Tag Archives: Pigeon Pea

Website Back Up and Other Stuff!

Hello!! We sorted out the casamascia.com website and it is back on-line. Having said all of that, we had a good think about the website (whilst it was lost in the ethers of Internet space) and admitted that it is a real pain to manipulate. I think that superficially, the site is okay. However, I haven’t been updating or adding anything new because the logistics behind the site are unwieldy and painstakingly tedious. It isn’t so straight-forward and it takes about thirty pages (clicks) to change one single thing on the site. Our Internet is slow so about thirty clicks between page changes takes about 2 to 3 hours. We have decided to change-over (it will take some time) to a simpler website; Gnome has embarked upon learning web-design (in amongst his already busy schedule of mowing, planting, doctoring and general gnoming). We think that if we have a simpler website, we will take more opportunity to expand and spend more time on it.

Anyway, onto other things since I have not written for a while. What have we been eating lately? The geese have started laying and we have been eating goose eggs!! We have got so used to the size (they about the size of three chicken eggs) that we think that they are normal sized. We feel blessed that we can indulge in a luxury that simply cannot be bought: fresh goose eggs with lovely yellow, runny yolks cooked in our home-pressed vegetable oils.

Goosie Eggs!

Look at that lovely yolk:

Fried Goose Eggs.

What else? February and March is pigeon pea time again. We have been collecting them green, shelling them together in a romantic Munchkin-Gnome sort of way and cooking them in stews. When they are green, the peas just need to be boiled for about 5 to 8 minutes and they are ready to eat. They retain the green colour with cooking so make a great pea substitute.

Pigeon pea (Cajanus cajun) is also known as Ganga Bean in Belize. It is a long forgotten plant and many older people remember picking the pods as young children for their mothers to cook. I don’t see much of it in Belize but it is a high protein bean that is very nutritious. It is a good animal forage food for fowl, cattle and horses. They grow easily from seed, require no maintenance and are very productive. I definitely recommend this crop for anyone who wants to grow their own food.

Pigeon Pea Pods.

Pigeon Peas:

Pigeon Peas.

We have been eating a fair bit of this too:

Pigeon Pea Meal.

Oh yum!! These are all the reasons for growing your own food!!

Wait, there is more…

We have Gnome-made sorrel (roselle) wine. Check out the colour. With all this food and drink, we don’t want to leave the farm:

Sorrel Wine.

Okay that is it for now. I am off to search for goosie eggs for lunch…

No Such Thing As Easy…

Together.PointingIt has been soooo hot and dry lately…as they say here in Belize, “The heat punish me.”  The other morning, Gnome left the house and said that he was going to mow around the farm.  He was gone for a fair bit and I didn’t hear the motor starting so I went to look for him.  Well, he certainly wasn’t mowing because the cat had nicely settled down for the day!

Cat On Mower.
Cat On Mower.

I did finally find him with the fruit picker getting some sapodillas down.  It was only 8am and we were both sweating profusely.  I looked at him all hot and bothered and I said,

Poor Gnome!
Poor Gnome!

“Let’s do something easier today!”

And so we picked a basket of pigeon pea together and podded them.  We thought it would be easier!!

Pigeon Pea.
Pigeon Pea.

Podding this  amount took two hours!!  Pea Sheller Jr (handmade in the USA) doesn’t work…we tried!  We have to do it by hand:

Podded Pigeon Pea.
Podded Pigeon Pea.

Each pea you see represents one drop of sweat!!  This one is definitely not for sale.  It beats mowing in the dry season but not by far!!

Adventures with Pigeon Pea.

Munchkin.Another.LookWe have been growing Pigeon Pea (Cajanus cajan) for many years and alas, I have to admit that I have neglected the wonders of this food plant.  We haven’t actually been actively growing it; in fact, it started off as a single seed which we planted on the farm and now due to voluntary seeding, we have about 20 plants which are happily producing a bountiful crop.

In the past, I have harvested the pods in the fully dried form and cooked it as a lentil substitute.  It has a good, nutty taste but in its raw form, it is extremely hard in consistency so in order to cook it, it takes about 3 hours.  The slow cooking time of this legume has been holding me back from experimenting with it.

Dried Pods of Pigeon Pea.
Dried Pods of Pigeon Pea.

This year, I have decided to be a bit more flexible with it and I am trying to find other ways of eating it.  The pods can be picked at a green (almost yellow in colour) stage and cooked like peas.  I actually achieved a good result with the peas cooked in rice and bacon.

At its greenest stage, when seeds have not formed, apparently the whole pod can be eaten.  The green pods took ages (well, half an hour) to cook to tenderness.  They were actually a let down and tasted over-cooked and sucked of all vitality.

Green Pigeon Pea.
Green Pigeon Pea.

Anyway, the next experiment will be to sprout the dried seeds to see if this will reduce the cooking time.  I will keep you posted with my adventures with pigeon pea!

Busy Day.

Munchkin.ShoutingWe have had a very busy and productive day on the farm.  I have started to pick pigeon pea (Cajanus cajun) which is an edible legume…

Pigeon Pea Plant with Green Pods.
Pigeon Pea Plant with Green Pods.

I harvested the brown pods as you can see:

Pigeon Pea in Pods.
Pigeon Pea in Pods.

This is the time of the year to pick this bean and if I keep up with the harvesting, the plant usually flowers two or three times making it a very prolific producer.  Once we have gathered all the brown pods over a succession of weeks, we shell them all at the same time with a gnome-mechanised contraption.  The pigeon pea tastes similar to lentils with more of a bite.  Watch out for some recipes later on!!

Gnome.SmilingGnome has been working hard.  He is not in a very talkative mood  right now so I will tell you what he has been up to today:

He has been cleaning the coconut plantation:

Coconut Plantation Mowed.
Coconut Plantation Mowed.

He has been grating coconuts:

Grating Coconut.
Grating Coconut.

Gnome attaches a grater onto the end of a hand drill.  We use the coconut in cooking and the animals like it too.

He has also been busy making a batch of soap today and right now, as I am writing, he is cutting the soap.  No pictures yet…maybe later!!