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post #32151 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by NanaKat View Post

 

Yes, it tastes wonderful!  

 

When you make hominy, picture your grandmother slaving over an outdoor wood fire or a cast iron wood stove and having to rinse using water she drew from a well or from the spring.

 

Here's recipe for Lye Hominy   

You can cut in half to save you some time and to make the quantity easier to handle.   I make enough to can because the process is so time consuming.

 

10 cup dried corn.  I use dry field corn...pick thru it like beans and rinse to remove dust.  I use only the whole kernal.

3 gallon water (Well water or distilled)

3 ounces (by weight) of food grade lye...Sodium Hydroxide.  You can get this at a health food store or by ordering from a soap maker's site.  I use mine from www.Essentialdepot.com  Lye is a caustic alkaline and will burn your skin even when dry,.  So handle carefully.

  

Use a stainless steel pot (not aluminum) and bring to a boil for 30 minutes stirring frequently.  The lye will dissolve the skin off the corn and will make removing the black nibs from the corn easier. 

DO NOT get this on your skin...it will burn.   Turn off the burner and let the corn/lye sit for an additional 20 minutes.  Stirring utensils should be stainless steel, wood or plastic.

 

Now rinse the lye from the corn in hot water several times.  Be careful at this stage not to get burned by the lye.   You can use plastic bowls in the sink.

I find it easier to scoop out part of the corn into a big plastic bowl in my sink  and then rinse it.  I then use a large weave scoop (coarse sieve)  to lift the corn from that bowl into another plastic bowl or bucket filled with hot water.   Debris from the skin and nubs will float out and can be strained instead of going down your drain.    Rinse several times.  Your water will no longer be brown and it will be safe to handle the hominy. 

Now fill a bowl with cold water and scoop the hominy into that.  Once in cold water, you can safely work the corn between your hands to rub off the remaining nubs and skin and rinse again. 

 

Yes, You use a lot of water. 

 

Place rinsed nub free corn into a pot and cover with 1 inch of water.  Boil 5 minutes and change the water.  Repeat 4 x.  This removes any left over lye from the corn and cleans impurities.  It allows you to remove any unwanted dark corn kernals.  and you will see a color difference in the water.  When it is ready, the water will have gone from brown to tan to creamy clear.

 

Finally bring the cleaned hominy to a boil with clean water and cook 30 - 45 minutes to finish softening the corn and plumping it. 

 

Drain the hominy  and fill hot sterile jars, leaving 1 inch of head space. 

Add 1/2 tsp canning salt per pint; 1 tsp to quarts. 

Fill jars to within 1 inch of the top of the jar with clean boiling water.  Remove air bubbles, wipe jar rims, adjust sterile lids and process in a pressure canner.

10 pounds of pressure:  Pints 60 minutes, quarts 70 minutes. 

 

10 cups of clean yellow dried corn will make 20 cups of yellow hominy filling 10 pint jars.

You can use prepped hominy right away in your favorite recipe or store in your refrigerator up to a week. 

You can dehydrate hominy and grind it for grits. 

How many times a year do you make this?

OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

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OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

Reply
post #32152 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by mefordz View Post

hey nana, did you happen to go by the new auction at ensigns old place saturday and see if it was anygood?

No I spent too much time in the garden so I forgot about it.

 

 

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cjarvis View Post

How many times a year do you make this?

 

I've made it with Roger's Mom before.  This was my first time on my own.  Will definitely make it again.    Used corn  that had no chemical preservatives.


Edited by NanaKat - 6/4/12 at 7:25pm

LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

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LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

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post #32153 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by NanaKat View Post

 

 

 

I've made it with Roger's Mom before.  This was my first time on my own.

I might have to schedule time the next time you make it so I can watch... Not big on hominy, of course homemade is probably a whole different taste, but I do like grits.

OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

Reply

OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

Reply
post #32154 of 44246

Fresh out of the canner and cooling on the counter....When they are cool enough, I'll wipe down the jars and label them..

