Tuesday, October 29, 2019

In the Share: Week 15


SALAD TURNIPS: We can’t grow these turnips any better. Eat these fresh with a little salt for a wonderful appetizer or snack.

SPINACH: The spinach has flourished in the protection of the high tunnel. Enjoy it with some fresh cheese or with some free-range organic eggs.

CABBAGE: Fresh fall cabbage is always a treat. The harvest always coincides with the coming of cold autumn nights. To keep cabbage crisp and tender, salt it after cutting.

KALE AND BROCCOLI BUNCHES: Tender tops of the kale rescued from the field before the freeze. Bundled with some hefty sprouting broccoli, they make a great greens combo.

GARLIC: This softneck garlic stores best in the vegetable crisper. And if you have a garden, you can plant the larger cloves in your garden now to get a head of garlic next July.

LETTUCE/ARUGULA: Wednesday pickup will be lettuce, Satuday and Monday will get the arugula.

FARM REPORT
With the onset of wintery weather, the best work environment on the farm is the high tunnel.


The first picking of the spinach crop is outstanding. If we are lucky, we will continue to pick it every few weeks throughout the winter into next Spring. For the next several months, our harvest field has been reduced to this 30 ft. by 96 ft. space. While buttoning up the end wall, we got a bird’s eye view.


Left to Right:  Swiss Chard, sprouting broccoli, spinach, salad turnips, lettuce.  Outside is another story, with the fields headed towards a winter slumber.


This was on a lovely fall day last week when we got out the big ladders and buttoned up the end of the high tunnel.  Since then, we have just a few tasks left to complete before we can settle in to the winter routine. We could use a few more sunny, dry days to plant and mulch the garlic, wind up the remaining irrigation tape and chop down the sunflower stalks. As the season draws to a close, nature dresses herself in her own Halloween decorations.


Tuesday, October 15, 2019

In the Share: Week 14


BULB FENNEL: Chop the white part of a couple stalks along with some fronds and add to any fresh salad.

SWEET POTATOES: Dug several weeks ago and cured in the greenhouse. We’ve cutting them into wedges and covering with a cumin, coriander, paprika and garlic rub. Toss in olive oil, then the spice mix, and bake at 425 30 minutes or until browned and tender.

LEEKS: Started in the greenhouse in February and in the ground since March, these slow growing cousins of onions are worth the wait. Check out this recipe from our first season in 2004. www.fairsharefarm.com/archive/info/Newsletter/2004/week_18_september22.pdf

LETTUCE: Big, leafy heads from the high tunnel.

ASIAN GREENS: It’s a great time of year for a fresh stir fry. Check out these recipes from our first blog of 2011 https://fairsharenews.blogspot.com/2011/05/welcome-to-vegetables.html

KALE OR CHARD: happy, leafy greens

GREEN PEPPERS: Summer’s swan song, a great stir fry addition.

SAGE: Chop the sage leaves fine and add them to the sweet potato rub described above.

RECIPE: Going through old blogs checking for leek recipes, I came across the final blog of 2016. https://fairsharenews.blogspot.com/2016/10/what-to-do-with-your-share-week-24.html. Leeks and fennel were center stage, just as they are this week. It’s a nice tradition to carry on.

FARM REPORT:
Just two weeks ago, the summer sizzled and the fields were full of flowers and a buzz with insects including a migrating monarch who is hopefully far to the south by now.


Saturday morning, frost laid a heavy blanket over the farm. In a few hours, the heat-loving plants were gone and our fields turned into a graveyard. Only the hardiest roots and leafy greens survive. In anticipation for the big event, the farm crew worked quickly to dig the sweet potatoes and pick crate after crate of green peppers.



Meanwhile, inside the protected high tunnel the plants are happily oblivious to the drama.


Nature puts on quite a show out here. You never know what you are going to see next. After one little shower last week, this was the view from the farm house.


Tuesday, October 1, 2019

In the Share---Week 13


Zucchini and summer squash

SUMMER SQUASH: Our late summer planting is producing as well as any patch we have ever had. Enjoy these in fritters (see below.)


CARROTS: Their time in the cooler has only served to sweeten them up. Enjoy these crunchy delights.


LETTUCE: It’s been a scramble to keep the harvest the lettuce before it “bolts,” something that is normally not a problem in October.


GREENS CHOICE: The high tunnel chard and kale in the field are thriving right now. Our regular use for these healthy greens is to chop it fine and add it to our pasta sauce. We love the color and richness they add to a dish.


SWEET PEPPERS: They go with everything in the share.


GARLIC: The last of the hard neck variety.


SPROUTING BROCCOLI: Eat your broccoli!


HERB CHOICE:  A choice of common chives or rosemary.


When I was a kid we used to travel to South Bend, Indiana to visit my dad’s father and sister. Aunt Betty would always make a batch of zucchini fritters when we were there. Something about the wonderful aroma of them that takes me back to those days. Viva Italia!

Zucchini Fritters

Ingredients:
2 cups shredded zucchini
2 cloves of garlic, chopped fine
1/2 tsp salt
2 eggs
3/4 cup grated cheese (parmesan, goat cheese, mozzarella...)
1/2 cup water
flour to make a pancake-like batter (thick)


Method:
Mix together all of the ingredients except the flour. Add flour to form a thick batter.
Heat 1/2 inch frying oil in a pan.
With tablespoon, spoon batter into the oil to form patties. Fry until browned on both sides.




FARM REPORT:

The heat continues on this long summer. We look forward to cooler temps over the next few days and hopefully some more seasonal weather. Our fall plants that have been waiting for cooler days and nights to mature as the days grow shorter. Here’s to a good October.

Equinox sunrise


Work days have turned to days of harvest, collecting irrigation equipment from the field, mulching, and fortifying the high tunnel for the winter. 


On the adjacent Graff Property land the Indian grass is being combined to collect the seed. It has been a great year to see this stand of native grass thrive and produce seed to help establish other farms andconservation areas.