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Bridging the Seasons


As someone that enjoys every aspect of food, I read a lot of blogs on the subject. There are gardening blogs that help me determine what I want to grow and the best way to do so. There are photography blogs that focus on the beauty of foods, raw, prepared and in states in between. And of course, there are cooking and recipe blogs that share the process of preparing amazing meals, sweet baked goods and every type of delicious delicacies.

However, when the first of September rolls around, I am always disgusted with a large percentage of my chosen form of entertainment, knowledge and enlightenment. The dawn of the ninth month seems to be the official kick-off for all things autumn in the blogging world. It is all pumpkin and apple all the time, and I am never ready for these signs of winter. I want to hold on to summer as long as possible. Embrace it. Savor it. Memorize it to carry me through the bone-chilling cold days of snow that I know will inevitably come.

I won’t willfully ignore the fact that many of our gardens are only just now producing hearty tomatoes, peppers, and zucchini. Fall does not officially begin until September 22, and the carefully cultivated vegetables don’t just die because the calendar changed a page. There will be plenty of time for apples and pumpkins.

Because I spent Sunday tromping around in a cool, drizzly (turning to pouring every time I ventured outside) rain, and this morning was overcast, windy and very fall-like, I will give in a little to heartier comfort foods. They still must pull from the produce that is rolling in from the garden, though. The last of this season’s sweet corn is harvested and it deserves to be celebrated. Peppers are at their peak, and if you are lucky enough to have the rich flavors of a poblano, why wouldn’t you use it? Make a Poblano and Corn Crab Chowder, bake a pan of corn muffins, and slice a plate of just-picked tomatoes and herbs on the side. Serve a meal that bridges between the dwindling days of summer and the coming days of fall.


Poblano and Corn Crab Chowder

Adapted from Cooking Light

1 medium poblano chile
1 tablespoon butter
1 cup onion, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon chipotle chile powder
2 cups fresh sweet corn, cut from the cob
1 cup half and half, divided
1/2 pound small red potatoes, diced
2 cups water
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup whole milk
1 pound lump crab meat

Preheat broiler. Place pepper on a foil-lined baking sheet to roast. Broil 8 minutes on each side, or until blackened. Immediately, place pepper in a zip-top bag and seal. Let stand 10 minutes. Peel and chop the pepper.

Melt the butter in a large Dutch oven or soup pot. Add onion and next 3 ingredients. SautÈ until the onion is tender, stirring occasionally. Add corn, stir to combine, and cook briefly…still maintaining the crispness of the corn. Remove 1/4 cup of the corn mixture and combine with 1/4 cup half-and-half in a blender; process until smooth. Add potato to soup pot and sautÈ briefly. Stir in the water and bring to a boil. Cook until the potato is tender.

Combine the remaining 1/4 cup half and half and flour in a small bowl, stirring until smooth. Add flour mixture to soup pot. Cook 1 minute, stirring constantly. Return corn puree to the pan. Stir in the roasted poblano, milk, and crab; bring to a simmer. Cook until heated through, stirring frequently. Serves 4.


Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.

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Saint Ur-WHO?

This weekend, many South Dakotans will honor a very special holy man. But his fame is limited — you won’t find him in Butler’s Lives of the Saints or any other hagiography, and the Vatican doesn’t claim him. His accomplishments are limited to ridding one little European country of an animal plague. Of course we’re referring to St. Urho of Finland.

Urho’s a manufactured saint — Minnesota Finns dreamt him up in the 1950s to show up the Irish and their Saint Patrick. Their legend states that St. Urho was a hardy fellow, a voracious eater of kalla mojakka (fish head soup) and sour buttermilk. When Finland’s grape crop was threatened by grasshoppers, Urho saved the day. He banished the pests with a simple chant,”Hein‰sirkka, hein‰sirkka, mene t‰‰lt‰ hiiteen.” (Non-Finnish readers, that’s”Grasshopper, grasshopper, go to hell.”) The insects obeyed, the grapes were saved, and wine flowed for everyone.

