Hummingbird Nectar Recipe at Big Mill Bird & Breakfast

Our hummingbirds arrive at Big Mill B&B sometime around Easter – and it is with a flourish and a big show, chattering and demanding food. 

Hummingbird at Big Mill taken by Guy Livesay | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/hummingbirds-at-big-mill-bird-breakfast/

Hummingbirds love the zinnias at Big Mill B&B

And since we are a designated Bird and Breakfast Bird-Friendly Business, we willingly obliged. Guy’s outstanding photo, taken here at Big Mill B&B, earned him 1st place in the 2010 Beaufort County Arts Council Nature/Wildlife photography contest.

Hummingbird visits the garden at Big Mill Inn near Greenville | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/hummingbirds-at-big-mill-bird-breakfast/

Hummingbird getting lunch at Big Mill zinnia

Guests often ask me if there is any time during the year when you should stop feeding hummingbirds? If you have had a similar question, here’s my answer:

It is perfectly alright to leave the feeders out until freezing weather arrives. The birds usually leave when their food sources (flower nectar and bugs) are no longer available. You may get a traveling hummingbird guest en route to warmer climates.  Big Mill seems to be a favorite spot for such hummingbird “refuelings!”

Hummingbird Nectar Recipe

4 parts hot boiling water
1 part refined white sugar
Few drops of red food coloring, optional, but not necessary

Stir this mixture until all the sugar is dissolved. (Audubon suggests that you boil the sugar to kill any bacteria. If you change the water every day, this is not necessary).

Allow solution to cool before filling feeders. This sugar water can spoil in hot weather, so change it often, at least two times a week or more. Store any excess nectar in the refrigerator.

So, have you had any good hummingbird sightings this summer?  Share your best photos with us over on Big Mill Bed and Breakfast’s Facebook page .

And while you’re there, take a minute to write on our “Wall.”

Chloe Tuttle, Innkeeperinnkeeper at Big Mil Bed & Breakfast 252-792-8787

Update: I turned on the video camera and caught about 10 minutes of wonderful action at the hummingbird feeder the other day. Check it out here if you could use a 10-minute nature retreat:

Hummers-at-Big-Mill-Inn | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/hummingbirds-at-big-mill-bird-breakfast/

Click on photo to SHARE or PIN for LATER

Cooking up Cracklins and Making Cracklin’ Bread

Cracklins:  Pork fat and skins that are deep fried
in rendered lard until they are crunchy.

(From the Eastern North Carolina lingo dictionary)

North Carolina Innkeeper remembers cooking up cracklins as a child | chloesblog.bigmill.com

Cooking Up Cracklins

Cracklins used to be common fare on southern tables. Sometimes you have to go back to your roots and eat the food of your heritage. My folks and the neighboring farm families had hog killings in the winter and they made cracklins/cracklings. So in cold weather we ate cracklin bread. Rest assured we don’t eat like this all the time.

 

Cracklin Corn Pone Bread

Cracklins used to be common fare on southern tables. Sometimes you have to go back to your roots and eat the food of your heritage.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time33 minutes
Total Time43 minutes
Course: Bread
Cuisine: American
Keyword: cracklin cone pone bread recipe, cracklin corn pone bread
Servings: 16 pone bread
Calories: 88kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 1 cup pork cracklins
  • 2 cups fine ground cornmeal I use House-Autry
  • 2 Tablespoons self-rising flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • pinch of sugar optional
  • 1 cups warm water add more if needed

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease the pone pan with some really sturdy grease like Crisco or lard.
  • Chop cracklins. If you don't like brown flecks in the bread, then grind the cracklins.
  • In a large mixing bowl stir together the cracklins, corn meal, flour, salt and sugar. Add the water slowly, stirring until the mixture is the consistency of pancake batter.
  • Pour into pone pan, filling to the top. Bake until edges are brown and bread is crusty, 35-45 minutes. As soon as the bread is cool enough to handle, pop the pones out of the pan. Serve immediately while bread is hot.

