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Make low-acidity coffee yourself

February 2, 2014 by Jason Leave a Comment

I love me some coffee. Trust me, my day job is working at a computer. It’s been just over 15 years or more working at a computer and drinking lots of coffee. I’ve went through the phases most coffee drinkers do… thinking “man this coffee is tearing me up.” Is it the caffeine, or the acidity? For me, I think it’s the acidity. I’m testing this theory now.

Grind the coffee beans course.
Grind the coffee beans course.

I like acidic foods too… like citrus, sausage, hot peppers and a multitude of other things high in acid. Oddly, I don’t suffer from typical acid ailments like acid reflux or indigestion, yet. However, when my favorite cup of coffee hits my stomach, I feel it now-days. I have already cut down my intake and only drink it in the morning, and not every morning. I notice improvement. But what’s a man to do about his love of coffee? I thought I’d give the low-acid coffee I have been hearing about a try.

First, find good whole beans. I feel I have the best coffee connection in the world, if not my area. They French-roast a Mexican bean for me exactly how I like and I get 5 lbs. a month (working on cutting that down of course 🙂 I can also feel good about supporting my local economy.

Next, set your grinder to a course grind and grind to the following ratios; 1 cup course grounds to 3 cups of water. If you want to make smaller batches, respect a ratio of about 1/3 cup grounds to 1.5 cups of water.

I mix all in a 1 quart mason jar, put the lid on and set it aside for 12-15 hours.

Give the jar of coffee grounds a shake or turn if you walk by it during the steeping time.
Give the jar of coffee grounds a shake or turn if you walk by it during the steeping time.

The science of making the low-acid is steeping the grounds in cool water vs. blasting them with hot. I’m struggling to stay away from the technicals here… but my nerd friends can Google all about this science. Naturally, the cool water will take longer to steep out the flavor out of the coffee. I have let sit over night.

The next morning, I use my regular coffee maker as the strainer. See the pic. I put in a coffee filter, put the empty carafe below and slowly pour the water and grounds into the filter. The coffee concentrate flows through and into the pot. Mine is a perfect set-up because the carafe is required to be in place before the liquid can flow through (it’s the steal-a-cup style).

From there, I dump the concentrate from the carafe back into a mason jar. That’s it. You have coffee concentrate. Now stay with me here. This is where I thought this was going to be nasty. Boil your water. We boil our water in our teapot. Now, it’s as easy as ever to have coffee or tea… by the cup.

I’ve read mix 50% of the coffee concentrate with 50% boiling water. I have done this… and of course you can change those ratios to adjust strength to your liking.

The outcome? I can’t believe it’s still coffee? It tastes just as good, and just as fresh as the regular way I make coffee. It has all the flavor and strength and really doesn’t taste like yesterday’s pot. Sure, there’s a little more effort involved, but for now, it works for me. I have already  incorporated it in to our morning regimen. If you do it, let me know what you think!

Step by step pictures

Grind the coffee beans course.
Add grounds to mason jar and add water to sit 12 hours… to overnight.
Give the jar of coffee grounds a shake or turn if you walk by it during the steeping time.
Steeping coffee grounds in cool water.
Straining the coffee water from the grounds.
Coffee concentrate ready to add with boiling water.
Boil water for addition to the coffee concentrate.

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Filed Under: food/culinary, homesteading, how-to Tagged With: food/culinary, homesteading, how

Your Own Handmade Beeswax Skin Cream

January 19, 2014 by Susan 6 Comments

I’m going to give you a brief overview of making your own style of beeswax hand cream at home. It’s easy to follow the recipes on the internet and get something decent, although sometimes it takes two, three or four attempts to understand the key things that make a great consistency. It took us some time and testing. I’ve tried water-based recipes and many of the variations in the process to find a cream that I and my family like. To scent or not to scent? Water or no water? Should we use the secondary agents, or preservatives? The science can be as simple, or as complex as you want to make it. Creams and lotions you buy from the store usually have a plethora of ingredients that I seek to avoid. Those ingredients help the cream to last longer, or go on smoother… but how does the skin like it? Paraben for example is one of those ingredients that people are avoiding, just like aluminum in deodorant? We wanted to come up with a recipe that we liked and also fit a demographic of our local friends and family interested in more natural products.

