The one time I attempted to grow Swiss Chard in Interior Alaska it grew like crazy and went to seed before I could manage to do anything with it. I tried sauteing it and I tried adding it to a salad and I have to say that I was never particularly impressed. This is an easy (yet impressive) way of adding leafy greens to your diet. It’s not a particularly healthy preparation, but boy is it delicious!
My garden is full of greens thanks to plentiful sunshine this spring. I’ve got arugula going to seed! Its a race to keep the flowers trimmed back for leaf production. This salad is a nice accompaniment to grilled meats- in this case its Sockeye Salmon from the Kenai River last summer. This recipe was found in the New Alaskan Cookbook and is a modified version of Jens Nannestad’s recipe for Salmon with Arugula salsa. It’s a light dinner for a hot summer evening.
When I was a child my family would make the annual Alaskan pilgrimage to a warmer climate for a few weeks. Our usual destination was Zihuatanejo, Mexico and while we were there we’d often take day trips to the little fishing village of Barra de Potosí. I’ve heard that the beautifully expansive beach of Playa Blanca is beginning to be developed now but back in the 90s there were only one or two little beach bars right on the water. After an arduous journey that involved a tightly packed Volkswagen bus and a bumpy ride in the back of a pickup truck, we’d arrive at the tranquil locale. We’d settle in at an enramada where each of us would claim a hammock and relax in the warm ocean breeze. Besides plenty of cervezas, Frescas and fresh coconut water we’d order their specialty Camarones al Mojo de Ajo. If you do it right the garlic in this recipe will take on a sweet toasted flavor and it’s fun to leave the shell on as you cook them so that you can suck the garlic sauce off of your fingers later.
A caribou shank isn’t the most profitable part of the animal for filleting meat as it dries quickly and is generally tough. Osso buco or “bone with a hole” is a great way to use the often tossed front shank. The best approach to cutting the shanks for Osso Buco is to slice the frozen shanks with a band saw- a common tool in the dog yard! If you lack high powered cutlery you could attempt this with a bone saw or simply go boneless (call it stew if you must) utilizing those tougher cuts of meat.
When I was little and my mom was harvesting rhubarb she’d cut off all of the leaves and I’d take them and use them as doll-sized umbrellas, or make a little house for mice or fairies using the wide leaves for the roof. My mom’s rhubarb patch is over twenty years old and produces both mammoth stalks and prodigious yield. We’d happily eat rhubarb multiple times a week as most of the time it was fed to us in cobbler or pie form. In fact now that I think about it, rhubarb is one of the first things I can remember being allowed to dice up myself.
Rhubarb is a prolific Alaskan garden plant that can be grown in most northern climates. It needs plenty of rain and temperatures that consistently fall below 40°F in the winter. My mom’s secret to an impressive patch is to bury a couple of large starfish or sunstars (hopefully that you found already dead) about a foot and a half under the dirt beside the plants. This will provide fertilization for years to come. To start your own patch you will need root divisions taken from the crown of somebody else’s plant. Put them in the ground in early spring just after the ground becomes dig-able again. Once you have planted your starts, patience will be the name of the game. Don’t pick it for at least the first year (but waiting two-three years is better)!
After waiting so long harvesting can be a rewarding experience. Pull your chosen stalk away from the others and using a sharp knife cut at the base of the stalk. The ones you harvest should be between twelve and eighteen inches long and about an inch in diameter. If your stalks are thin you may not have enough nutrients in the soil. There isn’t much difference in taste between a green stalks and a ruby ones, but most people prefer red stalks for the bright pink color they add to baked goods. Remember to only take a few stalks at a time from each plant so that it will continue to grow.
It is extremely important when harvesting to know that the leaves are poisonous and should never be consumed! Among other things the leaves contain oxalic acid which is a nephrotoxin which can cause vomiting, breathing trouble, kidney failure, or a coma. One source even says to flush the area with water if it comes in contact with bare skin (it’s a wonder I survived childhood at all)!
One of my current obsessions are fruit shrubs. I have been using these for making salad dressings (which are delicious and putting them into cocktails! You can even use them simply as drinking vinegar and make refreshing drinks by adding 2 parts shrub to about 8 parts sparkling water. My favorite flavor so far is rhubarb shrub, although they can be made with just about any fruit. I have found that there are two main ways to make rhubarb shrub: the fast way and the slow way.
We are both born and raised in Alaska, land of the midnight sun and fishing at 2am. We love to find new ways to use fresh ingredients or put a modern spin on an old Alaskan classic. We hope you will enjoy tasting Alaska.