FALL PRESERVING TECHNIQUES
Root cellars, waterglass
and a better mouse trap.
DearMOTHER,
We need to store approximately 600pounds of
potatoes. What is the best wayto keep them?
Ed T.
Hamilton, IN
Potatoes are alive but dormant, awaiting spring to sprout
and grow. Keep them thinking that they're still buried in
the soil and that it's late fall, and they will last
through winter and into spring - longer if you can maintain
their temperature and humidity needs.
To do this, you must provide them absolute,
pitch-black dark - a squeak of light makes them think
spring has arrived and they'll start pushing out buds.
Also, they need to be stored at high (95%) humidity and at
a temperature of 38°F to 40°F if they are to be
eaten soon. Reduce temperatures to 34°F to 36°F for
long-term storage (but warm again before eating).
Pack loosely in open-slated crates with air passages over,
under and around them to reduce the chance of rot.
Discourage sprouting by leaving apples to spoil in the
storage. The ethylene gas that apples emit encourages fruit
to ripen, but potatoes to remain dormant.
Potato pits dug below frost level in the soil and lined
with straw have been used to store potatoes for centuries.
More elaborate root cellars - ranging from storage pits
under a house floor to walk-in rooms dug into a hillside -
were a feature of country life till the advent of
electricity and refrigeration.
A deep, unheated cellar under a modern home can be adapted
to maintain potato-storage conditions. You'll need fans to
circulate air, outside windows that can be opened and
closed to maintain proper temperatures during winter, and
electric coolers in summer. A dirt-floored cellar will
maintain humidity naturally. In a concrete-floored cellar,
humidity can be maintained by lining the floor with
water-soaked burlap bags.
For more information on growing and storing potatoes, read
roving editor John Vivian's article "The Spud of Life:
Growing Nature's Most Perfect Food," in MEN #172, March
1999.
Dear MOTHER,
Issue #48 addressed the long-term storageofeggs. There was an issue that did a
follow-up to that article, but I can no longer, find it.
Can you give me any update on this subject?
Charlene A.
Columbia City, IN
Before electric lines got to the farm, the spring deluge of
eggs were stored in waterglass, a thin gel of sterilized
water and powdered sodium silicate that combines to form an
inert, fluid form of glass. Eggs were partitioned by age in
a vat with boiled - wood-slat dividers or grid-bottomed
boxes. They were used on a first-in, first-out basis and
replaced with fresh eggs over the year as production slowed
so none were more than a few months old.
You still can preserve eggs in waterglass, which seals them
away from air, bugs and bacteria. If eggs are clean, the
vat of waterglass sterile and everything kept cellar-cool,
they will keep for six months or more. Older eggs will
stiffen and develop an off-balance flavor (a little sulphur
dioxideish), but they can still be used for baking.
Some books say not to wash waterglassed eggs so as to
preserve the natural antibacterial coating on the shell.
Though valid for refrigerated fresh eggs, this makes no
sense in waterglass because the protective silica medium
serves that function. Also, chicken droppings can remain on
unwashed eggshells and could introduce bacteria into eggs
within the silica bath.
You'll want to keep the vat covered loosely to keep out
dust and cellar creatures. Fishing the eggs out of the
waterglass by hand is beyond icky, so you might want to
invest in some long rubber gloves or tongs. You can get
both, as well as the waterglass, from the homesteading
catalogs (see " Sources ")
On general hygiene principles, replace waterglass after a
year. Air out and sun a wooden vat thoroughly, and scour
plastic or metal vats before refilling.
Dear MOTHER,
As a longtime animal lover, 1 have always held to the
firm belief in not killing or harming animals. However, our
garage is overrun with mice, and while we have no problem
with their choice of shelter, we do object to the little
critters chewing on the wiring in our truck. Twice we have
had to have the wiring replaced, and we have to get rid of
the mice. We have two cats and two dogs, and we need a
natural way to rid ourselves of this problem? Any
ideas?
Les
Put your cats to work to earn their keep. Teach them that
the garage and the vehicles are part of their home turf,
and are to be defended against vermin. To do this, shut
them in the garage for the night with fresh water, an ample
evening feeding (well-fed cats make the best mousers),
comfy cat beds and a clean litter box. Leave the truck's
doors open; they might sleep on the seat or in the foot
well or, if the weather is cold on the hood or on the
still-warm engine. From these spots they'll be sure to hear
any mice gnawing on the wiring harness. Heap praise on them
for any mouse cadavers they drop at your feet in the
morning.
(For more tips on encouraging mousers, see " Large Pest
Control " by John Vivian in this issue)
Alternatively, as mice prefer the dark, leave a bright
light on at night where the mice have been active. In
addition, you can purchase a high-frequency, pest-deterring
siren (pitched above human hearing range) available from
most home and garden stores and catalogs. Get the most
powerful one you can find and put it beside the lamp.
Mice will only reproduce at a higher rate if they have an
abundant supply of food. If you are truly overrun with
mice, find and eliminate their food source: sacks of grain
or seeds, accumulated trash or garbage.
Next year, keep grass and weeds mowed in a 100'-wide band
all around the house before the plants have a chance to go
to seed and provide the little rodents' primary winter food
supply.
Lastly, you can build an owl's nest - a giant birdhouse or
small pet house - about 2 1/2' square with a peaked roof to
shed rain and with a 6"-wide entrance. Fill it with loose
wood shavings and fasten it high in a tree, with the front
facing your driveway or garage. A family of barn owls will
keep the mouse population in check.
