Category Archives: Food

Week Six of the Fall CSA

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Abbondanza! That Italian word for abundance. Richness. Copious amounts. In other words, our CSA box this week.

Sandy Spring Fall CSA 2012 Week Six

Sandy Spring Fall CSA 2012 Week Six

Here is the list.

Romanesco Cauliflower
1 Bag Purple Carrots (over a pound)
1 Bag Broccoli (incredibly fresh)
1 Bag Fingerling Potatoes
1 Bag Spinach (over a pound)
1 Quart Mini Dwarf Bok Choy
2 large Leeks
1 bag yellow onions (out of the swap box)
1 Bag Red Potatoes
1 Seminole Squash

I gave back a Napa Cabbage to get onions. With the venison coming, I needed onions to make chili. The Romanesco is one of my favorite items. It has a nutty flavor. I love roasting it in the oven with Indian spices and drizzled with butter.

Romanesco cauliflower

Romanesco cauliflower

As for the broccoli, this isn’t all of it. I must have grabbed and eaten three or four crowns as I was emptying them out of the bag. Nothing as sweet as fresh veggies, one day out of the fields.

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Now, the spinach as well. I had too much to fit in the spinner. Had to do it in two batches. I decided to leave some out to have for dinner with some sockeye salmon. My husband came home and started eating it right out of the colander. It is sweet, tender, packed full of nutrients. Yes, we are weird. We snack on fresh veggies like they are candy or fruit. There was 17 ounces of organic spinach in the bag. I bought organic baby spinach last weekend as I wanted salad greens. They cost me $4 for five ounces. Today we got at least $12 worth of organic spinach.

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My husband is also very happy, as we got fingerling potatoes. These little gems are such a treat. Parboil them first. Pop them in a pan with some butter, rosemary, garlic and salt and brown them. They are so good this way. They will be part of dinner tonight as well.

Heading over to In Her Chucks to link up. Not as many of us have fall and winter CSAs but there is still a ton of goodness being delivered from local farmers to those of us who love fresh food.

hocofood@@@

Revisiting that Rainbow

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The Eating by Color rainbow. The one I blogged about a while back. Mixing fruits, veggies, grains, and nuts of different colors to provide the diet high in antioxidants and other nutrients that keep you healthy.

Dinner tonight was a rainbow dinner. Lots of local and organic. Totally vegetarian by design. At least once a week we try to eat vegetarian for our health.

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Two fairly simple plates. The salad included organic spinach, feta from Bowling Green, pears from Lewis Orchards, snap peas, croutons and dressing from the grocery store and pistachios. The croutons were whole grain. Many of these items are in the book I spoke of in an earlier post. Eating by Color. An older Williams Sonoma book.

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I love spinach salad. It preceded a plate of steamed veggies and stuffed squash. The Carnival squash and broccoli came from the CSA. The Brussels sprouts and cranberries in the chutney came from England Acres Farm. Simple steaming the green veggies. Baked the squash with Trickling Springs butter, some cinnamon and nutmeg, then added my homemade chutney to finish it.

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Look at how fresh that broccoli is. It is from last Thursday’s CSA delivery. Fresh veggies last so much longer than store bought. Although this meal wasn’t totally local, it had major elements that were. When the food is local, it tastes so much better, and you are supporting local farmers.

Oh, and just as an aside, here is a pic of the last of our yellow popping corn, popped last night in the microwave. This is a new found favorite, and if we don’t get popcorn tomorrow in the CSA, I may be buying some out at Breezy Willow’s farm store this weekend. Hopefully, they still have their strawberry popcorn around.

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Round Up Those Resolutions

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Having a blog means getting to see what you said you were going to do in your New Year’s Resolutions. And then, when you revisit them, see if you made any progress, or just forgot about them. I did revisit in April.

Then, I did forget to see if I did anything. It’s been almost eight months, and I think before I make any resolutions for 2013, I should see if I accomplished any of the 2012 ones. Why make resolutions just to ignore them, or shelve them?

I did get that freezer. It is full. I am using it. Garlic scape pesto, chicken and turkey broth, chunky tomato sauce, all being used. CSA veggies being preserved in it and nothing going to waste. I think I can call this one a win.

pesto, fruit, veggies, broth ready for winter

pesto, fruit, veggies, broth ready for winter

We didn’t bid on a 4H animal this year, but I am getting venison tomorrow. Changing into almost 100% locally supplied beef, pork, chicken, turkey, lamb and now, venison. Not buying from grocery stores. That is a huge change in our consumption. I think that is another win. I even started buying bones from the Mt. Airy butcher to make my own stocks.

beef bones for stock

beef bones for stock

I did lose weight, even with the set back of surgery. Not very much, but down from a year ago. That will be another major goal next year. Make it a double digit loss, though, instead of a cumulative single digit loss. Still, six pounds down from a year ago isn’t bad.