Nutrition

Calories: 88kcal | Carbohydrates: 15g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 1mg | Sodium: 179mg | Potassium: 63mg | Fiber: 1g | Calcium: 1mg | Iron: 0.6mg
Cracklin bread recipe from innkeeper at Big Mill B and B | chloesblog.bigmill.com

This bread is made in a cast iron corn pone pan

The corn meal is also important. When I was growing up I rode my bicycle down our dirt road to the Big Mill to get a paper bag full of fresh ground corn meal; usually from our own corn. Miss Sadie James made the best meal; I can’t find any meal of that quality now. My dad Ops taught me how to take the raw meal in your hand, squeeze it and it should clump together like clay. If not, then it was ground too fast and the stone heated the meal too much.

Chloe's Cracklin bread recipe made with pork cracklins | chloesblog.bigmill.com

Cracklin bread ready to eat

If you really want to try eating cracklins and you aren’t planning to attend any hog killings, you can buy them in some grocery stores like Piggly Wiggly. Buy the cracklins without skins, your teeth will thank you.

I did find a Cracklin’ Bread Recipe in the White Trash Cookbook, but don’t think cracklins are just for us down home folks anymore.

Come see us at Big Mill Bed and Breakfast, 252-792-8787

Chloe Tuttle, North Carolina Bed and Breakfast Innkeeper

Farmhouse Tomato Sandwich & the Great Mayonnaise Debate

 Oh, there is absolutely nothing quite so tasty
as that first homegrown tomato…

Heirloom tomatoes in bike at Big Mill B&B in Williamston, NC | www.chloesblog.bigmill.com/farmhouse-tomato-sandwich-the-mayonnaise-debate/

Homegrown tomatoes on the farm at Big Mill Bed & Breakfast, Williamston, NC

… and a tomato sandwich is even better!

Tomato Sandwich from the farm at Big Mill B&B | www.chloesblog.bigmill.com/farmhouse-tomato-sandwich-the-mayonnaise-debate/

Tomato sandwiches are always better with Duke’s Mayonnaise

There are many versions of this classic sandwich, but the down-home plain and simple sandwich made with white bread and Duke’s mayonnaise is the award winner.

Chloe's Farmhouse Tomato Sandwich

Oh, there is absolutely nothing quite so tasty as that first homegrown tomato…… and a tomato sandwich is even better!
Prep Time5 minutes
Total Time5 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American
Keyword: farmhouse tomato sandwich, farmhouse tomato sandwich recipe
Servings: 1 sandwich
Calories: 363kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 1 medium-size ripe preferably homegrown, tomato
  • 2 slices bread
  • 2 Tablespoons Duke's Mayonnaise
  • Salt and pepper

Instructions

  • Wash and cut the tomato into thick slices. Spread the mayonnaise onto both slices of the bread, one side only. Make sure to spread the mayonnaise to the edge of each slice of bread.
  • Place the tomato slices on one piece of bread. Add salt and pepper. Cover with the second slice of bread, mayonnaise side down, of course.
  • Cut the sandwich into two pieces and enjoy the best tomato sandwich ever. How to cut the sandwich is debatable-corner to corner or straight across the middle? We all have an opinion.

Notes

This recipe was featured on the Bountiful Kitchen, a part of Inn Cuisine.

Nutrition

Calories: 363kcal | Carbohydrates: 32g | Protein: 7g | Fat: 23g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Cholesterol: 11mg | Sodium: 474mg | Potassium: 393mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 7g | Vitamin A: 1025IU | Vitamin C: 16.8mg | Calcium: 90mg | Iron: 2.3mg

homegrown tomatoes in bicycle at Big Mill Farm B&B | www.chloesblog.bigmill.com/farmhouse-tomato-sandwich-the-mayonnaise-debate/

When I was a child I delivered baskets of tomatoes with my Schwinn bicycle to the restaurants in Williamston. Some were 3 miles away and I had to ride part way on a dirt road and partly on U.S. Highway 17. Surely couldn’t do it today.

