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Friday, July 25, 2014

Time Flies When You're Having Fun!


Looking at the top of my farmthisway newsletter, I realized that we are already in week 10 of our 24 week CSA distributions.  Looking back we have already received so many wonderful items from annual flowers and hanging baskets (I always take the portulaca - even I can't kill them) to herbs (I know have a thriving fresh herb garden - minus most of the parsley which I managed to kill) to yummy fresh produce, which always comes in quantities big enough to share &  still have enough left over to freeze, can, etc.  My freezer is starting to fill up with some of the yummy things we have gotten.  I've got lots of strawberry jam stored up, even despite giving it as end of the year teacher presents.  And we've made a few family, friends and neighbors happy as well, by sharing a little of our farmfresh goodies.

This week brought perhaps the happiest of arrivals since fresh strawberries...THE FIRST CORN!!!  We love corn on the cob.  Caitlyn couldn't even wait to get it home on Wednesday and ate one ear raw at about 9 AM...meaning it was only about 3 hours old, as it was picked fresh at 6 that morning, as it is every day at the farm.  I'm perfectly OK eating corn as a side dish every night for the next couple of weeks.  It doesn't get much fresher than that and we all enjoy it.  The first night the corn starred as the main attraction, even though it was a side to the pancetta and kale I had sauteed up to go with it.  I know that when we get more next week, we will start to put some aside to freeze for later use in corn chowder, etc.  Pretty soon it will be tomato season, and the corn makes a wonderful addition to our homemade salsa as well!  

Along with the corn, and many other goodies, we got some more zucchini and summer squash.  At the grocery store the other day, they were demonstrating a delicious grilled zucchini and summer squash with an Asian Miso Ginger sauce.  My daughter and I loved it, so we decided to replicate it at home.  I thought I had ginger..but I thought wrong, so instead, I used soy, soba sauce, garlic olive oil, and sesame oil as the marinade, grilled until tender and then sprinkled with some toasted sesame seeds.  It was delicious, and gone very quickly.  

The first of the green bell peppers arrived this week too.  Those are so tasty that they didn't even make it to a salad, as they are very wonderful sliced and eaten plain.  Maybe in the next few weeks, some of them will make it to be stuffed peppers.  It is hard to believe how fast the summer is flying by, and how we are already closing in on the halfway point for our CSA membership for this year.  If you didn't do it this year, maybe 2015 should be the year you try farmthisway CSA.  This is our 3rd year, and we have never been disappointed! 

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

ALL HAIL, GLORIOUS KALE






If you and your family, like the dwarf above think "I don't like green foods", then kale can be a little scary.  But, for a seasoned green foods veteran, kale comes as a pleasant treat in this week's farmthisway CSA Distribution. 

I took a peek at Marty's distribution video and from what I can see...this week includes both summer squash and zucchini, cauliflower, eggs, cherry tomatoes and kale!  My kids will be excited about this, especially my oldest, 14 year old, Caitlyn.  I know the first thing she will want to do it make kale chips.  They are SIMPLE, quick and tasty! 

To make kale chips, take one bunch of kale, get the leaves off and torn up into bite size pieces.  Wash and dry (I use a salad spinner) and drizzle with a tablespoon of olive oil and sprinkle with a teaspoon of sea salt.  Bake in an  350 degree oven for about 10 minutes, or until the edges start to get a little brown.  My daughter took these into school one year and her teacher was impressed and tells me to this day that she still makes them because she LOVES them, but would have never tried them if Caitlyn hadn't brought them in that day!

If kale chips are not your thing, how about adding pancetta to your kale?  Pork fat never disappoints in my house, so my plan is to make Kale, Apple & Pancetta Salad
 
And sometimes for a straightforward kale side dish, this  Bobby Flay recipe for Sauteed Kale hits the spot.

Let's not forget the other greens in the basket...This week, we remembered one of our favorite squash recipes.  First we sliced up 2 each (small to medium) summer squash and zucchini, and sauteed them in butter with about a quarter of a sweet onion, salt and pepper.  Next we tossed them in a big bowl, with about a cup of panko bread crumbs, and about 2 cups of cheddar cheese.  I put this all in a Pyrex 9x13 pan, topped it with a few pats of butter,  and baked at 350 for about 20 minutes, putting the broiler on for the last 2 minutes to brown/crisp up the top a little.  Sometimes, for a little something different, we will also mix in either a can of cream of mushroom soup or cream of chicken soup, but this time, we went for less added to the veggies.  SO GOOD that the little bit that was left was highly contested for leftovers as lunch the next day. 

