Friday, July 10, 2015

A Traditional Farm Life - Kosher Dill Pickles

A Traditional Farm Life

By Shasta Hamilton



Greetings from Enterprise, dear friends!  My daughters triumphantly ushered in the first red, ripe tomato from the girl’s garden this morning.  It was a mere 2 inches in diameter, so everyone present had to be satisfied with a thin slice of the first fruits of high summer.

The current abundance of cucumbers in the garden brings back to mind the joy of making pickles.  Since I’ll be teaching some folks on Saturday about canning pickles, a practice run after a two-year hiatus from pickling seemed in order. 

As a result, Thursday we took a “refresher course,” and got out the water bath canner, found the jars, lids, bands and assorted paraphernalia, and set to work.  It was with the fond recollections inspired by a visit from an old friend that I washed up those familiar canning utensils for use once more.

The last summer I actively canned was 2013, as summer 2014 was consumed by our baking for the Abilene Farmer’s Market.  According to our records, that summer we canned over 100 quarts of assorted pickles, 119 quarts of tomato products, 36 quarts of apple pie filling, plus 27 pints of “Mockberry Jam”—an unusual spread for bread composed of blended tomatoes, strawberry gelatin, and sugar. 

I don’t expect we will duplicate our “personal best” canning record of 2013 anytime soon, as the restaurant requires so much of our time these days.  Looking back, the more than 250 jars we processed seems a pretty amazing feat, but it was the end result of four months of canning several days a week—one canner load at a time. 

After all the washing, cutting, packing, and canning were over Thursday afternoon it was a delight to see those perpendicular pickle spears in the jars—even if there were only 4 quart this time around.

The following Kosher Dill Pickle recipe comes from an old Better Homes and Gardens Home Canning Cookbook. I’ve added additional instructions for folks these days not as familiar with the water bath canning process. 

With no brining involved, Kosher Dills are great first pickling project.  There are several tips we’ve picked up over the years to help make sure your finished pickles are crisp rather than soft. 

First, make sure your cucumbers are as fresh as possible.  We like to pick in the morning and pickle in the afternoon.  If you don’t have your own garden, Farmer’s Market cucumbers will probably have been picked the day of the market, so pickling the next day should be just fine.

Second, be sure to trim a thin slice off the blossom end of the cucumber.  This step removes an enzyme that causes soft pickles.

Third, do not over process the pickles, which cooks them and—understandably--softens them. 

Historically, pickles were fermented naturally in cellars without any heat processing at all.  In time, many were done by the ”open kettle” method, meaning the cucumbers, dill, spices, etc. were packed in the jars, a boiling brine poured over, and one at a time the jars were closed and left to seal at room temperature. 

The next progression was a 5-minute processing time in a boiling water bath.  The process was just like the “open kettle” method,” but the closed jars were placed in rapidly boiling water, covered, and processed for 5 minutes before removal to cool and seal.  Although this method is still widely used in rural communities today, it no longer conforms to modern recommendations.

Personally, I find it interesting to note that over the years “official” canning sources like “The Ball Blue Book” have gradually increased the processing time from 5, to 10, then 15 minutes. These days, a processing time of 15 or even 20 minutes is often recommended for pickles. 

If you’d like more information on current recommendations for home canning, please give Chelsi Myer at the Dickinson County K-State Research and Extension Office a call.  As a family we have benefited much over the years from K-State Extension literature.

Kosher Dill Pickles
2-1/2 lbs. pickling cucumbers
    (3 to 4 inches long)
  --larger cukes may be cut into spears
10 heads fresh dill
    (or 2-1/2 tablespoons dill seed)
5 large garlic cloves
5 tablespoons pickling salt
5 hot peppers (optional)
1 quart (5% acidity) apple cider  
    vinegar
    (do not use apple flavored vinegar)
3 quarts water

1.   Check 5 wide-mouth canning jars for cracks or nicks on sealing surface; wash in hot, soapy water and rinse thoroughly.  Wash ring bands as well.  Sterilize jar lids according to package directions, or by pouring boiling water over lids in a heat-proof container.
2.  Fill water bath canner about 2/3 full, cover, and begin heating on high heat.
3.  Thoroughly rinse the cucumbers.  Remove stems and cut off a very thin slice from the blossom end.
4.  In a large pot, combine the vinegar and water; bring to a boil.
5.  Place 2 heads dill (or 1/2 tablespoon dill seed), 1 clove garlic (peeled), and 1 tablespoon salt in the bottom of each jar.
6.  Tightly pack cucumbers into the jars, leaving a 1/2-inch headspace at the top of the jar.  (For larger cucumbers, slice into spears and pack vertically.)
7.  Ladle hot brine over cucumbers, leaving a 1/2-inch headspace.  Wipe rim clean with damp paper towel.  Place lid on top, and screw band on fingertip tight.  Place jars in rapidly boiling water with 1 to 2-inches above the jar lid.  (Add boiling water if necessary.)  Cover and process 15 minutes.  Carefully remove from boiling water and place jars upright 2 or 3 inches apart on a thick, dry towel, away from drafts.  Let cool undisturbed 12-24 hours.  When cool, test seals, wipe jars clean, and store.  For best taste, let stand at least one week before serving.