Always Duke's Mayonnaise for Tomato Sandwich | chloesblog.com

Here in the Inner Banks of North Carolina, Hellman’s Mayonnaise is sold to transplants. And don’t even consider Kraft Mayonnaise.

Just remember, if it ain’t homemade, it has to be Duke’s.

If you don’t believe me, ask Eddy Browning, food columnist for the New Bern Sun Journal. He heard tell of various barroom brawls in this great mayonnaise debate. Eddy does advocate for homemade mayonnaise, so stay tuned. We will have that recipe on Chloe’s blog soon.

So it is just normal here in eastern North Carolina to see a display of Duke’s with six shelves, lest we run out ….. forsooth.

Chloe Tuttle Big Mill Bed and Breakfast near Greenville NC

‘come and check out our Tomato Sandwich at Big Mill Bed & Breakfast in Williamston, NC, 252-792-8787

“Bird & Breakfast” Special at Big Mill B&B

In honor of Earth Day, 2009, we are celebrating our first
Big Mill “BIRD and BREAKFAST.” 

Find details about our earth-friendly special below.

Birders love the variety at Big Mill Bed & Breakfast in eastern North Carolina
Guy Livesay took this photo of one of our feathered Goldfinch guests
admiring our gorgeous azaleas in full bloom.

We offer food & lodging for finches, bluebirds, purple martins, barn swallows, Carolina wrens, hummingbirds, cardinals and throngs of other birds. There is no charge, but they are encouraged to pose for photos and to sing.

Big Mill B&B in Eastern North Carolina is a feast for bird lovers
(Bluebird photo by Guy Livesay)

Many feathered couples stay at Big Mill Inn and they especially enjoy our homegrown sunflower seeds and suet.  In fact, our Big Mill Birds are quite discerning and refuse to eat the store-bought suet.

So while I am making breakfast for our people guests, I whip up a batch of homemade suet for our Big Mill bird guests.  They love it! I am excited to have discovered a great use for left over bacon fat — it makes great suet!

Birds at Big Mill love our Suet

The woodpeckers at Big Mill really like fruit so any excess fruit goes into the suet. I have great hopes of making soap with the bacon renderings some day, but that hasn’t happened yet.  Until then, it is suet.

Big Mill SUET RECIPE for the Bird

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  • 3 cups corn meal
  • 1/2 cup shelled seeds like sunflower or thistle
  • 1 cup crunchy peanut butter (store brand is fine)
  • 3/4 to 1 cup rendered fat.    (lard, bacon drippings, etc.
  • Several large pine cones
  • Optional: 1 cup chopped fruit and/or a cup of quick cooking oats

In a large bowl, mix the corn meal and seeds together. Using two forks cut in the peanut butter, as you would for a pie crust.

Melt the fat and pour into the corn meal and peanut butter mixture. Mix well and allow to cool. If it is too runny, add more corn meal or some oats.

Stuff the suet into a pine cone. Hang several of these stuffed cones from a limb (as in photo above.) In a few days your birds will love you. I hang mine near a feeder to speed this process.

This recipe is very flexible-and a good way to use grease and fruit. Store excess suet in the refrigerator.

Birds near Greenville, North Carolina at Big Mill B&B, named a birder friendly business
(Photo of Big Mill Bed and Breakfast Goldfinch by Guy Livesay)

We are Bird Friendly and our birds know it. Moses has retired and poses no threat. Big Mill Bed & Breakfast 252-792-8787

Raccoon Quiche

Need a Wild Game Recipe? Not everywhere can you pull in to your local marina and buy raccoon meat.

Roberson's Marina on Gardner's Creek sells Raccoon meat

Except in Martin County in eastern North Carolina. Yep, raccoon meat. So to keep a tradition we wanted our guests to have our special Raccoon Meat Quiche. Just down the road from Big Mill Bed & Breakfast at Gardner’s Creek is Roberson’s Marina where you can rent a canoe and, in season, get raccoon meat. I haven’t seen the sign for ‘possum yet.

