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Blog: studio lolo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: raven, crow, berries, totem, studio lolo, alla prima, laurel gaylord, Add a tag
Blog: Post-Its from a Parallel Universe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Life, Recipes, Gardening, Vegetables, Organic Gardening, Berries, Add a tag
Supper last night:
- Vegetable and Bean Minestrone from 500 Best Healthy Recipes. Recipe found by daughter Sarah. From garden: potatoes, broccoli, carrots, onions, celery, basil. Delicious.
Supper Tonight:
- Strawberry Margueritas made with frozen OG strawberries from the garden
- Little Caeser’s Pizza! Yes. My neck hurts. I couldn’t make homemade pizza tonight.
Harvested:
- 2 Very large bundles of Aroma and Sweet Basil. Basil was washed and then hung upside down to dry. I keep the bundles together with rubber bands and store the bundle in a paper bag, with holes cut out, and hang this.
- A handful of Gusto Hot and Jalapeno Peppers
- 1/2 gallon of Bush Beans
- 2 large Zucchini and 3 large Yellow Squash
My chiropractor is getting a bag of vegetables tomorrow, the Hot Peppers were especially picked for him. He usually plants a garden but just couldn’t this year. Dr Kyle saved me on Memorial Day from the worse pain ever when I threw some of my ribs out.
Jen’s Strawberry Margeuritas:
- 4 oz Strawberry Marguerita Mix. My favorite is Mr & Mrs T’s.
- 2 oz. Bacardi Rum
- 1/2 to 1 cup frozen strawberries
Put the Marguerita Mix liquid in the blender first, then the rum, then the frozen strawberries on top. Blend until smooth. No ice is needed. This makes one serving.
Margueritas take the edge off the anxiety that comes when your economic future is unclear after your economic assets have been devastated through no fault of your own, you just happen to be living in the here & now and your small business is struggling to survive after being successful before that economic crash that was no fault of your own.


Blog: Sandie Lee...Live it. Love it. Write it. (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: berries, chilled soups, chilled recipes, low-fat desserts, summer desserts, Add a tag
It's officially summer and what better way to kick it off than with Melon Berry Soup by Company's Coming. It's as yummy as it is pretty.
The colours in this vibrant soup excite the eye and the palate. Serve in chilled bowls for a light, refreshing dessert on a hot summer evening.
What You Need:
Chopped ripe cantaloupe ~ 5 cups - 1.25 L
White grape juice ~ 1 cup - 250 mL
Lemon juice ~ 2 tbsp. - 30 mL
Fresh (or frozen, thawed) raspberries 1 1/2 cups - 375 mL
White grape juice ~ 1/3 cup - 75 mL
Process first 3 ingredients in blender or food processor until smooth. Transfer to medium bowl. Chill, covered, for at least 2 hours until cold. Makes about 4 1/2 cups (1.1 L).
Process raspberries and second amount of grape juice in blender or food processor until smooth. Strain through sieve into small bowl. Discard seeds. Chill, covered, for at least 2 hours until cold.
Drizzle over individual servings. Serves 6.
1 serving: 96 Calories; 0.6 g Total Fat (trace Mono, 0.1 g Poly, trace Sat); 0 mg Cholesterol; 24 g Carbohydrate; 3 g Fibre; 2 g Protein; 13 mg Sodium
Reprinted with permission by Company's Coming - http://www.companyscoming.com/

Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: nature, animals, woods, Ginger Nielson, forest, bear, berries, Add a tag

