Category Archives: CSA

Fall CSA Week Five

Posted on

Really lovely things in the box this week.

Some really interesting specialty radishes, heads of green cabbage, broccoli, red romaine and cauliflower, a bag of onions, a bag of yellow fin potatoes, a bunch of cilantro, turnip greens and collard greens.

This should make my dark days dinner this coming Sunday night very interesting, as I am considering my favorite of making greens in butter and olive oil, with potatoes and topped with beef short ribs. If I get it all together, it should be a great meal.

I made sauerkraut with cabbage from two weeks ago, which I am cooking tonight with chicken sausages and apples. Now that I know the sauerkraut is a hit, and very easy to make, I will be doing it again with this cabbage.

Dark Days Challenge Week One – Dinner and Lunch

Sunday night I kicked off the Dark Days Challenge by cooking an almost completely locally sourced dinner, and then Monday had a lovely lunch of leftovers to make it a “twofer”.

My rules are in my previous post. This meal came from within a 100 mile radius, since my CSA sources are about 80-90 miles away in Amish country. We pick up our CSA about 8 miles from our property so that is the distance I traveled to get most of my dinner. A few things came from my trip Christmas shopping to Frederick and Thurmont, and from a visit with friends to the Dupont Circle Farmer’s market. I stocked up on local items while on these two trips so have lots in the larder and freezer for future meals.

Sunday Menu
Green Salad
Turkey Breast w/chutney
Sweet Potato Galette
Pumpkin Ice Cream

The wine was local as well. Black Ankle vineyards is my favorite Maryland winery, and this Gruner Veltliner is a perfect match for turkey.

The salad:
2 heads Baby Flashy Troutsback Lettuce – organic – Friends Road Organics – CSA
1 shaved carrot – organic – Elm Tree Organics – CSA
Six cherry tomatoes from my garden
(bag ripened from the final culling of the vines prior to frost)
1 Black Radish, peeled, sliced – organic – The Farm at Sunnyside (Dupont Circle Market)
Cremini and Button Mushrooms – organic – The Mushroom Stand (Dupont Circle Market)
Peach Vinaigrette – Catoctin Mountain Orchards Thurmont MD
Pistachios – the only non-local item on the salad

The galette:

Recipe Sweet Potato Galette

2 Beauregard Sweet Potatoes – organic – Eagle View Acres – CSA
1 large bunch spinach – organic – Farmdale Organics – CSA
1 head tatsoi – organic – Hillside Organics – CSA
1 package Firefly Farms Black and Blue Goat Cheese, crumbled
Salt and pepper to taste
Turkey Stock, homemade from Maple Lawn Farms fresh turkey, using neck, gizzards, heart and liver
1 TBSP butter – South Mountain Creamery

I cooked down a large quantity of greens (spinach and tatsoi) in skillet using a splash of organic extra virgin olive oil (not local, I wish we could grow olives here) and a quarter cup of my homemade turkey stock. Set them aside and prepared skillet for creating the galette. Dropped a tablespoon of butter in the skillet, let it melt, and added first layer of thinly sliced sweet potatoes, topped with greens and cheese, then repeated three times, and seasoned with salt and pepper. I made sure to press down the final layer just before putting it in the oven, and added a tiny bit more of my stock to keep it moist.

Baked in a 350 degree oven in the skillet for about 45 minutes. I use convection bake for this to speed up the baking and keep the bottom from browning before the potatoes are done. A bit messy to plate but definitely good. Next time I would use the other cheese from Firefly which is a creamier blue. This one got a wee bit chewy.

Reheated the turkey breast in the oven with a drizzle of turkey stock. Turkey breast was leftovers from our Thanksgiving all natural fresh turkey from Maple Lawn Farms in Maryland, made Friday. Veggies and stock for the turkey all local, veggies from CSA (carrots, onions, celery) and stock made in advance from the innards.

Served it with a side of the last of the wild blueberry chutney a friend brought home after her summer in Maine. I give them all tomatoes in the summer and they exchange things, like milk from their cows, and others have eggs from their chickens.

Dessert was pumpkin ice cream from South Mountain Creamery.

Monday was beautiful here, so we decided to eat out on the patio. I made a salad with leftovers of the turkey and pretty much the same other items, like carrots, mushrooms, and served it with cheese from Bowling Green Farm and an apple from Quaker Valley Farms (Dupont Circle Mkt). I did add dried cranberries from our organic supermarket. They are not local obviously. The vinaigrette was Catoctin Mountain Orchards Blackberry Splash. Cider from Black Rock Orchards in Lineboro MD.

It wasn’t hard to do most of this in November. February is going to be difficult I imagine.

Our Thanksgiving Dinner

Tonight I will be cooking our personal “what I want to eat” Thanksgiving dinner for just the two of us. We do this every year, since we moved out here to the rural west county. We buy most of it locally and make spicy or ethnic foods that don’t find favor or takers at our family get together.

Some won’t eat spicy, or “weird” veggies. Their words, not mine. There are few veggies we don’t like, and the ability to experiment with what we get at farmer’s markets or in the CSA share, is what gives me pleasure.

Besides, the turkey legs will be Sunday night’s kick off Dark Days Challenge main course.

We picked up the turkey Wednesday at our local market when I picked up the CSA.

I am roasting it this year in the oven instead of grilling it, and not stuffing it with anything other than some onions, and citrus peel. I will use a dry rub that I make with Italian herbs and use a little grapeseed oil on the skin.

I am baking sweet potatoes in the other oven, along with a small batch of sausage and apple stuffing, with a spinach salad on the side.

Opening a local Gruner Veltliner from Black Ankle Vineyards.

