The New Book

In Stores Now

The Crash Course - Book

What Should I Do?

Concerned after watching the Crash Course? Read our step-by-step guide for building resilience today
Water Water Fire Energy
Food Food Wealth Wealth
Health Health More More...

What Should I Do?

Follow Us

Login for Registered Members:

Register for Free

Post comments, receive updates via email, gain access to exclusive content, and more.

Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

Last year, after all the essentials were stacked in the cupboards, the freezer full, and the root cellar piled to waist-high with 60% of all the food we needed for a year, I realized I was hungry for a snack. It was a hunger that lasted all last winter. As the winter progressed, I began a shopping list of snacks we could grow in our northern climate, process at harvest, and store away for winter snacking. My new goal in life was to become a professional at squirreling away snack goodies that were healthy, tasty, and nutritious.

By spring, my seed list consisted of turnips, sweet potatoes, sunflowers, popcorn, celery, and carrots, along with dried fruits. Here are the snack recipes that emerged:

Chips

In the fall, dig & clean your turnips, potatoes, and sweet potatoes. These will all make chips, so be ready to peel. (Note – the  skin of potatoes right out of the ground will scrub off with a rough kitchen scrubber).

The turnips are done first by thin slicing, then salting lightly (it helps draw the moisture out) and tossing with oil (we use olive oil but most any oil will do). Bake for 15-20 minutes until golden brown (if they are thick, you may need to turn them over). Salt the hot chips with sea salt/pepper or sprinkle with herbs. If you make more than you eat, freeze them and re-heat in a hot oven to crisp up.

A few days later, the potatoes should be ready to process. Scrub off the skins, clean out any damaged parts and get out the slicer. Slice at desired level of thickness. You can process potatoes into potato chips in one of two ways – deep fry, or bake (salt & toss in oil then bake at 375 degrees F). Salt to taste. Again, leftovers go in the freezer and get re-heated in the oven as needed, so store them in the right size bag for your family.

“Jo-jos”

I also do “jo-jos” about now. I keep the best looking potatoes and slice them length-wise and deep fry them in a pressure cooker. If you haven’t used a pressure cooker before, here’s a tip: Only fill the bottom 1/4th of the pot with oil or you could have a real mess on your hands as the oil bubbles up and over. In 15 minutes (depending on the size of the slices), the “jo-jos” are done.  I like hot & spicy, so I toss them with paprika, turmeric, red pepper, & sea salt. Some get tossed with just salt. To re-heat them, spread them out on an oven tray and re-heat. We dip them in sour cream; for variety, try garlic, chives, or onion in your sour cream.

A gardening lesson: Our potato crop was a failure for years until we started adding ashes to the compost. The recipe for potato fertilizer is potash, a little manure, and rock dust. This goes 2” deeper than the potato seed. Wwe keep our potato plants “buried” under piles of old hay so we don’t have to dig much. We just rake away the pile of hay, which can then be used in following years until it just turns back into soil.

Sweet potato fries

Next are the sweet potatoes; don’t rush to do these, as sitting sweetens them. About a week or two and they are as sweet as they will get. They also lose some moisture while sitting so they will crisp up better. Follow the directions as for the other chips (above). I like my chips hot, so I sprinkle with cayenne pepper (lightly!), but plain sea salt brings out the flavor, too. If you have enough sweet potatoes – be sure to make your sweet potato fries now – slice and deep fry or bake, then cool and toss in the oven. I love my sweet potato fries drizzled with maple syrup.

To grow good sweet potatoes, put them in poor clay soil. The first year I tried sweet potatoes I had a bumper crop, because the root stock came in the mail late in the season and the only space left was some hard clay, so in they went. I was so impressed with production that I gave them a “better place” in my garden with soft loamy soil and was disappointed with the small under-ground crop, even though the top growth looked ideal. This last year, I divided the hard clay area so I could plant a large group there, and sure enough, it seems the more the roots struggle, the bigger the potato crop. Sweet potato vines are some of the best food for chickens, goats, and sheep. I’m constantly cutting mine back to take to the barn as a treat for the animals.

Next year I plan on trying pumpkin chips, acorn squash chips, and zucchini chips. 

“On the go” seeds

On the other side of the snack list are “on the go” seeds. The big ones are the sunflower  & pumpkin seeds. These get spiced first then roasted, or dried in the food dehydrator. If you haven’t cleaned a pumpkin for the seeds before, you are in for a nice slimy treat!

Discard any sunflower seeds that look questionable. Both kinds of seeds get soaked (after cleaning) in sea salt water. The pumpkin seeds can be tossed in melted butter and salted lightly before roasting or drying. Stir the seeds occasionally to get a good even drying, and cool before bagging. We bag these in 4” x 6” bags  - just big enough to toss in a school bag, briefcase, or purse. Etiquette for eating seeds is questionable, though. Do not spit out the hull. It is more proper to crack the hull open, eat the seed and toss the hull back into the bag, unless you are a kid and sharing your snack for the purpose of a seed spitting contest!

