Mar. 18th, 2018

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chiles rellenos no tomatoes
Chile Rellenos Casserole
2-4 servings

1/2 lb. beef
1/4 onion (chopped)
1 10 oz. can whole green chilies
1 1/2 cups cheddar cheese
2 eggs
3/4 cups milk
1/8 cup flour
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper

Preheat oven to 375F. Cook hamburger meat and onion. Drain, then add cumin, salt, and pepper. Line the bottom of your pan with whole green chiles (chop extra green chiles for later).

Layer meat over green chiles. Top with cheese and chopped green chiles. Whisk together eggs and milk, then add flour and mix well. Pour this mixture over dish. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes.

Serve right away while everything is hot and cheese is melted. Yum!
http://hello-homebody.com/20…/…/27/chile-rellenos-casserole/
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http://www.scienceprojectideas.co.uk/make-rubber-band-from-dandelion.html

Make a Rubber Band from a Dandelion

Dandelion

Rubber is a natural product made from latex. Many plants, including dandelions, produce latex but most of the world’s latex, the key ingredient of rubber, comes from the rubber tree, Hevea brasiliensis.

Rubber is a very versatile product, and has many uses, including tyres, balloons, balls, shoes, erasers, playground surfaces, rain wear, gloves, adhesives, and of course, rubber bands.

Make an Elastic Band
The latex from a dandelion can make a small rubber band – but please do not do this experiment if you think you might be allergic to rubber or latex.
Collect some dandelion leaves and flower stems, break them and squeeze out the milky sap. Coat a finger down to the first knuckle with the sap, let it dry, and then gently roll this off – it will form a small, stretchy (but not very strong) elastic band. Dandelion latex will also make a rubbery sheet, if spread on a piece of glass or a tile. However, it will be stickier than the elastic band, as body heat helped the latex in the elastic band to set.

Make Waterproof Cloth
Waterproof clothes can be made out of rubber sandwiched between two layers of fabric – this process was invented by Charles Macintosh, which is why waterproof coats are sometimes called 'macintoshes' or 'macs'. To make a small piece of waterproof fabric, spread dandelion sap on a piece of cloth and allow it to dry – this will now not let water through, though it will stay rather sticky.

Make a Bouncing Ball
Acid helps latex stick together (coagulate) – mix half a teaspoon of sap and quarter of a glass of water and stir with a straw. Slowly add a bit of vinegar – the acid will make the latex stick to the straw. Squeeze the latex into a ball – this will get rid of the excess water – and try giving it a bounce! A rubber ball bounces because it is elastic and squashes as it hits the ground – the energy used in movement goes into changing the ball’s shape. As it returns to its original shape, it releases the energy, which turns into movement again.

Curing Rubber
Rubber made commercially is cured using heat and sulphur, which stops the rubber from being sticky and means that it isn't affected by heat (the dandelion ‘rubber’ will be soft in warm conditions and stiff in cold conditions). Leaving the rubber ball made from the dandelion latex for about a month will begin the curing process and will change it from white to a transparent brownish colour. This allows any water to evaporate and continues the coagulation that the vinegar started.

Using Dandelions
These aren't just fun experiments to do – in 2008, Ohio State University’s Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center and the Ohio BioProducts Innovation Center received a grant of around $3 million to study methods to make rubber from the roots of a Russian dandelion, Taraxacum kok-saghyz.
It isn’t the only use for a dandelion – the young leaves are high in calcium, potassium, and iron, and can be eaten like spinach, the young roots (after peeling) taste like turnip, and the flowers are edible too. However, remember that dandelions can be diuretic (make you wee)!

Dandelion sap experiments are taken vidyaonline.net/arvindgupta/rubberscience.
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https://www.livescience.com/15322-healthiest-backyard-weeds.html

The Five Healthiest Backyard Weeds


Broad-leaf plantain. Credit: User:SB_JohnnyBroad-leaf plantain.
Credit: User:SB_Johnny

You likely have weeds in your garden or in your neighborhood that are striving in the heat and are actually far more healthful than almost anything you can grow or buy.

Far from famine food, these so-called weeds can be delicious if prepared properly. And they are absolutely free.

Just a few words of caution: Be sure to identify the weed properly. (The ones described here are easy to spot.) Avoid harvesting from anyplace you suspect pollution — such as from vehicle exhaust, lawn pesticide or doggy business. And remember that edible does not mean allergen-free.

Got your garden gloves? Ok, here we go.
Common dandelion from upstate New York. Credit: UpStateNYer
Common dandelion from upstate New York.
Credit: UpStateNYer

Dandelion:

Dandelion is one of the healthiest and most versatile vegetables on the planet. The entire plant is edible. The leaves are like vitamin pills, containing generous amounts of vitamins A, C and K — far more than those garden tomatoes, in fact — along with calcium, iron, manganese, and potassium.

