Week 4; June 30, 2016

What's in the box? 

 

Cauliflower
Broccoli
Tendersweet or Savoy Cabbage (medium and large shares)
cucumber (medium and large)
spring onions
green top beets
zukes/ summer squash
salad mix
collards
garlic scapes (large and medium)
red romaine

 

Notes on the box.

The cucumbers, summer squash, and zucchini are just starting to come on, so you are getting just a taste of these Summer lovelies.  Some of the cukes may need to be cut in half and have the seeds scooped out with a spoon, but they are quite tasty!  More coming your way in upcoming weeks! 
The collards are super beautiful and are still pretty tender and not bitter even though we've had some pretty warm temps.  They are perfect for collard wraps. You can use them raw or blanch them quickly and then use them as a wrap. 
Tendersweet and Savoy cabbage are bot great for fresh eating and we are big on coleslaw during the summer months. 
The greens on these beets are so beautiful and are VERY yummy.  I had a bunch from last week going limp in the fridge.  I chopped them and wilted them in some butter with a pinch of salt and they were some of the best tasting greens we've had. Keeping it quick and simple is often the best way eat these veggies!  Remember that the best way to store any root crop with greens still attached is to remove the greens from the roots.  Both will store longer that way. 

Cosmic Wheel Creamery Cheese Shares.

Moonglow is an Alpine recipe (similar to a Greuyere)  I make one type of cheese called Moonshadow that is the same recipe, but made in the very early Spring when cows are still eating hay and the resulting cheese is much milder in flavor and more white in color since the cows aren't getting the green pasture.  It's fun to taste the two next to each other.  This season's Moonshadow is aging and won't be ready until late fall. 
Also this week we have the first fresh cheese curds of the season!  They are a tasty little snack.  To get the squeak, let them warm to room temperature before you eat them.  If you don't like them squeaky, let them sit in the fridge for several days and eat them cold.  I had been cutting these little suckers by hand which took WAY too long.  Making cheese curds is still a really long day for me since bagging them up takes quite a while, but I got a handy new tool called a curd mill.  Most cheese factories have mechanical, motor driven mills.  Mine is manual, but still makes this job a lot easier than cutting them by hand!  Hopefully that means more cheese curds coming your way soon! 

This isn't a picture of me using my curd mill, but it's not far off. 

This isn't a picture of me using my curd mill, but it's not far off. 

Recipes.

The Collards this week are perfect for wraps!  You can use them in place of tortillas for a lighter meal.  Here's a picture tutorial on how to blanch collards for using as a wrapper.  You don't HAVE to blanch them.  They can be used raw since they are still tender and not bitter.   Fill them with beans, rice, salsa, and cheese.  Or with hummus, feta, cucumbers, and lettuce.  Or with beet burgers, or use this recipe for Roasted Sweet Potato and Cauliflower Rice Wraps.  Otherwise, you can always de-stem them, roll them up, slice them crosswise into thin strips, and then cook them down with some bacon. 

Beets are still popping and Miranda made an amazing farm lunch for us.  She doesn't use a recipe, but this is roughly her practice for beet fritters.  Shred unpeeled beets, zucchini/ summer squash for a total of about 4 cups of shredded veggies (mostly beets).  Crack and whip three eggs.  Mix eggs and veggies together.  Season with your choice of spices.  Miranda used a little paprika and cumin.  Add some flour and breadcrumbs until they will hold together into a loose patty shape.  Miranda made hers the size of hamburgers.  Fry in oil, pressing down as they cook so that the edges get crispy.  Fry for about 4 minutes on each side or until brown and crispy. 

What to do with Cauliflower Cauliflower Rice is pretty popular right now.  To make it you just shred the cauliflower (using the shredder attachment on the food processor works great)  then saute in oil of your choice for about 5 min.  Serve where you would use rice. 
I like to chop cauliflower finely and throw it into the pasta cooking water for the last few minutes when cooking boxed mac and cheese (which is a thing that we eat often now that we have kids and it is the most frequently requested meal).  Drain along with the pasta and continue as normal.  You can also do this with broccoli or kale or other greens, but the cauliflower is not often noticed or protested.  Our kids are pretty good about eating veggies, but we joke that they are strict locavores. Once the veggies leave the field or the packing shed they are suddenly inedible to them!  So sometimes we find ourselves hiding veggies in things like mac and cheese. 

Cabbage Slaw with Green Onion, Mint, and Parsley

  • 1/2 large head green cabbage
  • 3/4 cup chopped parsley
  • 2 Tbsp chopped mint
  • 3/4 cup thinly sliced green onion (or more)
  • 1/4 cup oil
  • 1/4 cup white balsamic vinegar or white vinegar
  • 1/4 cup sugar, maple syrup,honey, or sweetener of your choice
  • salt to taste (I used about 3/4 tsp. sea salt)
  • freshly ground black pepper to taste (I used about 1/4 tsp.)