I'm sure you have plenty of ideas for what to do with cherry tomatoes, mine don't usually make it past being rinsed and eaten straight out of the container.  And the cauliflower in our house is usually either eaten raw with dip or steamed with a little butter and salt.  

I hope you like green foods, and that if you don't you give them another try.  And stop by the Blasdell Farmer's Market on Wednesdays from 9AM-2PM at the farmthisway stand and say hi! 


Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Wednesdays are the best!






With no alarm clock and no school schedules to keep up with, Summer days can tend to be indistinguishable from each other.  Not Wednesdays though.  Wednesdays are farmthisway days!  Today is no different.  We are in week 7 of our 24 week CSA membership here in my house, and this week is looking like a fun week!  

Growing season is in full bloom, and the variety in the distributions is starting to show that.  This week we have lovely cauliflower, cabbage, zucchini and summer squash, strawberries, cucumbers, onions and eggs.  Oh what a culinary delight!  The first thing on my post CSA pick up shopping list is going to be a pizza crust or two.  I see a grilled veggie pizza night in our very near future. I usually either buy the Wegman's whole wheat crust or the Rustic Crist Old World Whole Grains crust.   Then I just make long slices of the zucchini and summer squash, make large rings of onion and rough chop the cauliflower and toss in olive oil and some sea salt.  Grill those up first, and once cooked, chop to smaller, pizza friendly sized pieces. Then I take my crust, shred up some fresh basil from my farmthisway herb garden and spread that with some olive oil as the sauce.  next some cheese of your choice, I usually do a blend of cheddar and mozzarella, and toss the veggies on, before putting the whole thing on a low heat grill and closing the lid to get a better melt on the cheese!  

Also a summer favorite is cauliflower salad.  Steam the cauliflower, and you've got a picnic side dish in a few simple steps.  Much like potato or macaroni salad, but by using cauliflower instead of noodles or potatoes, you get more veggies, and please any of your friends who skip the carb scene for one reason or another.  Sweet yellow peppers, hard boiled farm fresh eggs, and mayonnaise make this quick and easy, and tasty too.

This week, most of our strawberries are destined for the freezer in one form or another...Here is the strawberry Popsicle recipe we will be using this week!  

2 pounds ripe strawberries, washed, hulled and halved
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice

Place strawberries in a medium bowl.  Add sugar.  Toss to coat.  Soak berries for about 30 minutes, or until they begin to leave juice in the bowl

Add strawberries and lemon juice to food processor.  Blend until strawberries are pureed.  Add to popsicle molds.  Freeze until solid (about 8 hours).  

This looks like a great way to beat the heat this Summer.  Healthy popsicles that the kids will LOVE!  I hope you enjoy your week of goodies, I know I will! 


Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Week 6 of 24

Fresh produce is starting to roll into the local farms around Westen NY and our CSA distributions at farmthisway are getting exciting.  

In my family, we plan most of our meals around the produce in the distribution for that week.  This past week we received Cucumbers, cabbage, and 2 more flats of strawberries, plus eggs.  

The strawberries have been made once again into jam, frozen for future use, sliced with sugar for shortcake and just eaten plain.  One of my favorite things to do with the strawberries in the freezer is to make smoothies.  We use these for breakfasts, lunches and snacks.  One of my favorites is the "Banana Split" smoothie.  Greek yogurt, frozen strawberries, banana, Ovaltine (or your favorite chocolate milk making powder/liquid), and milk.  Another frozen strawberry favorite is a simple strawberry milkshake.  Berries, ice cream or frozen yogurt, and milk in the blender is great for dessert. 

The cucumbers never usually make it to dinner, unless we slice one or two on our salad.  They are often just sliced and eaten either plain or with a little salt.  Sometimes if we have a lot of them, I like to make a cucumber salad, with sour cream/vinegar dressing and some sweet onion, or if we also have fresh tomatoes, we use the cucumbers, tomatoes, sweet onion and a little Italian style dressing.

A lot of people fear the cabbage.  My family was never really a big cabbage family until we started getting it from our CSA.  It was something I just never bought because I didn't have many standard recipes for.  We have grown to enjoy it though...and found many tasty ways to prepare it.  Whether a fresh cabbage slaw, or sauteed with onion and bacon, stuffed with ground beef and rice for cabbage rolls, or made into sauerkraut, there are way more uses for cabbage than I had ever imagined.  This week, I used some of mine to make an Asian style stir fry of cabbage, onion, and thin sliced beef, tossed in a little sesame oil mixed, and finished off with toasted sesame seeds, soba sauce and some fresh garlic chives chopped out of my herb garden that was part of an earlier distribution (and that I have miraculously managed to not kill!).