Phony or not, Finnish Americans embraced the saint. Now St. Urho’s Day celebrations occur all over the country each March 16, incorporating fun, Finnish foods, and St. Urho’s official colors, Nile green and royal purple.

If you would like to participate in St. Urho’s Day festivities here in South Dakota, you’ve got two options this Saturday. Lake Norden will hold their annual parade at 11 am on Main Avenue. It’s followed by a potluck and a special program at the Community Center. Frederick, South Dakota also observes St. Urho’s Day with Finnish foods like mojakka (beef soup), lihapiirakat (meat pies) and Finn bread. There’ll also be a wine tasting exchange, where participants of drinking age bring a favorite bottle of wine for others to sample. Join in the fun at Frederick’s Community Center from 6-8 pm.


Mojakka: A Finnish Favorite

This recipe comes to us via Heidi Marttila-Losure, a Frederick native and the editor and project administrator of Dakotafire Media, a journalism project that focuses on the rural issues facing the James River watershed area of North and South Dakota. Marttilla-Losure told us the secret of making mojakka: “Do not use flour when you brown the meat. Just brown it in butter. If you use flour, you might make a fine soup, but it won’t be mojakka. The clear broth and the rutabaga are its key characteristics.”

1 1/2 to 2 pounds beef stew meat
2 tablespoons butter
6 cups water, broth or a combination
1 medium onion, chopped
2 teaspoons whole allspice
6 medium potatoes, peeled and chopped
2 carrots, peeled and thinly sliced
1 large rutabaga, peeled and chopped
1 teaspoon salt

Brown meat in butter. Place meat in stock pot with water, onion and allspice. Bring to a simmer. Stir in the potatoes, carrots, rutabaga and salt. Replace lid and simmer on medium-low until vegetables are tender, about 30 minutes.

Some variations on this recipe include adding garlic, bay leaves or celery.

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Potato Soup for the Soul


Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the January/February 2010 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.

Soup suppers are popular fundraisers for churches and other organizations in South Dakota. A bowl of hot soup on a cold day warms body and soul. But it’s not just the food that attracts people; the aura of fellowship and community also beckons.

Such events are often called soup kitchens in southeast South Dakota. One of the oldest is held every fall at St. Agnes of Sigel, a small Catholic parish of 40 families near Utica. The tradition started as a chicken dinner in the 1950s before the parish hall even had plumbing.”Water was hauled to the back door by a water truck,” said longtime member Catharine Hunhoff.”When we needed hot water we had to heat it.”

The chicken dinner, called a bazaar, took considerable preparation.”Everybody brought six or seven fried chickens, potatoes, pies and salads,” she said. Besides sharing a fried chicken dinner and real mashed potatoes, parishioners and guests played bingo and other games and shopped at tables of homemade baked goods and fancy work.”We made some money back then, but it was done more as a social event,” Hunhoff said. Gradually, interest died out and in 1984 the chicken dinner became a soup kitchen.

The members of Sigel’s Altar Society organize the fall soup event, but everyone in the parish works together to make it a success.”The men help just as much as the women,” said Hunhoff. Even the children help by cleaning tables, running errands and operating a cake walk.

The menu includes potato, chicken noodle and chili soups, taverns, hot dogs, chili dogs, homemade pies and desserts. A system has developed through the years. Parishioners meet at dawn at the parish hall to brown hamburger and peel potatoes. Thirteen Altar Society members bring a gallon of chicken broth and the deboned meat from two chickens for the chicken noodle soup. The remaining Society members make a monetary donation for the chili supplies. One Society lady grinds the carrots and celery for the chicken and potato soup. Hunhoff chops the onions — several bags of them.”Some people don’t like the job, but it doesn’t bother me.”

The recipes for the soup supper, many contributed by older church members, are kept in a special recipe box in the parish hall.”They may have been revised some over the years,” said Hunhoff.”Especially the chili and taverns since everybody has a different idea of what tastes better.”

As many as 300 people attend.”People like to come and visit, said Hunhoff.”They see people they don’t get to see often.” Charlie Wagner attends every year even though he moved to Yankton in 1974.”I go to see old neighbors,” he said.”I always find it warm and welcoming.”


