CSA Newsletter Week 5, June 30th 2016

In Your Box

Lettuce Heads- Romaine and/or Red & Green Summer Crisp

Peas- Snap and/or snow peas – all to be eaten in the pod not shelled

Spring Turnips- Last week until fall

Carrots- from the hoophouse.

Cucumbers: Long smooth skinned, yellow slicers or green slicers.

Zucchini and Summer Squash – see the backside of the newsletter for our annual guide.

Garlic scapes – looking like a pigtailed curly cue. These can be used (the whole green part) like garlic. They are amazing pureed with olive oil and used as a base for stirfry.

Napa Cabbage or Kohlrabi

Broccoli – not perfect but our broccoli planting came around.

Next Week’s Best Guess:  garlic scapes, broccoli, kohlrabi, kale or chard, peas, cucumbers, basil, lettuce, summer squash.

 

IMPORTANT REMINDERS

 Gleaning for Peas is this coming week. See below for times

Please remember to give clear directions to any friends or family picking up boxes for you – box size/color, how to bag veggies and leave box and your pick up site. We have had several members left with the wrong sized box due to guest pick ups. 

 

News from the Farm

Like so much of the season we are so thankful for the bounty coming out of the fields. Beans, cabbage, more broccoli, fennel are all 2 weeks off. The fruiting crops like tomatoes and peppers look wonderful (although we still have another month until they arrive) and we did a huge planting of fall broccoli and cauliflower along with carrots for fall and winter and the last crop of late summer beans.

Thank you to everyone who came out for the pancake breakfast. It was beautiful and we were happy to have a berry picking crew since they would not have made it until this week. We hope to offer gleaning for broccoli and beans in the next month. We are opening up snap peas to picking (gleaning) for CSA members this coming week –Friday 9am-7pm, Sunday 7-9am, Monday and Tuesday 8am-7pm. Please call, text or email so we can make sure there is enough. This is not an extra cost but we ask that you pick only what you will eat or be able to personally preserve. Have a happy 4th of July weekend. We can’t believe the CSA is ¼ over. The summer goes so fast.

Have a delicious week – Kat, Tony, Ted, Riley and Maple

Recipes from Heather Busigs Kitchens

Pasta with turnip green pesto and parmesan roasted turnips. serves 6. Total time 35 minutes (by Heather Busig)

Ingredients: 1 bunch of turnips, greens included, 1 TBSP olive oil, salt and pepper to taste, 1/4 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese, 1 lb any shape pasta, 2 garlic scapes, 1/4 cup pine nuts (or walnuts, almonds, sunflower seeds or pumpkin seeds), 1/4 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese, juice of one lemon, 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil, salt and pepper to taste. Directions: Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Quarter the turnips and slice into approx. 1/4 inch slices. Spread on roasting sheet, lined with foil or parchment paper and toss with oil, salt, pepper and parmesan. Roast for 15-25 minutes, until starting to brown. While the turnips are roasting, put a pot of water on to boil and cook pasta according to directions. Reserve 1 cup of pasta water. While the pasta cooks, make the pesto. Roughly chop the turnip greens (can substitute with kale or arugula, or add other greens in), garlic scapes, nuts, parmesan, lemon juice in a food processor or blender. Puree and slowly add the olive oil until you have a green paste. Add salt and pepper to taste. Drain the pasta and add the pesto. Add some of the reserved pasta water to help thin the pesto so that it evenly coats the pasta. Stir in the roasted turnips. Serve with extra parmesan cheese at the table.