We shave blocks of our cleaned and processed beeswax for measuring.
We shave blocks of our cleaned and processed beeswax for measuring.

Having a hand-made beeswax cream of your own makes awesome, and easy gifts. Taking the process into consideration, the ingredients I use, (thank you, Amazon) the containers, and my effort to make it all, we’ve found a recipe that is economical for us, something we can call our own and make it the same every time. This is important because we sell ours at the local farmers market, and when people come back for more, we need to be able to sell them more of what they originally bought and loved.

High-quality ingredients for homemade hand cream.
High-quality ingredients for homemade hand cream.

There are many recipes out there and even more variations. Process also affects how your own cream will come out. We’ve made creams in the past that we loved… but neglected to write down exactly what it was we used and how we made it, and where was that recipe we originally followed? As a result, we couldn’t re-create it. I spent a little time going over many recipes, and many theories written by others and just decided to use the most natural ingredients I could, and start with the simplest method of an unscented cream.

If you think I’m sharing my recipe with you, I’m sorry to let you down. But I’m sharing something better… an approach to create your own.

Cream, or lotion?

Is it a cream or a lotion? This is something Jason always complains about because he’s still scarred from the movie “Silence of the Lamb” years ago. So, I took a minute to better distinguish a cream from a lotion. Creams are usually about 2/3 oil  part (including butters and waxes) and 1/3 water part (total water-soluble ingredients) while lotions are more 2/3 water part and 1/3 oil part. 5-6% beeswax is generally sufficient to give your emulsion enough body. These ratios can be adjusted as you desire. You’ll find yourself experimenting.

Lotions and creams are ’emulsions.’ Most everyone knows that oil and water repel each other and so they will separate if you don’t achieve a proper emulsion. To do that, we need an emulsifier. An emulsifier is an agent that binds water and oil together so it will not separate. There are many different emulsifiers with different strengths. Depending on your philosophy (ours is, less is more), some argue that you need a secondary emulsifier. Examples;

  • Palm Stearic (a vegetable-based Stearic Acid) with Cetearyl Alcohol (a vegetable-based emulsifying wax.)
  • Beeswax with Borax
  • Lecithin with a secondary emulsifier
Setting the emulsion in beeswax hand cream.
Setting the emulsion in beeswax hand cream.

I chose beeswax and have experimented with just that. Beeswax is considered an emulsifier with a low strength, and it’s said that over time, it will allow the water and oil to separate. That’s probably true, but I’ve adjusted my formula to be water-less to avoid that separation. I don’t use borax. Also, water is susceptible to bacterial and fungal growth, and must have an anti-microbial agent such as paraben, or grapefruit seed extract. Since I don’t want to add either, I settled on a water-less formula. I use food grade almond and coconut oils. No matter how high the quality of your oil is, all oils can go rancid when they come into contact with air. I chose Vitamin E  (an anti-oxidant) and good for the skin as well. I have read rosemary oil extract can be used too but I have not used it yet. The oils are added to the oil during the heating phase, however, I hold out the Vitamin E oil and add that during the cooling/mixing stage so that some of the benefits are not cooked out of it.  This has been my standard for over two years now and it makes a wonderfully textured, long-lasting great-smelling cream that I can’t keep in stock.

My process:

Having everything very clean and trying not to touch the cream as you work with it is important so that you keep all foreign bacteria out. I add my measured beeswax into the almond oil and begin heating over low heat. While it’s heating, I add food grade coconut oil and stir until all ingredients are dissolved to a consistent looking oil. Note, when I have used the best, organic, food grade coconut oil I can find, I have seen very, tiny little hairs in the solution. You have to be looking pretty hard… but you might see some. After plenty of panic, I’ve found that it is natural coconut fibers from the oil. This might suggests less processing or more natural, so this is really a good thing to me.

