Geo wrote:Jim,
Methinkx those deer are surplus. Moreover, since they always come out when you've got your grill or smoker going, perhaps It's Destiny. Sounds like that to me...
Geo
polishmeat wrote:Hey Jim,
POLISHMEAT (Martin) here from the SMF forums brotha!! Nice to see you on here man! Nice shots of the deer man. I'll come over with my Remington and we can make some venison.
jimswside wrote:wild black raspberries are in, and the patch increased in size almost 2 x from last year. Only got a few last night, but for the next few weeks I will have fresh ones almost daily.
boudreaulicious wrote:jimswside wrote:wild black raspberries are in, and the patch increased in size almost 2 x from last year. Only got a few last night, but for the next few weeks I will have fresh ones almost daily.
hmmmm... I see trade opportunities here...
jimswside wrote:the crop is starting to come in.
JoelF wrote:jimswside wrote:the crop is starting to come in.
Those look a lot like the black razz I have growing -- got 'em from a neighbor. They're scary canes: left to themselves, they'll loop along the ground, creating the sort of thicket you need a prince charming to slash through. The fruits are deeply flavored but seedy: one of the best applications for them I've found is sorbet: run through a food mill you leave most of those seeds behind.
Pie-love wrote:We live in the city and have a gigantic, extremely productive mulberry tree on our parkway. I have to shovel the berries off the sidewalk daily. We mostly forage the raw fruit, but this year I have been experimenting with cooking. I made a mulberry-apple crisp and, most recently, mulberry-lime pectin jellies (from Peter Greweling's Confectionery at Home book).
The mulberries are very good this year-- I just wish I was organized enough to harvest a lot. Wine, jelly, sorbet,you name it! The mulberry has a thin stem through the middle, so I find it better in preparations that call for puree that was put through a food mill.
Jen
nr706 wrote: But I don't think there are many similar, fleshy plants that are common in this region.
jimswside wrote:my property in Marseilles is prime foraging grounds for some of the larger predators in the area - fox, lynx, and this big coyote I spied sunning itself, this is as close as I could get, the yote wanted nothing to do with me when he/she saw me.
Also check out those popping fall colors, mother nature is putting on quite the show this year..