Sigel Potato Soup

Recipe by Mary Ann Kathol

8 cups diced potatoes
4 cups water
1/2 cup chopped onion
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup diced carrots
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
2 teaspoons chicken stock base
3 cups milk
2 cups thickening agent (recipe to follow)
1/2 cup butter or margarine

Cook potatoes, onion, celery, carrots, pepper and chicken stock base in water until vegetables are tender. Mash to desired consistency. Add milk and blend well. Then stir in thickening agent and butter or margarine. Continue to stir over low heat until thickened.

Thickening Agent:

4 cups powdered milk
1 cup flour
1 stick softened butter or margarine

Blend well with whisk. Extra thickening agent can be frozen for later use.


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Smells Like Feet But Good to Eat

Today, I am thinking about feet. Summer brings sandal season, and let’s face it, most of our feet have been neglected all winter. They. Are. Gross. We need a collective pedicure. (And guys, I am talking to you, too.) You don’t have to get all frou-frou with polish, but a good scrubbing with a pumice stone and trimming the nails is never a bad thing. Truly. Feet aren’t pretty, but they do carry us around and deserve a little respect. It doesn’t matter if you frugally tend to your tootsies at home or splurge on a professional salon service. Give everyone around you a break and offer your feet some love. Don’t air your dirty toes to the world. Don’t make the world smell like feet.

“Smells like feet.” That is what someone told me this spring when I made Curried Chicken and Rice Soup. They walked into my kitchen, sniffed the air, asked me if I was cooking, and then proclaimed that it smelled like feet. Ouch.

I don’t believe my pot of soup smelled like feet, but I guess everyone doesn’t hotfoot it for curry. This mix of savory and sweet spices pairs so well with chicken and rice, but it can be an acquired taste/flavor/smell/aroma. The amount of heat varies depending on the type of curry powder you use…start small, if you aren’t accustomed to it. A little dill and lemon brighten this soup (like a pedicure will for your tired feet), and I think it is warming and delicious. If you have to make the world smell like feet, Curried Chicken and Rice Soup is the way to do it.


Curried Chicken and Rice Soup

Adapted from Food Network Magazine

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breast
2 medium carrots, sliced diagonally
1 bay leaf
Kosher salt
6 cups chicken stock
2 tablespoons butter
1 large onion, thinly sliced
1 teaspoon sugar
1 1/2 tablespoons Madras curry powder
3/4 cup jasmine rice
3 tablespoons chopped fresh dill
1 lemon, cut into wedges

Combine chicken, carrots, bay leaf and a pinch of salt in a medium saucepan or stock pot. Add 3 cups chicken stock and bring to a boil. Immediately reduce heat to a simmer, cover and cook until the chicken is just firm, about 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, heat the butter in another saucepan. Add the onion, sugar and 1 teaspoon salt. Cook until the onion is soft, about 5 minutes. Add the curry powder and cook for 1 minute. Add the rice and the remaining 3 cups of stock. Increase heat, cover and simmer until the rice is tender, about 15 minutes.

Remove the chicken from its broth and shred the meat into pieces. Return the shredded chicken to the same broth. Using an immersion blender, puree a portion of the rice mixture. This will slightly thicken the soup. Combine with the shredded chicken and broth; bring to a simmer. Toss in the chopped dill and serve soup with lemon wedges to squeeze into bowls. Serves 4.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and two dogs reside near Colome.

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Soup For The Soul

As I sit to type this, the sun is streaming in the window near my desk and nearly blinding me. My computer tells me it is 52 degrees outside, and my puppies are charging out of the house and rolling in grass that is still green. It feels like spring. However, the calendar says it is February. Here in South Dakota, there is supposed to be more snow than just the little bit remaining in the shaded and sheltered spot on the north side of my house. It is supposed to be cold. I am supposed to want comfort foods.

I am going to let the calendar win. I am going to make soup. Thick. Hearty. Warm-your-bones soup. And then, I might go sit on the patio in the sun and eat it.


