Sunday, June 20, 2010

fresh food. frozen food.



A few months ago, "Eating Well" magazine (one of my favorite reads, along with "Vegetarian Times" - an amazing gift from my sister), featured how to freeze a lot of fresh produce to be used in the winter. The chart features about 10-15 foods and has the recommended blanching time before freezing, along with the dethawing time when you are ready to eat them. I cut it out and put it on the fridge in anticipation of the (hopeful) overflow from our garden and CSA produce.

I'm trying to get started now with freezing a bit at a time so in the winter, if I want to grill some asparagus, I'll have some handy in the freezer. I'm taking small portions of what I have now and saving it for later.

This morning I made an asparagus and wild rice frittata, sort of a hodge podge of a few recipes I had. I took the rest of the asparagus and with my new $3.99 Ziploc vacuum freezing pump (that I was way too giddy about for some reason and couldn't stop vacuum suctioning air out of an empty bag for last night) and froze the rest. When I took the trash out this morning, I noticed that I now had 7 more red tomatoes...on just four of the five plants. I forgot to check the other one. I gave two away to my neighbor, kept two for a pasta sauce I want to make this week and froze the remaining three.

I know it's just two small bags of food but envisioning the freezer drawers slowly filling with fresh food is making me happy. I'm also going to make a turnip/carrot soup and vegan vegetable soup this week and freeze them as well. Here's to a happy, frozen food winter...

Saturday, June 19, 2010

csa basket - week 6.

I can't believe this is our 6th week of receiving fresh food from Beaverdam Creek Farms. Truly amazing...even more so considering it's not even technically summer yet, although the heat makes it feel like August.

I just realized that we paid $450 to receive a basket of fresh produce for 20 weeks. It's crazy to think that anyone WOULDN'T do this! Our family is great and we are so happy with the food we are getting. They are still selling prorated shares so it's not too late to get in on some fresh food for 3-1/2 months as a pro-rated rate. And if you can't make it to Franklin every week, WE can and you can pick it up at our house. Please, please, please think about it. Even if you have a garden yourself, I personally find it to be an awesome way to support local farms and keep them in business (although, it boggles my mind on how you make money selling a 1/2 share for $450 for 20 weeks of food!! CRAZY). Anyway, I'm stepping off my soapbox but we NEED to keep local farmers in business and CSAs are a great - and tasty - way to do it. (Plus, most produce can be frozen and/or canned and you can eat the food later this winter when everything is gray and sad...okay, I'm really stepping down now)

I want to remember what I'm getting every week in my basket so I can plan even better next year and will start posting pictures of the basket before it gets unloaded into the fridge.

Today we received...
- turnips
- cilantro
- galisse lettuce
- cabbage
- broccoli
- zucchini
- rainbow swiss chard
...enough to fill our bottom crisper drawer every week

We also managed to snap some yukon gold and truffle ravioli, angel hair pasta, blackberries, red potatoes and shallots at the farmer's market. I'm going to work on the aformentioned asparagus/wild rice quiche today along with freezing some produce. I'm also thinking about making a blackberry/cherry cobbler this weekend but that will probably come later as I want to purchase a cherry pitter first.

Along with mowing the lawn, cleaning the house, gardening and some work to do with my main job, this weekend seems almost over already!

asparagus bread pudding.



Our friend's gave us some GORGEOUS asparagus from their garden - huge stalks, some red, some green. I want to start on my asparagus plant next year and even then I know I won't get good produce like that for at least three years. It was nice to have someone supplement in the meantime. Plus, the asparagus season is so short, it was nice to get some while we can. They gave me another bag and I plan on using half and freezing half. Hopefully I'll have a freezer full of summer treats when it's cold and dreary outside. I'll post later how my first freezing (sans the pesto earlier in the month) goes.

I got the bread pudding idea from Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (I know, shock...probably the biggest shock of all is that I'm still not done with the - especially for those who know that I read (probably too) fast. I hope to finish today but I've been taking my time and trying to soak it all in, although it will probably join my shelves as a yearly read. It's also making me want to read The Poisonwood Bible again...but I digress)

It was AWESOME! In her book, she puts morels in it but as I'm trying to get 90% of my produce at the farmer's market, mushrooms were not a delicacy I had at hand. I left them out and it was still delicious. We ate it that night with a fresh salad and the next few mornings as breakfast - so, so good. I'll probably make something simliar with the asparagus I have now...perhaps a wild rice/asparagus quiche. Yum.

