The Bellevue Gazette

Rhubarb peeping through ground.

The Amish Cook

By Lov­ina Eicher

The sun is shin­ing and the tem­per­a­ture is over 60 degrees this morn­ing. It looks like it will be another gor­geous day and spring only offi­cially begins tomorrow.

All signs of spring are here, first among them: the rhubarb is peep­ing through and win­ter onions are up. Also the horse­rad­ish and tea plants are start­ing to grow.

Trees are bud­ding and the grass is extra green for this time of the year. We had our first meal of dan­de­lion greens last night. Last year it was about a month later before we found enough for a meal. I steamed some pota­toes and boiled some eggs to mix with the dan­de­lion greens and sour cream.

Sour cream I make with Mir­a­cle Whip salad dress­ing, vine­gar, milk, and salt. Joe grilled T-bone steaks to go along with the meal.

We also had sliced Colby cheese which is a favorite around here. I buy the Colby cheese by the horn which is usu­ally 15 to 16 pounds. It is so much cheaper to do it that way than to buy a few pounds at a time.

A horn of cheese does not last long around here with our size fam­ily. We eat cheese in sand­wiches, casseroles, soups, or just with crack­ers for a snack. I think the cheese doesn’t taste dried-out as much as the small pack­ages in gro­cery stores.

If we need shred­ded cheese we shred just the colby cheese which tastes so much bet­ter than the pre-packaged kind you buy in stores. Years ago when we had cows and sold milk we would always order our horn of cheese off the milkman.

We took advan­tage of the nice weather this week and washed all our cur­tains, cleaned the win­dows and put in the screens. Looks so much more refresh­ing to see the white, crisp cur­tains on the clean windows.

A few weeks ago one of the big oak trees in our yard uprooted knock­ing down one half of two smaller pine trees. Joe and some of the chil­dren worked on cut­ting the wood and burn­ing the branches on Saturday.

The big­ger logs we might be able to sell to the local sawmill. The rest we will keep for fire­wood. Our neigh­bor, Steve, brought his larger chain­saw to help Joe cut the big­ger area by the stump. Joe’s chain­saws were not long enough to cut all the way through.

On Sat­ur­day we also car­ried the patio table, chairs, and rock­ers out of the base­ment to put on the front porch again. Last night we already enjoyed eat­ing sup­per on the porch. We let our coal stove go out a week ago. We hope the nice weather is here to stay.

Joe wants to till the gar­den this week so we can plant some of the early things like peas, potatoes,radishes, and so forth. On our list to do this week is rak­ing the yard.

The grass is really grow­ing fast and I don’t think it will be long before we have to mow it. Our solar-powered freezer is stay­ing charged well with all the sun­shine. It even charges some on cloudy days.

With spring weather here it is time to start think­ing about rhubarb. Mom would make rhubarb pie and rhubarb short­cake. We’d eat the short­cake warm and pour milk over it.

My chil­dren like to eat it with ice cream. We didn’t have ice cream around the house when I was grow­ing up since we didn’t have freez­ers. Rhubarb-custard pie is another favorite around here.

Our chil­dren also love rhubarb juice, we just fin­ished our last quart this week so we’ll be eager to make more this spring. This is another deli­cious way to use the early rhubarb. Give it a try!

RHUBARB BREAD

1 1 /3 cup brown sugar

2 /3 cup veg­etable oil

1 beaten egg

1 tea­spoon vanilla

1 cup sour milk

2 1 /2 cups flour

3 /4 tea­spoons salt

1 tea­spoon bak­ing soda

1 /2 tea­spoon cinnamon

2 cups chopped rhubarb

1 /2 cup nuts (optional)

Mix every­thing together and pour bat­ter into 2 greased loaf pans. Bake at 350 for 45 min­utes or until a tooth­pick inserted in the cen­ter comes out clean.

Visit amishcookonline.com to sign up for our free twice-weekly emailed newslet­ter which con­tains recipes, videos, pho­tos, and Amish information!

kpotts Posted by on Mar 20 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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