Note: If you want really big seeds, use Mongolian Giant Sunflowers and giant pumpkins grown with a lot of well-composted manure. I add rock dust and wood stove ashes to improve the size, too.

Both sunflowers and pumpkins need as much sun as possible, so plant in the sunniest location you can find. You want them in a good breeze for pollination -- if they are not pollinated, many sunflower seeds won’t develop.  Both plants need a large amount of space in the garden, so if you are limited in space, these are not the plants you want to grow unless you are like we are – snackers.

Dried fruit

The rest of the snack plan is filled with dried fruits – apples, pears, strawberries, and berries from the woods.

I take advantage of dried food in a couple different ways. Besides eating them as crispy fruits and chewy-taffy roll-ups, I also take dried fruit and throw them in the blender along with a few other ingredients – L-Caritine & taurine-  to make our own “monster” drinks.  Occasionally, instead of using water I use semi-frozen milk for a fruit smoothie (we freeze our goat’s & sheep’s milk during summer and use it all year).

Now I’m not saying you should give up valuable garden space that you are using to grow essentials like beans, corn, potatoes, and squash. But just because you are growing your freedom and securing your 3Es future, it doesn’t mean boring food. It means more variety, more health, and more real food, because you know where it came from and how it was processed. What’s more, it can be a great family activity – teaching kids skills to last a lifetime and (more important) be fun for everyone.

 



This What Should I Do? blog series is intended to surface knowledge and perspective useful to preparing for a future defined by Peak Oil.  The content is written by ChrisMartenson.com readers and is based in their own experiences in putting into practice many of the ideas exchanged on this site.  If there are topics you'd like to see featured here, or if you have interest in contributing a post in a relevant area of your expertise, please indicate so in our What Should I Do? series feedback forum.

If you have not yet seen the other articles in this series, you can find them here:

This series is a companion to this site's free What Should I Do? Guide, which provides guidance from Chris and the ChrisMartenson.com staff on specific strategies, products, and services that individuals should consider in their preparations.

__________________

EndGamePlayer

Bookmark and Share

Comments
Comments RSS

skywillow's picture
skywillow
User offline. Last seen 1 year 3 weeks ago. Offline
Member
Posts: 12
Joined: 01/11/2010
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

End Game,

I like the way that you think. Your attitude appears to be "Let's have a good time as we go through these changes". I will try your recipes. Having been vegetarians since the early 1970s, we (my husband and I) are "snackers", - we have traditionally called ourselves 'grazers"

For us, the ultimate natural snack is Popcorn - with nutritional yeast and olive oil.

How do you determine that you provide 60% of your food? I would not know how to make that calculation (and I am an accountant).

We are in the South near the Southern Appalachians, we cannot use hay with our potatoes for the fire ants will leave their mark.

Keeping in line with your positive attitude, that is also my aspiration for these times, I have a new harmonica,

Tennessee traditions encourage making your own music.

Thanks 

__________________

Sky Willow ...a hippie accountant

SagerXX's picture
SagerXX
User offline. Last seen 45 min 9 sec ago. Offline
Diamond Member
Posts: 2058
Joined: 02/11/2009
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

NICE, EGP.  I'm already drooling...

(Now, to prod my spousal unit to order the dang food dehydrator already!)

Thanks for the ideas!

Viva -- Sager

__________________

"Show some  !@#$%^  ADAPTABILITY!!" -- Sergeant Jack Shaftoe, USMC ("Cryptonomicon")
"It's all goin' *down*, man! Martha Stewart's polishing the brass on the Titanic!" -- Tyler Durden
"Have the courage to use your own understanding!' -- Immanuel Kant
"Dreams are the seedbed of the possible."  -- William Greider
"One day you finally knew what you had to do, and began, though the voices around you kept shouting their bad advice." -- Mary Oliver

JAG's picture
JAG
User offline. Last seen 3 hours 46 min ago. Offline
Diamond Member
Posts: 2451
Joined: 10/26/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

"I keep the best looking potatoes and slice them length-wise and deep fry them in a pressure cooker."

EGP,

I use my pressure cooker nearly everyday in the preparation of winter fare, and I have always read that frying in it was extremely dangerous. Are you really frying under 15 PSI? If so, do you use a quick or slow release? In your experience, does the hot oil degrade the rubber seal and clog the pressure release valve?

Thanks for the article and any feedback you can provide on my questions....Jeff

__________________

Captain Sheeple

Woodman's picture
Woodman
User offline. Last seen 11 hours 32 min ago. Offline
Platinum Member
Posts: 850
Joined: 09/26/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

Great ideas! 

I find dehydrated foods make great snacks with no mess or further preparation needed.  Dried tomato slices really concentrate the flavor, and seem to digest easier too. I also blanched and dried some corn on the cob grown out back that is good to munch on.  Last year I soaked some cumber chips in dill, lemon juice, and other stuff before drying to make yummy snacks.