Digressing again...here's the recipe:

3 cups milk
1 cup chopped spring onions with green shoots
Add onions to milk in saucepan and bring to a boil; remove from heat and set aside to steep.

1 loaf stale or toasted multigrain bread (I used an oatmeal molasses bread we buy from a lady at the farmer's market), broken into crouton-sized pieces
Pour milk over crumbs and allow bread to soak

1 pound asparagus
Chop into 1/2-inch pieces and simmer in boiling water until bright green.

2 tablespoons butter
1 pound morels (or other wild mushrooms)
Salt and pepper to taste
Melt butter in skillet, cook mushrooms until tender, add salt and pepper, and set aside

4 eggs
1/2 cup chopped parsley
3 tablespoons oregano
3 cups grated Swiss cheese
Break eggs and beat until smooth, add herbs and plenty of salt and pepper, add bread crumbs with remaining milk, asparagus, mushrooms with their juices, and 2/3 of the cheese. Mix thoroughly and pour into a greased 8 by 12-inch baking dish; sprinkle remaining cheese on top and bake at 350 for 45 minutes (until puffy and golden)

first tomato! 6-12-10


It was an exciting day at the Bond house last weekend when we found our first red tomato! It actually worked out perfectly as we had a few friends visiting and were in the process of making pizzas to grill out.

(Ignore the peppers in the picture...Mark got so excited and picked them and quickly realized after biting into one, that they were CAYENNE peppers are are supposed to be red before picked...oops)

It was an awesome addition and tasted great. Since then, we've had three more red ones and I made an amazing basil-tomato pasta sauce the other day with them. Can't wait to have a bunch more to can and freeze. With five plants producing really well, hopefully we'll have enough to last us quite awhile into the winter months.

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Here are the pizzas we ended up grilling - they were delicious:

BROCCOLI PESTO-POTATO

Broccoli pesto (blended: broccoli, basil, garlic, hazelnuts, pine nuts, olive oil)
Boiled red potatoes for 10 minutes until tender
Parmesan cheese
Salt
Pepper

WHITE-TOMATO-GREEN ONION

Parmesan cheese
Asiago cheese
Swiss cheese
Green onion
TOMATO!!!
Salt
Pepper
Garlic
Oregano

PASTA SAUCE:
2 tomatoes
Garlic
Salt
Pepper
Basil
Blend half and throw in the rest - partly smooth, partly chunky - DELICIOUS!!!

Sunday, June 6, 2010

pesto! pesto!



I picked my basil plants tonight - I have 11 so it was time - and pulled together two bowls full. I am going to make some fettucine (from a local homeade pasta maker that we buy at the farmer's market) with pesto and freeze some to use later.

I'm also going to boil some carrots, kohlrabi and turnips - from our CSA - and mash them with a white sauce. I made this (minus the kohlrabi, which I didn't have yet) for Mark's family who was in town a few days ago and it was fantastic. I have to admit, I have never had turnips and I love them. I bet in the winter that a carrot-turnip soup would be unbelievably good. I'm going to look one up when my turnips grow and see if I can freeze it to eat in the winter.

PESTO:
basil, olive oil, pine nuts, walnuts, garlic, garlic scrapes

CREAMED TURNIPS, CARROTS and KOHL RABI:
Boil root vegetables for 15-20 minutes (until tender). Drain and mash with a potato masher. Melt one tblspoon of butter and mix with one tblspoon of flour. Meanwhile, boil one cup of milk with 2 peppercorns, 2 bay leaves and 2 cloves (start at 30 second and work your way up. As soon as it reaches a boil, remove from the microwave). Remove the bay leaves, peppercorns and cloves and mix the milk into the flour/butter. Make sure the heat is at medium and not too hot. Simmer for a few minutes and then mix into the mashed vegetables with some salt and pepper. ENJOY! It's delicious!

master gardener.

