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Freezing Leftovers

November 30, 2014 by theblogbloom.com 1 Comment

Leftovers get a bad rep.

Unfortunately for me, so do girls in their twenties who can vegetables.

And, just because I like my garden, putting food not flowers in Ball jars, and cooking more than going out to eat doesn’t mean that I am not like other twenty-somethings.

It doesn’t mean that I don’t like cocktails downtown with my girlfriends. Or Taylor Swift. Or Instagram. Or fun sparkly shoes.

But, because of my few “old-er lady” tendencies, I have made a conscientious effort to avoid things that might further drive this case home.

Potential Tweets about loving my vacuum and being really excited about my organized spice cabinet have been censored. I try not to let it be too well know that I belong to the library and use it… often. And blog posts with topics like freezer meals have been avoided… until now.

Freezer Meals have a reputation for being a busy mom’s BFF. Carting kids from one activity to another is apparently easier when dinner is already made at home in the freezer and just needs to be heated up.

I am not carting kids around yet, but I do have evenings where meetings go late and I still need to hit the gym. I have days where I have traveled for hours home from a university and have no plan for dinner. And, in the winter, there are plenty of evenings where the last thing I want to do is leave the house to deal with the grocery store.

Story of my life, I am here to break down the reputation: Freezer meals can be anyone’s BFF.

Soups are one of my favorite things to freeze. They defrost well and I also love how well soup stores in the freezer. I typically put the finished soup in a gallon freezer baggie and freeze it solid, flat on it’s side… so that I can save space and stack up even more meals.

Four days past Thursday, I am getting to the point where I am kind of over turkey. So, I decided to make this hearty turkey and rice soup with our left over Thanksgiving turkey so that I can enjoy it some other time when I am not on tryptophan overload.

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It will be perfect for a cold January day. Maybe there will be snow on the roads and I won’t be able to go anywhere. Then, I can be thankful for this turkey twice.

And my new BFF.

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Turkey and Rice Soup
2014-11-30 14:48:45
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Ingredients
  1. 1 tablespoon olive oil
  2. 1/2 cup diced onion
  3. 1 cup sliced carrot
  4. 8 tablespoons flour
  5. 6 tablespoons butter
  6. 2 cups milk
  7. 5 cups turkey broth
  8. 3 cups diced cooked turkey meat
  9. 1 1/2 cups cooked wild rice
  10. 1 tablespoon dried herbs like oregano, thyme or sage
  11. Salt and Pepper
Instructions
  1. Add oil and a little broth to a skillet with onions and carrots. Saute over medium high heat until nearly tender, but carrots retain a bit of their bite.
  2. Using a large stock pot, melt butter with medium high heat.
  3. Add flour to melted butter and whisk until combined.
  4. Keep whisking and add a quarter of the broth until mixture thickens.
  5. Still whisking, add remaining broth and milk and bring liquid mixture to a boil.
  6. Remove from heat when mixture is thick enough to coat a spoon.
  7. Add carrots, onions, diced turkey, and rice to liquid mixture.
  8. Stir, adding seasonings like salt, pepper, and herbs.
To reheat
  1. Let thaw in refrigerator over night and then heat in the microwave or on the stove.
  2. OR,
  3. Cook frozen in a large saucepan adding a 1/4 cup water so not to burn over medium heat until warmed through and bubbling.
Bloom. https://www.theblogbloom.com/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: freezer meal, homegrown, left overs, soup, Thanksgiving, turkey

Lighter Leftover Love

November 29, 2014 by theblogbloom.com 3 Comments

So, the goal was to get a handful of left over turkey recipes on Bloom all week long… but, family arrived.  The holiday came.  And, things got busy.  

But, good busy.

It’s always fun to get the family together, talk and laugh.  What was really fun about this Thanksgiving is that Adam and I hosted everyone.  We spent the last couple days showing my family around our town, showing them our favorite parks, places to shop and, of course, our favorite places to eat.

