turkey Recipes (TurkDec)
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