Hawes Farms

So typically around this time of year, I’ll start to see pictures on Instagram of girls in sweaters posing with pumpkins in the pumpkin patches, or pictures of Starbucks coffee dates, or twinkle lights with blankets and Netflix. I envy those girls. For one thing, my phone camera sucks, for another I don’t feel all that photogenic and my boyfriend isn’t a photographer.

From our trip to Hawes Farms, I have nothing to show. Also, because I have a tendency to live in the moment and completely forget to take pictures, completely forget to post those pictures on social media and then I beat myself up later for it because I could have documented this year’s “fall shit” in a scrapbook when I’m married with kids.

Hawes Farms is a pumpkin patch. Or it just started out that way. It’s a pumpkin patch with a corn maze, a cow train, haunted corn mazes, food, concerts, etc. I’d never been there, I didn’t even know it existed.

Dustin’s mom bought passes for us to go and kept pushing them on us on the weekends.

So we went for the night time part.

I’m not one to complain, but this place was definitely only for kids. The cow train had oil barrels that you sit in and you get taken around the length of the farm, but they were small. There was zip lining that was maybe ten feet long and not very high off the ground. There were go carts that went in a very small circle.

Instead of picking pumpkins like I was expecting there was one pallet of pumpkins with a price tag next to them. The corn maze was fun, although we never actually got very far and we were spied on by a drone.

We sat down with drinks and garlic fries and people watched for awhile. We watched while a concert started up in the back. The woman who was serving made my crown and coke at a 90:10 ratio and I had to chug it before we went into the haunted corn mazes. So I was feeling pretty good. So was Dustin, who was four or five beers deep by then.

The haunted corn mazes turned out to be not very long and full of jump scares. It wasn’t very scary, instead we found entertainment in scaring the actors. Dustin 1 – Kristin 1.

Dustin scared a “Doctor” who was performing some sort of disembowelment surgery. He was following the last group of people and Dustin walked right up behind him and he jumped when he turned around but then immediately went right back into character.

The next haunt, I sneaked up on someone who was pacing in a small storage unit, and yelled “boo!” and made him jump. We made a game out of it and came out laughing.

The last thing, one of the most exciting ones – at first, was the zombie paintball. We were herded into a storage unit, explained what to do and the safety part of it, then herded out to a tractor hauling two trailers. The paintball guns were attached to the rails of the trailer and could only move on a pivot, the “zombies” were just people in padding that looked nothing like zombies whatsoever and the area was a junkyard full of crap. We only got fifty paint balls, and maybe I was just irritated by that point but the high school kids supervising the ride were annoying.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get to shoot the pumpkin cannon, pick a pumpkin or anything like that, because that was the morning part and I forgot to bring the tickets for it.

So Dustin and I left to meet our friends at the bar. Which we ended up leaving early, because Dustin had to work the next day and the Monster Truck show was letting out so there were tons of people flooding in.

The tickets, which were supposed to be season passes ended up only being good for one use, even though they cost $300+.

Gluten Free Blackberry Cobbler

When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. When life gives you blackberries, you make cobbler.

Ingredients:

Produce:

3 1/2 cups of wild Blackberries (washed)

Condiments:

2 tsp. Lemon Juice

Dairy:

1/2 cup Milk

3 tbsp. Unsalted Butter (softened)

Baking & Spices:

3/4 cup Sugar + 1/2 cup later

1/2 cup Brown Sugar

1 tbsp. Corn Starch

1 tsp. Cinnamon

1 tsp. Baking Powder

1/4 tsp. Salt

1 cup Gluten Free Flour (I use Pillsbury because it substitutes evenly)

1 tbsp. Vanilla

Water:

2/3 cups boiling

This recipe was originally from my boyfriend’s paternal grandmother, but I made some small tweaks when I did it on my own.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees, or you can use an air fryer (I did). Set a small sauce pan with 2/3 cups of water on the stove top to boil.

The recipe calls for a 9″ x 13″ dish, but I used two square 8″ dishes and doubled my recipe. Grease it with butter. Is there anything better than butter? – Julie Powell.

Yes, butter. Julia Child was a butter lover, so is Paula Deen, who was ever a lover of nonstick spray?

Mix your blackberries in a separate bowl with a little bit of the first half (3/4 cup) of sugar and lemon juice and let the sugar dissolve in the citrus acid of the lemon. Pour into dish(es).