Vegetable, Lentil, and Barley Soup
adapted from Cooking Light


2 teaspoons olive oil
1 cup chopped onion
4 cups chicken stock
1 cup water
1 bottle beer (I used Amber Ale)
1 cup chopped carrot
1 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped parsnip
1/4 cup chopped parsley
4-6 sprigs thyme, tied into a bundle
1/2 cup uncooked pearl barley
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 bay leaves
3/4 cup dried lentils
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

Heat oil in a large, heavy pot. Add onion to the pan and sautÈ until golden. Add broth, water, and beer; bring to a boil. Add chopped carrot, celery, parsnip, parsley, thyme bundle, pearl barley, black pepper, and bay leaves. Return to a boil. Cover, reduce heat, and simmer for 15 minutes. Stir in lentils; cover and cook 30 minutes more. Discard bay leaves and remains of thyme bundle. With an immersion blender, puree about half of the soup. (Alternatively, remove about 2 cups of soup from pot and process in blender until smooth. Return to the pot with remaining soup.) Season with salt and additional pepper, to taste. Return to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer about 10 additional minutes until thoroughly heated, stirring occasionally. Serves 4-6.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and two dogs reside near Colome.

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Improving with Age

Hill City’s heralded winemakers trace their heritage to 19th Century Mobridge

Prairie Berry Winery relocated from Mobridge to Hill City in 2004. Larger tanks let Sandi Vojta experiment with wines and begin the fusion label, which blends two fermentations into another style of wine.

Sandi Vojta became a fifth-generation winemaker at the age of four when she experimented with yeast and fermentation. Her dad would take her out to pick chokecherries for wine, tying a piece of twine with a pail attached around her waist so she could pick berries with both hands.”But my favorite part was, and still is, getting the fermentations started; getting the first smell of the fruit’s potential.”

“It has been a way of life. It’s just who I am,” she says. Neither she nor her father has copied a recipe for the family wines.”Instead, we used a taste of the wine that he grew up with. When he made his wine he was trying to replicate that taste, so that is what I tried to do with my wine,” she says.

The winery won a double gold medal at the 2011 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition for its Brianna wine in the white hybrid category. The Brianna grapes are grown at Lewis and Clark Vineyard in Yankton. Their wines have been winning awards at prestigious wine shows for years.”It’s awesome because people are paying attention to the state of South Dakota, and it’s great for our entire state’s wine industry,” Sandi says.

Prairie Berry currently makes about 30 varieties of wine — including the popular, funky Red Ass Rhubarb. The Hill City winemakers are branching out into new tastes, including a fermentation made from West River prickly pear to be released this fall. Vojta has a flavor vision of what she wants to accomplish with each new wine.”Sometimes I feel like I nail it the first time around. For others, I feel like I’m just getting closer to the vision with each release. I’m always trying to make things better. I’m never content.”


Perfect Pairings

Sandi Vojta’s parents taught her how to make wine and how to cook.”We grew up eating a lot of chili, and mom often followed it with steamed apple dumplings,” she says. This dumpling recipe is her mom’s, and the chili is”pretty close to what she used to make.” Vojta chose these recipes as perfect pairings for her Buffaloberry Fusion, Gold Digger and Crab Apple wines.

White Bean Chili

Pair Vojta’s chili with Prairie Berry’s Buffaloberry Fusion wine.

Serves 2 – 4
Paired with Prairie Berry’s Buffaloberry Fusion wine

1/4 yellow onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
1 1/2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 cup no-salt added crushed tomatoes (not drained)
4 tablespoons canned chopped green salsa
1 cup water
1 cup canned Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed
Juice from 1/2 lime

SautÈ onion, garlic, Italian seasoning, and cumin in oil over medium heat for 3 minutes. Add tomatoes, green salsa, water and beans, and bring to boil. (If desired, add 2 ounces cooked ground turkey or diced chicken breast.) Simmer 10 minutes, and serve with lime juice on top.

Steamed Apple Dumpling

Try Prairie Berry’s Gold Digger or Crab Apple wine with these apple dumplings.