Thinly slice and coarsely chop slices until you have about 6 cups chopped cabbage. Wash and coarsely chop parsley and mint, and thinly slice green onions.
In small bowl or glass measuring cup, stir together the canola oil, white balsamic vinegar or white vinegar, sweetener, salt, and pepper.
Put chopped cabbage, chopped parsley and mint, and sliced green onions into salad bowl and toss to combine. Add just enough dressing to moisten salad, and toss again. (You may not need all the dressing.) Taste to see if you want more salt or pepper, then serve.

On the Farm.

 

Next Week

a break from cauliflower and broccoli
cukes
zukes/ summer squash
big head lettuce
fennel
beets
cabbage
carrots??

 

Week 3; June 23, 2016

What's in the box?

Butterhead Lettuce
Red Russian Kale
Scarlet Turnips
Green Top Beets
Red Scallions
Broccoli
Cauliflower
Savoy Cabbage (medium and large)
Garlic Scapes
Salad Mix
Herb Pot

Notes on the box

The Beets and Turnips will store best with the tops removed from the roots.  My suggestion is to chop the stems below the rubber band so that your bunch of greens remains intact.  Store greens and roots in an open plastic bag.  Beet greens can be used as you would chard or spinach.  These beets are the nicest we have grown and we will have more in the coming weeks.  I don't peel the beets and they are still great.  We have been eating them raw cut into chunks.  They are so tender and tasty!  Great for a raw shredded salad, or dice, roast, and add them to salads. 

The Scarlet Turnips are great braised with their greens.  They are a little too tough for eating raw, I think.  But I sliced some with the mandolin and the kids ate them right up. 

The herb pots in the small shares have savory and parsley or savory and sage.  The Large share herb pots have thyme, sage, and parsley.  These will all grow into sizeable plants if you pot them out or put them in your garden if you've got one. 

All greens should be stored in a plastic bag in your fridge.  The cabbage doesn't need to be in a bag, but should be refrigerated.  This variety is really nice for fresh eating. 

Cosmic Wheel Creamery Cheese Share

If you have a cheese share, an eat like a farmer share, or an eat like a vegetarian farmer share please remember that your cheese is packed in a separate box at your drop site!  It is labeled "CHEESE"  Open the box and find the bag of cheese with the sticker with your name.  Don't forget your cheese!

Feta and Antares.  Yellow Feta!?  Whaaaaaat??  I hear it a lot at farmer's markets, but it's true.  Our feta looks like butter.  All of the cheese is yellow because of the cows 100% grass diet.  There's no color added.  It's just the carotenoids in the milk.  It's super healthy!  Enjoy it! 

The Antares is a cows milk Manchego.  I rub the rind with olive oil, chamomile, sumac, and calendula.  Antares is one of our most popular at farmers markets.  People seem to really enjoy the piquant kick at the end. 

The aged cheeses you get will store best if wrapped in parchment and then put into a ziploc bag.  Cheese is alive and needs air, but too much and it will dry out.  But you should eat it all before you have to worry about that! 

Recipes

10 Things to do with Garlic Scapes

Roasted Scarlet Turnips with Sauteed Greens

15 Unbeatable Kale Recipes

Farro Salad with Beets, Beet Greens, and Feta

On the Farm

This week is seeing lots of activity on the farm, as usual!  This year we were super lucky and got a grant from the Lakewinds Organic Field Fund to improve our packing shed.  We had a ceiling put in and are having the huge sliding door changed into a garage door and a service door.  This will help us to keep the birds out of our packing shed and will improve food safety on the farm and help to keep things cleaner.  The birds seems to have had no trouble finding new housing options on the eaves of the barn.  A BIG BIG BIG THANK YOU to Lakewinds and their customers for helping us with this project! 

If your box is missing or anything is missing from your box (especially eggs!) Please contact us so that we can make it up to you.  We do our best, but sometimes something gets missed on the packing line or a box might get mixed up on delivery. 

Thanks!

Next week...

beets
salad mix
scapes
spring onions
savor or tendersweet cabbage
swiss chard
head lettuce
bok choy?
summer squash?
cukes??
collards?