In a mixer mix the rest of the first bit (3/4 cup) of sugar, butter, baking powder, salt and sifted GF flour. Slowly pour in milk and vanilla. Mix well; may be slightly lumpy.

Pour over blackberry mixture.

For the topping: mix together the second half of sugar (1/2 cup), brown sugar, corn starch and cinnamon. Pour the boiling water over the top.

Bake in the oven for forty-five minutes (gluten free cooks faster, so you’ll have to keep checking on it) or in an air fryer for thirty-eight. The top should be golden brown and bubbling.

Pair with ice cream, fresh cream or whipped cream.

Enjoy!

Ducklings, Jet Skis & Unemployment

Firstly, I’m surprised that I haven’t posted at all in July or August. I had no idea it had been that long. I guess its hard to notice things when you have your head down.

Here’s the second truth.

After my dog passed, it changed me. A big part of me died with him. I needed something to fill the void. My boyfriend would comfort me while I cried and mourned my loss. Even months afterward, I cried. I sobbed into pillows and cried in the face of my boyfriend’s dog, Freddy, terrorizing the poor boy with exclamations of “you’re the only dog I have left”.

Then, my boyfriend decided we needed ducks.

Actually, it was more complicated than that.

I saw a picture on Facebook of baby ducklings for sale, and I said they were cute and I wanted a duck someday.

A week or maybe two weeks later, he took me to a Tractor Supply store to see if they had any ducklings for sale, without telling me until we were almost there. They didn’t have any, and at the time we both decided it was a good idea not to get them, because we lived with his parents which I was sure, wouldn’t approve.

But then we went back after awhile and found that they did have ducklings. I looked at my boyfriend and he looked at me and said “do you want one?” I was excited but I still said we shouldn’t.

But we did.

We got two. One pure black one, one yellow one with a gray bill.

After several months, my little yellow one got kind of chunky so I named it “meatball”.

Around that same time, my boyfriend bought me a vintage sit-down Wave Runner jet ski, because we’d spent most of the summer out on the lake, testing out his 90’s Kawasaki stand-up, and our friend’s stand-up.

The first few times we went out, there were problems. Either it rained too much and the lake was full of debris, or the battery died, or the gas was low. Eventually, I got to ride and even stood up for a little while my first time. The only reassurance I had was that it wouldn’t hurt when you fell off.

Being unemployed, I’ve been depressed looking for another job. I tried to get a job in road construction with a friend of ours, but after some stories, I decided I’d rather not work there. Now I’m trying for a job at the distribution center with my boyfriend, making $18/hour, working 3 – 10 hour days a week with the option of overtime days. I have a few thousand saved up, but we are trying for twenty thousand by this time next year, so we can put a down payment on a house.

I haven’t done a whole lot of cooking lately. But can you blame me?

Quitting a toxic job

I’ve been meaning to write another post for three weeks now, but several events have transpired that left me tumbling down a steep hill, and progressed to what feels like falling into a dark ravine.

So I swear to Tell the Truth, the Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth So Help Me God.

I quit my job. I wanted to quit it as soon as I started it, actually. My first day wasn’t so bad, but I was being trained by my manager who was leaving to care for her new baby. The next day, I was “trained” by the main boss, who had as much experience with this particular kitchen and the way things were supposed to be done as I did. Then came the only coworker I had who put me on a three day training schedule. Shadow and Teach, Shadow and Help and then Do it Yourself, were my three days.

I didn’t have experience cooking for large groups of people in large quantities, especially sixty people who ate cottage cheese and tuna fish sandwiches every single day. It was like a mix of a high school cafeteria and a sit down restaurant. I would have to make large quantities of food, by myself, and serve the food in a restaurant like style – with tickets.

This particular coworker, when she was training me, was not nice. She decided she didn’t like me. She decided I was an idiot. She decided I was inferior, and would amount to nothing. She decided I was lazy. Those things she also told my new boss, whom had worked there before, with her.

My new boss was skeptical of me. She hadn’t been a manager before (I’m assuming) and had no idea how to do it. She didn’t train me. She didn’t offer solutions when I made mistakes. She didn’t buy the necessary ingredients for the menus. She didn’t print out the recipes we were supposed to follow, for me. When I had questions, I got looks. So I didn’t ask questions if I could avoid it. I didn’t ask for help either. I would rather fail and dig myself into a deeper hole than admit that I made mistakes to people who would judge them to the harshest degree.

