Earth Day 2014, this past Sunday, was optimistically mild and bright. After the recent long and oppressive winter season, it felt downright magical to soak in the sunlight and breathe the warm, violet-scented air. I had traveled westward from my city apartment to attend dinner on my family’s property, as it was also Easter Sunday. After the family gathering, I found myself wandering around the acreage as I seem to do most every spring.
To give you an idea, a few years ago one warm September evening, I camped out on the roof of a tall apartment building with some friends in the middle of the city. I recall looking out over the city before the sun went down - it was trees and hills as far as the eye could see, thoroughly obscuring the countless buildings below them. I remember being awed. I had never seen Rochester from that vantage point before, and it was very surreal. It was actually hard to see most buildings for all the foliage even though they were clustered together in every direction beneath me.
And so I have come to equate western New York State with the Garden of Eden.
My family’s property is no exception. There are two houses, one relatively new and one a hundred years old which used to be a farmhouse. There are a handful of very old barns and outbuildings which used to house dairy cows, chickens, pigs, and farm machinery. All these buildings are surrounded by trees except for where the road runs. This was my family’s homestead. Accordingly, I have become ingrained with a do-it-yourself spirit and an appreciation for self-sufficiency.
Among the things my family members have done on this property are maple syruping, planting our own personal Christmas tree farm (of sorts), raising livestock for produce and for slaughter, and a whole lot of fruit, vegetable, and flower gardening (we’ve grown pretty much every kind of vegetable you can think of, along with raspberries, blackberries, cherries, black walnuts, strawberries, and rhubarb). There is even a hive of wild honeybees that has been inhabiting one of the barns for about 20 years and counting, who may at some point be moved into a man-made hive when it is time for the barns to come down.
In recent years, I have completed my own set of projects. I have canned tomatoes, jams, peaches & pears, collected, hulled, cured & opened black walnuts, harvested & candied violets, sewn aprons & zipper pouches, and made my own dog treats. Not to mention assisting with the ambitious gardening ventures that seem to grow slightly more extravagant every year.
I have high hopes for 2014, too. I intend to develop a good handle on flower liqueurs this year, a product that seems fairly obscure and difficult to obtain in this country. But considering that Rochester (the Flower City) is experiencing something of a renaissance on various booze-related fronts including cocktails, craft distilling, and local beer brewing, I feel like this is something I could run with.
Also in the works will be further canning projects such as chutneys, pickles, and fancy fruit concoctions. I may even begin to delve into growing my own saffron, one of the rarest and most expensive spices even to this day. Saffron is made from the stigmas of Crocus sativus (also known as the autumn crocus or the saffron crocus), of which there are only three on each flower. My family’s land has proven exceptionally fertile, and the only thing I think we have ever failed to successfully grow are melons (and maybe we’re just not doing it right), so barring any climatic restrictions I am hopeful about the saffron project.
Time and further research will tell! I’m really feeling the spring fever today. What are some DIY food projects that you are passionate about?
Time and further research will tell! I’m really feeling the spring fever today. What are some DIY food projects that you are passionate about?



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