 

Pickled carrot and hummus sandwich:

Pickled carrots: 1/2 lb carrots, cut into matchsticks, peel from half a lemon, ½ cup sliced sweet pepper, 1/4 cup sliced red onion, 1 TBSP red pepper flakes (or to taste), 3/4 cup water, 1/2 cup white or apple vinegar, 2 TBSP sugar, 3/4 TBSP coarse salt, 1 tsp crushed coriander seeds, 1 tsp crushed cumin seeds. Instructions: At least 12 hours, up to 1 week before making the sandwiches, place the carrots, pepper, onion, lemon peel and pepper flakes in a quart-sized jar. Combine water, vinegar, sugar, salt, coriander and cumin in a small pot and heat over medium heatuntil the mixture boils and the sugar/salt dissolve. Pour over the veggies, cool, and place lid on jar. Store in the refrigerator. To assemble the sandwiches, spread 1 TBSP hummus on each of two slices of bread, add micro greens, a layer of pickled carrot mixture and (optional) feta cheese. Repeat as wished. I found that 1 quart of veggies made 8-10 sandwiches.

 

 

 

 

Summer Squash and Zucchini 101

Every year, and this year is likely no different, we have lots of summer squash. Summer squash are not only the butt of many jokes like “how do you know you are living in the midwest?” A: “The only reason you lock your car doors is to keep your neighbors from filling it with free zucchini”; but it is a versatile vegetable that can make into sweet muffins for breakfast, cake, does well on the grill, can be stuffed, roasted, eaten raw and much more. Below is our annual zucchini/summer squash guide with information on different types and uses.

The varieties

There is a large range of color (and to a smaller extent flavor) in summer squash.

Zucchini are one type of summer squash characterized by being long and fairly uniform in size throughout the plant. On our farm we grow both green zucchini and several varieties of stripped and yellow zucchini. We also grow a type of light green zucchini called Alexandria which are shorter and more squat and have a great flavor. All can be eaten in the same manner.

Yellow Summer Squash- Many people ask for summer squash for specific recipes usually referring to straight neck or crock neck squash with a paler yellow skin and a more bulbous bottom or seed cavity. Some people may these are nuttier. Honestly for most recipes you can use all summer squash interchangeably.

Patty Pans and Eight Ball Squash – These space ship or gourd looking squash and round zucchini look unusual! They do actually have nuttier flavor and a crisp texture. We never give you gourds in the box, so know that if you have a brightly colored squash (or a round one) they are meant for eating.

Recipes

Summer squash and zucchini ribbons – for pasta substitute or just fun! You can use a veggie peeler to slice squash into long ribbons of desired thickness after washing and removing the ends. You can lightly steam or sauté these and treat them like pasta (or use them like lasagna noodles) or cook with garlic (or garlic scapes) and olive oil and serve as a side. We also find these great raw in marinated salads (with Italian or sesame based dressings).

Zucchini mock apple pie- I know it sounds strange but one of the best pies I have ever had was not a real apple pie but a midsummer 4th of July mock apple pie!  1 recipe for a double 9 inch pie crust (we use the Joy of Cooking recipe but with whole wheat flour), 2 large or equivalent or zucchini halved with larger seeds removed (not need to deseed small ones),  2 Tbs lemon juice (or 1 Tbs cider vinegar), 1 cup pack brown sugar or equivalent maple syrup (if using maple syrup add 1 tsp corn starch), 1.5 tsp cinnamon, 1 pinch nutmeg, 1 tsp cream of tartar. Sauté zucchini in lemon juice and salt for 3-4 minutes until tender. Combine other ingredients in a bowl and mix well. Add zucchini, toss well, fill pie crust, top with other pie crust making sure to punch small hole in top. Bake at 400 for 40 minutes until golden brown.  

Zucchini Pickles- 1 pound zucchini ,1 small yellow onion or green onions/garlic scapes, 2 tablespoons salt, a little more if using kosher, 2 cups cider vinegar, 1 cup sugar or honey, 1 1/2 teaspoons dry mustard, 1 1/2 teaspoons crushed yellow and/or brown mustard seeds, 1 teaspoon ground turmeric. Wash and trim the zucchini, then slice them lengthwise into 1/16-inch-thick slices on a mandoline. (You could slice them crosswise, too, but Zuni's are lengthwise.) Slice the onion very thinly as well. Combine the zucchini and onions in a large but shallow non-reactive bowl or casserole dish, add the salt, and toss to distribute. Add a few ice cubes and cold water to cover, then stir to dissolve the salt. After about 1 hour, taste and feel a piece of zucchini—it should be slightly softened. Drain and pat dry. Meanwhile, combine the vinegar, sugar, dry mustard, mustard seeds, and turmeric in a small saucepan and simmer for 3 minutes. Set aside until just warm to the touch. If the brine is too hot, it will cook the vegetables and make the pickles soft instead of crisp. Transfer the zucchini and onion pieces to three two-cup canning vessels (or the equivalent) and pour over the cooled brine. Seal tightly and refrigerate for at least a day before serving to allow the flavors to mellow and permeate the zucchini. They'll last for a week in the fridge.­­

