Category Archives: CSA

Finding a CSA That Fits

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We just signed up for the spring/summer CSA with Sandy Spring. They use the Lancaster Farm Fresh Cooperative as the source for their shares. They offer vegetable, fruit, herb and flower shares as well as a buying club.

We used them last summer and fall. The summer pickup point was a new one, at the Conservancy where I volunteer. The fall pickup point was down in Columbia Maryland, a little less convenient for us, but the only local option for a fall CSA that fit in the gaps.

We are currently in The Zahradka Farm winter CSA, using a partial share and bi-weekly eggs, and weekly meat. They deliver right to our front porch in the winter, which is very convenient. Winter shares are more limited in items, but do keep me in local eggs and local meats.

We thought long and hard before joining a CSA, with the usual worries. Will we get weird vegetables that we won’t eat. Will we drown in corn or tomatoes or cucumbers. I grow tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, herbs and sometimes squash. The stink bugs are hurting us and this past year I knew I needed a source that wouldn’t be as susceptible to them.

The local CSAs in Maryland do offer much of the same things that Sandy Spring offers, but with the sheer size of the coop (somewhere between 70-80 farms across the Lancaster area), we took the chance and signed up last March. We were supposed to get 7-10 items every week. We never got less than 10, and some weeks there were fourteen items in the box. The variety was amazing. I did a spreadsheet that showed we had over 100 different items, and none of them more than 9 weeks of the 25 week season. The winners were broccoli and eggplant.

We tried new things, like salsify, and tatsoi, and fell in love with garlic scapes.

We know that many of our friends do not eat enough vegetables to buy a full share. Other local CSAs offer half shares, which are a better fit for someone who eats out often, or who isn’t a big veggie eater. We also see great CSAs that offer eggs, or breads, or specialty items. They work well for those who don’t want to see 12 different veggies every Monday. We get eggs from a friend in the summer, in exchange for tomatoes and other veggies from our garden, so don’t need eggs from the CSA. We buy our meats in the summer at the farmer’s markets locally. We also don’t eat enough bread to get it weekly. We passed on the bread option from our winter CSA.

Doing a little research into the typical items, and the location, date, time and method of pickup will help someone find an option that fits them. And, that supports those small farmers local to your area. We found we almost never went to the chain grocery stores all summer, and that we do minimal shopping there now in the winter.

Next year I intend to can, freeze, or dry whatever I can’t use immediately to minimize my reliance on processed foods.

Dark Days Week Seven Sunday Dinner

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Honestly, if I didn’t get the salsify from the CSA the end of December, I would never have found my newest favorite vegetable.

Ugly looking vegetable, isn’t it? But it ended up in a lovely dinner of beef sausage, baked red cabbage and apples, and fritters made simply with the salsify. I do need to work on my photography skills though, as the cabbage and apples had juices running all over the plate. I suppose I can’t qualify for cooking magazine photographer, can I?

The salsify recipe came from vintage recipes and I chose the salsify fritters recipe from the Boston Cooking School Cookbook. I made it using local butter from Blue Ridge Dairy, and the spelt flour from The Common Market Coop bulk foods bin. It was really great tasting, just like described, reminding us of oysters.

The sausages were placed in a small pan in the oven to brown. The red cabbage from the last week of our fall CSA were placed in a deep baking dish with apples from the Leesburg Farmer’s Market (I forgot to record which farm we bought them from), apple cider from Heyser Farms Colesville MD, honey from Baugher’s Westminster MD, and baked with the sausage. Baked it all at 300 degrees, for about an hour to get the beef sausages to caramelize.

Finished it all off with some pumpkin ice cream left in the freezer from our earlier trip to Baugher’s.

Winter CSA Week Two

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I am getting used to having someone drop food on my front porch. I like the delivery aspect of this CSA, even though winter food choices get a little boring, so to speak. Still, the meat choices are interesting, and I get eggs every other week.

This week I chose:
French Breakfast Radishes
Celery
Sweet Potatoes
Large Spanish Onion
Broccoli crowns
Grapefruit (the citrus comes up from a farm in Florida, not local but really appreciated)

The meat this week was a heavy pound of Italian style beef sausages. I promptly used them in my Dark Days meal on Sunday, which I will post soon.

I like getting the smaller 6 item share. I alternate what I get week to week. If I had the 10 item share, it could get a bit boring in the winter without many choices of fresh produce available.

The beef sausage are Pleasantville Beef, in Forest Hill MD. Angus beef.

Drowning in CSA’s

Really!

Two in the same day. Our fall CSA ended today, and the winter one I found was supposed to start Friday but moved up deliveries to today due to the holiday.

Thankfully, the next delivery is January 6th.

I love Lancaster Farm Fresh Cooperative. The large number of farmers means lots of choices. Today finished the eight week fall offerings. DH carried home almost 30 pounds of veggies.