Didn’t do chickens, or a cold frame. We think we will pass on the chickens, until we find a better place for my garden and get the radio towers positioned. Still want to do the cold frame.

As for baking and cooking. Didn’t bake that much, but did get cookies done for the Holiday Mart. Decided baking and losing weight are a problem, unless you bake to give away.

Cooking, on the other hand. Doing lots more and getting creative. Pumpkin hummus. Ajvar, now a staple in my recipe file. More cinnamon, garlic and other Mediterranean flavors. The venison will become many stews and chilis. I want to use tomatillos in it. I have branched out to new items.

ajvar and hummus

ajvar and hummus

All in all, I am pleased with this year’s changes. And, yes, we did a bit of decluttering. The boxes in our garage from my husband’s office are gone. The shed has been cleaned to remove all leftovers from the roof, gutter and siding replacement jobs. Now, to get the tractor out of the garage so my car can go back in it. Before we get SNOW! That is one of my final big goals. But, at the moment tower parts, cable, rotors, antenna parts, all are still in the shed and the tractor needs just a bit more floor space than we have there. Hope that getting this crank up done this week will get me back in the garage. Keeping my fingers crossed.

making progress on the first tower

making progress on the first tower

I guess I will make public resolutions for 2013. I seem to have done OK this year. Still loving the CSA and knowing I can eat locally year round in Howard County was a very pleasant surprise and motivates me to keep doing it. I need to update the local resources page to keep it current and show where things can be bought in the winter.

Oh, almost forgot. Still volunteering and loving it. In 2013, I will be helping with programs at the Conservancy to showcase local farmers and artisans. Can’t give up that precious gift of time.

hocofood@@@

My SOLE Food Sisters and our Winter Eat Local Challenge

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For five years, a group of bloggers and blog readers took on a challenge to cook locally during the winter, at least once a week, and blog about it. We called it the Dark Days Challenge, for the dark days of winter here in the Northern Hemisphere. Ten of us, called the south region made it all the way through the challenge, and we bonded in our support for one another.

We continued our blogging together, setting up a Southern SOLE food challenge, using our gardens, farm stands, CSAs, markets and local producers for some staples, as a basis for cooking with our bountiful summer goods.

We decided we wanted to continue this winter and do our own Dark Days again. We will be keeping our google reader going with the participants, and our leader, Emily, from Sincerely Emily, is putting it all together right now. We will blog on Sundays or Mondays about what we made, from our freezers, our canned fruits and veggies, our dried herbs, a few local winter markets, some farm stands that are open year round, and let you know you can still find good things to cook in your own backyard, regionally. From places like Breezy Willow or TLV or Clark’s Farm, all open on Saturdays this winter.

Breezy Willow last January

Breezy Willow last January

What is SOLE food? Sustainable, Organic, Local and Ethical. Pick two or three or all four for most of your ingredients. Eggs from free range chickens. Locally produced meats from animals that aren’t given hormones, antibiotics or fed grain to fatten. Seafood from the local waters. Winter veggies from farmers who don’t spray pesticides or use GMO seeds. Fruit from growers who practice IPM, and minimize what they put on their trees. Those types of things. We state up front that certain items like oils, spices and in our cases, citrus, beans and grains, won’t be local if we don’t have sources ever for those items. Chocolate, for example, or cinnamon. Salt and pepper. Olive oil. When I cook my dark days meal, I do use things like olive oil that have traveled a lesser distance, like my oils from California. Much closer than Spain, Greece or Italy.

my "local" olive oil

my “local” olive oil

It is a fun challenge to make a meal by minimizing non-local items. We will be running our challenge from December 1st until May 1st. I will be updating my food challenge page to follow it.

To kick off my week, I will be making venison chili this week with the venison I will be getting Tuesday. Newly processed. A freezer load of 50-60 pounds, to keep us in stews, chilis, soups and a few nice meals with the loin and the steaks. Out here in our neck of the woods, the bow season is fairly long and we are supporting the deer management practices, to lower the over population in our forests. In some of our watershed areas, they have done night counts that register 6-8 times the number of deer than the vegetation will support. If we don’t use managed hunts, we end up with large numbers of starving and diseased deer.

After providing deer meat to family and friends, many of our local hunters support FHFH (Farmers and Hunters Feeding the Hungry) with donations of deer to be used as a nutritious inexpensive source of protein.