Serves 6 – 8
Paired with Prairie Berry’s Gold Digger or Crab Apple wine

2 cups flour
3/4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 tablespoon sugar
2 tablespoons vegetable shortening
3/4 cup milk
1 quart boiling sweetened apple sauce

Bring the applesauce to a boil in a non-stick Dutch oven. Sift together the dry ingredients, rub in the shortening with fingertips keeping the mixture coarse. Moisten with the milk, mix, turn onto a floured board and pat to one-half inch thickness. Shape with a biscuit cutter and place in the boiling apple sauce.

Cover tightly and boil 20 minutes. Additional sugar and cinnamon may be added to the boiling applesauce if desired.

EDITOR’S NOTE — This story is revised from the May/June 2011 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order this back issue or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.

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A Roots Soup

The Schumacher family (from left — Signe, Evie and J.P.) enjoy a summer tradition of making a batch of borscht soup.

This story is about the adhesive qualities of a beet soup called borscht. The soup won’t hold plastics or wood together, but it has amazing bonding qualities for people.

Borscht came to South Dakota in the 1880s when Germans-from-Russia emigrated to escape religious and political persecution. Among them were the Wenzels, Lapkas and Schumachers.

The immigrants and their offspring became immersed in South Dakota culture, but they didn’t forget their roots or soups. Walter and Vivian Wenzel were second-generation South Dakotans who farmed and also operated a movie theater and bowling alley in Eureka.”Everybody around Eureka had their favorite recipe for borscht and mother made it at home when I was growing up,” says the Wenzels’ daughter, Marilyn Nef, who lives in Milbank.

Marilyn left Eureka for college in Brookings in the early 1960s and remembers feeling surprised when her parents then decided to expand their movie theater with a restaurant named — of all things — The Borscht Kettle.

“Mother had been a stay-at-home mom who gardened and was a housewife,” Marilyn recalls.”She also helped at the theater, selling tickets and the like. But after I went to college she went down and learned from scratch how to run a restaurant and order supplies and do all the things you have to do to be successful. I was really proud of her.”

Naturally, the beet soup became a staple at The Borscht Kettle, along with other German specialties such as strudels, barushka, knoepfla and cheese buttons (aka kase knoepfla).”It was really a normal Midwestern cafe,” she says.”It was a short order place with hamburgers, eggs and pancakes along with some of mom’s German recipes.”

The Wenzels ran the place until the mid 1990s. Today, it’s operated as the Lyric Lanes and Restaurant by Vicki Lapka, the great-granddaughter of German-Russian immigrants. She occasionally serves borscht and regularly features other ethnic dishes — including strudels and dumplings for Tuesday lunches and either strudels or cheese buttons on Saturday nights.

Some of the immigrants’ descendants still farm or run businesses in McPherson County. Many more have left the rural countryside, but hold tight to their forebears’ foods. Luther Schumacher grew up on the family farm between Leola and Eureka, and then went into education. He retired as a school principal in Aberdeen.”Borscht was a staple of summer because we always had fresh beets,” he says.”We picked the best leaves with the brightest colors. Talk about healthy food, that was it.” He makes borscht every summer, and is showing his daughters how to cook it and other German foods.

Luther’s sister, Nina Kunz, also continues the borscht tradition.”It is a summertime soup because you use fresh vegetables from the garden,” she says.”You can use canned beets and whatever, but when it comes out of the garden it has a taste that can’t come from the can. The fresh dill and the beets especially must come right from the garden. The beets give you that beautiful ruby red color. It’s a beautiful soup.”

She and her husband, Kenny, live on the original Schumacher farm.”One of the greatest things about living here is knowing as I walk around the yard that my great-grandpa and grandma walked here and my uncle and my aunt walked here, and now our two sons are here, and their sons are the sixth generation.”

The Kunzes’ daughter visited from Fargo last summer. Before leaving North Dakota, she made a request to her mom.”Would you have some borscht soup ready when I get home?”

Nina knows variations of borscht.”There’s a green borscht, a chicken stock soup that you add a lot of the new growth dill, fresh carrots and fresh garden onions and then the beet leaves. You make it early in the season when the leaves are tender and add some garden potatoes and a little bit of rice.”

