Week 3; July 2, 2015

What's in the box?

Napa cabbage (large share only)

choy Sum/ vitamin green (Medium and large share)

Green onions

green butter head lettuce

red rapids head lettuce (medium and large)

Hakuri salad turnips

Scarlet Queen turnips (medium and large)

Broccoli!

Dill

Collard Greens

Sugar snap peas (edible pods)

Notes on the box...

This Butter head lettuce is fantastic. seriously head lettuce doesn't get much better.  Dill is a nice addition to a creamy salad dressing for all the lettuce. 

The collard greens are still quite tender and delicious.  They haven't turned bitter from the hot weather and we have been enjoying them in lunches regularly.  These large leaves are great for making veggie wraps.  Blanch them briefly in boiling water a few at a time, take them out and put into cold water, cut out the hard stem, then use them for making wraps.  Fill them with whatever you can dream up!  Polenta with cheese and sausage?  YES.  Avocado, green onions, and turkey?  You bet!  Scrambled eggs, cream cheese, and red pepper?  Do it up!  Or, of course, there's always cooking them with bacon.  The quick and easy way to prep collard greens for cooking is to slice or pull the stems off, stack them up, roll them into a cigar like tube, then slice across to make  thin ribbons of collards.  They cook up quickly and easily. 

Pea season is short and sweet.  We know how much everyone loves them.  We were really missing our Amish neighbors from the old farm that used to come help us with picking peas.  It takes a loooong time to pick enough peas for all the boxes.  Enjoy them while they are here! 

Next week...

We will be moving into the early summer stretch, not officially summer, but not quite the end of spring. This means tender sweet cabbage, and the first of the summer squash and zuchinni, closely followed by the green beans and cucumbers.. also more head lettuce, Broccoli, and green onions... and cauliflower, too.

Cheese Shares...

This week we have a pint of lovely whole milk ricotta and the first of our aged cheese for you to try. 

The Ricotta is great in classic lasagna or used to stuff shells, but it's also wonderful dolloped on pizzas, added to scrambled eggs, or you can go sweet or savory with a  ricotta tart.  It should keep for a week in your fridge. 

The aged cheese is a Manchego recipe, but made from our cows' milk.  It's still young, so it is quite mild compared to other Manchego you may have tasted.  We are naming this cheese AntaresIt's a good all purpose cheese.  I was planning on using some for cooking, but Otto and his friend Emery took the whole wedge and ate it by just taking giant bites out of the wedge!  The rind is thin and it is edible, but not everyone enjoys eating the cheese rind. Otto and Emery sure did, but I rarely eat the rinds of cheese.  Have a little taste and decide for yourself.  When tasting aged cheese, to get the most flavor, allow it to come to room temperature.  I don't know much about wine, so if you have any suggestions for pairings, please share! 

Recipes

Homemade Buttermilk Ranch Dressing (from Huffington Post)

  • 1/2 - 3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk
  • 2-3 tablespoons sour cream
  • 1-2 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh tarragon, dill, parsley, chives or celery leaves (or a combination)
  • 1 clove garlic, finely minced with a microplane grater
  • 1/2 teaspoon dijon mustard
  • few dashes Tabasco sauce (or hot sauce of your choice, but a little vinegar is what you're looking for)

Combine all ingredients into a mason jar (just trust us on this one). Shake like the Dickens. Forget you ever whisked salad dressing before. Open, taste, season to taste with salt and plenty of fresh black pepper. Seal, and shake again. Instant ranch dressing nirvana.

links this week...

Brazilian Collard Greens

Bacon and Collard Greens

on the farm

Inga from Around the Farm Table on PBS came to our farm!  We will be in an episode airing in the fall.  She's a good friend and it was really nice to have her out to the farm. Have you seen Around the Farm Table??  It's really fun to watch.  Check it out sometime on PBS or online.


Week 2, June 25 2015

What's in the box?

medium share

medium share

small share

small share

All Shares

  • bok choi
  • salad mix
  • green onions
  • garlic scapes
  • radishes
  • arugula
  • broccoli
  • herb pot (basil and parsley in most medium shares, basil and mint in most small shares) 

Large and Medium only

  • Scarlet Queen Red Turnips
  • Napa Cabbage
  • Head Lettuce

When harvesting your basil leaves, pinch the stem above where you see little leaves growing next to big leaves. This will encourage your basil to bush out and grow more leaves.  Try to keep the flowers pinched off.  Basil and parsley will grow nice and big if you plant them in the ground or in a bigger pot.  They like sun.