The leaves are most tender, and tastiest, when they are young. This happens in the spring but also all summer along as the plant tries to rebound after being cut or pulled. You can add them to soup in great abundance. Or you can prepare them Italian style by sautéing with a little olive oil, salt, garlic and some hot red pepper.

You can eat the bright, open flower heads in a lightly fried batter. You can also make a simple wine with the flowers by fermenting them with raisins and yeast. If you are slightly adventurous, you can roast the dandelion root, grind it, and brew it like coffee. It's an acquired taste. You might want to have some sugar on hand.

Common purslane. Credit: ZooFari
Common purslane.
Credit: ZooFari

Purslane:

If you've ever lived in the city, you have seen good ol' Portulaca olearacea, or common purslane. The stuff grows in cracks in the sidewalk. Aside from being surprisingly tasty for a crack dweller, purslane tops the list of plants with omega-3 fatty acids, the type of healthy fat found in salmon. [7 Perfect Survival Foods]

If you dislike the bitter taste of dandelion greens, you still might like the lemony taste of purslane. The stems, leaves and flowers are all edible; and they can be eaten raw on salads — as they are prepared worldwide — or lightly sautéed.

You should keep a few things in mind, though, before your harvest. Watch out for spurge, a similar-looking sidewalk-crack dweller. Spurge is much thinner than purslane, and it contains a milky sap, so you can easily differentiate it. Also, your mother might have warned you about eating things off the sidewalk; so instead, look for purslane growing in your garden, or consider transplanting it to your garden from a sidewalk.

Also, note the some folks incorrectly call purslane "pigweed," but that's a different weed — edible but not as tasty.

http://www.theprairiehomestead.com/2012/07/when-life-gives-you-weeds-eat-em-or-what-to-do-with-lambs-quarters.html
http://www.theprairiehomestead.com/2012/07/when-life-gives-you-weeds-eat-em-or-what-to-do-with-lambs-quarters.html

Lamb's-quarters:

Lamb's-quarters are like spinach, except they are healthier, tastier and easier to grow. Lamb's-quarters, also called goosefoot, usually need more than a sidewalk crack to grow in, unlike dandelion or purslane. Nevertheless, they can be found throughout the urban landscape, wherever there is a little dirt.

The best part of the lamb's-quarters are the leaves, which are slightly velvety with a fine white powder on their undersides. Discard any dead or diseased leaves, which are usually the older ones on the bottom of the plant. The leaves and younger stems can be quickly boiled or sautéed, and they taste like a cross between spinach and Swiss chard with a slight nutty after-taste.

Maybe that taste combination doesn't appeal to you, but lamb's-quarters are ridiculously healthy. A one-cup serving will give you 10 times the daily-recommended dose of vitamin K; three times the vitamin A; more than enough vitamin C; and half your daily dose of calcium and magnesium.



plantain https://dspermaculture.wordpress.com/2015/03/28/broadleaf-plantain-plantago-major/

Plantain

Plantain, like dandelion, is a healthy, hardy weed as ubiquitous in the city as broken glass. You know what it looks like, but you might not have known the name.

Part of the confusion is that plantain shares its name with something utterly different, the banana-like plantain, whose etymology is a mix of Spanish and native Caribbean. The so-called weed plantain, or Plantago major, was cultivated in pre-Columbus Europe; and indeed Native Americans called it "the white man's footprint," because it seemed to follow European settlers.

Plantain has a nutritional profile similar to dandelion — that is, loaded with iron and other important vitamins and minerals. The leaves are tastiest when small and tender, usually in the spring but whenever new shoots appear after being cut back by a lawnmower. Bigger leaves are edible but bitter and fibrous. [World's Plants Growing Less Thanks to Warming]

The shoots of the broadleaf plantain, when green and tender and no longer than about four inches, can be described as a poor-man's fiddlehead, with a nutty, asparagus-like taste. Pan-fry in olive oil for just a few seconds to bring out this taste. The longer, browner shoots are also tasty prepared the same way, but the inner stem is too fibrous. You'll need to place the shoot in your mouth, clench with your teeth, and quickly pull out the stem. What you're eating are the plantain seeds.

The leaves of the equally ubiquitous narrow-leaf plantain, or Plantago lanceolata, also are edible when young. The shoot is "edible" only with quotation marks. You can eat the seeds should you have the patience to collect hundreds of plants for the handful of seeds you'd harvest. With time being money, it's likely not worth it.


Stinging nettles. Credit: Uwe H. Friese, Bremerhaven 2003 Stinging nettles.
Credit: Uwe H. Friese, Bremerhaven 2003

Stinging Nettles

It sounds like a cruel joke, but stinging nettles — should you be able to handle them without getting a painful rash from the tiny, acid-filled needles — are delicious cooked or prepared as a tea.