So that meant the new doughnut shop downtown, the brewery, a cute new diner for brunch, and the Irish pub.  

Now that everyone has left and the Holiday festivities have cooled, Adam and I are both feeling the need to get back on track.  All the indulgent food and short week at the gym has us craving something green.

My go-to salad really fits the bill.

It’s similar to a Cobb Salad but, traditionally, a cobb includes greens, grilled chicken, bacon, tomato, eggs, hard boiled eggs, avocado, chives, Roquefort cheese, and red wine vinaigrette.

But, I say, why be so confined? Why go buy Roguefort when there is Colby Jack in your fridge?

Enter my salad: The Garbage Salad.

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The Garbage Salad is kind of an institution in my family.  Adam and I rarely repeat a dish, but we make Garbage Salad maybe once a month.  We even say that if we were to ever open a restaurant The Garbage Salad will be on the menu.

I was introduced to this complex salad by my Dad thanks to the handful of times he cooked for us without my mother’s menu planning.  He was also a big fan of the garbage macaroni and cheese, garbage pasta and garbage pizza.  

You better get a pen for this one: The ingredients are whatever you can find in your refrigerator that would work well in a salad. So it is great for this weekend, the weekend after Thanksgiving, as I am trying to use up what we already have and clear out the fridge.

This salad features bacon left over from this mornings send off breakfast for all the guests, the carrots from my roasted thyme carrots that were a side dish on Thursday, cheese from cocktail hour and, of course the bird.

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Take a look at your fridge and get creative tonight!

And, for another great turkey salad recipe, check out my most recent post on Scratch Mommy and whip up my Crunchy Chinese Turkey Salad.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: left overs, salad, Thanksgiving, turkey

Leftover Love

November 25, 2014 by theblogbloom.com 1 Comment

Back to our regularly scheduled programming on Bloom… food!

And, it’s a good week for food.

I absolutely love Thanksgiving.

I love getting together with family, cooking a great big meal that is a little more fancy than an everyday meal, but still keeping the atmosphere very warm and relaxing.

As a little girl, I loved (and still love) watching the balloons and dancers marching down the streets of Manhattan in the Macy’s Parade fueling dreams of becoming a Rockette… But, unfortunately for me, I am still waiting to clear 5′ 4.

I love taking a little time to really reflect and think about what I am truly thankful for.

I love Thanksgiving so much that I won’t even begin to think about anything Christmas (another holiday that I love) until the leftovers are gone.

And speaking of leftovers… I love those too.

If the whole rhelm of leftovers were a 2000s high school movie, Thanksgiving leftovers would be the handsome and charming football captain who also is Student Body President. Good at everything, liked by everyone.  Pretty much perfect.

Just like this sandwich.

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This panini is everything we all love about Thanksgiving and a little more.  The addition of herb packed and slightly salty pesto really compliments sweetness of the cranberry sauce. 

And let’s be real here, everything is better with melty cheese.

Especially when it’s between two pieces on bread.

 

Day After Thanksgiving Panini
2014-11-25 20:11:33
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Ingredients
  1. 2 slices of good bread
  2. 2 Tbs. Butter
  3. 4 Tbs. cranberry sauce
  4. 2 Tbs. pesto
  5. About half cup of turkey slices or pieces
  6. About a quarter cup shredded mozzarella cheese
Instructions
  1. Turn on and heat up panini press.
  2. Spread butter on one side of each piece of bread.
  3. Spread pesto on other side of one piece, and cranberry sauce on the other.
  4. Place one piece on bread on panini press, butter side down. Top with turkey and cheese. Place second piece of bread on top of the sandwich, butter side up.
  5. Close panini and cook sandwich until golden brown.
Notes
  1. If you don't have a panini press, you can easily prepare the sandwich in a skillet, flipping once the bottom side is golden brown.
Bloom. https://www.theblogbloom.com/
Check back the rest of this week for more Thanksgiving leftover love!