Cheese Share

  • cheese curds
  • feta cheese - quote from farmers market customer "This feta just ruined all other fetas for me"  Yes.  It has been a real hit at the market and we are excited to deliver it to you!  Save some for next week when we have peas.  Feta, Mint, and Peas are so good together! 

Notes on the box

We checked out the sugar snap peas and they weren't quite ready.  This variety is a new one for us and doesn't taste so great when under-ripe, so we are holding off for another week.  Next week there WILL be peas! 

Broccoli is here!  Quite delicious and more on the way in the coming weeks.  Store it in your crisper.  If you want to save veggies for later in the year, broccoli is easy to chop, blanch, bag, and freeze. 

The Scarlet Queen Red Turnips have the most beautiful greens.  They are tender and have a really wonderful flavor.  To make the roots and greens store longest, cut the roots from the greens and store both in a plastic bag in your crisper.  A really great quick way to enjoy these is to cut up the roots and sautee them in some butter or oil until tender, then add the chopped greens (and maybe some chopped garlic scapes or green onion) and continue to saute until the greens are wilted.  Season to taste with salt and pepper. 

Napa Cabbage may be new to your plate.  It's similar to bok choi in that it's great added at the end of a stir fry or added to noodle soups.  It's also really fantastic fermented and will last a very long time in your fridge that way.   Homemade pro-biotics!  Recipe below...

Recipes

Week 2 Kimchi
1 large Napa cabbage, cored and chopped into (roughly) 2 inch pieces
2-3 Tablespoons unrefined salt
1 bunch green onions, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
some radishes, thinly sliced
4 garlic scapes, cut into half inch pieces
knob of ginger, peeled then minced or grated
1 teaspoon fish sauce (optional)
1 teaspoon crushed red chili pepper (optional)

Take a leaf off of the outside of the cabbage and set it aside.  Place cabbage pieces in a large bowl, sprinkle salt on the leaves, then toss to distribute well. Allow to rest 30 minutes as the salt pulls moisture from the cabbage.  Using clean hands or a wooden pounder, gently mash the cabbage leaves to further release juices.  Add in the remaining ingredients and combine well. Transfer the kimchi mixture to a sterilized quart-sized wide-mouth jar, pressing down with a wooden pounder or your hand.  Pack the jar so that more brine juices are released. Your goal is to fill the jar just up to 1-inch below the lip, allowing space for expansion.  Cut or fold the reserved outer leaf to fit on top of the mixture and press it down so that the brine is above the leaf.  If your cabbage did not exude very much moisture, you may need to add a little filtered water to the finished product so that the brine is above the kimchi ingredients.

Loosely cap the jar and place out of direct light in a dish to capture liquid that may bubble out of the jar as it ferments.  Allow to ferment for 3 to 21 days (warmer temperatures make fermentation happen more quickly.  The longer the kinchi ferments, the more pungent it will become). Add/remove brine if the level is not maintained at 1-inch below the lip of the jar. You should see occasional tiny bubbles rising along the inner sides of the jar as the veggies begin to ferment.  After 3 to 21 days, move the kimchi to the fridge. Serve with beef, chicken, pork, eggs, as a condiment with rice.  

The ideal household temperature for vegetable lacto-fermentation is 72 degrees. Fermenting may occur more slowly at cooler temperatures and more quickly at warmer temperatures
Enough salt in the ferment should keep mold from growing on your kimchi.  Lacto-fermenting is considered to be a very safe technique for preserving foods but, when in doubt, throw it out. 

Lots of links!

This one from Thursday Night Pizza makes a pesto from the turnip greens and puts it on a pizza! YUM! Early Summer Harvest Pizza with Turnips and their greens, Garlic Scapes, and Aged Cheddar  sounds very tasty!