Dear MOTHER,
We want to grind our own grain to make bread. Which do
you consider the best method, for a grinder.. stone or
steel? And do you have a recommendation for a home
grinder?
Raleigh Hardin
Your timing is great. With the Y2K scare, home
food-grinders were hard to get toward the end of 1999. Now,
they are a glut on the market.
After more years of a self-sufficient country existence
than we like to admit, there are a few chores that have
proven to be so time-consuming for such a small return that
we are glad to pass them off to machinery and tradespeople.
One such chore is milling flour. (The miller was a popular
tradesman in any pioneer or frontier town. He would grind a
crop for a portion of the grain a farmer brought him so
that no money exchanged hands until the miller sold his
share.)
When grinding your own wheat for flour, you have to set the
grinder's burrs so close together that single-pass
handgrinding is very strenuous and time-consuming. We
restrict our milling to nuts, coarse whole-grain flours and
corn by using steel burrs.
Fine-textured stone burrs are practically essential to
grind fine-textured bread flours, but they have their
drawbacks. Stone burrs of natural stone or man-made ceramic
composites have grain channels cut into their faces like
old-time, water-powered millstones. In these horizontal
grinders, grains are picked up at the mouth of channels
around the wheel's rim as the wheel turns and are rolled
down the ever-shallower channels toward the hub, where
they're ground down as they pass. But grain can jam in the
channels and the burrs are fine-grained enough that meal
can clog up the grit, so the burrs will slip and quit
grinding if the grain is at all moist or oily. Stone-burred
grinders are no good for nuts, coffee or peanuts (for
peanut butter), and cleaning wears them down quickly.
Replacement burrs are expensive and cost around $50 per
set.
Steel burrs consist of opposing steel face-plates with
curved, knife-edged ridges cast into them. Though a bit
crude looking, they work well at producing relatively
coarse grinds of any seed or grain and they can be cleaned
off with a stiff brush. Steel burr replacements cost less
than $10 a set.
The crudest and least expensive steel-burr grinders (in the
$30 range) are the cast-iron models from Universal (now
cast in China) and Corona, which are still cast and
tin-plated in Colombia. We use a Corona mill because we've
had one for over 30 years - from back when it was the only
hand-powered grain mill we could get. By now it has become
a member of the family. Thoroughly dry corn can be ground
to a tortilla-fine cornflour meal in two quick trips
through a Corona. A single slow-pass with burrs a little
further apart turns out a coarse cornbread meal.
You can find a wide choice in hand and powered grain mills
(and a great deal more) in the big $4.00 catalog from
Lehmans (see " Sources ").
DearMOTHER,
We just bought a 17-acre ranch. The well is a very deep
- 330 feet. l am trying to get off the grid but have not
found an alternative way of pumping water from that
depth.
Dana
Lomeda, TX
You have quite a number of options, ranging from $50 to
$5,000 in cost. If you live in a windy place, you can erect
a full-size windmill and an in-well push-cylinder pump.
Running on free wind power, these can draw water from a
depth of 600 feet, but they are expensive to install and
intimidating to maintain. The catalog is available from
Kansas Wind Power (see "Sources").
A modern 60- to 400-watt wind generator or small solar
array can charge a battery to power a DC push-pump down in
the well and costs less than $500. The solar setups are
available off the shelf from Real Goods and other
alternative energy suppliers.
New to the market is a manual deep-well pump, exclusively
from Internet emergency-goods supplier www.watertanks.com ;
tel: (888) 7426275.
Also new are small-capacity submersible diaphragm pumps
powered by dedicated solar panels. They can pump a gallon
and a half per minute from 350 feet using just under 200
watts of power. Available from Real Goods.
Finally, in a pinch, you can pull up your existing
submersible jet pump, power line and delivery tubing to
clear the 6"- or 8"-wide well casing, and lower a
5"-diameter, cylindrical, galvanized tin drilled-well
bucket on a 400' rope and pull it up hand over hand with a
winch or on a hand-crank reel. It's a lot of hauling, but
the cost is less than $50. Plus, the old-time
hand-stencilled tinware looks cool on the barn wall when
not in use. Available, along with a full line of farm
water-supply equipment, from the homesteaders catalogs (see
" Sources ").
DearMOTHER,
Do you knowofany company making
electrical garden tractors?
Will
Coarsegold, CA
We don't know of a commercially viable electric tractor
being made by an established firm today. The cost of
high-capacity motors and batteries is just too high to
compete with gas engine-powered models. The obvious
environmental advantages alone won't convince enough buyers
to pay ten times what a zippy little John Deere lawn or
garden tractor costs.
General Electric made the ElecTrac
lawn-tractor/riding-mower in the 1970s, but lost their
shirts on every sale and discontinued the line years ago.
You can find used ElecTracs for sale at well under $1,000.
They were robustly made, and parts are still available. But
they are slow and heavy, underpowered for attachments, too
low-slung to use in the garden row, and lack the run time
to mow a big lawn on a single charge.
Sources
Lehman's
Non-Electric Catalog
P.O. Box 41, Kidron, OH 44636;
(888) 438-5436; e-mail: info@lehmans.com ;
www.lehmans.com
Kansas Wind Power
13569 214th Road, Dept. MEN, Holton, KS 66436;
(913) 364-4407
Cumberland General Store
#1 Highway 68, Crossville, TN 38555; (800) 334-4640;
www.cumberlandgeneral.com
Real Goods Renewables
200 Clara St., Ukiah CA; 95482-5576; (800) 762-7325;
www.realgoods.com
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