I will be using my frozen chunky tomato sauce and CSA veggies to make my meal. I will write a post about my dinner, and also link up with the others who are supporting the eat local challenge with me. A year ago, when I started this blog, my CSA and my locavore tendencies were my main source of postings. I do believe it is not that difficult to make one meal a week using something produced right down the road. Even if it is only a couple of eggs for breakfast one Sunday. Served with a walnut spelt bread from Atwaters in Catonsville. Spelt is a local grain, grown in PA.

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Anyone interested in taking the challenge, add your name in comments here, and add your link, or your description each week as we go through the winter supporting our local farmers and businesses. Definitely a way to support the best that Howard County and the rest of the region offer us. Truly the Land of Pleasant Living.

hocofood@@@

A Foggy Sunday Morning

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Warm and foggy. Weather that changes by the hour. It is fairly warm out, and the fog is heavy in the yard and meadow.

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I have been spending a lazy morning, finishing sealing the envelopes to send the Christmas cards, cleaning out the kitchen freezer to make room for the venison we are getting Tuesday, and checking out the Christmas lights to see if any strings need new bulbs. I also had to rearrange things in the basement freezer, which is pretty full again. Last week I just added three containers of turkey stock. Time to make some soups.

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I did pop outside to feed the birds and to watch the red breasted nuthatch ignore me while he got breakfast from the feeder, letting me stand there and take his picture.

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Back to putting out the Christmas decorations, like my bed post people I found years ago at a crafts fair at the county fairgrounds. I think finding special items made by local artists is my favorite source for decorations.

foggy sunday morning 012

If the fog burns off, I will be putting up my lights on the trees outside. Otherwise, a lazy afternoon of watching football and eating steamed shrimp and flatbread pizza. Gotta make more room for that 50-60 pounds of deer meat. Oh well, whatever doesn’t fit will just have to become a large pot of chili sometime this week.

Making Popcorn

So easy. A paper bag. A microwave. An ear of popcorn. Three minutes. A bowl. Some seasonings. The result.

Popcorn from scratch

Popcorn from scratch

We got popcorn twice already in the CSA box this year. These ears are the larger ones. Called yellow popcorn.

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I made one last night to have while watching a movie. Perfect with warm cider. Simple last night. I just did butter and salt. Before the movie though, it was nice to wander out and check out the full moon. You could walk the property in the dark just enjoying the light of the moon. Perfect evening out there last night.

hexbeam 005

The weekend is supposed to be awesome as well. We got a flier about Breezy Willow farm store being open on Saturdays starting tomorrow. If I recall, they have some lovely strawberry popcorn.

Tomorrow will see me at the Conservancy Natural Crafts Fair followed by a visit to Breezy Willow. Keeping it local.

hocofood@@@

Fall CSA Week Five

Heading into the home stretch. Only three weeks left after today. No worries. The freezer is full. Potatoes and squash in the coldest part of the laundry room.

2 Rutabaga
2 Bags Red Potatoes (Napa Cabbage swapped for second bag 5 Pounds)
1 Bag Purple Carrots
1 Head Broccoli
1 Head Bok Choy
2 large Leeks
1 Butternut Squash
2 large Yellow Onions
1 Bag Viola Turnips

The new one for us this week is the viola turnips. Never had them before. They should be interesting. The link says they are a rare heirloom.

We love the Hakurei turnips. Maybe this one will be another favorite.

Our preview harvest page at Sandy Spring said they were harvesting salsify this week. I was sad we didn’t get any, and am crossing my fingers hoping to get it before the season ends. I did a wonderful fritter from salsify last year, the post here, and a picture below.

Only ever found it at Harris Teeter, it was from Belgium and way past its prime. It is the root of the sunflower. Tastes like oysters. The fritters were lovely.

I am always intrigued by the new veggies we get. This week most of them were ones we have gotten before, but a new variety of turnips sounds interesting to try.

I also compared pricing with Wegmans this week. $38.50 to buy the same veggies as we got, but not all of theirs are organic. We pay $31.25 a week. Still ahead, even after the hurricane washout one week.

Making leftover turkey tonight with the last of the stuffing, and baking a few of those lovely red potatoes.

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Just BAKE IT!!!

As opposed to just doing it. It was a New Year’s resolution to bake more. I am trying to find my own sugar cookie recipe that tastes as good as my mom’s.

This recipe isn’t bad. My mom’s uses margarine. I don’t like using margarine, but every recipe I find without margarine isn’t as good as hers. I will continue this quest to find crispy chewy cookies without margarine.

my mom’s cookies

My mom’s cookies are also incredibly thin. Every time I try and roll mine that thin, they break. Still, this isn’t a bad recipe. Pretty easy too. I am blessed with the space to bake without stress as I have an area in the kitchen I only use to bake, and it is away from cooking prep.