Blog: Silver Apples of the Moon (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: gardening, berries, Add a tag
Life drawing started up again today. So typically Fridays will be Life Drawing posts. Except that I didn't go today (luckily I have a fabulous assistant who ran things in my absence) since I had been up all night keeping my husband company in the ER with his latest kidney-stone attack. It's all over - everything's good, we're just both just suffering the after-effects of multiple hours spent at the hospital (in my case, in a hard folding chair in a chilly room). So, no life drawing. No art of any kind really today since I don't seem to be able to really focus my eyes... :-)
So instead, here's a report of impending ripeness in the yard:One of my newer bushes, an aronia, or flaming chokeberry (as the autumn foliage gets gorgeously red-magenta), is covered with clusters of near-black, ripe berries. They are fairly bland to eat right off the bush but are supposed to be uber-high in antioxidants. So now to find other ways to use (I hear juice/jellies/breads are good?)
I also have a pretty good crop of Sea Buckthorn berries this year. *Very* tart eaten raw (almost impossible to eat actually), but also supposedly super high in Vitamin C and other nutrients. And sweetened, it tastes somewhat like passion-fruit, which I love. It's just a little precarious to pick because of the woody, thorny branches... Extreme-sport fruit harvesting!
This will also be my first year that my Hardy Kiwi vine will produce. These are 'baby' kiwis, about the size of grapes, thin skinned and sweeter than their larger, more common counterparts.
It is also the first productive year for my tiny dwarf Italian (prune) plums, my favorite plums to eat, dry, roast and turn into tarts. Tasty purple goodness!


Sleep... sleep sounds good. Here's hoping for more luck with getting some tonight...
Blog: Post-Its from a Parallel Universe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Family, Gardening, Organic Gardening, Carrots, Berries, Blueberries, Teaching Children, Canning, Food Preservation, Add a tag
I harvested about 15 pounds of organic carrots yesterday out of my kitchen garden. My kitchen garden is a large raised bed outside, right next to my — yes, you guessed it — kitchen! By Golly, Ned, you just won a free copy of my limited edition Guide To Parallel Universe Travel For Less.
Carrots store very well in the fridge, but I will slice and freeze about 9 pounds of these carrots for stews and soups and roasts this winter. I have carrots growing in my main garden in amongst my tomatoes and the end of this month I will sow my fall crop of carrots. My daughter will eat Mom’s fresh garden carrots raw but not “store ones”.
I harvested more calendula yesterday and hung the flowers to dry. We ate fresh green beans with our dinner. There is quite a measure of assurance for me to grow some of our own food. Not to mention that it tastes superior to anything you can buy in a grocery store.
My daughter and I then canned 10 jars of blueberry jam. This jam cost me 6$ in jars, $2.50 in Reduced Sugar Pectin, $4.50 in fresh blueberries and about .30 cents in sugar. For $13.30 we made $30 (at least) in jam. Next year, we will have the jars and hopefully, the blueberries in our berry patch will fruit better.
Canning jam with my 11 year old was a lot of fun. She pushed the pulse button on the food processor to chop (not puree) the blueberries, she measured precisely — remember canning is chemistry — she poured the sugar quickly into the blueberry jam in its rolling boil — and her most favorite, she ladled the ready jam into the funnel on the jar. She got very good at knowing how much to ladle in to get the right headspace. I did all the hot dangerous activities with the hot jars and boiling water. We have a lid lifter — a green plastic stick with a magnet on one end — and this fascinated her to no end. She also enjoyed filling out the pretty labels and wants to be the one who sticks the labels on the jars.
It is much cheaper to entertain children then we give them credit for. And they enjoy being productive and contributing to the family’s well-being. Canning teaches math, chemistry, language arts, domestic arts, fundamental business principles and how to be self-sufficient. And it is not as time consuming as you might think, we canned the blueberry jam in about one hour.

