Kara Ann wrote:Ditto on David's comment that this thread of post reads so well!
THANK YOU Ulla for sharing this method for preserving egg yolks - this is great to have and I have saved it so I can try it.
When you are using these salted egg yolks (sliced or grated), are you adding them as a final garnish to items being served (no further cooking)? Or also as an ingredient into food that is going to be cooked?
Kara Ann wrote:
I had completely forgotten about posting in this thread. When I reread the post I made, it made me laugh, because I am still preserving eggs.
Ulla - what you are doing is really impressive!!! As a newbie who has never heard of salted egg yolks before, would you share what you do to preserve them, and also the ways that you use them? They looked like little gems in the picture you posted earlier!
Erika Gruber wrote:Hello Ulla Bisgaard,
Thank you for your hard work and for sharing your recipes. I know that developing gluten-free recipes from scratch takes a great deal of effort; I have been doing this myself for about 20 years.
As a European, I seem to have quite different dietary habits and recipes compared to you. Your recipes rely heavily on starches—such as cassava, sweet potatoes, and the like.
These ingredients are relatively expensive where I live, so I do a lot of baking using legumes, millet, buckwheat, corn, and similar ingredients instead.
I try to incorporate as much fiber as possible into my meals so that they keep me feeling full for longer.
Joao Winckler wrote:One thing I'd find useful is a chapter on managing the transition period, the first 2-3 years before the system starts producing reliably. Most beginners give up during that gap because they don't know what to expect. Knowing roughly when things start to pay off, and what to do in the meantime, would help a lot.
Anne Miller wrote:How to compost, make compost tea, use organic or better, ...
The benefits of using wood chips, leaf mold, and how to grow mushrooms, ...
How to incorporate animals into the system, ...
Cristobal Cristo wrote:Master Ula,
I would include a separate chapter dedicated to shade.
Not all warm climates are extremely sunny (especially in eastern Asia). The south western regions will be usually too sunny and even there there exists a lot variation. In California - the lowlands have less intense sun than higher elevations like mine where sun is simply brighter than agricultural lands that are located low and west of me (they are also enshrouded in agri dust). Sun intensity at lower temperature will be more destructive than higher temperatures with clouded skies. This extremely bright radiation will overheat the plant even if the temps feel fresh and pleasant.
I just built an experimental garden (6x9 m) in my eucalyptus grove. It gets some direct afternoon sun. Everything grows just better. I'm having strawberries and will have blackberries that were getting completely scorched before in full sun - no matter how much mulched or watered. The herbs grow better and lush and out of my 40 grape cuttings only 5 died so far (last year at this time 90% were dead). For the first time thyme and also lovage have germinated.
Morning shade garden with figs and grapes is also much better for them as compared to growing in the open frying pan. My theory is that in extremely sunny locations the evaporation rate is so high than watering can not account for it at the given species level of plant physiology.
All of it may seem obvious to some who lived with higher elevation sun for a while, but in my case creating a shaded growing area did way more than soil improvement, irrigation and mulching.
If the garden proves itself throughout the year I will built more and will try raspberries and my beloved currants.