Eastern North Carolina B&B recipes

Big Mill RACCOON QUICHE

Yup, it's true. If you hunt raccoon, you can go ahead and eat it. Just watch how you cook it.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time1 hour 45 minutes
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Keyword: raccoon quiche, raccoon quiche recipe
Servings: 6 servings
Calories: 319kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups shredded southwest style hash brown potatoes found in the refrigerated section at the grocery store
  • 4 Tablespoons butter melted and divided
  • 3 scallions/green onion with tops
  • 1/2 medium sized red bell pepper about 1/2 cup diced
  • 4-5 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups half-and-half
  • dash of cayenne pepper
  • Salt and fresh ground black pepper
  • 1 Tablespoon flour
  • 3/4 cup grated Swiss or Jarlsberg cheese
  • 1/2 cup cooked coon meat diced (see below)
  • paprika

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a round 8-inch or 9-inch quiche dish. Stir together the shredded potatoes and 1 Tablespoon of the melted butter. Sprinkle with salt. Press into the greased dish. Bake for 35-45 minutes or until edges start to brown. Remove from oven and reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees.
  • Chop the scallions, bottoms and tops. Dice the red pepper. Saute both in 2 tablespoons of butter, until just barely tender, keeping them separated while cooking.
  • Whisk together the eggs, half-and-half, cayenne pepper, 2 Tablespoons of the butter, 1 Tablespoon flour, salt and black pepper. Sprinkle the cheese over the baked shredded potatoes. Add the coon meat, scallions and red pepper. Fill the dish full with the custard mixture and sprinkle with paprika. Bake for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until a knife inserted into the center comes out clean.
  • Serve with hot sauce.

Nutrition

Calories: 319kcal | Carbohydrates: 14g | Protein: 13g | Fat: 23g | Saturated Fat: 13g | Cholesterol: 171mg | Sodium: 310mg | Potassium: 350mg | Fiber: 1g | Vitamin A: 1090IU | Vitamin C: 18.6mg | Calcium: 199mg | Iron: 1.4mg

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APRIL FOOL’s…..got’cha!

Now did you really think the same folks who will eat Raccoon will actually eat homemade yogurt with granola????  I don’t have a camouflage baseball cap, that would have made a better photo.

But really, the hunters here in Eastern North Carolina do eat many different game animals, including raccoon. The North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service has a long list of Wild Game recipes, including bear, opossum, grouse, deer, moose, beaver, wild turkey and, yep, raccoon.

I talked to Frank Scearce, a raccoon hunter and game chef from way back; and this is how Frank cooks a whole raccoon. Cleaning a raccoon is serious business. They have about 14 musk glads that must be removed, or, I hear, it will run you out of your house. And don’t forget to remove the feet.

And I have to ‘fess up … Frank cleaned and cooked the racoon for the above quiche.  I had EVERY intention of cooking this raccoon myself, but Frank rolled his eyes, Two of my guests, Sarah and Jackson, from Cambridge, Massachusetts, actually requested this ‘Coon Quiche. They liked it!

A confession:  I hardly eat any meat, so this is the one and only time I plan to make this quiche.

How to Cook a Raccoon

  • 1 coon, skinned with feet  and head removed
  • 1 onion
  • 1 potato, peeled
  • Salt and Black Pepper
  • 1-2 Tablespoons dried sage
  • 1-2 pints barbecue sauce

Fill a large pot with water. Put the coon, onion, potato, a good sprinkling of salt, some black pepper and sage into the pot. Bring to a boil and cook until fork tender.

Remove Raccoon from pot and place whole coon in a roasting pan.  Discard onion and potato.  Baste coon with barbecue sauce. Cook in a 250 degree oven for one hour, basting with barbecue sauce several times. The meat should flake off the bones easily. Note: you might want to save certain bones, I hear they are magic.

Wild game entrees and politics have been in the news lately. At the death of North Carolina Governor Bob Scott the News and Observer states that Bob Scott might have been rural North Carolina’s “…last political hurrah — the last governor proficient at milking a cow, the last associated with the country crowd called the Branchhead Boys, the last to hold Executive Mansion possum dinners.”

