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The Grateful Farmer

6670 Trout Creek Ridge Rd
Mt Hood, OR 97041
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The Grateful Farmer

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Rhubarb Revival!

May 15, 2015 Katrina McAlexander

We sell our mouth watering rhubarb jam at Mt. View Orchards Fruit stand

Maybe there is no middle ground when it comes to loving Rhubarb. You are either all IN, or most definitely out. I for one, am a rhubarb lover and come from a long line of Rhubarb Affectionados. I was converted at a young age and I have kept the faith for all these years.

I adore this time of year on the farm because our rhubarb plants are brightly colored pink and full of endless possibilities.  I have fond memories of my maternal grandmother, Janice Merz making bowls of warm, sweetened rhubarb for me and my siblets when we would go over for a visit.  A sweet bowl full of pink vegetable LOVE!  What could be better than that when you an small little farm girl? Absolutely nothing!

(I have a secret fantasy of being given a bouquet of rhubarb in lieu of roses one day from my lover...

The peak season for Rhubarb is from April to June. Rhubarb’s stalks become soft when baked and make for a delicious pie filling. A tart vegetable, rhubarb is divine both in desserts, such as upside-down cakes and crumb bars, and in savory dishes.

Because it's so tart, rhubarb should always be cooked with a sweetener. It's usually used in baked desserts such as crumbles, cakes, and pies. You can also toss it with honey, roast briefly, and then add to salads or serve with meats. Apples, pears, berries, sugar, honey, whipped cream, ginger, fresh cheeses, yogurt, vanilla, almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, ham (rhubarb chutney), duck, trout, salmon, and lamb (after all it is a vegetable and it roasts well with meats)
 

I have a annual ritual of making Rhubarb jam with my mother. You can also make rhubarb and strawberry or raspberry, peach or blueberry jams or chutney. I love to enjoy rhubarb jam on homemade honey wheat bread or Ice cream or by the spoonful.  I also enjoy making a Rhubarb Gallette because it is the perfect combination of sweet and tart!

On the farm I am finding other tasty treasures such as wild asparagus and morel mushrooms hidden all over the ground.  This is the kind of treasure hunting I highly recommend if you live in the country.  I feel so very thankful to live on such rich and fertile soil and eating off the land truly is a gift.  I encourage you to head to your local farmers markets and friend a farmer there and pick up some rhubarb to enjoy this weekend.  If you have rhubarb planted in your back yard this is a great weekend to harvest this beautiful pink vegetable and turn it into a sign and a wonder. (xoxo, your grateful farmer)

 

An Ode to Rhubarb

Come midmorning, my sister and I

Would be shooed from the sandbox

To pick a dozen stalks of rhubarb

For that day’s pie.

There is a knack to picking rhubarb.

Grab too high and you snap the stalk.

Grab too low and you lose the leverage

For that crucial tug from the root,

Like pulling a boot from spring’s muddy gumbo.

Then we would take our lives in our hands

Lopping off leaves coursing with enough poison

To kill a congregation –

Or so we’d come to believe

Given the stern order never to taste them.

The work was both gratifying and disconcerting,

Entrusted to wield foliage so deadly

We could not feed it even to the hogs,

Bur heaved the leaves into the ditch

Onto a wilting mound that grew with every pie.

So, if I hesitate over that first bite,

It’s only a flicker of remembering how it felt

To bring those stalks into the house,

Hoping we had not been trusted too much.

–Kim Ode

I am a poetry lover and I so enjoyed the rhubarb poem above by Kim Ode.  It also highlights of course that the rhubarb leaves are indeed poisonous friends, so don't eat them.  As a young girl this didn't scare me but felt like an important and dangerous mission when I was asked to bring rhubarb in for my mother. (Cue the mission impossible theme song....du du du du du du....)



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Confessions of a Grateful Farmer

May 8, 2015 Katrina McAlexander

and then she left her farm for the weekend to head to the coast so she could breathe....

1. I am "Over the Moon," that we have an Great Crop set out on our small family Mt. View Orchards! (A thousand thank yous!)

2. My lil house on the farm is steadily progressing each day and I am to the fun stage of picking out light fixtures!  (Good Grief, Finally!)

3. I confess I have a small melt down every first week of the month when I pay the bills and wonder why does it costs 30,000 to run a farm and how the heck did I come up with that kind of money? (cue the song:I believe in miracles.....)