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: holidays, left overs, local food, panini, Thanksgiving, turkey

“Where Are We Going” by Both of Us

November 24, 2014 by theblogbloom.com Leave a Comment

After a little discussion about what we were going to say for our “Where are we going” posts Adam and I have decided to write it together, because where ever we are going, we are going together.  And, while we both have different ideas for details, the goal is the same for the both of us.

So, this final post in our Thanksgiving Series is a collaboration told from my  voice.

In October, we hosted a handful of my sorority sisters for “a weekend in the country.” During dinner one evening, a friend posed the question to the group “What do you love?” Everyone took turns going around the table revealing their love for friends, family, food and more. 

When it was Adam’s turn his response was “Growing food that people can enjoy.” 

Adam’s mom always talks about how his favorite book as a kid was Farmer Grover. I can hear her now mimicking the book: “Be a farmer, Grover!”

Funny story… I read Farmer Grover as a kid as well.  And, that’s about the last I heard about farmers until I was eighteen.

Because of Grover, and his background, he has been fascinated by farmers his whole life. It’s not surprising that growing food is something he is still passionate about.

Now don’t get me wrong, I love growing our own food as much as he does. But, we look at it from two different perspectives.

I look at the beauty of growing food.  Taking something covered in dirt and transforming into a fabulous dish that people love. My passion for food starts with my desire for putting the best ingredients into the dishes I serve. And, I now know that we are capable of growing the best ingredients possible in our own yard .  I want to teach people that they can do the same.

Adam looks at his passion for growing food from a  different perspective. He wants our production of food to be the most successful and efficient as possible.

He’s the mind behind production. I’m the mind behind how it can be shared. 

As much as we are different in our roles of producing our food, we are the same in the most important aspect: We love seeing people enjoy the food we grow and becoming inspired to build a stronger connection to their food.

There is something completely romantic about seeing someone pull your carrots out of the ground in complete amazement. Or sit down to a dinner and enjoy the flavor of your homegrown lettuce and beets as much as your guests enjoy the flavor of your pasture raised chicken.  And, I can not even begin explain the remarkable feeling that comes over me when someone reaches out asking for help and advice because they are interested in starting their own garden.

We love providing food, real food, to people who will enjoy it. We have been producing food for ourselves and a small group of family and friends. We want to grow this to the point that we can provide food to many others as well.  Our goals for the future include more pastured chickens and the addition of pasture raised beef and pork.  We plan to continue to increase the size of the garden each year.

We aren’t sure if this will lead us to Farmer’s Markets, CSA’s, Farm to School programs, partnerships with local butchers or chefs.  Where ever or however we choose to share our food, we want to be transparent.  We want people to come to our farm and see the passion we put into the food that will be going onto their table that night. We want people to understand that their food doesn’t have to come from a grocery store but rather directly from the farm it was grown.  We want people to be inspired to take starter plants back to their homes and teach their children how to grow their own food.  

Most people are generally disconnected from where their food comes from. I know, I was!  

Where we are going is a place where we will work to close that gap.

Where we are going is a place where people will be connected to their food.

And that’s where we all should be going.

Hillary Ferguson Photography.

Hillary Ferguson Photography.

 

 Thank you all for reading our series.  We really enjoyed working on this together and we hope that you enjoyed it as well!  

Wishing you and your loved ones the all best this Thanksgiving!

 

… And, if you do choose to shop, Shop Small!

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Backyard Gardening, beef, Chickens, Growth, local food, Love, pork, Thanksgiving

Thankful For Local Farmers… and Local Turkey

November 18, 2014 by theblogbloom.com Leave a Comment

Interrupting Adam and my series for a little more Thanksgiving fun that was worth sharing the week before the big day.

Last week a post I wrote on how to cook a pasture raised turkey on Scratchmommy.com.

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The post is full of not just cooking tips, but also how to source a turkey for your holiday feast.

In the Scratch Mommy post I advocate for pasture raised birds from a local grower versus just picking up a turkey from the store.

I wrote about my decision to purchase a pasture raised turkey and said, “I cannot think of a better way to “give thanks” than doing something sustainable for the environment, that supports my local community, and is good for my body.”