Last weekend, we stopped by the Flatrock Arts Festival down the street to visit some of the booths and say hello to Mary, a fantastic neighborhood who has been actively working to get a farmer's market in Woodbine where we live. It is all approved and will be down the street from us...literally within walking distance. We wanted to stop by her booth and buy a tshirt and let her know how much we appreciate what she is doing.

While we were there, a division of the University of Tennessee was there handing out materials about their Master Gardener classes that they offer at the Agricultural Center about 5 minutes from our house. The lady gave me some information and I called the number the first chance I had! They sent me a brochure which I sent in and more information is on the way. It is a class that runs once a week for two hours from February to April and then you have to do 40 hours of community service - helping communities build gardens, etc.

I am SO excited to learn more and would feel so blessed to be able to use my love of plants (and food) as a volunteer opportunity!

seeds are sproutin'.





Last Sunday, Mark and I picked up a "greenhouse" kit to start some seeds. After reading Kingsolver's book (Animal, Vegetable, Miracle) I definitely don't want to buy seeds from Home Depot forever, but for this year, they will do the trick while I learn. We picked up carrots, bush beans, pumpkins, gourds, butternut squash, sweet corn and two flower varieties and went straight home to try it out.

We got a Jiffy self watering kit so you just put the pods in and 10 cups of water and wait for them to expand. Once wet, you just put 2-3 seeds in each pod and wait. It's easier done on some seeds (pumpkin) that are large and really, really hard for small seeds like carrots. I couldn't tell if any went in there or if 10 did. I just proceeded anyway and hoped for the best.

I was shocked when by Wednesday, some seeds had already grown so high that they knocked the top off of the bin! I guess it wasn't totally shocking since they were mostly all the beans (which I know grow fast) but three days was impressive. I removed all of the tall ones and put them in a bin in the shade and am still waiting for the others to grow. No activity at this point, which I hope is normal.

I was able to build mounds and put the pumpkin seeds in the ground this weekend. I hope I made them deep enough but if not, I'll learn for next year. I also built mounds for the gourds but when I went to plant them, I couldn't remember which plants they were - ha! Hopefully the others that are still marked will grow so I have a comparison but, if not, I can hopefully find a plant picture on the internet.

Mark has spent all weekend building a raised bed for these seeds. I'll have two next year (with the second one containing a large trellis area for climbing plants) but since most of those are potted this year, he just finished the one. It looks great! It's 3x24 feet and will probably grow 2-3 rows of plants. We're getting the dirt this week and then I have about 6 sweet corn, 10 bean, 3 winter squash and 6 carrots to plant. Hopefully the rest of the seeds will sprout in the next week. I also have some okra that I completed planted wrong. I put them in a container with the tomatoes to replace where the romaine lettuce was earlier in th year. Some friends of ours, Matt and Libby, came over last night and told me that okra will grow to about hip height...definitely too big for a container! I'll try my best to transplant when the garden is complete.

I also started some cauliflower, kohlrabi, swiss chard and more carrots this weekend. Typically these are cool weather plants but from what I've read, you can also plant them in June-July for an early fall crop. I hope to plant a bunch of things for a fall harvest so I can start freezing them to have "fresh" food in the winter. In August, I will plant some turnips, beets and radishes for an even later fall crop.

It feels so good to have a place (other than containers) to put all of it! I'm glad we have our CSA to tie us over until some of our crops bloom. When we eat at home now, it's mostly salads - since that it what is in season - and it's great how much better we both feel about eating fresh. It's just nice to go to your fridge and have an abundance of PRODUCE to eat! Probably next week we'll have tomatoes and yellow squash that's ready for our consumption. It helps that it was warm enough to plant them early.

Yesterday when Mark was working, it got up to 104 degrees! My plants are really thirsty so a rain barrel is next on the priority list, along with a compost bin. Personally, I love the heat because I've always been a summer girl but gardening has made me appreciate what the earth provides every season. I can't believe how much I am LOVING eating in season and how spiritually fulfilling it is for me.

Mark just looked over and said "this bed isn't going anywhere" as he was drilling through all 5 layers of landscaping wood. I hope whomever purchases our house next appreciates a garden!