I have already started assembling the supplies to make all the cookies I plan to bake for the holidays. My board is actually the cut out of the Corian counter from where the sink went, from our old house. Works great as a pastry, pasta and baking rolling base.

The recipe for the cookies:

2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
3/4 cups fine granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt

Slowly mix together. Then add:
2 sticks unsalted butter, very cold and cut into thin slices

Keep mixing on low. Add 2 large egg yolks and 2 tsp vanilla extract. Mix until it becomes clumpy. Make two flattened disks of dough, wrap in plastic and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. Roll out, cut and bake at 375 degrees for 12-14 minutes. Rotate pans halfway through baking.

I put the sanding sugar on top before baking. I think it adheres better that way. You can also ice them. Too much work to make icing, so I like the simple addition of red and green sugar.

I make a few little blobs to use for taste testing. I also make one big blob with the last of the dough. That is my husband’s cookie so he won’t take the good ones.

Now I just need to clean up my mess so I can make some other favorites tomorrow. I think I am looking to make dark chocolate chunk cookies. And my hazelnut butter ball cookies.

What are your favorite cookies?

hocofood@@@

A Windowsill Full of Sunshine

It may be cold and blustery out, but it is so satisfying to pull out the last of the bag ripened tomatoes from the laundry room, where they have been ripening for a month, and line them up on the windowsill. Evoking memories of summer.

I had picked the last of the green tomatoes on October 20th, and put them away to ripen. The little ones ripened first and were used, but these were the last to turn. They sat in a dark cool corner of the laundry room for a month. Closed in a paper bag.

They mostly survived. I had to toss a few of them. They obviously don’t have that fresh from the vine taste, but are much nicer than store bought tomatoes. I will make a pasta dish with these, sauteed and adding some of my pesto I will pull out of the freezer. Back from when I was overloaded with basil and put up containers in the freezer.

Here’s to memories of summer and my garden.

hocofood@@@

Multitasking

Seems like the six weeks around Thanksgiving to New Year’s are always super busy around here. Today is no exception. I have laundry going, dishwasher finishing up the last of the dishes from our Thanksgiving Saturday night and all the follow on cooking Sunday and I am slow cooking root veggies to get us back on track eating healthy meals.

Add to that the Christmas card writing, baking for this Saturday’s craft fair, and getting out the Christmas decorations.

In my fall cleanup I found lots of cards in the desk and I’m trying to use up old ones. No need to buy any in the next few years. I found more than enough plus another box in the guest room Christmas storage boxes. I also found the centerpiece flower holder I won at last year’s craft fair at the Conservancy. I decided to make my own centerpiece this year, using it. It was made by gluing cinnamon sticks on fabric around an oval flower holder.

I foraged in the yard, and found enough greenery including lavender, rosemary and savory from my herbs to make my own arrangement. A little sugar in the water will keep it fresh for a while, and I can replenish as it needs it. Added a cardinal for color. Instant centerpiece.

As for slow roasting the veggies, I have way too many root veggies in the crisper drawer, so time to make roasted root veggies with polenta. Tonight I will cook the polenta but now the veggies are getting nice and tender. Eating by Color, as usual, and getting flavor from spices and herbs.

Peeled, sliced in half or quartered, tossed in light olive oil, the sweet potato, apple and romanescu got some garam masala, a touch of cinnamon and a little butter. The rutabaga, golden beets, and both types of turnips got a no salt mix and some cayenne. Everything then got a light dusting of salt for flavor. Into the oven to roast for three hours on slow cook setting.

When they are done, I will cube most of them and heat and pour over the polenta. I make my polenta with the corn meal I get at Baugher’s.

It makes a dark rich polenta, perfect for big flavors. I made a Dark Days dinner last year with this polenta and short ribs. Tonight it will just be root veggies and I will finish it with a few bacon crumbles from the bacon I cooked up last weekend. Minimal meat. Mostly veggies. Taking a break from all those holiday foods.

Now back to the other task I have going. Making Christmas “gifts” to hand out at my brother’s big party. I am making my own dry rub mix. An easy fun holiday favor, or small gift to give friends and family along with my homemade cookies. As I have said before, we stopped buying “things” none of us needed.

As for the rest of my shopping, I will be doing most of it Saturday the 1st of December at the Natural Craft Sale. 9-3 at the Howard County Conservancy. I know that Breezy Willow will be there with lots of homemade items, including their soaps.

I hear GreenBridge Pottery will also be there. Critter crafts for the little ones. Master Gardener demos. Don’t miss it.

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