Speaking of President William Howard Taft the Atlanta Journal Constitution writes “Nothing says “hail to the chief” like a steaming plate of possum”.  In 1910 at a large banquet in Atanta, a waiter presented to President Taft the ‘possum entree that “sat grinning in a bed of gravy and sweet potatoes.” The New York Times wrote “Taft eats Possum.”  Billy Possum even became the mascot for Taft’s presidency. If you plan to eat wild game, it is best if you don’t name them…that just won’t work. I still remember when Brother John’s calf Blackie became steaks in the freezer. I was a wee little girl, but I cried.

In the south we all ate whatever we raised, trapped or hunted. Growing up on the farm here at Big Mill it just seemed normal to try it all. We ate rabbit, squirrel, quail, black birds, dove, duck, goose, frogs.  We once ate a guinea hen that had been run over; it was decided we just couldn’t do that again. Guess what, now I hardly eat any meat.

My good friend Ted Gardner who grew up near Gardner’s Creek told me they ate most any critter but, “Mama drew the line at ‘possum.” I think I agree with Ted “Pearl.’

In her 1928 classic southern cookbook, Southern Cooking, Atlanta Journal food editor Henrietta Dull includes a recipe for cooking ‘possum. I have this book; it was a gift from Sara Sutherland Tuttle (Mama Tut) who was a friend of Mrs. Dull.

If you decide that you really do want to eat like the locals, the North Carolina Extension Service at NC State University has many wild game recipes, including raccoon. They have Fricassed  Raccoon and Dove Tetrazinni. Eating raccoon and possum really makes as much sense as eating a crab.

I’d love to hear your comments … leave them below.  And don’t fret; I probably won’t serve you raccoon quiche at Big Mill Bed and Breakfast!

P.S. ‘sorry to those of you who received this April Fool post early…’twas a real operator malfunction.

Big Mill Bed & Breakfast 252-792-8787

Hurricane Hanna & Pear Preserves

Hurricanes bring out the spirit of hunkering down and staying put, so when Hurricane Hanna blew through eastern North Carolina, those of us here at Big Mill Bed and Breakfast hunkered down. After the wind stopped several of us wandered out to check out the damage.

We serve home made Pear Preserves to our guests at Big Mill Bed and Breakfast

In the orchard we found bushels of pears lying on the ground.

I really don’t like to waste anything, so I admitted that I knew how to make pear preserves. That was when Nurse Nancy, Paul and I decided to make Hurricane Hannah Pear Preserves…and pear butter…and pear brandy… and finally dehydrated pears. We trashed the kitchen but that was fun; and luckily we only lost electricity once.

We did have a rule for these pear projects — we had to use what we already had on hand-no trotting to the store for anything. And also trotting to the store during a hurricane is a bad idea.

Award-Winning Recipe Our Big Mill Pear Preserves won a  Blue Ribbon at the Martin County Farm Heritage Fair. We belong to the North Carolina Agritourism Association as a Farm Homestead Bed and Breakfast lodging. Our jams and preserves are for sale here at the Inn.

Pear Brandy Preserves

These Homemade Pear Preserves are a House Specialty at Big Mill Inn. 
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time1 hour 30 minutes
Course: Condiments
Cuisine: American
Keyword: homemade preserves, pear brandy preserves, pear brandy preserves recipe, pear jam
Servings: 80 servings
Calories: 114kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 10-12 pounds hard canning pears like Kieffer  (this is about 16 cups of cut up pears)
  • 8 cups sugar yes, these preserves are sweet
  • 3 lemons
  • 1/2 cup brandy We used Apricot Brandy because we had it.

