Posts in Carrots
Week 5, July 16, 2015

What's in the box?

Medium Share

Medium Share

  • green beans
  • green top carrots
  • spring onions
  • cauliflower
  • cabbage
  • zucchini/ Summer squash
  • cucumbers
  • fennel
  • head lettuce
Small Share

Small Share

  • same as above, but in smaller quantities

 Notes on the box...  

The Green Beans were picked just after a very heavy rain and were splashed with dirt.  We don't wash them, so you should give them a good rinse right before using them.  

The tops should be removed from the carrots as soon as you get them home.  The carrots will get rubbery if you leave the tops on.  Remove the tops and store the carrots in a plastic bag.  The tops are edible, as well if you need more greens in your life!  They can be blanched and made into a pesto or used in place of parsley in some recipes.  Taste it and see if you like it.

Fennel may be new to some people.  It was well received last season, so we thought we would send it out again this year.  The bulb, stems, and fronds are all edible.  I suggest removing the tops from the bulb for ease of storage.  Nibble the leaves to get an idea of the flavor of the rest of the plant.  It's like anise.  Check out this tutorial on how to prep fennel from Bon Appetite.

Cheese Share  

This is a cheese we are calling moon shadow.  It will mostly be aged to a dry jack, but we thought we would have you try it young.  All of our cheeses are young right now since our cows freshened in March and April and our facility was just licensed in May.  This cheese has the characteristic lactic tang that comes with younger cheeses and that mellows out over time.  You can enhance the bitey tang by pairing it with an IPA, or you can balance it with a farmhouse ale, a fruity chardoney, dried apricots, or smoked fish.  Or you can keep it simple and make a great cheese sauce for your cauliflower or broccoli!  Let us know what you think!

Recipes

Ginger Garlic Sesame Green Beans

Rinse beans (however many you want to eat) and remove the stem ends.  Heat a Tablespoon or two of oil in a skillet or wok.  Add the beans, some minced or grated ginger and garlic and cook over high heat until bright greeen, but still crisp.  Remove from heat and drizzle with a little toasted sesame oil and salt to taste.  You may also garnish with sesame seeds.  

Fennel, Cabbage, and Cucumber Slaw

  • 1/2 a cabbage, very thinly sliced 

  • 3 spring onions or 1 sweet onion, very thinly sliced 

  • 1 fennel bulb—very thinly sliced or grated

  • 1 -2  cucumbers, halved lengthwise and sliced thinly crosswise

  • salt

  • 1 cup crème fraîche or sour cream

  • 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar

  • 1/2 cup chopped dill or fennel leaves

  • 3 tablespoons poppy seeds

Mix crème fraîche or sour cream, vinegar, dill or fennel leaves, and poppy seeds in a large bowl.  Add cabbage, onions, fennel, and cucumbers and toss to combine.  Season to taste with salt and serve.  

Quick Pickled Fennel with Carrots

  • 1 cup white wine vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons coarse salt
  • 1 fennel bulb, very thinly sliced
  • 3 carrots, very thinly sliced or grated

Place the first four ingredients in a small saucepan and bring to a boil to dissolve the sugar and salt.  Then pour into a large bowl and allow to cool for 5 minutes.  When the mixture is still warm, add the fennel and carrots.  Allow to steep for 20 minuets.  Drain and use or store in the fridge for later.  These pickles are great with fish, on burgers or brats, or mixed into pasta, egg, or potato salad.  

Smitten Kitchen's Green Bean Salad with Fennel 

On the Farm

This week seemed to have a lot of potential to get smashed by some harsh weather.  We prepared for the worst and were pretty sure we were getting hammered as we watched an amazing amount of lightning flashing while we hunkered down in the basement.  When we went out to see how things fared, we were relieved to see everything just where we left it.   We were really lucky, though.  We got a text from a neighboring farm saying their sweet corn was all blown over, and another farm whose packing shed was a total loss.  That punched in the gut feeling of defeat came welling up in empathy so easily.  When your livlihood is dependent on the weather, it only takes a couple of years to experience it multiple times.  When a piece of equipment breaks down or a hoophouse gets taken down by wind or snow, our brains translate the loss into how many CSA shares or bunches of carrots worth of dollars was lost.  We ponder what we could have done wrong to deserve the beating from the universe.  We ask a few big questions about The Creator, karma, our place in the world...  Then we mope around and cuss and kick dirt for a while, think about what we can do without to make up for the loss so that we stay out of the red.  Then we take a breath, look at the sky, look at the ground, try not to take it personal, and start cleaning up and getting back to work. We've been hit in the past, and we are so glad that it missed us this go 'round, but we won't take it for granted!  Looks like potential for more weather this weekend... eek!  