You may have brushed by these in the woods or even in your garden, not knowing what hit you, having been trained all your life to identify poison ivy and nothing else. The tiny needles fortunately fall off when steamed or boiled. The trick is merely using garden gloves to get the nettles into a bag. [Video – Watch Gorillas Process and Eat Stinging Nettles]

Nettles tastes a little like spinach, only more flavorful and more healthful. They are loaded with essential minerals you won't find together outside a multivitamin bottle, and these include iodine, magnesium, potassium, phosphorous, silica and sulfur. Nettles also have more protein than most plants.

Like all weeds, nettles are free. But you get even more of a bargain if you boil them. You can eat the leaves and then drink the water as tea, with or without sugar, hot or cold. If you are adventurous — or, well, just plain cheap — you can collect entire plants to dry in your basement. The needles will eventually fall off, and you can save the dried leaves for tea all winter long.

Christopher Wanjek is the author of the books "Bad Medicine" and "Food At Work." His column, Bad Medicine, appears regularly on LiveScience.
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http://www.theprairiehomestead.com/2012/07/when-life-gives-you-weeds-eat-em-or-what-to-do-with-lambs-quarters.html

When Life Gives You Weeds, Eat ‘Em (Or, What to do with Lamb’s Quarters)


lambs quarters

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a post bemoaning my crazy weed problem this year…

I posted a few pictures of my garden which is buried under an abnormally thick, healthy, layer of weeds.

Anyway, a bunch of you offered many helpful suggestions in the comments and also by email. (Yes, I definitely plan to use mulch next year, by the way…)

Several of you also mentioned that, judging by this photo, you thought some of my weeds may be Lamb’s Quarters.

I have had a vague notion in the past that that’s what I had growing. They are one of the thickest weeds in my garden, so I’m used to seeing (and pulling) quite a few. However, I’m sad to say that I never really spent the time to research them.

So, at the prompting of a few of my lovely readers, I decided to solve the big question once and for all. I pulled up a couple specimens, brought them in the house, and spent some time looking at photos online.

It didn’t take long to figure out that—without doubt— I do indeed have a healthy crop of Lamb’s Quarters growing in my garden!

I’ve been anxious to get some revenge on my out-of-control weeds this year, so what better way to do that than to eat them?

I quickly announced to my husband that our menu had changed for the night. Instead of steak, pasta, and frozen green beans for supper, we were having steak, pasta, and Lamb’s Quarters.

He was skeptical er, tolerant…

I raced out to the garden while my pasta was boiling and plucked off a colander-full of leaves from the younger, more tender plants.

After bringing them inside and giving them a good wash, I plopped them in a few inches of boiling water, and let them cook until they were a little bit limp and a lovely shade of dark green.

A sprinkle of salt and pepper, and a pat of butter (because everything is better with butter), they were ready to serve.

The consensus? Not bad… Not bad at all!

To be honest, we aren’t real big eaters of plain cooked greens at our house anyway (I usually prefer them raw in salads, or mixed in other dishes), but these were very edible.

After bringing them inside and giving them a good wash, I plopped them in a few inches of boiling water, and let them cook until they were a little bit limp and a lovely shade of dark green.

A sprinkle of salt and pepper, and a pat of butter (because everything is better with butter), they were ready to serve.

The consensus? Not bad… Not bad at all!

To be honest, we aren’t real big eaters of plain cooked greens at our house anyway (I usually prefer them raw in salads, or mixed in other dishes), but these were very edible.

During the Great Depression, Lamb’s Quarters was enjoyed and foraged by many families.
It was also used as sheep, chicken, and pig feed, hence the name “pigweed.”
Lamb’s Quarters is incredibly nutritious. It’s packed full of good stuff- you can find nutritional info HERE.*

Like many other greens, Lamb’s Quarter contains amounts of oxalic acid. Because oxalic acid can interfere with mineral absorption, there is some debate as to whether people should consume large amounts of raw greens (it’s not an issue once they are cooked or steamed). I personally don’t worry about it too much since I don’t eat large quantities, but if it concerns you, just lightly steam your Lamb’s Quarters before consuming.

Choose the stems and leaves from younger plants. They will be the most tender.
The seed heads that the plant produces later in the season are edible as well. Lamb’s Quarters is related to quinoa, which is clearly visible once you see the seeds.

HOW TO EAT LAMB’S QUARTERS

Basically just use it anywhere you would use spinach. It’s an excellent substitute.

Lightly steam it and serve with salt, pepper, and butter.

Throw some in your stir fry a few minutes before it’s done.

Use it in soups (I’m dying to try it in this Zuppa Tuscana recipe!)

Mix a handful or two into your fresh green salad.

Use in Italian-style recipes like lasagna or stuffed shells.

Mix it with some cheeses (ricotta or parmesan) and use it to fill pasta.

