• Jonathan’s jerky

    Remember when my family went to Pennsylvania over New Year’s? Remember when my friend served me and my husband a bedtime snack of her homemade beef jerky? Remember how I dug the gallon jar of jerky out of the cupboard the next morning to show my children and how my older son clutched it to his bosom and wouldn’t let go? No? Well, here. This should jog your memory:

    Between chewy mouthfuls of dried beef, my son declared that he would go home and make his own beef jerky. Get the recipe, Mom, he said. So I snapped a photo of the recipe.

    A couple weeks ago, my son went to Costco with me so he could pick out a cut of beef.

    “Wow, it’s expensive,” he said, leaning over the trough of frosty meat. He selected a seven-pound boneless cut for thirty-eight dollars: “Ouch.”

    By the end of last week, my son had all the ingredients compiled. (It took two tries for the liquid smoke—the first time my husband came home with a liquid smoke marinade.) Saturday afternoon he mixed up the marinade and set the meat in a pan by the fire to thaw. That evening he spend a couple hours slicing the semi-frozen meat into thin slices. He divided the meat into sections—too-thin pieces, average-sized, and chunky-big—and smooshed in the marinade. 

    “Shouldn’t it have brown sugar, too?” He asked.

    “It called for white, so you should probably stick with that,” I said.

    “But all the good meat sauces call for brown sugar,” he argued. When I turned around, he was already sprinkling brown sugar onto the meat.

    The next morning, he got up early to lay the meat onto the dehydrator trays before church. I suggested we experiment with some black pepper-crusted jerky; I ground a bunch of pepper over a strip of slices, he flipped the meat, and I ground some more.

    All the time my son was gearing up for his jerky, we couldn’t figure out where to put the dehydrator while the meat dried. My friend had warned us the smell was overpowering, so we knew we couldn’t leave the dehydrator in the back hall. If we moved it to the basement, the smell would rise straight through the floor. The attic seemed too tricky (and potentially still too smelly). We were afraid the animals would get the meat if we left it outside. The Sunday morning when he was to run the dehydrator, the outside temps were in the single digits. Would the dehydrator work properly in such low temps? And then I hit on a solution: the truck! We could back my husband’s truck up to the porch, stick the dehydrator in the back cab, and hook it up with an extension cord. I was such a genius.

    Mid-afternoon the jerky was done. As my son peeled the pieces from the trays, we crowded round, stuffing the pieces of spicy dried meat in our mouths as fast as possible, fearing the moment his generosity would end. (It held out longer than I thought it would, sweet kid.)

    Straight out of the dehydrator, the jerky was crunchy-crispy (by the next day it had turned chewy). It had a delightful kick from the chipotle pepper, and the black pepper version was an enormous hit—it was gone in minutes.

    So now my son has a gallon of jerky in his bedroom. Actually. make that a half gallon.



    The stuff is good. Wicked good.


    Jonathan’s Jerky 
    Adapted from Amber’s recipe.

    Amber says you can use venison in place of the beef.

    Amber’s recipe called for 5 tablespoons white sugar, but my son recommends using all brown sugar and slightly increasing the amount (his changes are reflected in the recipe below). Also, Amber used cayenne pepper and only ¼ teaspoon of it. We used a whole teaspoon of chipotle powder and found the heat pleasantly kicky. If you’re into scorched tastebuds, feel free to add more.

    This is the dehydrator that we used. We love it to pieces.

    5-6 pounds beef
    1¼ cups Worcestershire sauce
    1/3 cup liquid smoke
    7 tablespoons brown sugar
    4 tablespoons sea salt
    2½ tablespoons Old Bay seasoning
    5 teaspoons soy sauce
    2 teaspoons granulated garlic (or garlic powder)
    1¼ teaspoons black pepper
    1 teaspoon chipotle powder

    While the meat is still partially frozen, remove any extra fat and then slice the meat across the grain into three-sixteenth or quarter-inch slices.