“The more we get settled in Sioux Falls, the more we want to hold onto our family food traditions. I grew up on lefse and krumkake but borscht is important to the German family that I married into.”

Kenny and Nina operate a bed & breakfast called the Northern Kross Lodge on their farm. The lodge is a renovated Congregational church building from nearby Greenway. Hunters and other guests are thrilled when Nina serves German recipes like sweet & sour cabbage (seezkraut) with pork sausage from Kauk’s Meat Market in Eureka and kuchen for dessert.

Luther and Nina’s nephew, J.P. Schumacher, moved to Sioux Falls, where he met Signe Hanson, a blonde with Scandinavian roots and no knowledge of German beet soup.

“Once, when I was dating J.P.,” Signe says,”I looked in his refrigerator and all I saw was beer, pickles and a quart of something that was blood-red.” His grandmother had given him a jar of borscht.

The blood-like jar didn’t scare Signe away. After they were wed, she wanted to learn to make some of the traditional recipes J.P. grew up eating. He insisted that borscht be included on the list. So, on a weekend visit back to McPherson County, J.P.’s step-mother Cindy taught Signe to make the summer soup.

The reddish color comes from beets, which also give the soup a tart summer sweetness and freshness. She found that she could get beef bones from Western Locker in Sioux Falls.”Supermarkets have soup bones, but there’s not as much good, tender meat on theirs.”

She says part of the tradition and taste is to grow as much of the vegetables as possible in your own garden.”We usually make a batch every summer and we’ll freeze three or four quarts, and come January we wonder why we didn’t make another batch.”

Their daughter, Evie, started eating borscht at the age of one.”We have pictures of her first spoonful,” Signe says.”She loved it, maybe because of the color. She ate it by the fistfuls.” When Evie turned four, she told her mother that she wanted to watch the soup-making so she could learn to do it herself.

“J.P. and I are not connected to the farm on a daily basis,” Signe says.”It’s not our lifestyle. But we want to carry on some of our family traditions for Evie. The more we get settled in Sioux Falls, the more we want to hold onto our family food traditions. I grew up on lefse and krumkake but borscht is important to the German family that I married into.”

Signe happily shares the old recipe. Awhile back, she met Kristin Tanner at the Living Word Free Lutheran Church. The two young wives became friends while serving in the same ministries, and they also discovered that both of their families shared roots in Eureka. In fact, Kristin’s mother is Marilyn Wenzel Nef, the daughter of the Eureka couple who founded The Borscht Kettle.

“Kristin had never made it,” Signe says,”so I shared some of our borscht with her family.” Kristin now makes it herself, using her grandmother’s recipe.

And that’s how borscht holds people together.


Schumacher Family’s Borscht Soup

Signe Schumacher grew up on lefse and krumkake, but keeps the borscht tradition going for the German family she married into.

Fill stock pot or soup kettle with water, about half-way.

Add:
Beef soup bones
3 bay leaves
2 celery stalks (with leaves)
1 whole onion (unpeeled)
2 large dill heads (about palm size)
12 peppercorns, whole

Simmer for two hours. Strain broth into fine strainer, removing beef to a clean bowl. Discard bay leaves, celery stalks, onion, dill and peppercorns. Pick edible beef chunks off bone.

Return broth to pot and add:
Beef chunks
1 can diced tomatoes
2 cans tomato soup, undiluted
2-3 medium beets, peeled and diced (save beet leaves)
3 medium potatoes, peeled and diced
2 carrots, diced
About 1 cup chopped cabbage
Handful of white rice

Simmer for about an hour, then add:
Handful of corn
Handful of peas
2 handfuls of green beans, bite sized
7-8 beet leaves, deveined & chopped

Heat for 5-10 minutes. Eat immediately or may be frozen. May also immediately transfer to quart jars, wiping the rim clean. Lids will seal themselves with their heat. Can be stored in refrigerator for a couple of weeks.

Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the May/June 2011 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order this back issue or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.