Instructions

  • Wash and sterilize the jars. This can be easily done in a dish washer.
  • Wash, peel and core the pears. Cut into 2-ince pieces. As you peel the pears, place the cut pieces in a large pan filled with water and some Fruit Fresh, lemon or lime juice. This will prevent the fruit from discoloring.
  • Wash the lemons. Slice into thin pieces, removing seeds. Discard/compost the end pieces.
  • In a large cooking pot, layer the pears, lemon slices and sugar. Continue until all the pears, lemon and sugar are used. Allow to sit four hours. This will draw the juice out of the pears. There will be plenty of liquid without having to add water.
  • Stir gently and bring to a slow boil. Lower heat and continue to boil gently for an hour. Add the brandy and cook 1-2 hours more or until the pears are tender and golden and translucent. If you overcook them they will be a dark color. They still taste good, they just aren't as pretty.
  • Using a slotted spoon, ladle the pears and a lemon slice into the jars. Fill with pear syrup. You might have some syrup left over but this is good on ice cream or pancakes.
  • Process according to the canning instructions.

Notes

Yield: 8-10 half pints

Nutrition

Calories: 114kcal | Carbohydrates: 29g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 1mg | Potassium: 71mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 26g | Vitamin A: 15IU | Vitamin C: 4.6mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 0.1mg

* Kieffer Pears are heirloom pears that are often seen in old, country orchards and thriving on abandoned homesteads in the south. They are grainy and hard and they ripen in September in Coastal North Carolina.

My father planted my Kieffer pear tree for me in 1971 and it survives with very little attention. Every year it breaks its limbs with an over abundance of fruit. This old variety of pear has stood the test of time.

  Big Mill Bed & Breakfast 252-792-8787

Citrus Decorations – How to Dry Orange Slices

When  holiday seasons approach I have to try to shed the Bah Humbug attitude. The best way for me to do that is to make something pretty or make a gift for someone.

How-to-Make-Dehydrated-oranges | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/citrus-decorations-how-to-dry-orange-slicles/

How to make your own dehydrated fruit decorations

My mother and I used to cook and bake fudge, brownies and cookies and we made all our decorations mostly from things we had available. We dipped sweet gum balls in the handy five-gallon buckets of silver roof paint. Wonder if it was toxic?

I just love the dehydrated orange and grapefruit slices; they look like stained glass when hung on a Christmas tree. The apples are also great for stringing garlands and for wreaths. Funny, but I have noticed that men love to eat these dehydrated apples; women walk right by them. And no one can deny loving that wonderful, fresh citrus smell. Click to see how to DIY dried frut

Tasty Pumpkin Bread has a Secret Ingredient – Cardamom

All things pumpkin remind me of fall. We used to grow our own pumpkins in the corn field.  Nowadays canned pumpkin is really better than the orange pumpkins we see in stores. This Pumpkin Bread is especially good – it has a secret ingredient.

Pumpkin Bread with Cardamom

This tasty Pumpkin Bread has a new twist - the elegant cardamom.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time50 minutes
Cool10 minutes
Total Time1 hour
Course: Bread
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Pumpkin Bread, Pumpkin, Holiday food
Servings: 8
Calories: 315kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 1 egg
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/3 cup oil
  • 1 Tablespoon maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup sweetened, shredded coconut
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened, mashed pumpkin canned is just fine
  • 1 cup self-rising flour
  • 1 teaspoon cardamom scant teaspoon
  • 1/2 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
  • 1/2 cup pecans, chopped

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease 3 mini loaf pans. Dust with flour.
    Whisk egg in a large bowl. Add sugar, oil and maple syrup. Stir in coconut and pumpkin. Stir in the flour. Pour into mini loaf pans, filling half full. Bake for 45-50 minutes.
  • Cool before slicing

Nutrition

Calories: 315kcal | Carbohydrates: 36g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 19g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Cholesterol: 20mg | Sodium: 11mg | Potassium: 117mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 21g | Vitamin A: 2415IU | Vitamin C: 0.7mg | Calcium: 18mg | Iron: 0.9mg

Photo of Chloe's signature Big Mill Bed & Breakfast, Williamston, NC 27892

Sweet Potato or Yam?

There is a difference between a sweet potato and a yam. They aren’t even related yet sweet potatoes are often mistakenly referred to as yams. Sweet potatoes are actually the root of a morning glory vine. A yam is the tuber of a vine grown in Central and South America.

