We hope you are enjoying all the food coming in your baskets. We certainly are. We ate the first broccoli from the garden this week and it was so good. The broccoli is going to be a here-and-gone item because it got hot so fast this spring. The heads are small and are trying to bolt fast, but they are still mighty tasty.
Good news and hard news to share from this week. Part of why we believe in the concept of CSA, of buying into one particular farm for your produce needs is so that you can share in some of the story. This isn’t faceless food from the supermarket, and so we want you to know what is going really well and what is struggling this year. This is your food and appreciating the ups and downs of farm life is important, we believe, in appreciating it more.
There are several good things. We got our last goat (for now anyway!) - Kasiana. She is a Nubian yearling who is in milk and we will be milking her twice a day. She is beautiful, friendly, and sweet and is getting quite beat up by the mama goats we have been goat sitting. But they leave today so hopefully she will settle in.
The tomatoes are looking great. I am expecting wonderful things from this years bunch - we might even have cherry tomatoes next week (and if not, then soon after). The sweet potatoes are growing well and so are the green beans. As the spring crops wind down, we are happy with how well they did, despite the early and intense heat. We missed cauliflower this year and are uncertain that it will mature in this weather. We’ll catch it again in the fall, but we love cauliflower.
Some places where we are struggling are becoming clearer. We have lost the war with the potato beetles on our early potato plants. They were almost completely mature anyway and we will still get potatoes from all those plants, but it is disheartening. Eggplant has also been a pest casualty. Flea beetles have taken out our eggplant crop completely. We have some ideas for combatting them next year and we will make sure you still get eggplant from other local farmers we know. Intensive farming that seeks to build soil and be sustainable is tough work and wonderful work. There are always joys and always setbacks. And every year it is something different. We are grateful for your company and support on this journey.
In your basket this week:
new garlic
potatoes
chard
beets
broccoli
kale/zucchini
cabbage
New garlic is different than cured garlic. The taste is much better. It doesn’t keep as long and the peels are different. This is the garlic you want to use in pesto, or dipping oil for bread.
I hope you like beets. I have a confession to make - beets are the only vegetable we do not like. We never have and we have really tried. But this year...we found this recipe from our friends at Three Springs Farm and it was terrific. Not just good for beets, but really good!
Roasted Beets with Garlic & Dill
beets (any number is fine) with tops chopped off, washed
1-4 garlic cloves, to taste
1-3 tablespoons of minced dill
salt
olive oil
- Roast the beets whole, on a baking sheet at 400 degrees for about an hour. After an hour start checking them. You want them to be very soft and easily pierced by a knife.
- Remove from the oven and allow to cool. At this point, remove the skins from the beets and place into a bowl.
- While the beets are cooling, make a paste out of the garlic, dill, salt, and olive oil. Use either a food processor or mortar and pestle. This is where taste comes in - use amounts that you think will taste good - there is no wrong way.
- Toss the beets with the paste and serve either warm or room temperature. Delicious!
Really. Delicious. The sweet, earthiness of the beets matches perfectly with the strong taste of the garlic. We have finally found a way to love beets. Well, Samantha and Lila aren’t convinced, but Ben and I are!
One more thing for this week. We are starting to get really into our fall share planning with transplants to be started in the next week and seeds to be planted and a hoophouse to repair. Which means we need to have an idea of how many shareholders we will have. We are not asking for money yet, but we would like to have an idea of who might be interested so we can plan. So please let us know if you are interested.
Here are the details on the fall share - and this is different from what was in our newsletter. It will run from October 22 - December 17. Delivery will be every two weeks, but with enough produce to last for two weeks. Produce will likely include lettuces, spinach, asian greens, cabbage, broccoli, kale, brussel sprouts, rutabaga, carrots, turnips, parsnips, potatoes, sweet potatoes, winter squash, pumpkin, and more. Cost will be $200/share when paid before August 1 and $250/share afterward.
Also we will be offering a preserved food share with the fall share. You will also receive with your basket three jars of tomato product (diced, sauce, whole), one jar of jam, and one packet of frozen veggies, along with occasional bonus items (goat cheese, dried herbs, fruit syrup, fruit butter). All of these will be preserved here on the farm, either from our garden or a near by farm. The cost of adding this will be $75.
We are also considering adding bread for the fall. If fresh baked bread is something that interests you, let us know and we will continue to think on it.
Remember that we have eggs if you want them and bring your baskets. Thanks for your support. See you Friday!