And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
Saturday, June 22, 2013
It's summertime, and things are starting to ripen here at the ranch. This week we stripped the apricot trees of as many as we could reach, and the farm wife made apricot jam. The best thing with jam making is you can use the apricots that have a fault, such as a bird peck, to make jam, since you only need to cut out the bad part, and the rest is perfectly good. This batch is really good, and it will be especially so this winter when it's cold and rainy, to be able to taste a bit of jellied summertime on toast or waffles.
The internet is an incredible resource, and in my travels, I found this post about corn cob jelly.
Naturally, since corn is abundant this time of year, the wife and I had to try something so off beat, so we acquired some sweet corn and followed the directions. First time, we got the jelly just about right, and you can see one of the jars above on the left. The chickens got the last peck at the boiled cobs, and there were no complaints from that quarter when we tossed them into the coop (Chickenmom, I know you'll relate to that). Talk about dragging the most use out of something!
Next up is probably the figs, and the monstrous fig tree is loaded this year. I'm really looking forward to that. After that, Indian Blood peaches, and then finally, the pomegranates.
Looks delicious! Neighbor has a peach tree, but right now they are only the size of walnuts. Maybe staring at them will make them grow faster!
ReplyDeleteGoing to try that corn cob jelly - never heard of it. And yes, the Evil One will attack if she doesn't get the cob first!
:-D
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