It’s so true.

For the Scratch Mommy post I purchased a turkey from a farm called Homestead Heritage that I found on eatwild.com. Eatwild.com is a great resource for finding local growers of fruits, vegetables, meat and dairy in your area.

Homestead Heritage is located just across the county from our home and when I reached out to the owners they suggested I meet them at their farm to pick up my bird.

In addition to turkey, Homestead Heritage raises and sells grass fed beef and dairy products as well as pastured pork, chickens, and eggs. They even make up freezer dinners and soups using homegrown vegetables and their sustainable raised meats. They sell at a handful of farmer’s markets in Indianapolis or you can pick up their products at their farm.

I really enjoyed going to see their farm when picking up my turkey. I was able to see other turkeys that had not been processed for the 2014 Holiday Season yet. It was great to see their living conditions; a great space full of grass, sunshine, room to roam and shelter from rain and wind.

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They were really interested in checking me out as I hopped out of the car to get a few photos.

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I was able to meet and talk with the owner of Homestead Heritage, Jonathon. He works with his wife and was really helpful as I asked lots of different questions about the turkey.

He said that they raise Broad Breasted White Turkeys and that the free range, pastured bird’s nutrition is supplemented with an organic feed. I asked him if they do the breeding and they do not. They arrive to his farm as day old chicks and the birds take about five months to become the right size for a Thanksgiving meal.

For the Holiday’s, they take pre-orders but almost always sell out… early. So, he recommends getting on a farm’s pre-order list early.

That’s what I did with the turkey that we will be enjoying next week

I put a deposit down in June- before I even knew I was hosting Thanksgiving!

The turkey I ordered for the holiday is from a small farm on a state road that runs from my house to Purdue that I travel on often for work. They also sell pastured chickens, seasonal flowers, vegetables and starter plants.

I have loved connecting with these growers for our Holiday meals. There is something incredibly wonderful about meeting the person who raised and cared for your food.  They take pride in it and were quick to offer tips and suggestions for cooking the turkey’s so that I have a good experience with the product that they poured themselves into.  These growers were also beyond kind. They invited me to their homes and even helped me get the birds into my car.

They shared their passion for raising animals that have the opportunity to bask in the sunshine, eat grass and bugs, stretch out their wings, and run around.

Their passions for creating a sustainable piece of land.

Their passion for helping people understand farming better.

And for people like them, I am very thankful.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: eat wild, holidays, Indiana, local food, pasture raised meat, Thankful, Thanksgiving, turkey

“How Did We Get Here” by Adam

November 9, 2014 by theblogbloom.com 5 Comments

It seems like people do a lot of reflecting in November.

Thanks to the upcoming Holidays, like Veteran’s Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, many people begin to take time to think about what they are thankful for and count their blessings just a little bit more.

With our Facebook Newsfeed full of daily “I am thankful for >enter whatever first world benefit here<,” Adam and I couldn’t help but get in the spirit.

Okay. So, maybe after we judged the people who said they were thankful for their iPhones within the first three days of the month…

But, it did make us ask “What are we Thankful for this year?”

The iPhone didn’t hit the list… weird. But there was one common denominator between us: The Garden.

We smiled at each other thinking of our love of the garden and our future plans for the garden. Then, I asked, “We are going to be those people, aren’t we?”

“What do you mean?” Adam questioned.

“The people who other people will think are insane for ditching their steady, corporate careers for sustainable farming. The people who have root cellars. Cows. Pigs. And, don’t know how to work an iPad. The people whose kids will be praying to the God of Sun and Rain while their cousins are singing, ‘Jesus Loves Me.'”

Okay… Just a little dramatic.

But, Adam, laughing, said, “Pretty much.”

“Oh my gosh,” I sighed, “How did we get here?”

Inspired by this question, our mutual gratitude for the garden and our excitement for the future, Adam and I, together, will be giving thanks and telling our versions of the story of “How we got here, where we are, and where we are going” throughout the month of November on Bloom.

