Preserving Classes

We are excited to continue offering preserving classes at The Depanneur in 2014. Stay tuned for details.

Interested in learning how to preserve in the privacy of your own home. I am offering individual or group home classes. I will come prepared with the recipe, the tools and the supplies. You and your friends will walk away with the knowledge and some tasty treats. If this sounds interesting send me an email.

Blog Index
The journal that this archive was targeting has been deleted. Please update your configuration.
Navigation
« To Market I Go - Five Tips on Getting There | Main | Spreading the word using MailChimp »
Monday
Mar052012

A home for my frozen Rhubarb

Every time I open my freezer door I think to myself - What can I do with these bags of frozen rhubarb? They have been haunting me since about October and I am tired of it with custard which seems to be the safe place for rhubarb to land in this house. In the summer I tend to overdose on rhubarb as we inherited what I would consider to be a sizeable patch of it in the garden of the house we bought 2 years ago. Finally a garden, and with it comes what I consider to be a 'responsibility' to ensure none of what grows in it goes to waste. Last winter we have more pesto than even I knew what to do with as our garden seemed to have burst with basil. This year it is the rhubarb that seems to be taunting me.

With the tulips in my front garden starting to poke up out of the ground even though it is only March, I felt like the rhubarb was beginning to breath down my neck. What would I do with all this frozen rhubarb if it wasn't gone before the new rhubarb started to grow.

That's it...challenge accepted. I was going to make something new and today was the perfect day as the temperatures took a dip and made it feel like winter all over again.

I spent the morning in the commercial kitchen making jam that I would sell, now I was going to spend some time making jam that I would EAT!

I stumbled across this recipe during my search and decided it would be perfect. The list of ingredients made my mouth water just reading it. Cara Cara Oranges, Meyer Lemons (I didn't have any so I just used regular old lemons), rhubarb, carrots, rosemary....hmmmmmm.

Now if you ever spend a lot of time preparing recipes that require you 'zest' anything, may I suggest you buy one of these little babies. It makes the process so easy. I think I got mine at Crate and Barrel but I am sure you could find one anywhere.

Just the process of zesting the oranges and the lemons made me forget a little that it is still winter and well below zero outside. The fresh citrus smell seemed to permeate the entire kitchen. Just look at the gorgeous beasts.

The colours of all of the combined ingredients is gorgeous, I had a hard time covering the bowl so that it could macerate overnight. My instant satisfaction urge was taunting me and telling me just to proceed asap so that the final product would be that much closer. But the saying is true, sometimes good things are worth the wait.

And this my friends was definitely worth the wait!

Going to be a busy couple of weeks as I prepare for the U of T Scarbrough Farmer's Market. March 7th 11am - come shop!

References (3)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Response: wtc.ie
    Greetings Im curious if I can use this article on one of my blogs if I link back to you? Thanks
  • Response
    Response: long beach seo
    manningcanning - Secret Diary of a Canning Girl - A home for my frozen Rhubarb
  • Response
    manningcanning - Secret Diary of a Canning Girl - A home for my frozen Rhubarb

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>