I grew a bunch of popcorn this year too, but found the other day some ears in the bottom of the bin were a little moldy (shucked the ears but left on the cob); maybe not dry enough in the sun before storing?  I also tried microwaving an ear in a paperbag but they didn't pop; just smoke! - too wet or too dry?

Apples with Nutella are my daughter's favorite snack; will be great when all the trees I planted last year start bearing.  Carrots are worth growing your own when you pull one out of the ground and can smell the fresh aroma.  My kids eat those up too.

I have plenty of pumpkins left to try doing some seeds.

 

 

 

 

EndGamePlayer's picture
EndGamePlayer
User offline. Last seen 1 day 14 hours ago. Offline
Platinum Member
Posts: 536
Joined: 09/02/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

Hey guys -this little blog was nothing compared to your super articles!

Something I should add - I found Hull-less pumpkins seeds! I'll get mine going this year - just ask if you want seeds for yourselves. Both Johnnyseeds & HighMowingSeeds have them -- look under "Other Pumpkins" . . . 5 years ago - who'd thought I'd be excited about what type of pumpkin I was growing. . . how times have changed.

Frying in the pressure cooker is faster but unfortunately my guage is broke so I only put oil in the bottom of the pot - or you run the risk of it boiling over. I use it a lot in the fall too Jag since it takes less energy to pressure cook than cook on an open pot.

Here's to munching away . . . or should we say enjoying the "Crash Crunch"

EGP

__________________

EndGamePlayer

Full Moon's picture
Full Moon
User is online Online
Diamond Member
Posts: 1220
Joined: 10/14/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

 You had to go and put Healthy in front of the Snack  word. LOL   I was thinking Pumpkin Crunch , Apple pie , Carrot cake .

Well it is the season for Thanksgiving  Smile

 Actually  we just grab an apple, celery, cucumber etc.  and put peanutbutter or cheese on it for healthy . Or  any fruit with homemade yogurt .

FM

suesullivan
User offline. Last seen 5 days 14 hours ago. Offline
Gold Member
Posts: 300
Joined: 10/06/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

Thank you, EGP, for this post. I really appreciate the work of all the community members participating in this new series. I was reminded of this blog post about pumpkins grown specifically for their seeds, which I plan to try next year. (This is an excellent, very informative blog, by the way.)

http://matronofhusbandry.wordpress.com/2010/10/27/the-skinny-on-the-naked-seed-pumpkins/

Dogs_In_A_Pile's picture
Dogs_In_A_Pile
User is online Online
Martenson Brigade Member
Posts: 2318
Joined: 01/04/2009
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

We had a great summer enjoying various concotions of sun teas.  We have a load of lemon verbena and lemon balm that we throw into a sun tea jar by the handful.  We used green tea and did all of the flavoring with the lemon balm and lemon verbena.  For an added kick we also added a handful of bruised stevia leaves and let the jar sit in the sun all day.

If any of you have a sweet tooth, the stevia is amazing.  Just pop a few leaves into your mouth and it's just like candy, only sweeter.

As a word of warning to the "grazers" out there.  It is highly recommended that as you are working in your garden beds you resist the urge to grab a handful of tabasco peppers and start to munch on them.  I have heard that doing so puts on an extremely humorous show for the neighbors.

__________________

Peace - DIAP "Handle every stressful situation like a dog.  If you can't eat it or play with it, just pee on it and walk away."

steveyoung's picture
steveyoung
User offline. Last seen 2 hours 38 min ago. Offline
Silver Member
Posts: 161
Joined: 03/19/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

EndGamePlayer wrote:

Something I should add - I found Hull-less pumpkins seeds! I'll get mine going this year - just ask if you want seeds for yourselves. Both Johnnyseeds & HighMowingSeeds have them -- look under "Other Pumpkins" . . . 5 years ago - who'd thought I'd be excited about what type of pumpkin I was growing. . . how times have changed.

I grew "Lady Godiva" available from Fedco and probably other seed suppliers.  Right out of the pumpkin the seeds were just like the green ones you buy in the store - great toasted with some spices.

Steve

Denise2257114's picture
Denise2257114
User offline. Last seen 4 hours 1 min ago. Offline
Gold Member
Posts: 461
Joined: 07/18/2008
Re: Creating Healthy Snacks from Your Garden

EGP

this is a fun and very enjoyable post. thank you and to everyone so far who has shared their skills and experiences in preparing for the future.

DIAP said

As a word of warning to the "grazers" out there.  It is highly recommended that as you are working in your garden beds you resist the urge to grab a handful of tabasco peppers and start to munch on them.  I have heard that doing so puts on an extremely humorous show for the neighbors.

 

I just had a terrific jalapeno hummus yesterday, so after drying the tabasco peppers they can be made into tabasco hummus.  So the antidote here is Garbanzos!!!Laughing

Take care

Denise

 

__________________

Denise

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.