Colleen Worlton chops ingredients for her mustard pickles
Colleen Worlton chops ingredients for her mustard pickles

Cooks 2022 | Cooks at Home

Not Cookie Cutter

Intuit leader Colleen Worlton relishes her work with Girl Scouts.

written by Barbara Twitchell
photos by Donna Victor

If they gave merit badges for being better late than never, Colleen Worlton certainly would have earned one. Worlton has served on the board of the Girl Scouts of Sierra Nevada for seven years, for the past three as its chair. Yet, interestingly, she has never been a Girl Scout, or a troop leader, or even mom to a Girl Scout.

The native Nevadan grew up in the rural outskirts of Yerington, in what she terms โ€œrather humble circumstances.โ€ As a child, she recalls, she loved those Girl Scout uniforms and wished she could join a troop. Unfortunately, the practical obstacles of transportation and finances made that dream unfeasible. Sheโ€™s making up for it now, she says, and loving every minute of it.

โ€œI tell people, โ€˜I got here as soon as I could,โ€™โ€ Worlton says, laughing.

Worlton began her association with the Girl Scouts through her employer. For the last 27 years, sheโ€™s worked for global technology firm Intuit (today as customer success and Reno site leader). The companyโ€™s longtime support of the Girl Scouts organization provided an opportunity for one of its employees to sit on the GSSN board. When asked to fill the board opening, Worlton gladly accepted.

โ€œItโ€™s been a great adventure,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s a unique time for women and girls right now. Things are good, but thereโ€™re still so many miles to go.โ€

Of special interest to Worlton is the work GSSN is doing to promote STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) for the girls. Worltonโ€™s work at Intuit affords her a plethora of professional connections in the technology area, and the ability to bring in real-world experts to guide, teach, and, often, serve as role models for the young women.

But closest to her heart, she says, are the GSSN programs that serve girls in homeless shelters and low-income housing, ensuring that they have the opportunity for the scouting experience that she, herself, missed out on as a child.

ย Home Grown
Despite having her feet firmly planted in the tech business world, Worlton insists sheโ€™s really an โ€œold soul.โ€ Once sheโ€™s home on her lovely two-and-a-half-acre property in Southwest Reno, this married mother of three grown children acts more like a pioneer woman than a techie.

โ€œI just love getting my hands in the dirt,โ€ Worlton says, in homage to her rural upbringing. โ€œItโ€™s a little bit of therapy before you go in and sit at a desk for eight to 10 hours.โ€

To say she gardens would be an understatement. Her garden covers around a quarter acre, which she tends herself, primarily, spending about three hours total, before and after work, daily.

To give you some idea of its scale, last summer she grew 70 tomato plants. She vows she will never do that many again. She ended up canning more than 100 quarts of spaghetti sauce and 60 pints of salsa. (Yes, she cans, too!)

The Worltons also have a dozen chickens and last year raised a couple steers for beef. Oh, and they have an orchard and berry bushes with sweet fruit for canning homemade jams. And Worlton loves to bake bread. Of course, she uses flour that her hubby grinds from hard red wheat. Her freshly baked loaves are renowned to be as beautiful as they are delicious.

Family meals are just simple, good food, Worlton says. Nothing fancy. They love to eat veggies from the garden and their homegrown meat and fresh eggs. Grilling is her preferred cooking style โ€” quick, easy, with fewer pans to wash, she says. Who could blame her after all the other work this techno-pioneer woman has done?

And last, but not least, her favorite dessert is any delectable concoction sheโ€™s devised using โ€ฆ what else? Girl Scout Cookies!

Reno writer Barbara Twitchell enjoyed trading gardening tips with this industrious woman and canโ€™t wait to visit her huge garden later this summer (and maybe get a taste of that fabulous bread, too!).