Blog: Post-Its from a Parallel Universe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Life, Humor, Gardening, Interests, Organic Gardening, Berries, Canning, Food Preservation, Add a tag
This week I took my second class in home preservation. Not the kind of home preservation where you storm into the bank and make them stop all the foreclosures in your neighborhood so that your own property value doesn’t fall into the black abyss of no return.
Rather, the class covered how to can fruits and tomatoes in a hot water bath and the week before was how to can jams/jellies and how to freeze vegetables and fruits. Why take these classes?
- It may be the end of the world and I’m gonna want some fruit.
- It is kinda stupid to grow food and throw away what you can’t eat. Like investing in the stock market.
- You never know what they really put in those cans you buy at the grocery store, especially anything from China.
A long time ago, I canned some strawberry jam. Otherwise, I have mostly frozen my garden produce or stored it. Last summer I tried to make refrigerator pickles that were put in jars, but stored in the fridge. These jars of pickles became fizzing stink bombs, needless to say, no pickles for us.
It is not that hard to make your own jams/jellies and can your own tomatoes and fruits. There is also pectin now for freezer jam and last weekend, I made 5 jars of blueberry freezer jam. It is much cheaper to make your own jam. Even if you have to buy the fruit. For instance, I needed 5 cups of crushed blueberries, the pectin, and the fancy twist-on-caps freezer jars. I spent 8.69$ to make 15$ worth of jam and next year, I will not need to buy jars again. Hopefully, if the bees ever make a comeback, I will grow enough blueberries again to produce jam. It’s not looking good this year for blueberries here.
Our teacher shared many enlightened stories in case we were mentally impaired. For instance, canning in a hot water bath is never done in the bathroom. The bathtub is not where you work at. What a revelation! We also learned not to use Alzheimer inflicting aluminum pans and instruments when canning tomatoes after we did so in our hands-on classroom. I mean she actually made us use an aluminum pan to make salsa in. I could feel the aluminum robbing my capacity to remember what I was learning as I breathed in the salsa fumes cooking in the pan.
I am going to work on adding to my horde soon. Apricot jam. Blueberry Jam. Peaches. Pears. Tomatoes. Canned to store on a shelf. Hopefully, raspberry jam from my patch, but I’m worried about not seeing a lot of fruit.
Do you ever wonder if there is some kind of mass conspiracy to prevent us from being able to grow our own food? I mean, what is it with the weather? I truly have no idea what will grow in my garden this year because of this freaky weather. And how about GMO seeds- seeds that grow produce that have sterile seeds and cannot grow without being sprayed with cancer inducing pesticides? And what has happened to our bees? No bees, no pollinization, no fruit/vegetables.
When you work your tush off planting non GMO seeds and hoeing and weeding and siccing the chickens on the slugs and snails that are taking over the world and spraying NEEM oil and picking the bugs off by hand and there is not much food produced as a result, there is something going on. Don’t you think?
I figure if the aliens invade, or if they declare Martial Law, or if hyper-inflation brings out the wheelbarrows to haul our dollars in, my family and I can hide in the basement and eat jam out of the jar.


Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ginger Nielson, walking, ferns, leaves, berries, rocks, photo tour, Add a tag
I needed do to some active research this morning for my current dummy. Because I want to represent leaves, ferns, berries and pond water I took a long walk with my camera and gathered a lot of good info. We have SUN today, so the time was just right in the early morning. Dew is still on the leaves, the grass is wet and the forest is fairly still.
Blog: Post-Its from a Parallel Universe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Recipes, Gardening, Organic Gardening, Berries, Strawberries, Strawberry Jam, Add a tag
I tried a new recipe for jam the other day. I didn’t want to can any strawberry jam and didn’t want to make alot of it. It is not the big flavor in our house. I will wait for my raspberries to come in and make raspberry jam.
Which reminds me to sign up for the MSU extension food preservation workshops today. It has been a long time since I tried canning. I usually freeze or store. Last year, I tried to can refrigerator pickles (six month life in fridge) and ALL of those failed. Fizzing bubbles in the cans and bad smell. Canning makes me nervous, but I want to tackle it.
This homemade organic strawberry jam is so delicious I have begun inventing excuses to have some. It tastes like jam used to taste when I was a child in the 1970’s. We usually don’t eat jam that has sugar in it, so I lessened the amount of sugar the recipe called for and then further lessened it when I made a second batch. The recipe takes about an hour from start to finish and produces about one cup of strawberry jam that will sit in the fridge for two weeks. This is a good way to use imperfect strawberries. Slice off the imperfections and tops into a container for the chickens and rabbits and slice the good parts into your measuring cup.
From The America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook:
4 cups sliced thin strawberries
2 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice (yes, I squeezed a fresh lemon)
3/4 cup sugar (but I reduced this down to less than 1/2)
Put these ingredients in a stainless steel skillet for faster cooking or a pot for slower cooking. On medium heat, stir nearly continuously and keep on a simmer. When strawberries have cooked down to about half their original amount and the concoction looks syrupy and is thickening, take a small spoonful out and put into a bowl that sits on top of ice water in another bowl. If after 30 seconds, the jam doesn’t run when you tip the bowl, the jam is finished. Keep cooking if it is too runny. I cooked my jam much longer than the recipe called for, as I’m not interested in runny jam.
I made a couple of extra batches of this jam out of another bucket of strawberries I just picked for Father’s Day presents.