Because you hear from me all the time… and because even I have enjoyed this story from Adam’s perspective, I thought Adam should start:

First off, I guess I should introduce myself. You all know Claire, as I am sure you have read her blog posts. Well, I am her crazy husband. You know that guy who drug that girl away from the city and “cut her off from”… you name it.

To understand some of Claire’s blog, I think you should understand who I am. I am the country boy who isn’t all that country. Don’t get me wrong, I wear jeans a t-shirt and a ball cap just about every day(if it’s cold I put on a hoodie). I hunt, fish, trap, drive a diesel truck, drive tractors and wear boots.

Hive and Honey Photography

Hive and Honey Photography

However, I am not the rebel flag flying redneck some people imagine when they hear someone is from the country.

I love a glass of merlot with my steak. I save my money to buy nice things. I enjoy dressing up in a suit for a wedding or a coat and tie for a nice dinner out with my wife. And a night out for Wicked on Broadway doesn’t sound awful any more. I’m that guy that Claire’s hometown never thought she would marry. I’m that guy who taught her about farming. I’m also that guy who has learned with her, dreamed with her, grew with her, and become passionate about our life together. (Sorry for the sap.) We’re on an adventure together no one would have guessed, not even us, and this is how it all started.

I’ve always thought gardening was fun. My parents had a garden when I was kid, but I’m not sure how many years it actually lasted. I certainly don’t remember canning. As I got into high school I would start a garden in the spring, typically consisting of tomatoes, zucchini, peppers and cucumbers. Not the most diverse selection by any means. Spring always came around and I was excited to get plants in the ground. Typically, I always planted 10 too many pepper plants, wait too long to pick zucchini, and tomatoes rotted on the vines from lack of attention.

Somehow, my mom was always on board. She would take me to the local nursery, help me pick out the plants, help me plant them, and watch me ignore them all summer as friends and girls kept my attention.

Fast forward to January 2013 and Claire and I are moving into our new house. I had already decided a garden is going to be in our future. My friends had one. The neighbors had one. Must be a small town thing, but everyone around me had one. So, I had to have one too.

I know what you’re thinking.

“So what! It’s a garden. Big deal.”

Well, that’s what I thought too. Until I started doing some research.

Claire was working for a public school as head of their food service and became involved in the Indiana “Farm to School” program. She quickly became passionate about these farmers, how they grew their food, where our food comes from and the environmental impacts of producing our food.

So, I jumped on board and began doing some of my own research. YouTube is my best friend by the way. Video after video, hour after hour of listening to people talk about their gardens had me excited to get started. Square foot gardening, raised beds, typical row crop gardening and many more.

I thought we would want to do raised beds, with the help of Claire and all her pins on Pinterest of raised bed gardens. Soon we found that they would cost more than her car to build. So, I simply started by tilling up eight large garden beds.

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My mom thought we were crazy for having such a big garden. The twenty tomato plants probably had something to do with it…

We also settled on trying to grow our food as organically as possible.

I don’t want to get into all the political crap about anti-organic this or pro-gmo that. Everyone has a reason why they choose what they eat. My opinion was I didn’t want to waste the money on fertilizer, herbicides and pesticides if I didn’t need them. Also, I really didn’t feel that entirely comfortable putting things on the food I was going to eat that suggested chemical gloves, a dust mask and safety glasses as appropriate PPE.

I believe there is a place for both, and my backyard didn’t need the alternative.

With good management of crop rotation, proper maintenance and a little extra labor I felt like I could achieve the same results.

So, how was I going to fertilize this large garden? Back to YouTube I went. After many videos it seemed backyard chickens were the perfect companion to a backyard garden. They solved my pest problems, I could compost their manure for fertilizer and they produced eggs as a byproduct.

On Mother’s Day weekend, Claire and I brought home twelve baby chickens which launched us into an ever evolving production of growing our own food.