Copyright © 2015 by Shasta Hamilton

Shasta is a fifth generation rural Kansan now residing in Enterprise, Kansas.  She and her husband own and operate The Buggy Stop Home-Style Kitchen with their six home-schooled children.  You can reach The Buggy Stop by calling (785) 200-6385 or visit them on the web at www.thebuggystoprestaurant.com.

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President Eisenhower Dealt A Mean Hand of Cards!!! And Bridge was his Game-O

Eisenhower Bridge Benefit


Duplicate Bridge players are invited to the second annual Dwight D. Eisenhower Bridge Benefit from 1 to 5 p.m. July 25 at the Eisenhower Presidential Library Courtyard, 200 S.E. Fourth Street

"Join us in celebrating and preserving the legacy of the 'Bridge Player in Chief, 'Dwight D. Eisenhower," invites Carol Sunde, Benefit director and member of the Abilene American Contract Bridge League that sponsors the event with the Eisenhower Foundation. "We wanted to have an event at the Eisenhower Presidential Library because Eisenhower was such a bridge player."

Benefit co-chairwoman and fellow bridge player Georgia Reynolds says Eisenhower learned to play bridge while attending West Point and continued to play the game throughout his life.

"Dwight D. Eisenhower played with some very big bridge players of his time," Reynolds says. "He was very strategic-minded, and duplicate bridge is very strategic."

Proceeds from the event benefit the K-12 educational programs, Ike EDucation, according to Reynolds.

"Ike EDucation is working hard to educate people about President Eisenhower and he is more popular now than he ever was,"she says. "He was a man that stood up for principles that matter."

Promoting the Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home is also a goal of the Bridge Benefit, and players and their spouses receive free passes to the museum.

Those interested in attending the event are encouraged to pre-register by emailing ikeed@eisenhowerfoundation.net or phone (785) 263-6791; the registration fee of $10 can be paid the day of the event. For more information, contact Sunde at (785) 263-0582.

The Abilene American Contract Bridge League, active for about 50 years, organized the first Eisenhower Bridge Benefit at the Eisenhower Library last year with 10 teams participating from Abilene, Salina, Concordia, Wichita, Hutchinson and Great Bend, according to Sunde. The winners took home a traveling trophy featuring a bust of Eisenhower with a plate inscribed with their names; that trophy will be passed on to this year's winners.

Duplicate Bridge, the most widely used variation of contract bridge in club and tournament play, features the same bridge deal replayed by different sets of players.

"The object of the game is to score more than everyone else playing with the same cards,"Sunde says. "It's a game of what you do with what you have, and it's the best card game I've ever played and I've played a lot of card games."

About the Eisenhower Foundation
To honor and champion the relevance today of the life and leadership of Dwight D. Eisenhower through compelling programs and events that celebrate his legacy.

 

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Dixie Swim Club Makes a Splash in Abilene, Kansas

Dixie Swim Club Makes a Splash in Abilene, Kansas

L-R:  Deborah Kennedy, Nikki Savitt, Kim Bogus, Marcee Cosby, Laurie Pascale
Great Plains Theatre continues its 21st Season with the comedy The Dixie Swim Club at Abilene High School Auditorium, July 10-19. This heartwarming play, about friendship and the ties that bind, follows five friends who met on their college swim team. For a thirty-year span they reunite for one-weekend each summer, picking up where they left off and proving that good friends last a lifetime. The Dixie Swim Club is a celebration of the friends who become our family, written in the same vein as Steel Magnolias.    


For tickets contact Great Plains Theatre at 785-263-4574. For further information about performance dates and times, as well as details about the rest of GPT's exciting season, visit www.greatplainstheatre.com.


The production is directed by Great Plains Theatre's Artistic Director Doug Nuttelman. Mark Warner will serve as Technical Director and Stage Manager. William Snyder will design the scenery and Becky Dibben will provide costumes.