Napa Cabbage Wedge Salad with Apples and Buttermilk Dressing

Asian Coleslaw is a lot like the Spicy Peanut Slaw recipe that we put on the blog every season, but it uses Napa Cabbage.  Calls for grated carrots, but why not try grated radish or turnips?

Grilled Napa Cabbage with Chinese Mustard Glaze

Scarlet Queen Red Turnip with Feta Salad recipe calls for cucumbers, which are still growing, but I think would be great with lettuce or arugula instead. 

Turnip Greens Tart from 101 cookbooks if you are feeling ambitious!

Next Week...

  • head lettuce
  • salad mix
  • green onions
  • garlic scapes?
  • napa cabbage?
  • broccoli
  • peas!! (for real)
  • swiss chard

On the farm

The first delivery went pretty smoothly!  Thanks to you guys for being great communicators and letting us know as soon as any issues came up.  This makes everything happen!  Our hearts are FULL and we are so grateful for all of the wonderful emails and comments we have gotten after the first delivery!  We were a bit nervous about putting so many vegetables that may not be familiar to people in the boxes right away, but we are so glad that so many people are feeling it and happily eating their greens!  This week brings more greens and more new veggies, but rest assured that your familiar favorites are growing BEAUTIFULLY in the fields.  We've had a nice mix of sun and rain and the right amount of heat for this time of year.  We are having fun packing these very full boxes, and we look forward to all that is to come this season.  We are planning our farm events and will get the dates solidified and let you know as soon as we can so that we can hopefully get onto your Summer calendar.  Meeting our new members and seeing our returning members season after season is a real treat for us.  We are excited to share the farm with you! 

If there are ever any problems with your delivery or your box, please contact us.  Sometimes there are mix-ups or we miss something on the pack line.  We will always try our hardest to fix any problems that arise.  Thanks! 

We put a postcard with your CSA box about our friend and neighbor Nancy of Red Clover Herbal Apothecary CSA.  Here's the link for you to check out her website.  She does amazing work and we hope you will consider her seasonal herbal CSA share to help you feel your best and get the most out of the Summer.

We are so lucky that Dana is here doing an amazing job of documenting our work and the farm (and not just taking cute pictures of the kids like we always do!).  We shared some of her photographs in last weeks blog and there are more below.  Please check out her Etsy page if you are interested in owning some of her photos of farm life.  

Here are more of her photos...


Week 1 delivery, June 18, 2015

Welcome to our new members and welcome back to our returning members!  We are happy to have the first box of the season out to you.  This is our online newsletter.  It will follow a format each week.  A picture and list of the contents of the weeks box followed by notes about the veggies and storage tips.  Next a few recipes focusing on veggies that you may not be familiar with or that we have in quantity.  Finally, pictures of what's been going on at the farm, musings from your farmers, and news about farm events or announcements.  Your CSA experience will be greatly enhanced if you look at the blog each week!  It will help you feel connected to the farm and use up your veggies.  So here we go...  

What's in the box?

All Shares -

  • herb pot
  • dino kale
  • salad turnips
  • radishes
  • spinach
  • arugula
  • garlic scapes

Medium and Large 

  • pac choi
  • green onions
  • vitamin greens

What's what with the green stuff?!

 

Notes on the box...

 This box has quite a few veggies that might be new to first-time CSA members.  We grew a lot of them after getting positive feedback last season from members.  They were enjoyed and we hope that you like them!  If a lot of these are new to you, we invite you to taste, try, and experiment.  

 Kale should be stored in the fridge in your crisper in an open plastic bag.  It will last for at least a week and likely closer to two.  If it seems a little limp from the heat or from sitting in your fridge too long,  you can soak it in cold water and it will perk back up.  Remove the stems before cooking.  Hearty greens like kale are great simply sautéed in butter or oil with some chopped garlic (or garlic scapes!) until it is bright green.  You can add leaves to smoothies.  Kale can be washed, de-stemmed, blanched and frozen.  If you have tried kale before and thought that you didn’t like it, we encourage you to try it again.  Sometimes people have tasted kale from the heat of summer when it is at its toughest and most bitter.  We won’t give you tough, bitter kale.  If our kids won’t eat it raw, it won’t go in the box! 