So, that’s how it all started. One idea of wanting a backyard garden launched me into a job as conductor of plants and animals, trying to make everything work in the most symbiotic way possible.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Chickens, future, Garden, Gardening, goals, homesteading, Love, November, Thankful, Thanksgiving

Be Grateful, Not Wasteful.

December 1, 2013 by theblogbloom.com 2 Comments

Hope everyone is winding down from a fabulous Thanksgiving weekend!

We had a great time and were able to visit with both families over the weekend.

While making the trek from Adam’s parents to mine, I read that “Some five million tons of food—enough to fill the John Hancock Building more than 14 times—will be wasted between Thanksgiving and the end of 2013.”

The post used “shocking” to describe this fact.

Sure, yes, shocking.

How about disgusting?

And horrible?

And, as crazy as this might sound, I can only believe it.

Reading that I could only help but wonder how could that be changed? What would people have to do?

Here are a few little things Adam and I did, along with the help of our parents, to minimize the waste created by our Holiday celebrations.

1. Go Full Circle

Composting is awesome anytime of year. Adam built our compost bins in September and we plan to mix our compost into the top soil for next season’s garden.

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We have found that well over half of our kitchen waste is compostable. Egg shells, fruit and veggie scraps, baked goods (i.e. Bread, cookies), even coffee grounds and tea bags. I have a large Tupperware container in the fridge where I toss these items throughout the course of the day and we run them out to the bins when we collect eggs. We also compost plants from our garden, leaves, and the chicken’s droppings.

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Some things you wouldn’t want to compost: meat, dairy products, pet waste, and grease.

I love that composting helps to control the amount of waste we produce, but it also comes with an added benefit: it will also help ensure our garden soil is full of nutrients helping to create amazing plants.

Plants that will have scraps that will be composted to start the cycle all over again!

2. Eat The Bones

Okay, not really.

But don’t waste them!

Make great use of the leftover ham, turkey, and chicken bones and make stock at home. Homemade stock has unbelievable flavor and far less sodium than anything you could get in the store.

Adam and I managed to score both my mom’s and his mom’s turkey carcass this year.

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They both have been simmering in crock pots all afternoon in my kitchen, creating smells that have made me reconsider “detoxing until Christmas.”

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Stock is so easy to make and we were able to make if from things that were already in our fridge. (If you don’t have all these specific vegetables on hand, don’t feel like you have to run out to the store. We have left things out before and even added things like tomatoes. Worked out great.)

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Here is what we do when making stock:

Ingredients:

1 Turkey carcass
10-12 cups of water (needs to cover the carcass)
½ onion in large pieces
½ cup sliced carrots
1 rib celery sliced
Two to three cloves garlic
Tablespoon of peppercorns
Handful of herbs (Today we used a few sprigs of thyme, but have used parsley or a bay leaf before)

Combine all ingredients in a stockpot or slow cooker. If need be, breakdown the carcass so it can fit.

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Stockpot: Bring to a boil, and then simmer for two to three hours

Crock pot: Cook on low for eight to ten hours

Strain liquid and skim off any fat.

Portion out stock and either put in refrigerator or freeze. Mason jars are great for this. I have also read that some people put them in ice cube trays for when they need just a little flavor.

Keeps for about six months if frozen, about 3-5 days in the fridge.

I cannot wait to use this stock for fresh made soups and risotto throughout the winter. So good.

3. Eat Up!

Isn’t the best thing about Thanksgiving the left over’s?

You are completely justified to eat pumpkin pie for breakfast.

Soak your sandwich bread in gravy, creating a “Moist Maker” a la Monica Geller from Friends.

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And if you happen to have any wine left over, you can bring it to my house.

Because, well, we didn’t.

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Filed Under: Plant, Recipes Tagged With: Compost, Preventing Waste, Sustainable, Thanksgiving, Turkey Stock

Meet Claire

Hi, thanks for visiting! I am Claire and I have been sharing my life and thoughts on Bloom since 2013. Welcome to 2023's project, The Farmers Market and The Library. For more about me...

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