In my first month, I burned soup on five different occasions. Each time, I beat myself down, knowing how it would turn out the next day when my coworker would ask with a smirk on her face.

I burned soup because I was cooking two entrees, a pot of soup, and two to three sides at the same time.

Five times, I wasn’t offered a solution, until a manager from a different department told me to stack soup pots with the boiling water underneath like a double boiler. After that, I never burned soup again.

The residents still complained. They complained that I made the Tilapia too spicy with too much Old Bay, they complained that my Beef and Potato Skillet tasted metallic because of the red wine it called for, they complained when there was too much seasoning or not enough, the meat was too tough, they complained about the noodles I was supposed to use, and the menus I didn’t make. Some, if not most of the comments were hurtful.

One woman in particular said she hated my style of cooking. During the waitressing part of my job for lunch, one woman discovered I was the dinner cook and glared at me and threatened to give me a lecture. A man almost completely refused to eat anything I made and instead took sandwiches when he could help it. A couple at one of the back tables, disliked my cooking so much that they made every little comment they could and sent the food back sometimes three times in a night. At one point the man came into the kitchen to look for me to curse at me for not making the bacon on his BLT crispy enough. Then, they both told several managers that I’d severed raw, uncooked food.

Testing my abilities, my boss gave me more and more complicated dishes. I started to settle into a routine.

Most things, like pastas and breaded chicken or fish, I couldn’t taste due to a gluten allergy, so I had the dishwashers or waiters taste the dishes. I explained this to my boss when she told me all of a sudden I needed a doctor’s note for my allergy.

I’d had to go to the walk-in clinic before for a physical and a Tuberculosis vaccine to get this job. I waited at the clinic for three and a half hours that time, I didn’t want to go back and waste a whole morning for them to confirm something I already knew in writing.

The next day I was presented with a write-up. The first one I’d ever gotten in my entire life. For burning soup and not tasting my food.

I’d done worse things at other jobs. I’d intentionally be rude to people who were rude to me in the drive-thru when I worked at a Taco Bell. I broke safety protocols working for the California Conservation Corps. as well as dress code violations. I watched people steal from Jcpenney’s, and just sighed and walked away because I knew the local police would do nothing and because of that my boss almost no longer cared. I did all these things and yet I never received a write-up, I never got so much as a talking to, because the good outweighed the bad.

At Taco Bell I was the most reliable employee they had, when someone called in, they called me and I’d drive twenty minutes for a bigger paycheck. I got moved into the head line cook position, since I hated working the customer service positions. One time I worked nine days in a row.

At the CCC, I started off not doing as well as I could have because I wasn’t used to manual labor, but I pushed, and I became a Sawyer.

At my restaurant job, I got moved from Hostess to Prep Cook, but I was moved back to Hostess due to an unforeseen issue, that had nothing to do with me.

At Jcpenney’s I was moved from Cashier to Pricing & Signing Captain to an Operations Supervisor.

I didn’t have a poor job performance, or so I thought. It was poorer owing to the fact that I would be put down from all directions, so it made trying seem pointless.

After I’d cried in the bathroom (and the walk-in), I decided I wanted to quit. At that time, I was still going to wait to have another job lined up.

Then later that night, at least six plates were sent back (unusually high amount), and one of my disapproving guests came in to curse at me for not making the bacon on his BLT crispy (as I’d mentioned before). Since I was already on the edge, I snapped and wrote my official two week notice on a pad of paper on the desk for my boss and my coworker to find the next day, while I’d be relaxing on my day off.

My last day was the seventeenth, and I lied about having a back-up plan, but I didn’t want more of their looks.

On a day when I had time I complained to HR about everything that bothered me.

The residents never being happy and telling the managers lies about “raw food”, my boss not training me, my boss not helping me fix problems, lack of recipes, lack of ingredients, lack of respect from my coworker, occasional lack of respect from my boss, scheduling me or not scheduling me without letting me know, complaining about taking time off when my dog died, ruthless comments from my coworker about my job performance, lack of respect from other managers, the write-up, how my boss LEFT the write-up at the front desk for the receptionist to see, etc.

