Category: Uncategorised
-
How To Make Easy Bruschetta!
What you’ll need:
- 5 ripe tomatoes
- 2 cloves of garlic
- 8 largish leaves of basil
- 1 medium shallot
- 3 tbsp olive oil (more flavourful the better)
- salt and pepper
- 1 french bread/baguette of some sort
How to make:
- dice up all of your tomatoes, shallot and mince the garlic. Add all three to a bowl
- an optional step is to squeeze out some of the insides from the tomatoes to make for less “sauce” at the bottom of the bowl.
- add olive oil and salt and pepper to taste.
- shred up or rip the basil into small strips and add right before serving.
- Serve fresh on top of bread or as “serve yourself” style.
For the bread:
- for the bread, I like to slice it up into 1/2 inch rounds. Pop a tbsp of olive oil into the pan and place the rounds in on medium heat. They cook quickly so keep an eye on them.
-
How to: Samhain Bread
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups white sugar
3/4 teaspoon salt
3 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 (15 ounce) canned pumpkin or pumpkin pie filling for a sweeter bread
1/3 cup water
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
Additionally: Allspice
Mix wet and dry ingredients together. Fold in walnuts. Separate into two greased bread pans and bake at 350F. Bake until golden and springy.
Modified from: https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/149896/samhain-pumpkin-bread/
Samhain (pronounced Sow-in), is the final harvest festival on the Wheel of the Year and marks the beginning of winter. It begins at Sunset on October 31st and ends the same time the evening of November 1st. It is the time at which light fades and we prepare for the dark winter, a time when the dead return to us to feast and celebrate together. An extra place setting is made for our ancestors and placed either at the table or on an ancestral altar where we also place small portions of the meal. Samhain is also a perfect time for divination and spell-work focusing on change, as the cycle of death and rebirth is felt more keenly at this time.
Although Samhain and Hallowe’en are not the same holiday, many Hallowe’en traditions do come from these pagan celebrations. Similar also is the Mexican Day of the Dead.
We remember that the gifts of the Earth are not our entitled right, but exemplify the give and take of what we owe to each other. We remember the three-fold law: that all things we release will return to us three times. We remember that we are as much nature as the crops, and for this we are thankful.
-
FUTURE SOUP 2019
FUTURE SOUP! Studio Art students staked out some territory, occupied a field, planted nine kinds of garlic, baked for our ancestors, tucked in the plants, got dirty and cold, ate wild apples and Gleaners’ Soup, and cast spells for snow (which worked!).
It was a beautiful finale for our time on the farm. Thanks especially to Martha Gay Scroggins and Karen Houle.
-
Garlic Pins
Garlic pins that were made by Carolina Benitez and Emmi Boyle, for the facilitators and organizers of Future Soup to wear during the community event of planting garlic on Guelph’s Urban Organic Farm.
You must be logged in to post a comment.