The fruits of my labor

by Stephanie @ Keeper of the Home on January 18, 08

in In the kitchen

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Two days of chopping, stirring, baking and cleaning later, we now have:
1 large bag of dried apples (which will likely be polished off by Sunday night)
2 jars of blueberry syrup for pancakes
3 containers of my favorite, creamy, comfort food potato soup
4 breakfasts worth of pancakes in the freezer
5 large jars of delicious yogurt
6 days left until I need to bake bread again (this is probably only hopeful thinking)
7 happy mouths to serve vanilla custard to tomorrow night (the last item on my list I still have to make)
8 apple cinnamon muffins left as we speak
and 9, the hours of sleep I hope to get tonight. :)

But it was so worth it.

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{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Laura January 18, 08 at 9:10 pm

Wow girl you've exhausted me :)

Please share your muffin recipe!

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2 Mab January 18, 08 at 10:37 pm

Just wondering: Do you have 2 fridges?
I couldn't fit all that in my little bit of a fridge.... and my freezer is even smaller. I love the idea of cooking once a week [which you almost have here] but how do I store all that?

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3 Bonnie January 19, 08 at 3:20 am

WOW !! You've been busy !!! How do you make dried apples ??

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4 Stacy January 19, 08 at 6:55 am

Wow! You have been busy!
It all looks great.
Stacy

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5 Tara January 19, 08 at 8:00 am

Wow, that's crazy! Are you freezing the pancakes as a fast breakfast later? What a good idea!

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6 Stephanie January 19, 08 at 10:42 am

Laura, I'll post the recipe later today. :)

Mab, I only have one fridge. However, it is currently a very, very full fridge. I do also have a separate deep freezer, which helps a lot with making extra food. A deep freeze is such a great investment, for being able to take advantage of deals. You can often even get them free, through things like freecycle, craig's list, and spring cleaning, when people put stuff they don't want out on the side of the road (that's where we got our first and second freezer!).

Bonnie, to make dried apples you need to have a dehydrator. All you do is peel and cut them up (it's nicest to core and slice them in rounds, but it's difficult to core apples when they are getting older and fall apart more easily- I just cut these ones into smaller slices). Then spread them on the dehydrator sheets, put them on a low temperature (around 95 degrees) for around 4-8 hours (depending on your slice thickness and size). That's it!

Tara, the pancakes are for quick breakfasts. I realized that this worked well after making too many pancakes once and freezing them and just loving the convenience of having them. They're not quite as nice as freshly made pancakes, but they work when you need something fast. We use our toaster oven to reheat them.

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7 Stacy January 19, 08 at 8:05 pm

Great job!

Can I ask how you made so much yogurt in one night? I have a yogurt maker but it only makes 32 oz at a time.

~Stacy

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8 Barb J. January 20, 08 at 5:05 pm

What do you do with your dried apples? Do you eat them dry or reconstitute them?

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9 Stephanie January 22, 08 at 8:20 am

Stacy, good question! I don't use a yogurt maker- I use my oven! Here's the link to my yogurt making tutorial:
http://www.keeperofthehome.org/2007/11/making-homemade.html

Barb, we eat them dry. Both my husband and daughter love to snack on dried fruits.

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10 Angela February 23, 08 at 4:21 pm

How do you make your blueberry pancake syrup? It looks so yummy. You have really inspired me to try and cook things from scratch. I am really enjoying your site. Also, that potato soup looks really yummy. I am going to have to make that one sometime soon.

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11 Angela February 24, 08 at 9:11 am

Could you share your recipe for bread? I am just starting to make homemade bread and I thought it would be interesting to try spelt bread. I had never heard of spelt before reading about it on here.

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12 Stephanie February 25, 08 at 1:30 pm

Angela, I'll post my spelt bread recipe soon!

As for the blueberry syrup, what I made was loosely based on this recipe from Tammy's Recipes:
http://www.tammysrecipes.com/strawberry_sauce

I used honey instead of white sugar, and a bit of flour because I didn't have corn starch (tapioca or arrowroot powders would have worked well, too). It was so, so easy. I'm eager to make and freeze another big batch!

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