The cast of The Dixie Swim Club will feature five performers, three of which will be familiar to Great Plains Theatre audiences. Laurie Pascale (Always...Patsy Cline, Steel Magnolias, Moonlight and Magnolias), Nikki Savitt (Rumors, Harvey) and Marcee Cosby (Over the River and Through the Woods) are joined by newcomers Kim Bogus and Deb Kennedy.


Continuing with our exciting summer raffles, The Great Plains Theatre has secured some exciting prizes to be given away at the final performance of The Dixie Swim Club on July 19. These include gift certificates to Xpressions, Rivendell Bookstore & Picture This Plus, Material Girls Quilt Shop, The Shivering Sheep, Mr. K's Farmhouse, Ike's Place Bar and Grill, as well as an hour-long massage from Impact Sports and Fitness. Raffle tickets can be purchased at the Great Plains Theatre office or at any performance of The Dixie Swim Club. Winners need-not be present.    


Great Plains Theatre's entire 2015 Season is graciously underwritten by ASTRA Bank, with Corporate Sponsorship provided by Brierton Engineering, Inc., First Bank Kansas, Holm Automotive Inc., and Pinnacle Bank.

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Soggy Dog is Hosting a Salina Business After Hours!!

Business After Hours: July 9th

Soggy Dog Salon & Suites, Inc.
640 N. Santa Fe
Thursday, July 9
5-7pm * $5 per person

Soggy Dog Salon & Suites specializes in providing luxury boarding, supervised daycare, and professional grooming.  Centrally located in Salina, the resort's unique amenities include spacious full-view suites, an indoor daycare area, and a secure outdoor playground featuring specially designed K9 grass to ensure your dog's comfort and safety.  Staffed 24 hours- a-day, 365 days- a-year, dogs are cared for in a climate-controlled 6,800 sq. ft. area. Soggy Dog Salon & Suites, your dog's vacation destination.


For reservations call 827.9301 or email dsmith@salinakansas.org

REFRESHMENTS *TOURS *DOOR PRIZES (must be present to win)
$100 CASH ATTENDANCE DRAWING
$500, $500, $1,000 MEMBERSHIP DRAWING
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Sunday, July 5, 2015

Chalk Paint Workshop 101 at SK Designs in Abilene, KS

Chalk Paint Workshop 101 at SK Designs

Thursday, July 9, 6:00pm – 8:30pm
SK Designs, 314 N. Buckeye, Abilene, KS 67410


Sign up for our workshops in our new studio. You will learn 6 x paint techniques using Chalk Paint® and Annie's brushes on new moldings. You'll have the knowledge after 2 1/2 hours to go home and successfully attack a piece of furniture! Our class fee is $95.00, you'll take home all of your samples and lots of information. Call and reserve your seat 785-263-1423. See you soon!

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A Traditional Farm Life – Buggy HOP Pancakes


A Traditional Farm Life – Buggy HOP Pancakes

By Shasta Hamilton

Greetings from Enterprise, dear friends!  Nothing says “summer” like fresh cucumbers on the table.  Our garden has blessed us with “Sweet Slice” cukes for the last week or so.  Now if we could just get some ripe tomatoes to go with them . . .

In other news fresh from the garden, our twelve-year-old son has been digging potatoes this week when he can squeeze in a little time in the evenings after other chores.  So far, it looks like the best potato crop we’ve ever had.  The Red Pontiacs are humongous—some of them are as large as Russet baking potatoes!  The Red LaSodas are the usual smaller red potato size.

We’ll definitely be planting Red Pontiacs again next year.  Our son notes the potatoes are the largest in the areas where we mulched the plants the deepest.  In these parts, the potatoes are right on the surface, rather than down in the dirt as well.  A win-win situation!

Between our recent purchases of tack and draft equipment and the lack of outbuildings on our place, we are painfully aware it looks like a used tack dealer collided with implement salvage yard.  But friends, sometimes it has to get worse before it gets better.

In order to care properly for all the miscellaneous gear we’re collecting for our horses, a tack room is in the beginning stages in the one outbuilding we currently have on the place.

We’re working on clearing the concrete pad north of the house for implement storage.  When the overgrowth, scrub trees, and years of dirt are cleared away, the boys will be able to pull through and drop off equipment circle-drive style.  Our treasure trove of used farm implements will then have a home of their own away from their current abode on the front yard.