And along with the wind came some rain that is making all the crops grow at an incredible rate.  Everything is looking very lush and healthy and the coming weeks look like more delicious and healthy bounty.  We hope that you are enjoying your Summer and eating lots of veggies and that none of you were affected by the bad weather!  

Let us know if you have any questions and thanks for all the nice emails and comments and instagram pictures of your amazing meals!  Keep them coming!  If you have any recipes to share, please do!  

Picture time...


Extended Season Week 1; October 30, 2014

What's in the box? 

IMG_0784
IMG_0784

potatoes

green top carrots

hakurei aka salad turnips

diakon radish

leeks

pak choi

broccoli

broccoli leaves (the greens in a bunch)

fennel fronds (the wispy bunched greens that smell anise like)

spinach

onions

brussel sprouts on the stalk

pie pumpkins

Notes on the box...

To store brussel sprouts, pop them off the stalk into a plastic bag and keep them in your fridge.  This is a fun task with kids.  Notice how they grow in a spiral on the stalk.  So cool!

We've recently got word that broccoli leaves are soon to be the new "it" vegetable.  The new brussel sprout since brussel sprouts took over kale.  So you guys will be like "Oh, I was eating broccoli leaves before they were cool."  Prepare them as you would collards or kale.  They are chock full of vitamins and usually just go to waste in the field.  Let us know what you think! 

Fennel fronds are from some fennel that we planted too late and it wasn't going to size up.  But, you can use these fronds as an herb. They have an anise or licorice type flavor.  They are great chopped and added to roast carrots and turnips, or used as a bed upon which to bake fish.  Instant fancy. 

See the blog a few weeks ago for several links to diakon radish recipes.

Recipes... 

[yumprint-recipe id='56']Broccoli Cheese Soup

 Carrot Orange Fennel Soup (use fronds instead of bulb that the recipe calls for)

On the Farm

sprout spiral

IMG_0782
IMG_0782
IMG_0781
IMG_0781

Queen Francie RIP

Hand sized spinach leaves  (gloves are to keep that cold dew off tender fingers)

IMG_0774
IMG_0774

Caption contest:

IMG_0771
IMG_0771
Week 18; October 23, 2014. Final delivery of the season!

What's in the box? 

IMG_1720
IMG_1720

pak choi

carrots

broccoli

red onions

brussel sprouts

rainbow chard

parsley

winter squash

spinach

head lettuce

IMG_1725
IMG_1725

pak choi

head lettuce

winter squash

red onions

brussel sprouts

broccoli

parsley

carrots

Notes on the box...  

Brussel Sprouts are such a treat, but this season they matured a little late and unevenly.  We picked what was ready, but feel pretty disappointed that we weren't able to get more to you.  Good news for Winter Share folks who are fans of Brussel Sprouts, though.  Some of them got extra large size.  Trim off the stalk part and then cut them in half before cooking.  They all taste great! 

We are giving a medley of Winter Squash today.  Everyone got some combination that included pie pumpkins, black futsu squash, autumn crown pumpkin, delicata, acorn, red kuri, or butternut. Black Futsu is an heirloom and a personal favorite.  The skins are edible, so it's good for recipes where you remove the seeds then slice the squash into moons and roast the slices (see a few weeks ago when we had delicata squash). 

Pak Choi, again?  wow.  Three times was WAY more than we planned on giving this vegetable, but it loved the weather or something. It wouldn't stop growing!  Hopefully you have learned to love it!  It is wonderful chopped and added to stir fry or soup. 

The chard can be used as you would spinach.  I like to stretch the amount of spinach that I have by adding card to it.  Spinach/Chard Lasagna?  Yum!  