CSA Newsletter Week 4, June 23rd 2016

In Your Box

 

Lettuce Heads- butter head and/or romaine! Great with the creamy dressing.

 

Scallions– last week for these onions in late July.

 

Peas- Snap and/or snow peas – all to be eaten in the pod not shelled

 

Spring Turnips- great in the pancake recipe below.

 

Napa (Chinese) Cabbage- stir fry, slaw and spring rolls

 

Carrots- from the hoophouse and wonderful!

 

Cucumbers: Small Shares Only

 

Zucchini: Full Shares Only

 

Fresh Dill

 

Spinach: Full Shares Only

 

Strawberries! yippy

 

Next Week’s Best Guess:  Spring Turnips, peas, lettuce heads, garlic scapes, cucumbers, zucchini, kale, fresh herbs (sage, basil, cilantro), carrots

 

Important Reminders

ü  This Sunday is the pancake breakfast! Make sure to park in the yard (not on the road!) for this event as well as pizza nights.

ü  Remember to separate carrots and turnips from their greens and to use the greens. Pesto is a great option for extra greens include carrot tops (see back for recipes)!

 

News from the Farm

This Sunday is the pancake breakfast! We are excited to see everyone. If possible (not required) bring a mug, a plate and a fork to minimize disposables. We are planning on letting CSA members pick and eat strawberries since they have arrived but… this is not an official upick event. We will not have significantly large amounts of berries to take home.

Almost every crop in the field is looking great. June is just incredible in Wisconsin. Our early broccoli crop was hurt by the late frost so we will not have broccoli for several weeks but other than that everything is growing according to plan! We are still in the thick of weeding and mowing season but are also getting fields ready for the big fall planting of storage crops and we continue to plant cabbage family crops for fall. We have some big infrastructural projects going on – we are closing our manure pit which has been un-used and building it into an irrigation pond; we are getting ready to re-roof our giant dairy barn, and we are taking a needed plunge into the world of parking and will have a gravel lot in place in a week or so (to deal with pizza night and CSA event parking.

Have a delicious week – Kat, Tony, Ted, Riley and Maple

 

Recipes from Heather Busigs and Kat’s Kitchens

 

Kat’s creamy herb dressing: Use the basic base recipe here and add fresh herbs, green garlic, scallions to change the flavor.

Basic proportions: 1.5 Tbs Mayo (optional but good if you use a less thick yogurt), 1 cup plain yogurt, 2 Tbs lemon juice (mild vinegar like rice wine or apple cider can be used instead), 1-2 Tbs fresh herbs or garlic. This is a great dressing for napa slaw, and grilled romaine or regular greens salads.

 