Yams are quite toxic if eaten raw. Sweet potatoes are a good eaten raw and I know for a fact that they will give you a stomach ache if you eat too many. But they are not toxic.

Somehow the word candied just seems to pair with yam. Oh, well, henceforth, it will be Candied Sweet Potatoes around here. Maybe someone should ask the USDA why they require the word yam to accompany sweet potato on package labeling.

 Great old farm truck hauls bushels of sweet potatoes grown on the farm at Big Mill. Potatoes were stacked in the barn and cured. Chloe is sitting on top of the truck

Old Farm Truck and Chloe beside the Potato House

When I was growing up on the farm here at Big Mill we grew lots of sweet potatoes.  My father’s favorite was Hayman, an heirloom sweet potato. They are pale green in color and produce fewer potatoes per acre, but locals declare they taste better.

Everyone saved seed potatoes so we never had to buy the plants. We raised acres of sweet potatoes and folks came from all over to buy my father’s Hayman potatoes.

Sweet potatoes are harvested or dug in the fall. After we dug the potatoes they were cured with a low heat. The potato house is my favorite of all the barns here at Big Mill Bed & Breakfast.

I do believe the Hayman sweet potatoes are sweeter.

This old Dodge farm truck hauled bushels of sweet potatoes to the potato house (right of truck). Chloe is sitting on the truck. The goat really did eat the windshield wipers.

Sweet Potato Fries

Baked sweet potato fries are easy to make and so good for you. They also add great color to your meal. Recipe on Chloe's Blog | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/hayman-sweet-potatoes

Baked Sweet Potato Fries are delicious!

Sweet Potato Fries

Sweet potato fries are so good. I love the creamy insides from baking but then that crisp outer edge.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time30 minutes
Total Time45 minutes
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Keyword: baked sweet potato fries, baked sweet potato fries recipe
Servings: 3 servings
Calories: 278kcal
Author: Chloe Tuttle

Ingredients

  • 2 large or 4 small red sweet potatoes about 1 1/2 pounds
  • 2 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon coarse sea salt

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  • Wash and peel the sweet potatoes. Slice each sweet potato into large steak fries. Spread on a cookie sheet in a single layer, leaving a space between each fry. Toss with the oil. Sprinkle with salt.
  • Bake for 15 minutes. Remove from oven and turn each fry. Return to the oven and bake 15 more minutes or until the fries are tender and crisp. If you want the fries to be crispier, bake longer.
  • Serve hot. Oh, these are good!

Nutrition

Calories: 278kcal | Carbohydrates: 46g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 9g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 513mg | Potassium: 764mg | Fiber: 7g | Sugar: 9g | Vitamin A: 32175IU | Vitamin C: 5.4mg | Calcium: 68mg | Iron: 1.4mg

Heirloom Hayman sweet potatoes have a lighter colored skin and a pale green flesh.

Hayman Sweet potatoes are a special sweet potato that has a yellow flesh and is prized by Sweet potato afficanados for its delicate sweet taste. @bigmill.com | https://chloesblog.bigmill.com/hayman-sweet-potatoes

Hayman Sweet potatoes have a light yellow-green flesh

Chloe Tuttle Big Mill Bed and Breakfast near Greenville NC

If you want to branch out, here is a good Sweet Potato Fritters from Jenifer in New Zealand

Big Mill Bed & Breakfast, Williamston, NC 252-792-8787

 

 

Pickin’ Berries Down on the Farm

Growing up on the farm in North Carolina, we loved picking berries right off the bushes.

Award winning Blueberry Jam from Big Mill B&B

We picked blueberries that we called huckleberries or blackberries that we called briar-berries.

I only grew up in the summer – there are no fun stories about winter. My nephew Barney and I would get on our bicycles and go as far away as five miles, all on dirt roads. The only mishap would be a good case of red bugs (town folks called them chiggers) but they are miserable by either name. click to get Innkeeper Chloe Tuttle’s Southern Blueberry jam Recipe