Blog: Post-Its from a Parallel Universe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Gardening, Organic Gardening, Berries, Strawberries, Pugs, Add a tag
This is what I picked out of my organic berry patch today. Sarah, 11, helped only until her legs got sore. Berry picking is hard work. This is my second bucket and it is only June 13th. I am predicting I will need to pick at least two more times.
Today, I will wash through them all. The ones with defects, I cut off their tops and the defects and put these in a container. I then slice the remainder of the berry into a 2 cup size bowl and add maybe a 1/4 cup sugar. This will be topping for shortcake and angel food cake, and some of us just eat it out of a dish.
The container of berry tops and bad parts will be shared between the rabbit and the chickens.
A small portion of the rest will go in another container for fresh eating.

Cookie Loves Eating Strawberries
I will freeze the remainder. First, I pull the tops off — not cut them off — then I set them in a single layer on cookie sheets that I’d covered with wax paper. These cookie sheets will be placed in my freezer. In a couple of days, I will then bag the frozen strawberries into freezer plastic bags. Frozen strawberries are used in my house in fruit smoothies, strawberry margaritas and as snacks. All of my kids have always eaten frozen berries as a snack.
My strawberry patch is about 20 feet long by 10 feet wide. It is a raised bed made from recycled railroad ties (recycled in that they were pulled off other people’s yards) and we filled the strawberry side of the bed with sandy soil. My berries are both June-bearing and everbearing and I planted many varieties. I probably have about 150 plants. The spray I generally use for pests is Neem oil or other organic pest sprays and I fertilize my berries using the all natural Spray-n-grow products.

Strawberry and Blue/Black Berry Raised Bed
The strawberry patch is combined with our blueberries and blackberries and it is fenced with also 2′ of chicken wire running along the bottom. Steel hoops were placed over the top and the entire area was covered in a netting that in its former life was used in a pond to keep the leaves out in fall. The netting has holes large enough to allow the bees in and out, but small enough to keep the birds out.
We did run a water line out to the patch, the spigot can be seen in the left front corner. I do water my berries once weekly, if it did not rain enough. It is especially important to keep well-watered new strawberry plants their first summer.
Strawberries are very easy to grow. This year, I grew Borage from seed and placed several of these plants in the strawberry patch to help repel pests. But pests have not really been a problem in the berry patch.
I am making strawberry shortcake tonight — with homemade whipped cream!


Blog: Quake: Shakin' up Young Readers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: health, nutrition, san diego, berries, pears, Sonic, Regan Black, american heart surgery, michele scott, eating well, Add a tag

But getting back to the point, I ate out a lot. In spite of this, I managed to lose one pound during my ten day trip. Michele's husband, a personal trainer is a fiend for fruit and found the GREATEST blueberries. So what could I have done better? I just spent some time on line trying to find some tips on what could have helped me reach my goal of losing 3 pounds on that trip. I ran across the Eating Well site.
I have another trip coming up next Thursday for 5 days, so I have a goal to lose 2 pounds and this is what I am going to try.
First, no trips to Sonic. We don't have Sonic here in Maryland, so one of the first things I do when I get to Regan Black's house is take the kids to Sonic. Not this year. I love their Blasts, Reeses Peanut Butter Cup to be exact.
I am going to stop at the store and pick up a few bags of fruit to munch on while I am there. I'll also have fruit in the car so I don't hit the service centers for chips and candy bars. I'll get some Fuji Apples, maybe some Anjou Pears, and some berries. I have to keep an eye on my heart.
With my new religious choices, I'll not be doing the barbecued spare ribs that I love. I will probably suggest we eat at home and cook chicken. Maybe some Chicken and Rice in the Crock Pot. Regan is a whiz with the crock pot.
Regan always has yummies at her house, so I am going to post a link here to some awesome brownies that won't pack on the pounds and will still taste good!
So do any of you have tips on what you can do to keep yourself healthier, not just in your travels, but even at home while you are sitting at your computer surfing?

