About agrarian

48 acre farm using pasture and forage as the core feed for our heritage breed cattle (Dexter), pigs (Tamworth and English Large Black), turkeys, hens (Barred Plymouth Rock) and meat chickens. We also try to raise as much of our own fruits and veg as we can but yes, we still buy bananas, coffee and tea etc.

Website

agrarian.vox.com

Location

Ontario Canada

Favorite Foods

Grass-fed beef, pasture-raised pork, free-range chicken, Georgian Bay whitefish and apple-smoked salmon, Manitoulin Island trout, baked Newfoundland cod (RIP, raspberries, new potatoes, preserves from wild fruits i.e, chokecherry jelly, wild grape jelly, may apple marmalade, lime, Hewitt's goat milk ice cream, Mapleton's cow milk ice cream, Guernsey Gold cheese, Monforte and Best Baa sheep milk cheeses

Favorite Food Writers

Shannon Hayes, Nina Planck, Euell Gibbons, Michael Pollan, Lisa Hamilton, Margaret Webb, Wendell Berry, Lynn Miller, Peter Kaminsky

I call myself a…

farmer, home cook, preserve maker, gardener

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sweet corn time

From agrarian — Blog by
August 13, 2009

It’s been a long wait here in Ontario (Canada) for our annual sweet corn bonanza.

Cold, dark “summer” days most of July and early August have held back the golden kernels around here (Tomatoes too).

I don’t grow any myself -- the raccoons always get it first -- although they haven’t attacked the strawberry popcorn I planted this year.

Instead, we have to wait for my neighbour George, whose farm backs on ours, to have his corn ready for market. He tried to time the first ripening for the Civic Holiday Weekend -- the first weekend in August. He gets a lot of business from city people heading along the county road on their way to Collingwood and Wasaga Beach.

Yesterday, his kids hauled out the road signs and the tent canopy has gone up outside his farm. Today’s the day the sweet corn comes in!

How to cook it?

  • Bring a big pot of water to boil.
  • Drop in the shucked corn and pull it out nine minutes later. (some people have different times; others say you don’t start timing it till the water boils again.)
  • Add butter, salt and pepper.

And what’s with all these people who buy sweet corn in the supermarkets and insist on shucking it there? For the past few years the stores have had to provide large bins for the stuff people want to leave behind. Hope it gets composted but I doubt it.

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