Arugula, vitamin greens, and turnip and radish greens should be stored in an open platic bag in your crisper.  They are tender leaves and all make wonderful pestos and additions to salads.  

Radishes These are called french breakfast radishes.  Take the tops off of the radishes and put them in a baggie in your crisper.  The tops are edible as well. You can add your radish tops to stir fry or salads.  Radishes are a great spicy snack and if you've never tried thinly sliced radishes on buttered bread with a little salt, now is the time to try it!  We’ve been enjoying radishes diced small and added as a seasonal replacement to celery in egg salad and pasta salad.  They add a nice crunch and a little spicy flavor.

The lovely white globes are hakuri or Salad Turnips.  The tops of the salad turnips are edible.  They are nice chopped and added to salads or you can saute them.  They are very mild for turnip greens.  The turnips themselves are so sweet and nice sliced and added to a salad.  We rarely do that as we mostly just eat them whole as snacks.  They can also be sauteed or roasted, but try them fresh first!  

Bok Choi is perfect for stir fry.  The key to good pak choi is to cook it briefly (we add it to the very end of a stir fry) so that the stems stay crunchy and the greens aren't mushy.  Try it!  Last season it was almost unanimous in our survey that people trying it for the first time liked it, so here we have it! 

Green Onions and Garlic Scapes can be paired together where you would use green onions.  Or you can substitute the scapes for green onions.  The garlic scape is the flowering part of the garlic plant.  We pull the scape off to enjoy before the garlic bulb is ready.  Pulling the scape off helps the bulb size up more.  The scapes can be made into a pesto, chopped and added to scrambled eggs or salads, or put into a vase and enjoyed for its beauty (before you eat it).  They can also be grilled or roasted whole till tender.  If you are intimidated by them you can keep them in your crisper drawer until you work up the courage to eat them, as they won’t go bad for a long time. 

Recipes

 

Garlic Scape and Arugula Pesto

several garlic scapes, cut into bits
1/2  bunch arugula (or spinach, kale, or turnip greens) chopped
1/2 c seeds or nuts (optional)
1/4 c grated parmesan cheese (optional)
1/4 – 1/3 c olive oil
juice of 1/2 lemon (or more)
1/2 t  salt
1/2 t chili pepper flakes

Combine the garlic scapes, arugula, nuts, and cheese in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse a few times. Let the machine run and slowly pour in half the amount of oil along with the lemon juice, salt and chili flakes. Slowly add the remaining oil until you’ve reached a good consistency (you may not need all the oil). Store in a lidded jar in the fridge for a week or freeze in small jars. Serve with pasta, spread on sandwiches, mixed into eggs, drizzled onto pizza, tossed with roasted potatoes.... 

Goodness Greenness Pasta

  • pasta of your choice
  • 1 bunch garlic scape cut into 1 inch pieces
  • avocado
  • ½ lemon, juiced
  • ½ lime, juiced
  • fresh parsley, thyme, and/ or mint chopped
  • fresh basil leaves, chopped
  • ¼ cup sour cream, quark, cream cheese, chevre, or greek yogurt
  • olive oil
  • spring onion, finely chopped
  • 2 salad turnips, thinly sliced
  • chopped arugula, vitamin green, turnip greens, and/or spinach
  • salt and pepper
  1. Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil. Add the pasta and cook 6 minutes. Add the garlic scapes and cook an additional 3 minutes, or until the pasta is al dente. Drain.
  2. While the pasta cooks, prepare the sauce: Add the avocado, 2 tablespoons of olive oil, lemon juice, lime juice, and fresh herbs to a food processor or blender. Process on high for 20-30 seconds, or until smooth. Scrape into a small bowl and stir in the sour cream or your choice of creamy dairy. Set aside.
  3. Heat a little oil in a large pan set over medium heat. Add the spring onion and turnips and cook 2-3 minutes, or until soft. Add the arugula (and/ or other greens) and cook another 2-3 minutes, or until the greens are wilted. Turn off the heat and stir in the cooked pasta, garlic scapes, and sauce. Stir to combine; season with salt and pepper.