Meanwhile, back at the restaurant, we were delighted by a surprise visit from Marci Penner and WenDee LaPlant of the Kansas Sampler Foundation Wednesday noon.  Marci and WenDee are preparing a second edition of the Kansas Guidebook for Explorers to be available in 2016.  They are again touring every one of the 626 incorporated cities in Kansas to glean information for the new Guidebook.

I was privileged to hear Marci speak this past May 9th at the Eisenhower Presidential Library regarding tourism in Kansas, and it was an honor to speak with her again and introduce them to The Buggy Stop.

The May 9th presentation included multiple pictures of pancakes the pair has eaten at restaurants all across Kansas.  Not being an establishment that serves breakfast, we weren’t able to throw our hat in the ring Wednesday. 

Their loss is your gain, however, because I’ll share with you our family’s favorite pancake recipe.  (By the way, if you’re not serving a crowd at your own House of Pancakes, simply cut the recipe in half or freeze the leftovers for a handy snack another day.)

Buggy HOP Pancakes

2-1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup sugar
2-1/4 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt

3 cups milk
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs

1.  In a large bowl, whisk first five ingredients until fully incorporated. 
2.  In a small bowl, whisk together the milk, vegetable oil, and eggs.
3.  Add wet ingredients to dry and whisk until smooth.  Let stand 5 to 10 minutes while griddle heats (325 to 350 degrees.). 
4.  Lightly grease griddle and pour on 1/3 cup batter for each pancake.  When bubbles form and break, turn pancake and cook until bottom browns. Serve warm with plenty of butter and maple syrup. Yield:  About 24 (4-inch) pancakes.


Copyright © 2015 by Shasta Hamilton

Shasta is a fifth generation rural Kansan now residing in Enterprise, Kansas.  She and her husband own and operate The Buggy Stop Home-Style Kitchen with their six home-schooled children.  You can reach The Buggy Stop by calling (785) 200-6385 or visit them on the web at www.thebuggystoprestaurant.com.


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5 Southern Women, 33 Years, Life, Lessons and Laughs

Dixie Swim Club At Great Plains Theatre


July 10 - 19
at Abilene High School Auditorium

Friday, July 10 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, July 11 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, July 12 at 2:00 pm

Tuesday, July 14 at 7:30 pm
Wednesday, July 15 at 2:00 pm
Thursday, July 16 at 7:30 pm
Friday, July 17 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, July 18 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, July 19 at 2:00 pm

"Five Southern women, whose friendships began many years ago on their college swim team, set aside a long weekend every August to recharge those relationships. Free from husbands, kids and jobs, they meet at the same beach cottage on North Carolina's Outer Banks to catch up, laugh and meddle in each other's lives. THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB focuses on four of those weekends and spans a period of thirty-three years. Sheree, the spunky team captain, desperately tries to maintain her organized and "perfect" life, and continues to be the group's leader. Dinah, the wisecracking overachiever, is a career dynamo. But her victories in the courtroom are in stark contrast to the frustrations of her personal life. Lexie, pampered and outspoken, is determined to hold on to her looks and youth as long as possible. She enjoys being married-over and over and over again. The self-deprecating and acerbic Vernadette, acutely aware of the dark cloud that hovers over her life, has decided to just give in and embrace the chaos. And sweet, eager-to-please Jeri Neal experiences a late entry into motherhood that takes them all by surprise. As their lives unfold and the years pass, these women increasingly rely on one another, through advice and raucous repartee, to get through the challenges (men, marriage, parenting, divorce, aging) that life flings at them. And when fate throws a wrench into one of their lives in the second act, these friends, proving the enduring power of "teamwork," rally 'round their own with the strength and love that takes this comedy in a poignant and surprising direction. THE DIXIE SWIM CLUB is the story of these five unforgettable women - a hilarious and touching comedy about friendships that last forever..."

Featuring Laurie Pascale, Nikki Savitt,
Deborah Kennedy, Kim Bogus
and Marcee Cosby

For tickets, or more information, call 785-263-4574 or visit www.greatplainstheatre.com!

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NASA Studies Kansas Thunderstorms

NASA takes to the Kansas Skies to Study Nighttime Thunderstorms


NASA has joined a multi-agency field campaign studying summer storm systems in the U.S. Great Plains to find out why they often form after the sun goes down instead of during the heat of the day.

The Plains Elevated Convection at Night, or PECAN, project began June 1 and continues through mid-July. Participants from eight research laboratories and 14 universities are collecting storm data to find out how and why they form. NASA's DC-8 airborne laboratory began research flights Tuesday from the Salina Regional Airport, Salina, Kansas.