GIRL SCOUTS SHORTBREAD COOKIE KEY LIME PIE JARS
Photo by Donna Victor
These are a fun and elegant treat to serve guests, but theyโ€™re quick and easy to make using Girl Scout goodies.
Servings: 12 jars
Author: Colleen Worlton, chairperson, Girl Scouts of the Sierra Nevada Board in Reno

Ingredients

For Crust

  • 1 box Girl Scouts Shortbread Cookies
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 7 tablespoons butter melted

For Pie Filling

  • 8 ounces cream cheese room temperature
  • 1 can 14 ounces sweetened condensed milk
  • ยฝ cup key lime juice fresh or bottled
  • 1 tablespoon lime zest key limes if you can โ€” takes about 4 limes
  • 1 cup heavy whipping cream beaten into stiff peaks

Instructions

For Crust

  • Place cookies in food processor and mix until they are fine crumbs (should be about 1ยฝ cups). Add sugar and mix, then add butter and mix.
  • Using ยผ-pint canning jars, drop a heaping tablespoon of crumbs in the bottom of each jar. Tamp down the crumb mixture as you would a pie crust. Set aside.

For Pie Filling

  • In large mixing bowl, beat cream cheese until smooth. Add sweetened condensed milk, key lime juice, and zest, then beat until smooth. Fold in whipped cream until well combined. Place filling in a Ziploc bag and pipe into jars (up to the jar rim, but not above). Place lids on jars and put in refrigerator until ready to serve. Can be made 1 to 2 days ahead.
  • To serve, remove lids from jars and add a dollop of whipped cream and a ยผ slice of fresh lime.

CHOPPED MUSTARD PICKLES
Photo by Donna Victor
โ€œThis is an old family recipe from my husbandโ€™s grandmother, Mary Ellen Argyle Stocks,โ€ Worlton says. โ€œTheyโ€™re great with ham, eggs, hot dogs, and other dishes relishes go with.โ€
Servings: 10 pints
Author: Colleen Worlton, chairperson, Girl Scouts of the Sierra Nevada Board in Reno

Ingredients

  • 2 quarts green tomatoes diced
  • 2 quarts onions diced
  • 2 quarts cucumbers diced
  • 6 red peppers diced
  • 6 green peppers diced
  • 1 large or 2 small, cauliflower heads, lightly steamed and diced
  • 2 stalks celery chopped
  • 6 tablespoons dry mustard
  • ยพ tablespoon curry powder
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric
  • 1ยผ cups flour
  • 4ยฝ cups sugar
  • 1ยฝ quarts water
  • 1 cup salt
  • 1ยฝ quarts white vinegar

Instructions

  • In large stockpot, add tomatoes, onions, cucumbers, and peppers. In separate bowl, mix dry ingredients and pour over vegetables, then mix lightly. Add wet ingredients (water, vinegar) and mix thoroughly. Bring mixture to a boil over medium/medium-high heat, then reduce to a simmer.
  • Add cauliflower and celery to cooked mixture. Pack in sterilized pint jars. Follow canning instructions (link in notes below) and water bath 10 minutes.

Notes

Worlton recommends the following water-canning resource:ย Nchfp.uga.edu/publications/uga/using_bw_canners.html.

SWEET CHILI SAUCE
Photo by Donna Victor
Servings: 8 pints
Author: Colleen Worlton, chairperson, Girl Scouts of the Sierra Nevada Board in Reno

Ingredients

  • 4 quarts about 36 ripe tomatoes
  • โ…“ cup red pepper diced
  • 4 cups yellow onions diced
  • 3 tablespoons salt
  • 3 cups sugar
  • 1 pint white vinegar
  • 1ยฝ teaspoons ground cloves
  • ยฝ teaspoon cinnamon
  • ยฝ teaspoon nutmeg
  • ยฝ teaspoon ginger

Instructions

  • Remove skins from tomatoes, dice, and drain. Add all ingredients to a large stockpot. Bring to a boil, then lower heat to a simmer. Stir frequently until sauce cooks down (about 2 hours). Pour into sterilized half-pint or pint jars. Follow canning instructions (link below in notes) and water bath 10 minutes.

Notes

Worlton recommends the following water canning resource: Nchfp.uga.edu/publications/uga/using_bw_canners.html.

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