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July 14, 2011 by: Renee Wilkinson

Strawberry Waffles and Funny Eggs

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Like a crazy woman, I went back to the local farm to u-pick more strawberries. Our cupboards are stocked with jam and I am getting tired of standing over the stock pot stirring. So this round I decided to just freeze them all – easy and versatile.

I lightly rinsed the berries, since they can be little sponges and soak up excess water. I then hulled the tops off and set them out in a single layer on a cookie sheet. They went into the freezer for a few hours until totally frozen. Then I rolled them off the sheet and into a plastic freezer bag. This freezes them as individual berries, instead of one giant block. That makes it really, really easy to measure out what you need as you need it.

Pearl, our 7+ year old Americana, laid a really funny looking egg the other day. It was under-sized and crooked. She seems otherwise healthy and has been laying eggs since then that have looked normal. We also got our first duck egg from Gladys!

For breakfast, I decided to whip up something using our funny shaped eggs and the frozen berries. I have been craving a huge pile of waffles using this great recipe from AllRecipes.com. I made up a strawberry compote/sauce for the topping.

Strawberry Sauce

  • 2 cups frozen berries
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 1/4 cup sugar (or less)
  • 2 tsp. cornstarch
  • 1/2 tsp. vanilla
  1. Mix berries, juice, sugar and cornstarch in a small saucepan and bring to a boil.
  2. The berries will fall apart as they cook, but you can mash them to desired consistency. Boil hard for a couple minutes to thicken.
  3. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla. Serve warm over waffles, pancakes, biscuits or ice cream.

The great thing about frozen, local berries is that they taste so close to fresh when they get cooked up. I ate about two waffles before I couldn’t fit anymore. With blueberry season just around the corner and raspberries coming on just now, it’s going to be a morning-berry-bonanza around here!

Related Posts

  • How to Freeze BlueberriesHow to Freeze Blueberries
  • Fritatta Three WaysFritatta Three Ways
  • Homemade Pumpkin PureeHomemade Pumpkin Puree
  • First Duck Eggs
Milt Needs to Go
Goodbye Milt

Comments

  1. 2

    AlizaEss says

    August 1, 2011 at 10:24 am

    Yep, one of the fun things about growing your own food is seeing the imperfect varieties the grocery store never wants to show you! We recently got one of those weird giant eggs… wish I had opened it to find out if there was another egg inside! I was kind of too nervous to crack it open 😛 http://www.baltimorediy.org/2011/06/giant-egg.html

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  1. Homesteading Summer « Fulcrum Publishing says:
    July 21, 2011 at 11:46 am

    […] if you haven’t been reading Renee’s blog, Hip Chick Digs, she’s been posting some great recipes recently, and her posts on her duck Milt’s…erm…insatiable appetite have […]

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Most days on the homestead aren’t big or dramati Most days on the homestead aren’t big or dramatic—they’re made of small, steady moments.

Refilling the chicken feeder. Collecting eggs still warm from the nest. Pulling up a few carrots. Tossing weeds to the flock. Trimming back the roses before they take over.

It’s not about doing it all—it’s about doing what you can, when you can.
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Swarm catching 🐝 This cluster was about the siz Swarm catching 🐝 This cluster was about the size of a basketball hanging in a Doug Fir next to a playground. They were super easy to catch with my extension pole! 

Note: don't put a swarm in anything plastic. I hated putting them in this bucket, but it's all I could grab in time. But they can easily overheat in something like this, which lacks good ventilation. I relocated them into a wooden hive super quick, but I was so nervous every minute they were in here.

As always, I chatted with several onlookers. Folks are always so curious about swarms and honeybees. It's a lovely way to educate and build bee ambassadors 🐝 
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Weekend vibes: gardening in pajamas, coffee in han Weekend vibes: gardening in pajamas, coffee in hand, and dirt under my nails before 9am.
This is how I fit homesteading into modern family life—little pockets of peace squeezed between breakfast and soccer games.

It’s not picture-perfect, but it’s real—and it feeds my soul (and my soil). Here’s to slow starts, messy mornings, and growing what we can, when we can.

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Hey there, new friends! I’m Renee, a modern home Hey there, new friends! I’m Renee, a modern homesteader living in Portland, Oregon—raising chickens, veggies, and three awesome kids on our little slice of urban heaven.

I'm carrying on generations of knowledge to grow my own food, live more sustainably, and teach my family the value of getting our hands dirty (in the best way). Here, I share the real ups and downs of homesteading—think garden wins, chicken shenanigans, DIY projects, and everyday lessons from the land.

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Homegrown asparagus tastes 1,000% better than anyt Homegrown asparagus tastes 1,000% better than anything from the store. So juicy, crisp, naturally sweet. Some of these were 18" long and still tender. 

Asparagus is a perennial vegetable, meaning you plant once and it comes back every year. You have to wait until year three to start harvesting, but it's worth that wait. 

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More garden arches! This one also started with 20' More garden arches! This one also started with 20' lengths of thin rebar, shoved into the ground with my weight and hooped over loosely. Our old Christmas tree trunks are tied to the rebar, to thicken up the base. 

Pruned branches from our fig tree make good vertical supports. Multi-stemmed branches help build up the sides, bc they can also be woven in horizontally.

The most time is spent weaving in thin, flexible branches horizontally from our plum trees. The structure gets more secure pretty quickly, as tension is built up.

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Making woven garden arches 💪🏼 I start with a Making woven garden arches 💪🏼 I start with a few 20' lengths of thin rebar. My soil is soft at this time of year, so I can use my body weight to push them deep into the ground. 

Then I start layering in pruned fruit tree branches. Fig and pear work well as vertical sides. Plum and apple are flexible enough for me to weave in between. Multi-stemmed pieces are helpful to create tangles of branches. I use twine selectively, if at all. 

I dream of hopping across the pond to take a workshop at @damsonfarm.house to improve my technique making natural supports. Some day, I hope! 
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I couldn't bring myself to send these cushions to I couldn't bring myself to send these cushions to a landfill, even though the fabric covers were totally deteriorating. But I've never seen cushion covers for sale, until I stumbled upon these at Ikea.

They fit perfectly! I don't need fancy patio furniture - just a place to put my feet up. So hurray for the small wins and keeping these babies out of the landfill 🎉
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