    Combine the remaining ingredients to make a marinade.

    In a couple glass pans, layer the meat with the marinade. Using your hands, stir the two together so that all pieces of meat are coated with the marinade. Cover tightly with plastic and refrigerate for about 12 hours.

    Lay the strips of meat on the dehydrator sheets. Place the dehydrator in a secure place away from the house and set the dehydrator to 150 degrees. Start checking the jerky after 6 hours. (Alternately, you can dry the jerky at lower temps, but it will take longer to dry.)

    Store the jerky in a glass jar. This recipe yields about a gallon, though warning: it will disappear far too quickly.

    For Pepper-Crusted Jerky: Lay the meat onto the trays. Grind lots of black pepper over each piece. Flip the pieces and grind over more pepper.

    PS. To rid the dehydrator of the meaty smell—because you don’t want your dried nectarines and apples to taste of beef and smoke—scrub it to within an inch of its life. Rinse and repeat.

    This same time, years previous: the quotidian (2.16.15), in the last ten months, the quotidian (2.17.14), Monday blues, sweet, ginger lemon tea, chicken pot pie, snippets, coconut pudding, food I never told you about, food I never told you about, part two, odd ends, and tortilla pie.        

  • the quotidian (2.15.16)

    Quotidian: daily, usual or customary; 
    everyday; ordinary; commonplace



    No sugar cereal involved: the birthday boy’s requested breakfast.

    Ice cream cake. Always ice cream cake.
    A new cornbread: needs more work.
    A Greek sweet: also needs more work.
    For all the salads: quinoa!
    Early morning scribbles.

    Ready for work.

    In another world.

    Outsourcing the metric system lesson.

    Headphones forever.

    Scrub a-dub dub.

    Swirls.

    Sky candy.

    This same time, years previous: it gets better, colds, busted knees, and snowstorms, chocolate pudding, how we do things, the quotidian (2.13.12), Shakespeare in church, the outrageous incident of the Sunday boots, just stuff, life interrupted, potato gnocchi, slow thinking, and cleaning up bad attitudes.

  • chasing fog

    The other day when fog swirled through the valley, I hopped in my car (petulant teenager in tow) and set off to capture it with my camera.

    The fog was temperamental. Sometimes it seemed to hang in place, and other times it moved so fast I could see it whipping by, tendrils flying like hair in the wind. I drove around one of my running loops, stopping whenever I found a beguiling patch of thick air. I kept having run-ins with school buses: once I met one head-on and was forced to drive backwards down the curvy country road until I found a spot wide enough to pull over and let it pass; the other time I was snapping a photo when I heard the telltale roar coming from behind and had to leap into my car and stomp on the gas.

    Sometimes I wonder why I keep working on this book. What drives me? The publisher that kicked off the whole process is no longer in business (and I had never signed a contract), so there’s no outside motivation, no one holding a cracking whip. Yet still, on I plod. Two, three, four mornings a week spent sending my (younger) children away so I can write a book about the homeschooling I’m not doing.

    Most days I feel like I’m trying to do the impossible: harness fog. My experiences and ideas swirl heavily through my mind, pressing me into my seat (or making me want to hide under it). How to seize the elusive and distill it into something tangible, logical, readable? This baffles me. Frustrates me, too. My ineptitude looms, jagged and terrifying. I feed myself lies: you’ve got this, I growl through gritted teeth. Forever hunting clarity, I toy with mere wisps of ideas, twisting and turning them into words, willing them into something bigger than the sum of their parts.

    So many hours spent stubbornly tugging at tendrils. It’s foolishness, yes? So why do I persist? My answer, the only one I can think of, is this: hope. Crazily enough, it really does spring eternal.

    This same time, years previous: a taste, one-pot macaroni and cheese, and then I turned into a blob, school: the verdict, blame it on the cats, to read, addictive and relaxing, a round about compliment, chai-spiced hot chocolate, hauling wood, and my me-me list.