I remove from the heat and let it cool for about 15 minutes (until around 122 F.) I periodically check it and stir it watching for my emulsion to set. As it does, I give it another stir. I’ll add in the Vitamin E and stir some more helping it cool. I’ll complete a quick house chore and come back. I use a hand-wand type mixer and have dedicated it to the cause. It works well, and makes stirring easier. I do not add any fragrances to my creams. However, the high-quality coconut oil that I use adds a natural coconut fragrance to it that we call “naturally scented. The cream eventually sets to a consistency that is like gravy, maybe a little thicker. I use a rubber spat to fill my clean containers. From there… we print out some labels of nothing more than clear address labels and a laser printer.

Uncapping honey frames before they are "slung."
Uncapping honey frames before they are “slung.”

A note on beeswax:

If you choose to use beeswax, obviously, you need to get some. It’s handy that we have our own hives here, but let me give you a hint. Your community might have a much larger population of beekeepers than you are aware of. There’s an easy 85 beekeepers within reasonable driving distance of our homestead. You can sometimes locate them by calling your local police and fire department. In more rural ares, you might call the county extension. Just ask if they keep a list of beekeepers. Many do because they often get called to send a beekeeper out to collect a swarm of bees out of the front tree. On in our area, you have a map such as this.

When using the beeswax, a little goes a long way when making creams and lotions. You don’t use a lot like you would making candles. You do want the best, cleanest beeswax you can get… preferably the wax that was sliced off the frames before the beekeeper slung the honey out. If you get in good with a local beekeeper, you can sometimes tell them what you are doing, and they can save that aside for you. Do know that this wax could cost more than another grade of wax. Some beekeepers use all there wax… others, will process it and sell it when they have it. The moral of the story… don’t pay full price at Micheal’s if you don’t have to. Even better, find your local bee club and check in to setting up some bee hives of you own!

I’ve intentionally kept the process general knowing that you can Google many hand cream and lotion recipes to start out with. I recommend you do start with a recipe so you can get the feel for how it works. Once you understand more about how it works, you can begin to experiment and create a recipe that is all your own.

Have fun, and enjoy some pictures.

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Filed Under: beekeeping, homesteading Tagged With: beekeeping, homesteading

Making sausage at home

January 13, 2014 by Jason 5 Comments

Sausage… they say everyone loves it until they see how it’s made. When I saw how it was made commercially, I cringed. There’s a lot going on in commercial sausage-making and in the end, it’s jacked with a lot of things we can’t pronounce. Things that are probably worse than the original meat and fat content. But when I make it at home, it’s something of a small miracle. I realize not everyone is making sausage at home… but those of us who have the inclination to do things our own way. We can be creative about the things we add to our sausage and in the end, we know exactly what’s in it. That to me is the incentive to make it myself. Everything I eat is intentional. If I know it’s not good for me, I try not to put it in my body, or at worse, use it in moderation.

Spice mixes for various sausages.
Spice mixes for various sausages.

I don’t consider myself a carnivore and I’ll enjoy a vegetarian dish just as much as a dish with meat. I believe a diet of mostly plants is good for you but I also believe a diet absent of animal protein is not good for you. Most of us have wondered once or twice how our elders have lived long lives eating bacon for breakfast, and adding lard in their pie crusts. Could half the reason be that at the same time, they weren’t stuffing their face with processed foods? When they woke, they didn’t have toaster treats, baked goods and other things made of aspartame, MSG and HFCS. They had good ole’ fashioned eggs and bacon… then they went outside and worked it off during the day. Like them, our family tries to eat a diverse diet and in moderation.

So where does sausage fit into all of this? Sausage is something that is questionably bad for you. However, I submit that a little of everything that is unprocessed is OK for you… in moderation. Having been made by our own hand and knowing the ingredients is even greater.

So to the point of this article, I’ve made sausages from rabbit, chicken, venison, and most recently pork. I’ve smoked it, froze it fresh, and I’m just completing a curing/drying chamber to get into the wonderful world of Charcuterie. In my quest of trying to make great sausage, I failed the first few times, because I lacked knowing the basics. My sausages turned out dry and crumbly, or tough and with weird textures. However, since understanding a few key things and changing my process to accommodate, I’ve never looked back. I wish these requisites for good sausage were more clear to me from the beginning.