4. I've learned how to operate 92% of the equipment on the farm and I haven't crashed into anything yet(Too Legit...to legit to quit! Hey Hey!)

5. The Mt. View Orchards CSA continues to be very successful(HUGE THANKS) to everyone who has pledged and backed me.  (I sincerely cannot wait until I can deliver our local, sustainable freshly harvested fruit to you all.) email me at thegratefulfarmer@gmail.com if you have ???s

6. I have an 4 mile loop that I can now jog at least half of it. (For Realzies! This is big progress for someone WITHOUT a runners bod. Let's just say God was extra generous with me when He made me.)

7. I believe love is stronger than death. (My sweet auntie Bette passed away a few weeks ago and I confess I have been feeling all the feels and missing her a lot a lot)

8. I joined the Young Farmers and Ranchers of America in the Hood River Valley( and I am officially the oldest fart in the group but who is counting really? World Changers!)

9. I still believe the the power of prayer and want to thank everyone praying for our farm. Mt. View Orchards was spared a massive hail storm that hit the valley this week. (Oh HAIL NO!)

10. My best sister came for a visit and I just want to say I am so grateful I have an amazing sister in my life. (lets run away from home again but this time lets pack first and wear shoes before we head to California)

11. I am watching my brave friends/cousins navigate through the foster care system with such courage and grace.  Their big LOVE for displaced kiddos never ceases to amaze me. (Love grows a family!! BRAVEST!)

12. I am trying to protect my skin from the sun but I am sporting a pretty intense farmer's tan these days. (Don't be to envious of my dramatic stripes)

13. I like someone and we go on fun dates ("Hallelujah" to be cont...)

14. I love farming and feel like coming home to save the family farm was one of the best decisions I have made thus far in my 30's!

15. I believe the cure to anxiety is thanksgiving so i want to thank you for following along and backing me sweet friends and future friends.(xoxo, your grateful farmer)

Gratitude

by Mary Oliver

What did you notice?

The dew snail;
the low-flying sparrow;
the bat, on the wind, in the dark;
big-chested geese, in the V of sleekest performance;
the soft toad, patient in the hot sand;
the sweet-hungry ants;
the uproar of mice in the empty house;
the tin music of the cricket’s body;
the blouse of the goldenrod.

What did you hear?

The thrush greeting the morning;
the little bluebirds in their hot box;
the salty talk of the wren,
then the deep cup of the hour of silence.

What did you admire?

The oaks, letting down their dark and hairy fruit;
the carrot, rising in its elongated waist;
the onion, sheet after sheet, curved inward to the
pale green wand;
at the end of summer the brassy dust, the almost liquid
beauty of the flowers:

then the ferns, scrawned black by the frost.

What astonished you?

The swallows making their dip and turn over the water.

What would you like to see again?

My dog: her energy and exuberance, her willingness,
her language beyond all nimbleness of tongue, her
recklessness, her loyalty, her sweetness, her
sturdy legs, her curled black lip, her snap. 

What was most tender?

Queen Anne’s lace, with its parsnip root;
the everlasting in its bonnets of wool;
the kinks and turns of the tupelo’s body;
the tall, blank banks of sand;
the clam, clamped down.

What was most wonderful?

The sea, and its wide shoulders;
the sea and its triangles;
the sea lying back on its long athlete’s spine.

What did you think was happening?

The green breast of the hummingbird;
the eye of the pond;
the wet face of the lily;
the bright, puckered knee of the broken oak;
the red tulip of the fox’s mouth;
the up-swing, the down-pour, the frayed sleeve
of the first snow—

so the gods shake us from our sleep.

(Mary Oliver is my fave and this poem has been a good friend of mine)

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Farmers gonna FARM!

May 1, 2015 Katrina McAlexander

My mother Ruthie, 70 years old and still going strong!!!

There is a long tradition since the beginning of agriculture where if one farmer could use some help the other farmers in their community happily come to their aid.  I remember hearing stories as a child where my grandfather Lew or my sweet parents would share with us heart warming farming stories of whole crops being harvested, or entire barns being rebuilt after a fire by other farmers in the community. At Mt. View Orchards we still believe in this generous model of farming and we love to farm along side and help out our neighbors.  It is truly an honor to farm along side our farming neighbors and rally for one another here in Parkdale, Oregon. 

