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Mr. Farmer: What have you grown on your farm for your Easter menu?

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    Mr. Farmer: What have you grown on your farm for your Easter menu?

    Grown on the farm: Barley salad, Einkorn and
    barley flour buns, cranberry sauce, dill pickles,
    bread and butter pickles, mashed potatoes, lentil
    salad, herbs,

    Homemade: Birthday cake, cookies, gravey,
    dressing,

    Purchased: California Carrots (Ate what we
    grew), turkey ( this is a Manitoba homegrown
    turkey), nuts, wine, coffee, tea, beer, ice cream
    for cake, olives. Happy Easter! Pars

    #2
    Wheat, Canola, Peas, and Barley. Sold it and my wife bought all kinds of yummy stuff.

    Comment


      #3
      Going to grow our own horse radish to make our
      Easter Hash next year.

      Bacon , four kinds of sausage and ham mixed
      with eggs and a bunch of horse radish all in one
      big pot and you get Easter Hash. Put it in 3
      gallon canning pot full with a little canola oil on
      the bottom and a little water and cook it up.

      can smell it cooking now.

      Comment


        #4
        Golly gee pars I hope that was a free range
        turkey.

        Comment


          #5
          dubsy: If it was it may look like a
          Leghorn rooster(not too plump).

          Happy Easter everyone and try to enjoy the
          calm before the storm(spring seeding-when
          ever that is).

          Comment


            #6
            Today buckwheat cabbage rolls, spinach & feta
            and mushroom perogies, turkey and our old
            standby Ukrainian sausage from Ukrainian Coop
            in Regina. Only cook a left-wing turkey. One less
            left to vote.

            Comment


              #7
              Jag, can you direct me to that recipe, or have a
              name to it. It sounds very good.

              I need to lubricate my heart!

              Eat right, exercise regularly, die anyway.

              Comment


                #8
                I don't Grow Food, I produce a commodity which gets turned into food and feed.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Hobbyfrmer

                  It is called Easter Hash.

                  My wife and her mother make it every year for
                  Easter. This has been a family tradition brought
                  over from Ukraine.

                  They get a big 3 gallon pot. Put a little canola oil
                  on the bottom. Then they get 4 or more kinds of
                  sausage and cut it up in small slices. Garlic
                  saugage, Ukrainian sausage, frying sausage any
                  kind of sausage. Then they cut up some smoked
                  ham slices and throw some slices of bacon in as
                  well. Then they take a couple a dozen boiled
                  eggs most years the ones the kids painted and
                  slice them up and throw everything into this big
                  pot. Then get a lots of horse radish. This year
                  we had horseradish the size of about 3 big
                  banana's. That was my job to slice strips off the
                  horseradish and put it in the pot. I dont know
                  all the cooking terms but i used one of those
                  things that you clean carots with to slice up the
                  horse radish.

                  Then you mix it all together and put it on the
                  stove to cook. Put a bit of water in it.

                  sure is good and it gets better each day when
                  you heat up the leftovers. The horse radish gets
                  stronger each day.

                  I look forward to Eating it every Easter which is
                  the only time we ever have it.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    What an interesting recipe! I grind horseradish
                    every year, and put it in glass jars. Cover with
                    vinegar. And freeze them. So good. Will have to
                    try this recipe. Thanks , jag! Pars.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      dubsy, I do try to buy directly from farmers. Beef
                      from the neighbors. Lamb. Used to buy chickens
                      from a neighbor. Used to buy eggs from a
                      neighbor. I find fewer neighbors grow these any
                      more. Home grown turkey is hard to find. Not
                      only do i like to support my neighbors, but they
                      taste better, I find. Pars

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Never ever, ever buy anything from
                        locals or neighbours. Always eat force
                        fed turkey er ham, with added growth
                        hormones and preservatives, cousin ya
                        wants yer moneys worth and the CFIA says
                        its okay ta gulp the stuff down. In
                        Summer and Fall we eat stuff from the
                        garden, but that time is short. Store
                        our own spuds till they are either used
                        er gettin rotten, then buy from super
                        market, cheap, beautiful food only,
                        nothin organic er with bugs er worms on
                        it.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Thank you Jag. Sounds easy enough to make
                          and so good to eat. I love stuff that get more
                          flavour the next day!

                          Comment

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