Hodge Podge 2


No.. not Mod Podge… Hodge Podge..

What is Hodge Podge?  Other than a delicious well kept Maritime Secret handed down from generation to generation?

Hodge Podge is a mix of early summer garden pickings… Invented most likely by a Mother, who lived before the age of microwaves and freezer meals, needing something quick to make to feed her family after a long hot day in the garden weeding. DSC05115

 

I’m sure she gathered what she could in her apron on her way up to the house.. rolling it into the sink to wash after kicking her dirty shoes by the door. I can see her now.. washing the potatoes.. and her hands. Scrubbing the carrots with one hand as she reaches for her favorite stew pot with the other… interrupted only by tiny little hands that pull at her apron, looking for a carrot or bean to snack on while they wait for supper to finish. She would have snapped those carrots and beans with her hands throwing some in her pot.. and a few to the hungry little hands waiting.. in what would have looked like a beautiful magical dance around the kitchen in her big skirts, from the table to the sink and back again.DSC05128

It’s the kind of dish you can throw in the pot, and bring to a boil, meanwhile attending the bread dough left to rise in the oven…  It gives you just about enough time to sip on your iced coffee while the bread bakes and the veggies cook. 

Everyone around here seems to have a different recipe.. each one a family favorite handed down… most likely from an Acadian ancestor. By definition, Hodge Podge is of Old french, hochepot, for a kind of stew usually made with meat and vegetables.

For us in Nova Scotia.. it is the newest vegetables from the garden.. not something you can eat in the fall..  only for a very short time in the early summer.. when the farmers markets are starting to fill their shelves with the fresh harvest. It’s something our family waits all year for.. unless you’re our Cousin Cindy..DSC05140 who was the only one in the family smart enough to put some away in her freezer last year so she could tease us about how wonderful it was to be eating it in the middle of winter.

What’s in your Hodge Podge? Care to put it up against mine?

Shall we have a Hodge Podge Cook-Off?

(We did Once.. have a hodge-podge cook-off a few of us vendors from the Hantsport Pop-up Market, and a few from the town of Hantsport. The Winning Ribbon was hand-made by a local artisan.. and while it did not go to me.. it did go to a friend and cook of one of the best Hodge Podges I had ever tasted.. and no.. She did not share her secret with me… still won’t. That Meanie 🙂 )

My Recipe:

(Adapted from Annie Wilson’s Recipe)

1 cup carrots, cut in large bite size pieces

1 cup beans, cut

1 cup peas, cut

4-6 new potatoes, peelings left on and cut into quarters or half

2-4 garlic scapes

2 cups milk

1/4 cup butter

a bit of dulse

2 sprigs of fresh dillweed

1 stem of sage flowers

1 sprig of thyme

Place potatoes & carrots in a large pot. Cover with water & bring to a boil. Reduce heat, Simmer until almost soft (do not over cook).. your knife will poke through.. but give a little resistance… add beans, peas & garlic scapes.. simmer for 5 minutes. Drain pot, leaving 1/4 of the water in with veggies. Add butter letting it melt before adding milk. Add herbs & dulse. Bring to a boil.. do not stir often.. once & a while, yes.. but too much will mush up your veggies. Remove from heat and serve with fresh homemade bread or rolls

Everyone has their own recipe.. This one is mine.. It’s not a Hodge Podge unless you make it your very own.. some omit the herbs.. while others add a ham bone.. some like a lot of heavy cream.. others with more water than milk.. I have yet to taste two Hodge Podges the same.. even my own.

 
If you are looking for Hodge Podge Ingredients.. and don’t have your own garden to dig from.. visit your local Farmer’s Market.. It’s Hodge Podge Season!!

 

 

 


About Jen

The writer of this Blog is Jen.. Other Half of Ken, Second Son of Annie & Donnie. I like to jam and bake, and thought this might be the appropriate place to share my recipes.. Some are treasured family favorites, while others are "I wonder if this will taste good" recipes. If your interested in a bottle of homemade goodness and don't have time to make it yourself, please feel free to message me: Sunflowers@DakeyneFarm.com

2 thoughts on “Hodge Podge

  • Pat Sidney

    Thank you for the recipe!!! My Aunt Muriel used to make the most delicious Hodge Podge!!!!Hope I can get her recipe from her daughter, my cousin Nellie!!!!

    • Jen Post author

      You are very welcome!! I Would love to hear what she does different 🙂 No two Hodge Podges are ever the same!! 😀

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