"We're hoping to collect measurements that will be used to characterize the atmosphere ahead of these storms," said Richard Ferrare, senior research scientist in the Atmospheric Sciences Division at NASA's Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia. "If we can map the water vapor that goes into these storms, we'll be able to improve computer models that represent these conditions and better predict the storms."

The NASA DC-8 and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) P-3 Orion research aircraft supporting the PECAN mission will be open to the media from 3 to 5 p.m. CDT on Saturday, July 11, at the Salina Regional Airport. The airport is located at 3237 Arnold Avenue.

Unlike other parts of the United States, summer thunderstorms across the Great Plains are most common after sunset. Much of the rain comes from medium-size weather systems and resulting thunderstorms known as mesoscale convective systems. These nighttime storms can produce heavy rainfall that contributes a significant portion of the yearly precipitation in the region.

Scientists understand that thunderstorms that form during the day result from a vertical "convective" circulation driven by rising warm air from the heated Earth's surface and falling air cooled at higher latitudes in the atmosphere. Less well understood are the mechanisms that cause thunderstorms after the sun has gone down and the land surface has cooled.

The DC-8 carries atmospheric science instruments and investigators from Langley; NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California; and several universities and research labs. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is providing a ground-based Doppler radar system.

PECAN is funded by the National Science Foundation with additional support from NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and the Department of Energy.

In addition to the NASA and NOAA aircraft, researchers will receive data from a University of Wyoming King Air plane, ground-based instruments, weather balloons and mobile radars. Storm information will continue to be gathered from multiple agency ground and air instruments across northern Oklahoma, central Kansas, and south-central Nebraska through July.The DC-8 is based at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Facility in Palmdale, California, and supports NASA's
Airborne Science Program under the Science Mission Directorate. The extended range, prolonged flight-duration capability, large payload capacity, and laboratory environment of the DC-8 make it one of the premier aircraft available for
NASA Earth science investigations.

NASA researchers collect and study data from space, air, land and sea to tackle challenges facing the world today, including improved environmental prediction and natural hazard and climate change preparedness. NASA develops new ways to observe and study Earth's interconnected natural systems with long-term data records. The agency freely shares this unique knowledge and works with institutions around the world to gain new insights into how our planet is changing.

 For more information on Project PECAN click here.

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Be Apart of the New Leadership In Salina


Be Apart of the New Leadership In Salina


Applications are now being accepted by interested individuals for the 2015 Leadership Salina program sponsored by the Salina Area Chamber of Commerce and Greater Salina Community Foundation. The deadline for applications is Monday August 3.

Leadership Salina is designed to develop leaders who will have the skills and capacities to move Salina and local organizations and businesses forward. The class will consist of a diverse group of a maximum of 30 individuals from various businesses, professional, governmental, educational, religious, civic and minority organizations.  The program does not discriminate in its enrollment policies on the basis of race, sex or religion.  Attendance at all sessions is mandatory.  Tuition is $450 per person.  A limited number of partial scholarships are available.    

This will be the 30th year of the program.  The program will begin September 3, and includes six full-day sessions, plus a day at the Kansas Leadership Center in Wichita.  The program will conclude November 19.  Graduation is November 24 and will include a celebration of class accomplishments.  Each session will include learning a new leadership skill or capacity, a community panel, and community tour. 

Leadership Salina equips people with the ability to make long lasting change for the common good.  It focuses on leadership being an activity, not a role or position.  The curriculum is based on the Kansas Leadership Center Civic Leadership Competencies---Manage Self, Diagnose Situation, Energize Others, and Intervene Skillfully.  Through large-group sessions, small group work, peer consulting and individual reflections, participants develop the ability to better harness their leadership potential and make a difference in the community. 

At the conclusion of the program, class members will have the opportunity to use their leadership skills for the direct betterment of the community through a group project or projects, based on their vision for the community.  Group members will be responsible for researching their idea(s), determining feasibility, acquiring resources to complete the project, completing the project, and celebrating their accomplishment.  

“The Leadership Salina program gives people an opportunity to develop not only their leadership skills, but exposes them to the challenges and opportunities facing our community,” stated Don Weiser, Chamber President/CEO.  “The program gives participants an in-depth look at the Salina community and encourages them to take an active role in its future progress and development.”

Persons interested in receiving more information about the program or receiving an application can contact Don Weiser at the Chamber office, 827-9301 or email dweiser@salinakansas.org.  Applications are available at the Chamber office, 120 W. Ash, or can be downloaded by clicking on “Leadership Salina” on the Chamber’s homepage at www.salinakansas.org. 

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