We got:
Baby bull’s blood beets
Buttercup squash
bag of kale
red cabbage
sweet potatoes
Yukon gold potatoes
leeks
turnips
rutabagas

Then, our winter CSA with a meat and egg option was delivered to the porch this afternoon. We picked a small share, of six items, and go on line to choose from the ten available.


One dozen eggs
One half free range turkey
cranberry chutney
red potatoes
Spanish onion
Romanescu cauliflower
beets
Tangelos (from a small farm in the south, we will have options to buy citrus during the winter)

I can’t believe how much the CSAs have changed what we eat and how we think about where our food originates. Eating better than we did when we worked and loving the variety of it.

Dark Days Challenge Week Four

It’s Sunday night. The night I usually cook my local meal for the Dark Days Challenge

I went way out there this week. Making gnocchi with local spelt. My local sources are on my page linked above on the blog.

Dinner:
Heirloom tomatoes with goat cheese, basil, olive oil and balsamic.
Sweet potato gnocchi with maple syrup and sage brown butter.
Maple pork sausage with onions and peppers.
Boordy Reserve Chardonnay.

Besides the salt, pepper, cinnamon, olive oil and balsamic, everything else was local.

Tomatoes and basil from Mock’s Greenhouse. 70 miles
Sausage and butter from South Mountain Creamery. 35 miles
Maple syrup from Patterson’s Farm, PA. 200 miles (yes, outside my 150, but one of the nearest sources of maple syrup to MD)
Sweet potatoes, onions and peppers from LFFC CSA. 100 miles
Goat cheese from Firefly Farms. 140 miles.
Spelt from The Common Market, Frederick MD 20 miles.
Ricotta from Natural by Nature. 100 miles.
Sage from my garden, 10 feet

Spelt was difficult to source, but The Common Market sells it in bulk, as well as in bags from Shiloh Farms. I bought bulk. I can also get it from Atwater’s by buying bags of Daisy, or by mail from Rodale or Small Valley. I saved the postage and bought bulk, even though they don’t know whether each batch is from PA, OH or maybe NY. In my rules, if I can source it locally, I will sometimes substitute if I can’t easily pick up the item. Having it shipped adds greatly to the cost. Same for maple syrup. There is a place in MD that makes it and sells it. Buying it when I am out costs less than ordering and paying for shipping.

The wine is from Boordy and went very well with the gnocchi. I have to admit, the white spelt which is a pastry flour is way finer than wheat flour, and the potatoes were also very fresh and almost melted when baked. I had to greatly increase the amount of flour to make the gnocchi, but they came out beautifully.

The recipe was from Food Network, with my changes to use spelt.
1 1/2 pounds sweet potato, baked in the oven, then peeled and smashed
1/2 cup ricotta cheese
1 tsp cinnamon
3/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp freshly ground pepper

Mix together. Add 2 cups of spelt, 1/2 cup at a time. You may need even more spelt as you are rolling out the gnocchi. Form a large ball. Divide into 4 pieces. Put more flour on the board. Get the right consistency by feel. If they are too wet, add more spelt. Keep on the side on a baking sheet. Heat salted water to boiling. Drop in enough at a time not to crowd them. Fish out after 5-6 minutes, and put under a foil tent to stay warm.

In the meantime, make the maple cinnamon sage brown butter. I used 3/4 stick equivalent of my dairy’s butter, 12 sage leaves, 2 TBSP maple syrup, 1 tsp cinnamon.

Bring the butter to a boil in a large pan, add sage and stand back. Stir and continue browning butter, then remove from heat and add cinnamon and maple syrup. Caution: it does foam up quite a bit, so be prepared to stir vigorously. Pour over the gnocchi and the sausages, which were baked in the oven with a little butter, two small onions chopped, and a few of my last CSA peppers.

Enjoy!

Lazy Saturday Mornings

Today started out nicely, and then only got better at the Silver Spring Farmer’s Market.

This week will be interesting, and it was nice to have a lazy sleep in day, with a local breakfast, and a trip to the market for apples and greens.

Turns out we got way more than that. But first, breakfast. We have eggs to use, as this week starts my new CSA on Friday that includes eggs. The egg bin needs attention. These are South Mountain Creamery eggs.

Their butter, their eggs, Atwater’s spelt bread and the only non-local items were the salt and pepper.

Then off to the market, where I discovered the wonders of Mock’s Greenhouse fresh produce grown year round in fourteen greenhouses. The heirloom tomatoes just jumped up and called to us so we had to buy some. And, their basil as well. With Firefly Farms goat cheese, these will be tomorrow’s appetizer for my weekly Dark Days Meal.

I know there will be many more visits to the markets where they sell these lovely tomatoes.

Fall CSA Week Seven

It is the next to last week of our fall CSA and we are winding down with a bang, more or less. There were two very large bags there, one containing carrots and the other containing fingerling potatoes.