We feel very lucky that on our road there are a variety of farmers and ranchers that grow free range beef, chickens, lamb, eggs, a variety of veggies, pumpkins, apples, pears, peaches, plums, nectaries, blueberries, raspberries, honey, christmas trees and so much more.  We personally support our local farmers and appreciate that they support us right back! We are grateful to have such beautiful and dense loom soil and an ample amount of irrigation run off from Mt. Hood. Water in other regions is very scarce making growing food nearly impossible and in our region we are indeed grateful for this faithful water source and want to preserve it for many generations to come.

Today on the farm my mother and I traded some rototilling for some of our new neighbors/farming friends(Saur Farms) that bought land just down trout creek ridge road for some of their amazing veggie goodness(see evidence below).  My mother Ruthie, brought me along so I could have another lesson on how to run the rototiller and learn how to navigate a smaller space with water valves nearly at every turn. (Good news, i didn't hit any of their valves making for a large geyser of turning failure) My mother is a very skilled farmer(60+ years of experience) and is also a very kind and encouraging teacher to me a budding farmer who is still learning how to operate all the equipment.  Together, we rototilled their our neighbor's land and it took us about an hour to finish up.  I am thrilled to see the next generation giving their hearts to growing our food and I am so encouraged to see more and more young people chose farming in our region.  When young people choose to become farmers this truly is the very best news and we should all feel the farming love all around us!  Who grows your food? You should have a personal relationship with that person/family and have walked around on their land. 

Lastly, I want to remind all of you that as farmers, we need your help to keep farming year after year.  We cannot sustain in farming without our communities believing in us and choosing to buy local and directly from our farms.  Thank you to every one who supports. Mt. View Orchards each and every year and has made our farm, your farm.  My face and my hands are quite dirty this morning after tilling for my neighbors but my heart is FULL.  I am so thankful that I am a farmer and I get to grow food for you all along side my farming neighbors cause "farmers gonna farm." xoxo your grateful farmer. 

My sHERO and favorite farming mentor!

your grateful farmer learning a new farming skill and praying she doesn't screw it up!

The dirty life!! Im working on tilling in a straight formation. room for improvement for sure!

HOPE!

Inside Saur Farms hoop house is a bounty of veggie goodness, They are ready for markets!

Our PRIZE= The best radishes and turnips we have ever had. Saur farms you guys are so generous! So glad you guys farm on Trout Creek Ridge Rd!

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Grateful

The grateful farmer is a blog about a woman who left her job in the the city to come home to save the family farm.  My desire is to candidly share my journey learning how to farm a 50 acre Orchard at the base of Mt. Hood. I invite you to follow along as I share seasonal recipes, childhood memories, farming successes and failures. Please enjoy the Orchard photos collaging the beautiful seasons and harvests here at Mt. View Orchards. I am grateful and humbled that are you are reading along and want you to know that my farm is your farm.


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Inspiration

Smitten Kitchen
Food In Jars
Phickle
Dishing Up Dirt
A Holy Experience
Broad Appetite
My Darling Lemon
Local Milk
5 Second Rule
Pen And Plate
Poires Au Chocolat
Maureen Abood
Love And Lemons
The Vanilla Bean
Top With Cinnamon
I Am A Food Blog
On Being
Neds Fox


Looking for a spot to take some family photos or picnic? Our sunflowers are in bloom and it’s a beautiful day to come visit the farm. #mtvieworchards
Looking for a spot to take some family photos or picnic? Our sunflowers are in bloom and it’s a beautiful day to come visit the farm. #mtvieworchards
Honeycrisp apples are a favorite @mtvieworchards and today we are going to be sharing some forward with our local food bank.  Apples are extremely rich in important antioxidants, flavanoids, and dietary fiber. The phytonutrients and antioxidants in a
Honeycrisp apples are a favorite @mtvieworchards and today we are going to be sharing some forward with our local food bank. Apples are extremely rich in important antioxidants, flavanoids, and dietary fiber. The phytonutrients and antioxidants in apples may help reduce the risk of developing cancer, hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease. @mtvieworchards we believe everyone deserves to enjoy the best of our 2018 local apple harvests. We have them in our farm stand as well if you want to pick some up for your lunches. #mtvieworchards #afarmthatcares #afarmthatgathers #afarmthatgivesback #apples #honeycrisps

6670 Trout Creek Ridge Rd, Mt Hood, OR 97041                                                                                                                    © 2017 Grateful Farmer