  • Clean your tools and your area really good… we’re working with raw meat. It’s obvious, right?
  • Everything needs to be kept COLD. Your meat, your spices, your water, the grinder attachments, the tray you will be grinding in to. Everything. Cold!
  • Your meat and fat (previously cut into cubes) should be almost frozen. It’s just thawed enough for you to work with it, mix in your spices and grind it. But otherwise, as close to frozen as possible.
  • I’ve always added my spices to the frozen meat and then added whatever cold liquids I’m using to distribute the seasonings before I ground it. Some believe you should add the seasonings first, grind it, then mix in the liquids to form the pellicle just before stuffing. I have experimented both ways and cannot say I’ve found a difference yet.
  • The meat should come out of the grinder into a tray or bowl set in ice. I use aluminum trays that I pull out of my deep freeze. They stay cold enough for the short time it’s in the tray before I load it into my stuffer.
  • While I’m waiting for the pellicle, I fry up a bit of the farce before I stuff it into the casings. If it needs any adjustments to the flavor, now, of course, is the time to do it. This is known as the quenelle test.

Grinding sausage.
Grinding sausage.

The reason for keeping everything cold is so that the fat doesn’t separate from the meat when cooked. If it does, it makes the sausage seem tougher… and have an unpleasant texture. Over-handling the meat doesn’t help it either. Working with it warm, or working it too much will cause what’s called “smear” and it signifies a “broken forcemeat” among sausage geeks. Many will say to give it to the dogs. I haven’t done that yet, but my first batches of sausage were certainly worthy of the dogs. From then on, I took keeping the meat cold very seriously. It does make a difference. Another deficit of my set-up was that my grinder dueled as my stuffer. I’d grind the meat through once, then I’d remove the dies and replace with the stuffing attachments to stuff into the casings. Again, the problem here was over-working the meat. Because it had to go through the auger again as it was stuffed into the casings, I believe it caused a broken forcemeat. I splurged for a separate stuffer, one where you would load the meat into the canister, and crank it down, effectively squirting the meat into the casings. You can see it in the pictures below. This also made a huge difference. Having the right tools for the job certainly helps, but also knowing a little of the science behind it will let you make a perfect sausage.

A quick note on casings. I prefer natural casings over any others. Casings are sold in hanks. A hank will stuff 100-125 lbs of sausage and they are pretty cheap, but not all butchers will sell them to you. I got in good with my local butcher and pick them up anytime I need them. While it may seem a little awkward handing slimy casings, once you have meat in it, there really is nothing better. They are easier to work with over the collagen casings or others that you have to soak before using. Natural casings are also more sheer, but strong enough to stand up to accidental over-stuffing, to a degree.

Oh, a quick note about clean-up. Don’t wash aluminum parts in your dishwasher. After years of washing my grinder parts by hand, just after I made the batch of sausage you see below, I decided to put the parts in the dishwasher only to my demise.

Spice mixes for various sausages.
Mixing the spices in sausage before grinding.
Mixing the spices in sausage before grinding.
Sausage ready to be stuffed.
Sausage stuffing.
Italian sausage about to be linked.
Italian sausage about to be linked.
Italian sausage about to be linked.
Linking italian sausage.
Italian sausage about to be linked.
Italian sausage about to be linked.
Linked sausage.
Frying up sausage to make sure it’s ready to stuff.
Grinding sausage.
Grinding sausage.
Grinding sausage.
Grinding sausage.
Grinding sausage.
Kielbasa sagsage
Venison sausage about to be linked.
Smoked venison sausage.
Fresh kielbasa sausage.
Fresh italian sausage.
Vacuum sealed sausages.
Vacuum sealed sausages.
Sausages headed to the smoker.
The sausage stuffer. This style doesn’t risk over-working the meat like the auger style does.
Summer sausages heading to the smoker.
Venison sausage,
Venison summer sausage,
Venison summer sausage,
Venison linked sausages
Venison sausages
Measuring our spice mixes.
A ginger basil spice mix to make a breakfast sausage.
Teh stuffed ginger basil breakfast sausage.

