Tuesday, July 22

Farm Share Info for July 22

Sorry this is coming in so late -- we topped off another long farm day by cutting some wood to build a shed for Kendra's new wood fired oven and after that we made our first pickles of the season (using the last of the year's garlic scapes and snap peas).

All shares contain:
  • "Rainbow" beets
  • Endive
  • Zucchini and/or Summer Squash
  • Celery (a small bunch)
"Full" shares also contain:
  • more "Rainbow" beets
  • a bunch of marjoram and parsley
  • Chicory
  • shell peas

Veggie Notes

beets - As I mentioned last week, remember that the leaves of beets (aka `beet greens') can be eaten like Swiss chard and that the color of the red beets will tend to bleed into the rest of the beets of they're cooked together. If the beets taste bitter, peeling off the skins can rid them of the bitterness.

endive and chicory - Endive has the finely toothed, feathery leaves while the chicory will look more like a head of romaine lettuce. There are many, many kinds of "chicory", but the one you're getting this week is called "Pan de Zucchero", or "Sugar Loaf". Less bitter than most chicories, it's natural sweetness really comes out when it's roasted. See the next post for some more recipes involving chicory.

celery - Baby celery, though not really that useful for the peanut butter and raisin treatment, is still a great seasoning. Just chop it up (leaves and all) an add to any recipe that calls for celery.

Recipe Ideas

Simple Squash Saute
For a long time, we tried to figure out what to do with all of the squash that piled up during the summer. Then we found this recipe and now we have a hard time keeping enough squash around! It's very flexible: use more or less squash, omit the herbs and/or garlic, etc.

2 6” squashes
1 medium onion
½ bunch fresh thyme, minced
2 cloves garlic, minced or crushed
3-4 tablespoons olive oil or butter
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper, or more to taste
salt and pepper

Remove stems from squashes and chop into ¼” thick, round slices. Chop the onion (including the top, if it's a fresh onion) into ¼” by 1” pieces. Heat the fat in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the pepper and onion and cook until the onion has softened, about 1-2 minutes. Add garlic and thyme and cook until fragrant, 30-60 seconds. Add the squash and cook for 2-3 minutes, stirring occasionally. Cover, reduce heat to low and cook for another 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season with salt and pepper.

Also, be sure to check out the next post for some recipes for chicory and endive. (The roasted radicchio recipes would also work really well with this week's chicory.)


As always, we welcome your feedback. Please let us know if you have any questions, concerns or problems.

We hope you enjoy the share!

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Tuesday, July 15

Farm Share Info for July 15 [Updated w/ notes & recipe]


All shares contain:
  • fresh garlic
  • collard greens
  • scallions
  • shell peas -- don't eat the pods, just the peas inside
  • thyme
"Full" shares also contain:
  • more garlic and peas
  • "rainbow" beets
  • baby zucchini

Veggie Notes

fresh garlic - This isn't the young, tender stuff we had earlier. As the garlic plant matures, the stem thickens and hardens while the skin around the bulb starts to become tougher. You can still use the entire bulb (wrapper skins and all), but you'll want to trim off the stem perhaps 1/2" above the bulb.

collard greens - Collard greens can be used just like other cooking greens, but they have a more assertive flavor (like that of kale and other brassicas, such as broccoli and cabbage) a more robust texture. Don't believe the old stories of fat, southern grandmas cooking these things all day with pigs feet; we boil them briefly in 1/2-3/4" of lightly salted water in a wide, shallow pan. You could also steam them. We also make a great tomato-based pasta sauce with collards for which I'm having trouble finding a recipe. I'll let you know when I find it.

shell peas - Unlike in previous weeks, these are shell peas and the pod cannot be eaten. I know, I know: it's a lot of work to shell peas, but -- to my tongue -- the convenience of snap peas still doesn't hold a candle to the great flavor of shell peas. While we cook snap peas in all sorts of dishes (stir fries and pastas, notable), we almost never cook shell peas because we always end up eating them all as we're shelling them.

beets - Remember that the leaves of beets (aka `beet greens') can be eaten like Swiss chard. The tend to be a bit more tart, but they're still pretty good. If you want to preserve the distinct colors of the rainbow beets, you should steam them or roast them. If you boil them, they'll all end up kind of red. See below for roasting instructions ... well, not so much instructions as guidelines.

Recipe Ideas

Finding recipes is perhaps the hardest part of writing these newsletters. We've been cooking with fresh, whole foods for so long that we don't really use recipes anymore, instead relying on "techniques" with generous injections of experience-influenced intuition to guide our hand to great meals. To that end, I'll treat one of our most versatile and trustworthy techniques as recipe.

Roasted Vegetables
Roasting is a wicked simple technique that works well for a lot of different vegetables. (And especially well for root vegetables.) Though we generally roast veggies during winter -- when the heat given off from the oven is a welcome boost to the wood stove -- there are a lot of great foods to roast in the summer too. Summer veggies such as beets, carrots, eggplant, peppers and new potatoes -- just to name a few -- respond well to roasting. So, here are our general guidelines for roasting:

You will need:
a vegetable, or vegetables, to roast
salt and pepper
a fat to roast in - bacon fat is best, olive oil is great, and other vegetable oils will work too
a pan to roast in - large enough to accommodate the veggies in a single layer
optional: seasonings such as herbs and/or chili peppers
  1. Turn on oven and preheat to 350 or so.
  2. Clean, trim and chop the veggies into pieces that are approx. the same same size. The size of gaming dice is a good size -- smaller is too much work and too much larger will take forever to cook.
  3. Toss the veggies with the oil or fat, a good pinch of salt, several turns of the pepper grinder and -- if using -- the seasonings.
  4. Spread the chopped, oiled, seasoned vegetables into the roasting pans and place into the oven.
Roasting times will depend upon the vegetable being roasted as well as the size into which it has been chopped. In general 30-45 minutes is a good amount of time to roast. If the veggies are cut smaller or thin, they will cook more quickly; if they are cut large or are spread in the pan thickly, they will cook more slowly. The test for being "done" is that the veggies will be "fork tender", i.e. that they will yield easily to a fork.

Roasted Beets
Using what we've just said, let's roast today's beets:
  1. Clean, trim and chop the beets into 1/2" cubes.
  2. Chop up about 1/2 of the bunch of thyme.
  3. Drizzle the chopped beets w/ olive oil to coat and toss with the chopped thyme and a good pinch of salt and pepper.
  4. Spread the beets into a roasting pan -- we used a 9"x9" pan.
  5. Place in oven and roast. As I'm writing, the beets have been in for about 45 minutes and are getting close to done. By 1 hour, they should be perfect!

As always, we welcome your feedback. Please let us know if you have any questions, concerns or problems.

We hope you enjoy the share!

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