Growing Carrots

Baby-carrots
After two attempts at growing carrots, I wish I had more concrete advice to share with you.  Though, I’m nowhere near expert in theories on carrots, I do have more of a clue.

-    I had thought carrots would expose a ½ inch when they are ready, poking through the soil the way beets and radishes do. They never did.  Perhaps it was the variety I was growing? Perhaps they didn’t get big enough?
-    Carrots prefer loose, sandy soil so they can grow deep and straight. 
-    I did not do a great job of thinning the seeds, but over-crowding the plants did not seem to hinder their growth either.  I noticed when I harvested all the carrots this afternoon that the spacing of the plants did not correlate with the size of the carrot.
-    I planted the carrots in a plot that has less sun then the rest of the garden.  The kale does excellent in that location.  And the carrots did better in that spot than where I had planted them last year near the tomatoes. 
-    No matter the size of the carrots, the skin is still bitter to my taste, and I prefer them peeled.  A sharp peeler is critical, especially with baby carrots.

Even if I didn’t get enough for an appreciable harvest, my $2 investment in seeds was not wasted. I did get enough for a small side dish of carrots roasted with butter and garlic.

Baby Carrots Roasted with Garlic and Butter
Baby carrots, peeled
1 tablespoon chopped garlic
1 tablespoon butter
Salt and pepper to taste

1.    In a large skillet, melt the butter over medium flame.
2.    Add the garlic.  When the garlic becomes aromatic and lightly brown, add the carrots.
3.    Season with salt, pepper and toss the carrots to coat.  Add about ½ cup of water and cover.
4.    Let the carrots steam for about 10 minutes, or until tender.

Embryonic Carrots

Embryonic-Carrots This is my second attempt at growing carrots.  Not quite big enough to constitute "baby".  But just enough to give a little crunch to my chicken salad.

And yes, that is a soy sauce dish.

Happy Birthday, Liz!

Happy-birthday-liz
Most people think of March 14th (3/14) as “Pie Day”… a word food play on the number represented by the Greek letter Pi: 3.14. To me, March 14th is my sister’s birthday. So in her honor, I made a carrot cake.

I used the recipe from the Blue Moon Cookbook. This is one of those old, Junior-League style cookbooks from Montgomery, Alabama. The Blue Moon Inn inspired the cookbook and the recipes. My mom remembers the place as a “private dining room.” It was more like a private club that opened only for special occasions and parties. My mom’s graduation party was there, as was the rehearsal dinner before her wedding to my dad (they just celebrated their 43rd anniversary!). The restaurant closed a few years later, so my sister and I never had a chance to eat there. Nonetheless, we treasure the cookbook. The bread pudding is a staple at our Thanksgiving dinner. And I’ve been making the carrot cake for as long as I can remember.
Blue-moon-cookbook
The book oozes culinary history – from the style of recipes (aspic and spinach ring mold) to the ingredient specifications. The recipe for carrot cake, for example, specifies the brand of oil (Wesson) not the type (vegetable). Other recipes specifically call for Hellman’s mayonnaise, Frito’s Corn Chips and Accent.
Carrot-cake-recipe

Over the years, I’ve tried experimenting with this recipe, but discovered that it’s perfect just the way it is… with one exception: it needs ½ tsp. salt. This year, I made a few other modifications. Halfway into organizing the ingredients, I discovered that I only had 1 cup of oil in the house (and it wasn’t even Wesson, it was the Whole Foods 365 Canola). I knew from past experiments that an all butter substitution created a dense cake, so I melted 1 stick of butter with the oil hoping for a better outcome. And since I was heating the oil anyway, I opted to infuse it with a Tahitian Vanilla bean.
Carrot-cake-butter

The other modification resulted in trying to use up leftovers rather than shop a second time. The traditional recipe calls for a cream cheese frosting. Since I had sour cream only, I made vanilla butter cream and folded in the sour cream to give it a bright tang.

Happy Birthday, Liz! I love you very much and feel so blessed to have you in my life.

Here’s the original recipe (with the salt addition)…

Blue Moon Carrot Cake

3 cups shredded carrots
1 ½ cups Wesson Oil
2 cups sugar
4 eggs, well beaten
2 cups flour
1/2 tsp. salt
2 tsp. cinnamon (I used Vietnamese)
2 tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. baking powder
1 cup chopped pecans (I used raisins instead)
3 cups grated carrots

Mix Wesson oil and sugar and beat well. Add eggs. Sift together dry ingredients twice and add pecans (or raisins). Grease and flour 2 – 9” cake pans. Fill pans and bake at 350 degrees F for about 20 minutes. Cool. Remove from pans and ice with the following icing.

1 – 8 oz. package cream cheese
1 stick butter (4 oz)
1 box confectioners’ sugar
1 tsp. vanilla