When I was done, she nodded and waved all of my problems away with a “that’s just how it is” attitude. Then she told me in a threatening way, if I didn’t stay two weeks I wouldn’t get a good reference.

The job was hell at every turn, but I stayed two weeks, did my job and went home.

I didn’t say good-bye to my boss and my coworker said a lame and what seemed underlyingly sarcastic, “good luck”.

I left, officially and my boyfriend’s mom turned my work shirts into rags.

Losing my Best Friend

I had planned on making my next post about an amazing new wine I’d discovered, and I had planned on posting a few days ago but several events in my life prevented that from happening and I’m sorry to anyone who was expecting a new post sooner.

On June 13th, as I was finishing up my last bit of cleaning before leaving work for the night, my mom told me that my one-year-old puppy, Jax was sick.

She said that he was lethargic, he wouldn’t eat, he would barely move, and he was having bloody diarrhea. It was a few hours after the vet in the small town I grew up in closed, and there were no twenty-four hour vets around, so she had to wait until morning. In the meantime, she got him to drink water and eat a treat.

She told me he was having the same symptoms my old dog, Shasta did when she was a puppy, she passed of old age in September of 2017. My mom said that Shasta was foaming at the mouth too, but that was because she was poisoned, but Jax wasn’t.

He stayed outside all night and in the morning my mom took him to the vet as soon as they opened.

As soon as he looked Jax over, the Vet told her that his gums were ice cold, he was dehydrated and that he was already half-dead, but he took him in for twenty-four hour care.

I called the Vet to check in on him while I sat in my car, waiting to go to work. They told me he was still in the same condition.

My mom and my boyfriend tried to assure me that he would be okay, that it had happened to Shasta and she was in worse shape, that it could be fixed.

The whole day at work I was a sobbing mess. I don’t know how I managed to piece together a meal.

At 2:00 pm, when I took my lunch break, I called again for an update, and I was told he was doing better, his dehydration was under control but there was still blood in his stool so he wasn’t out of the woods yet, but if he made it through this, he’d be around for a long time.

Mom called again just before closing and left a message, and they didn’t get back to her until the next day.

The whole time I prayed for him to get better and I kept thinking about seeing him for the first time.

We got him on June 2, 2018. He was born April 10, 2018. I remember stopping by my mom’s friends house to find all of them sitting and talking on the patio, and my mom cradling a little black lab.

He was a mix of a Black Lab and an Australian Shepherd, we later found out, and when he got older, it was obvious. He had the body and coloring of a Black Lab and the shortness of an Australian Shepherd.

After two days of having him, I taught him how to sit. A couple more and he could lay down, and after a few weeks he knew how to jump up and fetch. It took a month for us to potty train him.

He imprinted on me because I was around a lot more because I only had a part time job. He was originally my mom’s dog, but he became mine.

My boyfriend and I lived two and a half hours away from each other, which meant I would stay with him for a few days at a time and it was hard leaving Jax for that long.

It was much worse when I moved out. I would visit as often as I could and every time he wouldn’t stop jumping up and down and wagging his whole body when he saw me.

I wanted to skip work so I could go and see him, but the Vet said that it wouldn’t be a good idea for me to get him excited and then leave.

I thought he would be okay, because that’s what everybody kept telling me. I was going to go up on Tuesday and see him.

On Saturday, June 15th, around 7:15 pm, he fell asleep and the technicians couldn’t wake him up.

As soon as I got out of the shower at 7:30, I had a missed call from my mom and a text that said “he didn’t make it”.

The shock didn’t last very long, soon I was sobbing into the pillows on our bed. I texted my boyfriend and begged him to get off work early because I couldn’t handle being in the bedroom alone.

I couldn’t believe it. I still don’t want to. Deep down I still think it was all a mistake and he will be awake and ready for me to take him home, but I know its not true.

I couldn’t stay at work on Sunday because I was a mess and I couldn’t even try to cook, today I called in because I didn’t want to try.

I feel like I lost a child, and a best friend.

Tomorrow, my boyfriend and I will drive up to the vet and pick him up, and bury him in my mom’s backyard under the lilac bushes he used to chew on.

Rest in peace my sweet baby boy, I’ll love you until the day I die. I hope you can play fetch in heaven. I’ll miss you so much, Jax.