Homemade Lye Hominy

Lye Hominy.jpg

 

Will be making this again soon as I can find some fall dried corn.  I know 10 jars won't last long with Roger's family.    Started this morning at 9 am  and finished around 3:30 pm.  But I picked thru the corn thi morning.....that takes more time than I thought it would. 

LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

Reply

LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

Reply
post #32155 of 44246

I spent the morning weeding the garden and squishing squash bugs, I squished 53!!!!!  I have been squishing for weeks, and still got 53 today.  I looked over the squash plants that I put in the side back yard, this is an area the chickens have had access to the entire time, since before the seeds were planted, only about 50 ft from the garden.  These don't have a squash bug in site!!!!

Let's take care of the Earth, it is the only planet we know for sure has chocolate.
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Let's take care of the Earth, it is the only planet we know for sure has chocolate.
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post #32156 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kassaundra View Post

I spent the morning weeding the garden and squishing squash bugs, I squished 53!!!!!  I have been squishing for weeks, and still got 53 today.  I looked over the squash plants that I put in the side back yard, this is an area the chickens have had access to the entire time, since before the seeds were planted, only about 50 ft from the garden.  These don't have a squash bug in site!!!!

Proof that chickens eat those nasty smelling bugs!!!

LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

Reply

LF: Col W., Cochins. Projects: Blue CW, Birchen W.  B: OEGB, Rosecomb, d'Anvers.

"Speak kind words; hear kind echos."  "When you get to your wit's end, you'll find God lives there."  

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

Fabric Temptress - http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=3104712#p3104712
 

 

Reply
post #32157 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by NanaKat View Post

No I spent too much time in the garden so I forgot about it.

 

 

I've made it with Roger's Mom before.  This was my first time on my own.  Will definitely make it again.    Used deer corn  because it had no preservatives.

Be careful using deer corn, this corn is a down grade product which is literally not fit for human consumption or livestock consumption due to the toxins produced by mold spores.  It is sold as wildlife food and can be detrimental to wild turkeys, quail and other birds. 

 

Bo

Breeding & showing black, blue, mottled, & white large cochins; black bantam cochins; gray toulouse geese.  Project Brown Red and Brown LF Cochins.  Birds for sale in the fall, eggs in the spring.  "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet believed." Jesus to Thomas recorded in the Gospel of John ch. 20 vs. 29.  Do you have to see to believe?

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Breeding & showing black, blue, mottled, & white large cochins; black bantam cochins; gray toulouse geese.  Project Brown Red and Brown LF Cochins.  Birds for sale in the fall, eggs in the spring.  "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet believed." Jesus to Thomas recorded in the Gospel of John ch. 20 vs. 29.  Do you have to see to believe?

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post #32158 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kassaundra View Post

I spent the morning weeding the garden and squishing squash bugs, I squished 53!!!!!  I have been squishing for weeks, and still got 53 today.  I looked over the squash plants that I put in the side back yard, this is an area the chickens have had access to the entire time, since before the seeds were planted, only about 50 ft from the garden.  These don't have a squash bug in site!!!!

I have been battling them as well. Everyday there seem to be more. Been putting eggs in a jar with alcohol and still squishing hundreds of babies. They already killed one of my squash plants barnie.gif

post #32159 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by poultryand bees View Post

We are planning to go to the Newcastle auction this evening and taking brown Muskovey ducklings.  Looking forward to seeing everyone.   

I got there to late to see them.  Can you tell me how much they brought?

 

Nick

post #32160 of 44246
Quote:
Originally Posted by nickw View Post

I got there to late to see them.  Can you tell me how much they brought?

 

Nick

Hundreds... It may be counted in pennies, nickles, or dimes but I am sure it was in the hundreds.

OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

Reply

OEGB: Columbian, Opal, Birchen, Silver Blue, Brown Red

Rosecomb: Black, Birchen in development, Columbian in development, Opal in development.

NPIP 3-125

Reply
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