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Filed Under: charcuterie, food/culinary, homesteading Tagged With: charcuterie, food/culinary, homesteading

Build a backyard chicken coop

January 9, 2014 by Jason 4 Comments

See the full gallery with many more pictures on BackyardChickens.com

I thought about chickens for almost three years before finally jumping in. Mainly, I wanted to make sure I properly integrated them in to our lifestyle. Having several friends who assured me they were easy and fun surely helped speed up the process, but still, it was important to me to choose and build the right coop and assess all the other issues that might arise with chickens. There is feeding and watering, protection from predators, free-range, or coop? Should I build a chicken tractor? How do I set them up when I go on vacation? I tried to think of all I could so that there would be less surprises. So far, so good. It seems I’m always making a change or addition to the coop, but I started off with a “Cabin-style” coop. I made it out of all recycled materials and either scrounged or bartered for them. Here, I document the process. I don’t go through detailed instructions on how to build a coop, but I show how I address the basic concerns. BackyardChickens.com has a gallery of small, medium and large coops and many people have provided their plans. I found inspiration there, and then set off to build a coop of my own.

Location and foundation

I wanted to tuck the coop in to a place where they would be least disturbed. I actually settled for an area on the hill near my bee hives, behind my shed. Since it was on a hill, I needed to dig a platform on the hill to make a level spot. Drainage was of course a concern that I’ll touch on in a bit.

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After settling on the location, I started to dig… and of course, there were plenty of roots and rocks to remove.
Dug all by hand, and on the cheap. See more detailed pics at: http://www.backyardchickens.com/g/a/6620089/morgan-cabin-coop-in-indiana/
Dug all by hand, and on the cheap.

Next, I used cement blocks to make the foundation. I created a makeshift footer using the blocks that I’ll try to illustrate in the following pictures. The first row of blocks were leveled and stood up on their side to create sort of an underground wall to prevent coons or other animals from digging under the coop. Below these blocks, I laid down regular chicken wire to prevent any of these digging animals from coming up under the center of the run.

Blocks sitting on chicken wire to keep animals from digging in to the run.
Blocks sitting on chicken wire to keep animals from digging in to the run.
Once leveled, I used fill direct back around the footer walls.
Once leveled, I used fill dirt and packed it back around the footer walls.

I back-filled around the block walls on both the inside and outside walls to hold them in place. Ultimately, I will fill the inside with sand, so it wasn’t so important to stabilize these blocks any more than just enough to keep them standing up. Once filled, I laid blocks down flat on top and this became the foundation that I built the structure on.

Can barely see the work involved at this point.
Can barely see the work involved at this point.

Next, I set blocks laying down around the perimeter to make the foundation that the structure will be built on. I is important to make sure things are level so that the structure sits comfortably on top.

A pause for the snow!
Foundation is set. There's Heidi, my beloved retriever that passed away before the chickens arrived.
Foundation is set. There’s Heidi, my beloved retriever that passed away before the chickens arrived.

Again, ultimately, sand will fill the inside of the run. Before I got the drain tile ran around the outside perimeter, rain totally filled up the center proving that drainage would need to be addressed.

Framing it up

I put the word out to friends that I was looking for lumber and picked it up where ever it was available. I tore down a swing set and pressure washed it all. After I had a significant scrap pile, I began making the plans for the framing. Turns out, I got a lot of 4×4’s to use instead of the 2×4’s that were originally planned for. The coup is pretty stout as a result. Here’s some of the wood that looks almost new after it was pressure washed and I got all the nails and bolts out.

Free lumber, just had to pick it up and pressure wash it.
Free lumber, just had to pick it up and pressure wash it.
Framing started. Skids just placed to add weight and make a place to stand.
Framing started. Skids just placed to add weight to settle the foundation and make a place to stand.