Pictures I hope to get up here tomorrow. A romantic dinner watching the sunset from the dining room windows. Lots of leftovers to use in soups and sandwiches, and to make stock for future Dark Days Challenge meals.

Fall CSA Week Four

Surrounded by all the holiday traffic and chaos I picked up this week’s CSA and then went off to a local market to get my pre-ordered fresh turkey and homemade sausage for my Dark Days Challenge, and our Thanksgiving dinner scheduled for Sunday night.

We go to visit family on Thanksgiving in Annapolis, so our turkey is made Sunday.

The CSA haul was again beautiful.

“Log Grown” Shiitake mushrooms, tatsoi, purple top turnips, baby peppers, Jerusalem artichokes, baby leaf lettuces, garnet sweet potatoes, green cabbage, spinach, cauliflower and a leek.  All organic.

ImageImage

Why Blog? Why Now?

I was just asked by a friend as to why I started a blog now, what motivated me, and what do I intend to write.

I have to say my initial exposure to blogs was travel blogs by people visiting places I want to travel. People who wrote about Antarctica, and expedition cruises.

I haven’t been traveling lately, mainly because house renovations got in the way, but we used to travel quite a bit.

I suppose it was somewhere in the Amalfi Coast, while sailing that I really got into cooking, or maybe it was the market in Nice.

But, I also got inspired reading some great articles in Gourmet, before they went away, and then I inherited a Bon Appetit replacement subscription that introduced me to Molly Wizenberg and Orangette. We shared a common bond, sauerkraut at Thanksgiving, since I was born and raised in Baltimore.

So, now retired and really into cooking and growing some of my own food, I decided why not record it? I contributed to a few groups in my earlier years, only to find the posts disappeared when you don’t own them. My own domain, my words, my pictures, here until I decide to get rid of them.

Today I am making sauerkraut from a cabbage left over from the CSA. It will be ready to eat by next Sunday, for my dark days first supper, and our home Thanksgiving. Just us. The relatives get together on Thursday, but we like our own small fresh turkey from a local farm, with leftovers to make soup.

And here I get to record it.

Dark Days Preparation

I am getting ready for the dark days challenge. I have inventoried the farmer’s market and neighbor’s contributions of meats in the freezer and looking at what stocks and veggies are also in there.

I have my peppers drying.

I also have the dried sage hanging in the garage, and thankfully the rosemary is still going strong.

Garlic and jellies around, and some gifts from friends who traveled, like blueberry chutney. Honey from the bee hives where I volunteer.

Local wines in the cellar, and a few six packs of locally brewed beer. Apple cider still coming in from a local farm

The CSA and the Amish markets should help me make it through the winter. Fifteen weeks is a long time, and there may be some omelets and soups more than I usually make, but at least I am doing a small part to work on reducing my carbon footprint.

Baby steps, we call them, but worth it to me.

Roasting Beets

So, last night I roasted the specialty beets from the CSA and peeled them to use in a salad tomorrow night.

I roast beets dry, unpeeled, over a bed of kosher salt to pull out some of the moisture and allow them to concentrate their flavor.

I put them in a 350 degree Fahrenheit oven for about an hour, then let them cool and peel them. Off to the refrigerator to wait for my salad tomorrow evening. I will update this post with the salad picture when I make dinner tomorrow evening.

The Update with the finished product:

This salad was made using CSA box red romaine, white radishes, the specialty beets, and adding local goat cheese, some grapes from the store, some pistachios, and drizzled with Catoctin Mtn Orchards Blackberry Splash Vinaigrette. About 90% local, with only the grapes and pistachios bought at the grocery store.

Fall CSA Week Three

Another wonderful basket full of goodies this week. I am always amazed at the quality and the variety in this CSA.

This week we received:
1 bag carrots
1 Hokkaido squash
1 butternut squash
1 bunch specialty radishes
1 bag mixed specialty beets
1 bag sweet Hakurei turnips
1 head red romaine lettuce
1 head tatsoi
1 bag teeny tiny bok choy
1 bag Beauregard sweet potatoes
2 leeks
1 bag onions

All are certified organic.

I already have the beets roasting in the oven.

We found out that there will be no winter CSA in this area, but not to worry for us. We searched the local harvest site and found a new CSA for 18 weeks starting when this one ends. AND!!!!!! they deliver to our county, since the farmer’s markets are finished in this area, and they have a small circle of subscribers that they can bring it to us.

Can’t wait to begin this one, as we added a meat subscription and bi-weekly eggs. I already miss my suppliers from the markets.

Sometimes You Can’t Win

I got this lovely Queensland Blue Squash last week in the CSA basket. I hoped to roast it and make bread with it for a get together at my volunteer site.

But, although organic foods are wonderful for me to use, they have their downsides. I picked it up today to cut it and roast it and found an tiny hole in the bottom, probably the exit point for the little critter who had gotten in through the stem. He (it) had wreaked havoc in the squash and it gave off an ugly odor. Off to the compost pile for my lovely squash, and on to plan B, a butternut squash from two weeks ago.

Thankfully, critter free.

Dark Days Challenge

So, I signed up to do the Dark Days Challenge this winter.

The details for the challenge can be found here.

Having a fall and possibly winter CSA subscription, and having access to year round markets makes it a possibility for us to eat more locally sourced foods than we had been able to find in the past.

We have to establish our own radius, and determine which rules we will use for our participation. I know I will be using 150 miles as our radius, even though 90% of what we get comes from less than 100 miles away.

Our Amish Co-op that supplies our CSA is based near Lancaster PA, which is about 90 miles as the crow flies.

I will also use locally sourced meats, breads, wine, beer, cider and milk that are available near here, but do know that for some of the beers and some of the ciders they may be manufactured locally, but not all ingredients are local.

As more details are known, I will update my post with the complete list of rules.