 

 

Week 2; June 16, 2016

What's in the box?

garlic scapes
red romine lettuce (large and medium only)
red pearl onions
spinach
french breakfast radishes (large and medium only)
broccoli
lacinato kale
arugula
salad mix
butterhead lettuce
herb pot

Notes on the box

Still a lot of greens in these early season boxes.  We hope that you are enjoying having meals where salads fill up the majority of your plate.  And that you have been able to work greens into your everyday quick meals.  Add extra lettuce to wraps and sandwiches.  Serve chicken or tempeh on a bed of lettuce.  Morning eggs on top of spinach.  Chopped kale or broccoli can be thrown in with the cooking water of macaroni for the last few minutes when cooking pasta, and you can have instant kale mac and cheese!  We've been loving seeing all the salads people have been enjoying on our instagram feed!  Keep them coming! 
Garlic Scapes are a wonderful once per year treat that might be new to some of you.  The scape is the stem of the flower that the garlic sends up at this point in it's development.  We remove the scapes to help the garlic bulbs put more energy into the bulb so we get bigger heads of garlic later on.  And these scapes are SO GREAT!  They will keep for several weeks in your crisper if it takes you a while to get through them all.  They can be used as you would a green onion, but they will add a garlic flavor.  Or you can use them in place of garlic cloves.  Eating with the season! 
Radishes will store best and stay nice and crunchy if you remove the green tops from the radish.  Both can be stored in plastic bags.  The greens are edible as well.  You can add them to the Arugula in a pesto with the garlic scapes (see recipe in last weeks blog but use scapes in place of green garlic. 
Herb pots mostly have mint and Thai basil.  The Thai basil was used instead of Italian basil when we had very poor germination on the Italian basil.  You can use the Thai basil as you would any other basil, it will just have a stronger floral taste to it.  We will be putting Italian basil from the fields in future boxes.  You can pot out the herbs into bigger pots to let them grow larger or into your yard.  Be warned - the mint will spread and you will likely have a large mint patch that can take over gardens.  Don't plant it anywhere that it would be a problem later.  Small herb pots have thyme or parsley or basil or mint.   

All your greens-and broccoli- will store best in open plastic bags in your crisper drawer.  Everything in the box needs to be refrigerated.  Limp greens will perk up again after a soaking in a sink of cold water.  All greens are washed, but we suggest another rinse just to be sure you don't end up with any grit in your food. 

Recipes

favorite snack
Spread Quark cheese or butter onto slice of baguette.  Top with sliced radish and a sprinkle of black pepper.  Best snack ever. 

Roasted Radishes
If you don't like raw radishes or find them too spicy, try them roasted!  Remove tops, slice them in half, toss them with about 1 tablespoon of olive oil and some salt and pepper. Arrange them cut-side down on a sheet pan (a cast iron skillet is also good) and roast at 450°F for about 10 to 12 minutes.  Remove when the cut side is browned a little, but they're still firm inside. Sprinkle with salt, finely chopped green garlic or garlic clove, and some minced parsley.

Vinaigrette Recipes from Bon Appetit

Miso Tumeric Dressing - a favorite around here to do on salads or drizzle on cooked veggies

Baked Kale Chips

Cosmic Wheel Creamery Farmstead Cheese Shares

This week is Quark.  Quark is a soft cheese similar to chevre, but made from cows milk. Besides the above favorite snack, it's also nice with some pesto mixed or herbs mixed into it and spread on crackers, wraps, sandwiches, or dropped onto scrambled eggs at the end of cooking.  You can mix herbed quark into warmed drained pasta for an instant tangy, creamy sauce.  OR you can bake with it or serve with berries.  It's very versatile and will keep in the fridge for 2 weeks or more.  If you won't get to it in that time, it freezes pretty well.

The aged cheese this week is called Draco.  It's based on a Romano recipe.  Great to finish a pasta dish or to snack on.  These handmade long aged cheeses often have spots of mold creeping into the paste.  It's the nature of the natural rind.  Trim off these spots and enjoy the rest!

On the Farm

Thanks so much for your patience last week as our email server went down!  First week of delivery was a pretty stressful time to have it happen, but in farming we have learned that we can't get too stressed out about things that are totally out of our control.  We hope you all found your boxes easily.  Please remember every week to take the box labeled with YOUR NAME.  If you have any issues, contact your drop site host or the farm. 

Our local farmers do a baby sitting coop and kids from several local farms are at Turnip Rock on Thursday.  We will do our very best to answer your questions, emails, and phone calls right away, but there might be a delay in getting back to your or some joyful noise in the background of phone calls! 

Did you know your farmers were featured in Acres Magazine this month?  Our friend, fellow farmer, and neighbor, Andrew French did a really nice write up about our farm and resilience.   Acres isa farming publication that we have used as a reference since beginning our farming journey.  It's such an honor to have Andrew write about our farm for this magazine.   

This week Otto was a superstar in the field bunching onions and cutting lettuce and helping out in the cheese room with putting labels on the quark containers.  This time of year is the height of activity on the farm with seeding, planting, harvesting, and weeding all being done at the same time.  The long hours of daylight are totally necessary for the amount of work that needs to be done.  We thank you for your support in allowing us to do the work that we love!