Drain tile

Once I started the framing, we got a few good rains that washed water right in to the run. It was a small pond. So, I decided to start the drainage plan before I got too far along. I grabbed the spade and pretty much shaped out a good trough to lay the pipe around.

Trough shaped out and angled to allow the water to run one way.
Trough shaped out and angled to allow the water to run one way.
Pipe laid and will be filled with gravel.
Pipe laid and will be filled with gravel. Notice the sloped wall against the coop to keep water out. The Indiana clay soil is also helpful in this case.

Keep in mind that until you actually fill it with gravel and complete the drain tile, it’s not really good at catching the water and diverting it into the pipe. By back-filling, you create resistance… and of course, water seeks the path of least resistance. The perforated drain pipe becomes the only place the water can go. I got it filled and during the first rain, it proved it was working. Water was coming out both ends of the tile and routed around the coop and down the hill.

Next was to keep framing. As such, I needed to plan for windows, but still needed to get them. I traded some wine and honey with a local farmer for three windows, and the tin for the roof. Big score. Another good friend came over with the plywood for the roof. It was being tossed at a job site that he was working at and it was just enough for my 10×12 roof. Again, very helpful to put the word out to all your friends to let them know what you’re doing. There was more than one occasion where someone showed up with some materials to donate.

Roof is on and the tin was the really good and thick kind!
Roof is on and the tin was the really good and thick kind! 

 Notice the floor of the coop at left. That was made from wood of my neighbors old deck. He had replaced the deck or something and had some really long 1×6 he was going to burn. I scraped it up in time and put almost all of it to use by the end.

One of the three windows to rough in. All had to be refurbished.
One of the three windows to rough in. All had to be refurbished.

Once I had the windows, I could finish out the roughing and complete the framing. The siding was cut up plywood that actually came from Fernald 🙂 A friend of mine had it lying around, and it wasn’t much good for anything beyond a chicken coop.

Outside window roughed in.
Outside window roughed in.

 The wood that is painted red above (also from the decking wood that I got from the neighbor.) Looks good as new now, huh?

Additional rails for more support if dogs or coyotes jump on the sides.
Additional rails for more support if dogs or coyotes jump on the sides.

I also doubled up the rails around the run knowing that I have plenty of dogs and coyotes around that will eventually try to get at them. All of this 2×4 material was donated by another buddy who had piles of 2×4’s that were no longer then 3 and 4 feet. The wood had a lot of nails that had to be pulled. He said the wood was left over from a large foundation job where the 2×4’s were nailed together to hold the cement forms. Again, everything cleaned up nicely.

Nesting boxes roughed in.
Nesting boxes roughed in.

I added nesting boxes on two sides of the coop for a total of seven boxes. Four boxes on the long side and 3 boxes on the short. Many of the cabin coops I found online only had one set. I figured it was easy enough to add boxes on two side, so why not?

Adding siding.
Adding wood siding… all scrap wood. Note different wood and colors. All will be covered in tar paper.

Adding the barn-siding

Got the coop painted and the hardware mesh up. I chose 3/8″ mesh so that possums and raccoons could not reach through and get at the chickens. Kind of funny that traditional “chicken wire” (the pentagon shaped wire) is not really that great for chickens. It can certainly keep the chickens in, but it can’t keep greedy hands out. Coons are known for reaching through that wire, grabbing a chicken and pretty much eating a hole in to it right through the wire. So, I opted for the smaller, stronger 3/8″ wire mesh.

Tar-papered and ready for bard siding.
Tar-papered and ready for barn siding.
Continued siding progress.
Continued siding progress.

Notice the door to the run is nothing more than a frame of 2×4’s that will also use the 3/8″ hardware mesh. So a door to the run, and a door to the coop for easy cleaning are essential to the “cabin-style” coop.

Refurbishing the windows

The windows are just as you would suspect… rickety and wobbly. I needed these to be tight so I could control the ventilation in the coop. I also needed them to stand up to the elements that I know are going to be pounding on them. There were three windows and a total of 21 panes in all that needed to be re-glazed. Window refurbishing happened on rain or snow days in between the framing.