What did we get?

the bag of carrots
the bag of fingerlings
baby bellas
portabellas
butternut squash
two heads red romaine lettuce
mixed bag turnips
3 yellow onions
salsify (new for me)
2 leeks

The mushrooms are wonderful. They are one of the reasons I went with this CSA. Mother Earth is part of the Co-op.

Now these root veggies are just making me want to create a roasted meal sometime soon.

Dark Days Challenge Week Three

I find Sundays to be the best day to do the Dark Days Challenge as I am home watching football, and dinner can be made around games and halftime. I promised the OM (old man) in amateur radio lingo (as an aside I am the XYL or X young lady, single women are YLs) that he wouldn’t suffer with bad meals because I am doing this challenge. So far I think I am delivering really good food while staying within the parameters of the challenge. All of my sources are now being listed on my local resources page.

It all started with sauerkraut. I made my first batch of sauerkraut two weeks ago. This is the last of it.

I put a new batch together in the pail and will have more for meals over the holidays. Probably taking some to my brother’s house for Christmas Eve. The cabbage is from our CSA.

The sausage I bought Saturday at the Silver Spring year round farmer’s market.

Sausage, sauerkraut, and a honeycrisp apple from Quaker Valley. Ready to bake.

I made a spinach salad. Spinach from Our House Farm, rest of the veggies from the CSA, and cheese from Bowling Green Farm in Howard County. Vinaigrette from Catoctin Mountain Orchards. Spelt bread from Atwater’s. Butter from South Mountain Creamery. The wine is a 2000 Linden Hardscrabble Cabernet Blend from VA from the cellar. Virginia has some phenomenal wineries, and Linden’s wines are some of the best here. This wine is still a baby after 11 years.

The finished dinner, including a side of roasted root veggies left over from earlier in the week. The veggies were all from the Dupont Circle Farmer’s Market or the CSA, and all were local and organic, including the huge roasted black radish which was wonderful after slow roasting. It also included plum tomatoes, celery, carrots, onions and greens. After roasting the veggies earlier this week I strained and saved the veggie stock to use later for other meals.

Who says Dark Days have to be dull? We can cook great meals with local ingredients, with a little planning.

Fall CSA Week Six

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Getting towards the end of the fall CSA. We will be going through fresh veggie withdrawal, and this CSA does not start up again until May. It was rainy and muddy picking up our box, but there were twelve wonderful additions to the fridge.

We received:
Red Romaine Lettuce
2 baby bok choi
1 large leek (plus the extra one that I got when I swapped the lacinato kale)
a bag of green and red mustard greens
a bag of mixed cooking greens
butternut squash
a bag of garlic
a bag of carrots
a bag of Beauregard sweet potatoes
purple topped turnips
1 large rutabaga

All organic, and this week’s box was quite a bit different than last week, which is a good thing. I like the variety.

I am making sauerkraut again with last week’s cabbage, and will be making “pumpkin” bread using two of the squashes that I have been saving. I find butternut squash works great in many zucchini or pumpkin bread recipes. Looks like a stir fry later in the week as well. I did find organic chicken thighs at the natural foods store yesterday, and have enough other stuff in the pantry to make chicken chow mein and use up bok choy and Napa cabbage from past weeks.

We are definitely eating better from this CSA than we did in the past, and I appreciate getting good veggies since the stink bugs have been limiting what I harvested from our garden. Can’t wait until we eliminate those pests from our environment. I heard they may have found a natural predator and are studying it. It can’t come fast enough for us.

Dark Days Week Two – Dinner Extraordinaire

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When the better half, or the OM (old man in amateur radio lingo) raves about how amazing dinner was, you know you found a winning recipe.

I had leftover CSA veggies to use. The fridge is out of control. Today is CSA day. What to make with turnips and Jerusalem artichokes? Enter Serious Eats to the rescue.

Turnip, Jerusalem artichoke and apple soup. Somewhat easy to make. Immensely satisfying. Add to that some Red Apron Lamb sausage, some Atwater’s baguette, and cleaning out the spinach, tat soi and radish in the crisper to make a side salad. All local except for the olive oil, salt and pepper.

The soup recipe is below.

2 small leeks, cleaned and chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped
1 small onion, diced
olive oil

Start with these in a heavy cast iron Dutch oven. Soften first, then sweat them in a 1/2 cup of water, until water almost evaporated.

Add diced turnips (3), Apples (2) and Jerusalem artichokes (about a pound total) with 2 cups more of water and a pinch of salt. Simmer it all covered for 45 minutes on low heat, then puree in a blender.

Served with a side salad of spinach, tat soi, radish and a peach vinaigrette. Sliced bread and the leftover lamb sausage from Red Apron butcher. And, of course, a local wine. Boordy Reserve Chardonnay.

Delicious.