 

Radiant bok choi, adapted from Vegetable Love

  • 1-2 heads of bok choi and a bunch of turnip greens or vitamin greens
  • 2 teaspoons of turmeric
  • Generous pinch of sea salt
  • 1 can of coconut milk
  • fresh ginger, minced
  • A few mushrooms (shiitake or oyster are best), de-stalked and caps sliced
  • Tamari or umeboshi vinegar 
  • 1 lime, cut into wedges
  1. Cut base from bok choi, seperate leaves and wash well.  Wash additional greens well and chop roughly.  
  2. Add the turmeric, sea salt, coconut milk and ginger in a lidded frying pan. Bring to a boil, cover and turn the heat down to medium. Simmer for 3 minutes.  Add bok choi and simmer 3 more minnutes with lid on. 
  3. Add the mushrooms, stir, and cover again. Simmer for 6 minutes.  
  4. Add aditional greens and cook til wilted.  
  5. Serve over rice with a little tamari or umeboshi vinegar and squeeze of lime.  

 

Cheese Shares!

Welcome to our cheese share members!  We have been really busy with getting this part of the farm up and running.  WOW!  We will tell you more about it in the coming weeks.  for now, we will let you know that the aged cheeses are ripening and so the first few weeks we will get to enjoy some fresh cheese. If you would like to add a cheese share, please contact us and we will be happy to pro-rate a share for you.  This week...

  • Cheese curds
  • Quark

These are cheddar cheese curds.  A Wisconsin classic.  If you like squeaky curds, allow them to warm up and the squeak will return.  If you don't like squeaky cheese, you can have them cold or let them age for a few weeks in the fridge.  At market we noticed that a lot of people said they don't like their cheese to squeak, but they still love these curds!  Curds are most commonly eaten just as they are as a snack.  They are also very popular fried (Dana likes to make a little batter out of flour, egg, a little baking powder salt and pepper then pan fries them in a little bit of oil.  SO yummy!)  And we love to float them in a vegetable or lentil soup!  We just throw them in at the end and they become soft while still holding their shape.  

The quark cheese is a type of fresh cheese very common in Europe.  It is versitile and can be enjoyed fresh or used in baking where you would cream cheese, but it has a slightly more tangy flavor.  We have made a garlic scape and arugula pesto and drizzled it over the quark and spread that on crackers or bread.  It's also nice on a baguette with thinly sliced radish and black pepper.  And a good friend suggests using it in a sauce for mac and cheese.  Hope you enjoy it!  

Want to see a cool time lapse video of boxes being packed??  Click the link at the bottom of the blog that goes to our facebook page to check it out!

First delivery information for new members: 

We are so happy to be your farmers!  Thanks for signing up.  A few things to remember to make your Summer of vegetables more enjoyable: 

1. Don't forget to pick up your box! We send an email when your box is delivered.  Picking up sooner on hot days will help keep your veggies fresh longer.  Always only take veggies from the box with your name on the label.  If you are unable to pick up, let your host know so that they may hold it for you until you can pick up or even better, arrange to have a friend or neighbor pick up your box.  Certain dropsites (such as the co-ops) are sometimes unable to hold your share.  If you have any problems or questions, please contact your host or the farm as soon as you can. 

2. If you are splitting a box it is your responsibility to decide how to divide the share.  Some members alternate weeks picking up.  Some members get together and decide who gets what.  Some members cook dinner together and then split up what wasn't used.  It's up to you!

3. We wash greens and lettuce before delivering them, but we suggest another rinse just in case of lingering dirt or sand.  

4. Some veggies hold for a long time, and others have a shorter shelf life.  When deciding what to cook, keep this is mind to get you box used up!  For certain crops such as tomatoes, we try to pack some of varied ripeness so that you have some to use earlier in the week and some to use later.  Try to use up veggies from the previous week before getting your next box so that you don't get overwhelmed and veggies don't get lost. 

5. Be sure to read storage tips to get the best flavor and value from your veggies.  Little things, like taking the tops off of radishes and carrots or putting a head of lettuce in a plastic bag will make these veggies hold a lot better. 

6. If you have any questions or issues or comments or suggestions, contact us.  We will do our best to get back to you right away.

 

Next week...

  • head lettuce
  • peas!
  • radishes
  • turnips
  • green onions 
  • garlic scapes
  • broccoli?