Recipes...  

 Green Juice  The recipe calls for cucumbers, but we've been adding apples to our juice. 

Winter Panzanella from Smitten Kitchen  uses winter squash and brussel sprouts

Moroccan Spiced Carrot Hummus

Brussel Sprout Salad with Apples and Candied Walnuts

Twice Baked Squash with Quinoa, Pecans, and Parmesan  Recipe calls for Butternut, but any squash would work well. 

On the farm...

Usually at week 18 we are all feeling relief that the season is wrapping up.  It takes a ton of thought, planning, timing, sacrifice, luck, energy, and work from all of us to get these boxes out to you during the growing season.  Our next season starts as soon as the deliveries end.  We are cleaning up the farm and getting things ready for the snow to fall, reading surveys, packing and delivering season extension shares, going over what we want to change, working on our budget for the remainder of the season and for next season, we move on to crop planning, equipment maintenance and repair...  There are still animals that need care every day.  We have to look for crew members for next season.  And this Winter there will be off farm jobs, as well. 

So at the end of the season we are usually dreaming about shrinking our CSA to 20 members, turning the barn into a haunted house, and starting a kitchey pumpkin patch.  But this season, with the warmer weather and sunshine, the best fall colors we've seen in a long time, great feedback from members, and the boxes wrapping up in a way that we are overall pretty happy with; we feel like saving the pumpkin patch for a retirement dream and are already feeling optimistic and looking forward to next season.  

Overall we feel good about this past season.  We had fewer of some crops than we had planned (melons, cucumbers, and winter squash)  and some crops did really well (lettuce, broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower).  This is the nature of CSA farming, not everything goes according to crop plan. 

It's tough to keep the big picture in mind at times as to why we are doing this.  But our passion is good food raised responsibly going to a group of people who are hoping to change the world one meal at a time. But we know that those ideals are also as important as the value you get in the box. So we are always trying to give you both the ideal you signed up for, a healthy balanced farm and the value of what you bought into.

 If you enjoyed being a member of Turnip Rock, we would LOVE for you to stick with us!  When members return from year to year we are able to focus more on growing healthy food which we love to do, and less on marketing (which is honestly not a place where we excel).  If you love CSA,  we really hope that you will tell your friends and family. Word of mouth is the best advertising we can get and we need to get more people excited and educated about the importance of local food so that all the small farms can thrive and we can shift how our food system works, making it more sustainable and healthy for ourselves and our environment. 

Next season we will FINALLY be offering a cheese share!  We will be sending you information about adding it to your 2015 CSA share as soon as we get the odds and ends of our cheese room finished.  This may involve a crowd-funding effort, so keep an eye out for that. 

We are so grateful to have grown food for you and your families this season.  Please fill out the survey that we email to you and let us know about your experience.  We can't thank you enough for your support of a local, just, and responsible food system, and our little piece of the puzzle called Turnip Rock Farm ! 

IMG_1711
IMG_1711
IMG_1713
IMG_1713
IMG_1714
IMG_1714
IMG_1716
IMG_1716
IMG_1581
IMG_1581
IMG_1567
IMG_1567
IMG_1707
IMG_1707
IMG_1710
IMG_1710
IMG_1719
IMG_1719
IMG_1731
IMG_1731
IMG_1728
IMG_1728
IMG_1736
IMG_1736

And a big huge overwhelming THANK YOU to the 2014 farm crew who made it all come together.  Haley and Dana were with us full time and Sam worked with us again part time.  These guys are amazingly self motivated, smart, funny, and fast! They brought a great positive attitude to work and cared about the farm and the boxes in a very generous way.  Dana is sticking around to help us with the Winter Shares and Haley is headed to the city to keep up her work with food employment.  Sam is going adventuring and will be working on farms in warmer climates.  We hope to have all of them back with us in the future.  Big hugs guys!  We couldn't do it without you! 

Oh hey, Did we just get a shout out from the first lady?! 

Just kidding.  She doesn't know us.  Anyway...

Lots of love from the 2014 crew at TurntUp Rock Farm! 

IMG_1740
IMG_1740