Scramble it with your eggs for a nutritious omelet.

Freeze it for later.

Make a Lamb’s Quarter spread.
Use it on your sandwich instead of lettuce.
Make Lamb’s Quarter-infused vinegar. - http://www.herbalremediesinfo.com/herbal-vinegars.html
Make pesto - extra nutrition and a delicious, slightly nutty flavor.


plantain seed head

*309 mg of Calcium As well as good amounts of: Thiamin, Riboflavin, Niacin, Iron
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http://www.herbalremediesinfo.com/herbal-vinegars.html

Herbal Vinegars

Looking for a delicious, inexpensive way to boost your mineral intake? Try making some herbal vinegars.
While minerals like calcium are not easily extracted in water, they dissolve quite easily into vinegar.
For centuries, wise women have used apple cider vinegar combined with mineral-rich herbs, in place of calcium supplements to help build stronger bones. (It is said that a tablespoon of herbal infused vinegar has as much calcium as a glass of milk!)

“Adding vinegar to your food actually helps build bones because it frees up minerals from the vegetables you eat. Adding a splash of vinegar to cooked greens is a classic trick of old ladies who want to be spry and flexible when they’re ancient old ladies. In fact, a spoonful of vinegar on your broccoli or kale or dandelion greens increases the calcium you get by one-third.” ~ Susun Weed

herbal vinegar

Selecting Herbs

I suggest experimenting with different aromatic herbs. Some herbs, like thyme, oregano, rosemary or dill will be delightful in salad dressings and marinades. Others, like nettle, chicory, burdock, dandelion, mustard greens, kale, lambs quarters, etc, will be more nutritive and tonic. My guess is, by experimenting with single herbs at a time you will hit upon your favorites. How will you know? If you’re like me, you’ll crave them! Few things get my mouth watering in the spring like the sour, bitter flavor of dandelion vinegar!

Making Herbal Vinegar

~ Fill a glass jar with your choice of fresh herbs. To get the most nutrients from your herbs, chop them into small pieces first. It is crucial to completely fill your jar with herbs. I like to use single herbs at a time, leaves, roots & flowers. Some people like to combine several herbs.

~ Pour room-temperature apple cider vinegar over the herbs until it is full to the top. Cover your jar with a plastic screw-on lid. Don’t use metal lids because they react to the vinegar in a nasty way! Alternatively, you can use several layers of plastic or wax paper held on with a rubber band, or even a cork if it fits tightly enough. If you use unpasteurized vinegar you may get a film that forms at the top of what is called, ‘the mother’. Simply skim it off when you decant.

~ Label your vinegar with the date and the type of herbs you used.

~ Place jar in a dark place like a kitchen cupboard or pantry shelf for 6 – 8 weeks.

~ Strain out the herbs and bottle your vinegar. (Again, avoid metal lids.)

Some people like to eat the ‘pickled’ herbs rather than discard them. Decide for yourself.

Using Herbal Vinegars

~ Add a splash to cooked greens
~ Use them in your salad dressing
~ Add to cooked beans or stir fry
~ Dilute in a small amount of water and drink them down.

For an herbal vinegar with a real kick try some Fire Cider!

Wild Pizza

Mar. 18th, 2018 08:39 pm
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Wild Pizza

Ingredients

>> Premade pizza shell or pita
>> 8 cups of wild greens (packed tightly)
>> 2 onions medium sized finely chopped
>> 3 tbsps. olive oil or butter
>> 1/2 cup sour cream
>> 1 egg
>> 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
>> Pinch ground cloves
>> Pinch cayenne
>> 1/4 cup grated parmesan cheese
>> 2 cups grated mozzarella cheese

Instructions

(Recommended greens include: plantain, dandelion, wild lettuce, garlic mustard and lamb’s quarters.)

Preheat oven to 450° F.

Chop greens and place in a small amount of water, boil until tender and wilted. Older greens may be boiled more than once in a change of water to lessen bitterness if desired. Drain well. Once cooled, squeeze out excess liquid.

Sauté onions in oil or butter until soft. Add in greens and sauté about 5 minutes.

In a bowl beat egg and sour cream. Add cloves, nutmeg, cayenne, parmesan cheese, sautéed onions and greens.

Spread evenly on premade pizza shell or pita, leaving a small border around the edge. Sprinkle mozzarella cheese on top. Cook for 15 minutes or when cheese starts to bubble.

Edible Wilds in Recipe: Broadleaf Plantain, Dandelion, Garlic Mustard, Lamb's Quarters
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Mustard Sauce

1 1/2 cup Yellow Mustard
1/2 cup Cider Vinegar
6 T Brown Sugar
2 T Catsup
1 t pepper
2 T Hot Sauce
2 T Worcestershire Sauce

Good with Chopped Pork

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