Working the wondows.
Working the windows.

 I chiseled out the old glazing, removed the panes of glass and cleaned and scraped those separately. I stripped, scraped and sanded the windows and prepared them for painting.

The door window, before.

 The green window above has no less than 7 layers (all different colors) of paint that I counted. The window was painted over and over with no sanding or preparation. I used a stripper that made pretty quick work of getting the layers off, and also made it easy to see the different colored layers. The glazing on this window was also once treated with caulk. It was a total wreck.

Door window, after.

But then, a total transformation. All three window panes needed a serious amount of work, but in the end, you can see that all of them look like they belong together and the barn red color just pops. Some of the windows needed some girth planed off them to fit freely in my rough-ins. In the end, I had three very custom windows all painted red and treated the same.

Decided to practice some stained glass work on the window facing the run. Figured if I mess up, it’s a chicken coop, right? This is one of the panes glazed in.

 Just to add a little color when the sunlight comes through (and I broke a few panes of glass when I was cleaning them) I decided to brush up on some stained-glass work. I made a few panes that used mostly scrap stained glass I had laying around. It allowed me to brush up… and also use some glass that otherwise may have been tossed. The following series shows some of the panes I created.

Another one of the panes.
Yet another pane. This one was made because I cracked the corner of the pane while I had it out 🙂
All the panes put in and installed in the coop.

 At night, the light inside the coop shines through and it looks really good. The picture does it no liberty.

Window installed on the coop.

 Notice the top of the nesting box. The was the same style tin roofing that is on top, but there were some red pieces for the picking. I took these and pounded out the ridges to flatten them out as best I could. These were then screwed on to the top of the tar-papered lid and fitted with screened door hinges. So, it’s springloaded and wants to shit when you open it. I also use a basic hook and loop to keep coons from getting in.

Sand is in the run.

 I got the chickens in the coop and it only took them a day for them to get used to it. The sand in the run offers so many benefits. People buy and feed grit to the chickens. While I haven’t read extensively about it yet, they need some grit in them to help grind and digest their food. Having sand in the run offers a number of conveniences… as food falls in the sand, it also gets in to the chickens in lieu of the grit. Also, as the poop, it acts as a litter box. My original intention over the summer was to periodically sift the sand using a simple frame with 3/8″ hardware mesh under it. Scoop the sand from the run and add to the box, sift out the manure as any other larger matter and throw it in the compost. The fertilizer I pulled out of the coop this year is unbelievable.

I have many more pics, including the hens being introduced to the  coop as smaller adolescents, listed in the full gallery on BackyardChickens.com. 

The birds enjoy a bunch of plums on a warm summer day.
The hardware in the front of the coop.

I spent some time tweaking things after the coop was up and the chickens were in. The feeder and watering system were also made out of reclaimed materials. I use the deep litter method in managing the coop inside. Sometimes, I just rotate all the manure on top in to the straw on the floor and I can go 3-4 months without pulling anything out. When I do, I compost it in my compost pile. Before the winter hit, I layered a lot of the sand straw and manure on my garden. It will be turned into the soil when I prep the garden to be tilled.

Chickens in the sand run, peckin’ out dough. This was a cold winter day, but if the sun is out, so are the chickens.
The coop mostly finished. I was doing basic refinements over the summer.

 I also had a scrap piece of gutter that I used in back of the coop. Today, this gutter runs in to a rain barrel set up that stayed full most of the season. While a complete after-thought, the rain barrel worked out well. I ran it to some soaker hoses that went around the grape rows lower down the hill. Takes 2 days for the water to soak out of the barrel.

The coop, the vines and the bees on a cold, but beautiful December day. The scenic reward at the end of the season.

The chickens are very hardy. The coop is tight with wood, tar paper and barn siding. I have a few vents in the top front and back of the coop for mild ventilation. During the bitterest cold days over the winter, I left the pop door open and provided no heat to the coop other than a bulb that stayed on until 10pm. The chickens slowed down laying to about 4-6 eggs a day. There are a lot of thoughts on heating a coop, and my decision was to keep the drafts down and the coop dry and reasonably clean. So far, all has been OK. Check back in the Spring and we’ll do a coop clean-out. I’ll provide an update on what worked and what didn’t.