Blog: The Book of Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: awards, children's books, podcast, Sydney Taylor Book Award, Eco-Libris, Jewish Values Finder, Rachel Kamin, Linda Silver, Chana Rothman, Jewish Values Finder, Linda Silver, Sydney Taylor Book Award, Eco-Libris, Rachel Kamin, Chana Rothman, Add a tag
Click the play button on this flash player to listen to the podcast now:
Or click MP3 File to start your computer's media player.
SHOW NOTES:
This January 2008 episode offers themes of empowerment with these interviews:
> Raz Godelnik, founder of Eco-Libris, planting a tree for each book you read
> Chana Rothman, whose debut album We Can Rise shows off her "female-fronted earthy groove"
> Linda Silver, creator of The Jewish Values Finder, a database and book identifying values in Jewish children's books
> Rachel Kamin, chair of the Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee, describing the 2008 winners of this award for Jewish lit for kids and teens
NEWS:
February 7, 2008, 3-4pm EST The Book of Life will host a live call-in show on the theme "Funny, That Book Doesn't Look Jewish!" Pam Ehrenberg, author of the middle-grade novel Ethan, Suspended, will be our guest, and we'll take calls for YOU, the audience! Please join us by calling in - instructions for particpating will appear on our web site: www.bookoflifepodcast.com
Background music is provided by The Freilachmakers Klezmer String Band.
Books and CD's mentioned on the show may be borrowed from the Feldman Children's Library at Congregation B'nai Israel. Browse our online catalog to reserve books, post a review, or just to look around!
I love them Lo!
Yup, your ravens are your totem...follow them and you can't go wrong.
Beautiful!
XXOO~~
Anne
i blew it up and tried to catch my breath....
♥
kj
Oh my gosh, this is stunning!!! Come back ravens!!! Beautiful Laurel!!!
Just breath-taking, Laurel. Some jawdropping happening on the west coast with this one.
I love your gleaming blue-black ravens. The composition is awesome.
You KNOW I love this!!!! Blue-Black-Purple-Winged Ravens.....and those berries!!!!
HEAVENLY!!! Yes, don't ever stray too far from your Totem!!!!!
Love,
♥ Robin ♥
Your painting style always always makes me smile. You are simply just so good at it. And I did think of you each time we saw a huge raven on our recent road trip and there were many of them!!! I am glad they and you are here to stay!
the ravens came to rescue you from your "block.' They are so lovely.
These are just beautiful - I see your ravens and realize I have a long way to go before I can even draw ravens as well as you. I love the deep colors - it is really just beautiful.
It's really beautiful lo. i hope the ravens have worked their magic and your block is gone now.
have a wonderful inspired week ahead!
xoxo lori
Oh wow Lo isn't this wonderful!!!!
So beautiful! Doing what what touches your heart will give you back the fun in painting. And this one is so you!!! Perfect!
Hope you can hang on to the joy and inspiration tpainting this must have brought you.
♥♥♥
>M<
I agree with Suki...the Ravens came to help you unblock...and what a remarkable gift they gave all of us, as a result. I love this painting...really, I wish my creativity was half as blocked as yours was, heh!! xx
You obviously broke through your block. It's magical and feel of feeling. I love your raven work. Thank you for the inspiring piece and giving back creatively!
Happy new week to ya !
So lovely Lo. Ravens are your thing, I used to paint them a lot too, I still love them and always love seeing yours. Glad they are back. xoxo
Keeping your values SO close to each other really gives this piece a mysterious mood.
nice.
.
Lovely!
YOu do these so well. I think of you everytime I see the painting I have of yours. :)
Nice! Love the colors.
Your totem is quite handsome. I have missed seeing it pop up now and then. I hope you muse hears its call and is stirred by the flapping of its wings.