I know I blazed through everything. If you have any questions or comments, just add them below. I’ll be happy to reply and tell you anything I know. In all, I think I had about $200 in the coop. That was for various hardware, screws, a few boards, window glazing, and some of the perks that I decided to add. For the first year, I am blown away with the amount of eggs, and fertilizer I got from the chickens. Without a doubt, well worth the investment. I give the eggs to family and still have some to sell at the market a dozen at a time. I sell eggs for $2 a dozen, and for each dozen sold, a dollar goes to each of my kids. This was just an easy way to fund some allowance for their banks and it gives me good reason to involve them when I can.

See the full gallery with many more pictures on BackyardChickens.com

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Filed Under: homesteading, how-to Tagged With: homesteading, how-to

Dishwasher is not friendly to aluminum

January 2, 2014 by Jason 5 Comments

Well, after a vigorous night of sausage making, I tried to take a quick way out by throwing my grinder attachments and trays into the dishwasher. I have always washed them by hand up until now. The other night, I finished up the stuffing and smoking around 2am, and was ready to get some sleep. It didn’t register to me at the time that my grinder attachments were aluminum, and I’m well aware that putting aluminum in to the dishwasher would do this because I have done it before. It’s the detergents and chemicals in the soaps being blasted at the aluminum at high temperatures.

But the deed was done, I opened the dishwasher this morning to find all the aluminum had turned a dark “gunmetal gray,” almost black! Reading around, I found everything from using citric acids, to vinegar, and even cream of tartar. I tried the vinegar and it turns out it needs a harsher acid. Cream of Tartar was next, however, this only did the trick when boiling the parts in a mixture of the tartar and the water. Even still, when it came out, the darkness was gone, but so was my shiny “stainless steel” sheen that it had previously. Also, the finish still had traces of gray colors. Here’s where I took out the steel wool and gave it some elbow grease. This did help. It buffed out the variations but it still looked like a “brushed” stainless steel instead of original shine of the aluminum. This was still acceptable to me. I happen to prefer the brushed  look over the glossy look when it comes to my sink faucets and the like.

Recipe:

  • 2 tablespoons of cream of tartar to 1 quart of water

Process: Boil the parts in the water solution for at least 10 minutes. Take out and submerge in cool water just enough to be able to handle it. Take the steel wool and polish to your desired sheen. I also tried a magic eraser. It didn’t work, so don’t bother. I did go as far as putting the polished parts back in to boil and repeated the process thinking it might improve the finish. I little more sheen was achieved, but I’m pretty confident it was just from the second round of polishing with the steel wool. My advice would be to just boil the parts once, and then polish with the steel wool to the sheen you want. The more you do it, the deeper you are polishing and therefore reaching the original shine of the aluminum. There were also recommendations to try SOS pads. Since these are pretty much steel wool with soap in it, it’s worth a try, but I again would wonder about the detergents in the pads. It’s not a fun process, but it did make the finish much less dreaded. The outcome wasn’t ideal, but it was perfectly acceptable. See some of the before and after pics below, and good luck.

Aluminum turned black from dishwasher detergents.
Aluminum turned black from dishwasher detergents. Parts before and after.

 

The parts are put in to a cream of tartar and water solution.
The parts are put in to a cream of tartar and water solution.

 

See the difference between the ones in the tartar/water solution, and the one I'm holding above?
See the difference between the ones in the tartar/water solution, and the one I’m holding above?

 

After boiling in the cream of tartar and water solution, the parts begin to lighten up.
After boiling in the cream of tartar and water solution, the parts begin to lighten up.

 

Finished, cleaned parts.
Finished, cleaned parts.

 

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AllMorgan started as a family blog to keep extended family and friends around the world apprised on what's going on at our Indiana homestead. It always been a cross between a family diary and photo … Read more

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