Japanese vegetable pancakes (adapted from smitten kitchen) makes 12-14 small pancakes, serving 5-6: Pancakes: 7-8 cups of finely shredded vegetables, including (but not limited to): cabbage, carrots, turnips, kale and zucchini, 4 scallions, thinly sliced on an angle, 1 tsp kosher salt, 1/2 cup all-purpose flour (could use a gluten free substitute), 6 large eggs, beaten, neutral oil for frying. prepare: Toss shredded veggies, scallions, and salt together in a large bowl. Toss mixture with flour so it coats all of the vegetables. Stir in the eggs. Heat a large heavy skillet on medium-high heat. Coat the bottom of the skillet with oil and heat that too. To make the pancakes, pick up a small pile of the mixture with your fingers and drop it into the skillet. You can probably fit 3-4 piles of veggies in the skillet. Flatten the piles slightly with the back of a spatula. Cook for 3 minutes, until the edges start to brown. Flip the pancakes and cook them again until well browned on each side. You can keep them warm on a tray in the oven until you finish frying the rest of the mixture. Serve plain or with any of the sauces below. Extra pancakes will keep in the fridge for a couple of days or can be spread on a tray in the freezer until frozen and put in a freezer bag to be stored. Reheat on a baking sheet in a hot oven until crisp. Tangy sauce: 1/4 cup ketchup, 1.5 TBSP Worcestershire sauce, 1/4 tsp dijon mustard, 1 TBSP sake or white wine, 1 tsp soy sauce, 1-2 TBSP honey, 1/8 tsp ground ginger. Make sauce: Combine all ingredients in a small saucepan and let simmer for 3-5 minutes, until smooth and thick. Alternate sauce: Combine 1/2 cup mayonnaise, 2 TBSP soy sauce and 2 tsp sriracha. Mix well and serve. Also great with sweet chili sauce.

REMINDER! 10th Annual CSA Local Food Pancake Brunch

Sunday June 26th 9:00am - 1:00pm

 

Join us for food from 9-12 and including Stoney Acres whole wheat pancakes, maple syrup, maple herb sausage, egg veggie frittatas, local coffee, local cream line milk and yogurt and more all sourced from our farm and local farm and food businesses. Sausage and eggs are gluten free. Call or email with food questions or concerns.

 

We will have regular farm tours from 10-12:30 and visits to pigs and chickens. On-going berry picking.

 

11am we will have a planting party (Aimed at kids but open to anyone)– plant your own herb seedlings or bean seeds to bring home and tend!

 

12pm we will collect eggs with the chickens.

 

This is a free CSA event. Visiting friends or family from out of town, grandchildren etc. are all welcome to join you. We will have a small farmer’s market table, t-shirts & seasonal cook books available for sale.

 ________________________________________________________________________________________

Using Carrot Tops

Every year we send out the reminder (many times) that carrot tops are actually used in cooking all over the world and they are good. When we refer to the tops we are talking about the leaves (not the thicker stems) that can be taken off and fine chopped and used as a mild substitute for parsley in most dishes. They are wonderful fresh in salads (using a handful), as a base for pesto (see below) or in lightly cooked dishes like baby turnips sautéed with their greens, bacon and topped with carrot leaves.  Last but not least they can be used in smoothies by those who like to add greens and are milder than many other greens like kale and spinach. When you receive your carrots separate the greens from the carrots. Remove the long thicker stems and store greens in a loose plastic bag. This helps preserve the life of the carrot bottoms too.

Simple pesto for carrot tops, herbs and/or greens (kale, chard, beet tops and more).

3 cups packed torn kale leaves (carrot tops, basil etc can be added instead or used with these together), 1 teaspoon sea salt, 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil, 1/4 cup toasted walnuts (almonds, pine nuts etc also work), 4 cloves garlic (or green garlic, scapes etc), 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese. Pulse greens in food processor with nuts and garlic adding olive oil until desired consistency. Add salt and cheese and mix well. Add to pasta, serve on toasted bread, use as salad dressing based or stir into roasted vegetable.

Pesto can be frozen in ice cube trays and then put into ziplock bags and used throughout winter!

Using greens every day and storing them for winter

It might seem early to consider this but if you get behind on greens here are some tips. We will soon be into fruiting season but you can expect to eat lots of salads and greens for several more weeks.

-          Steam or sauté a large batch of extra greens that you have chopped and rinsed. Store in the fridge and add to eggs, pasta dishes, or atop sandwiches each day.

-          To preserve greens blanch in hot water, massage with olive oil or sauté or steam. Cool and throw into serving size ziplock bags (label) for winter soups, stews, lasagna and more.  

CSA Newsletter Week 3 - June 16 2016

In Your Box

 

Baby lettuce mix-

Broccoli Raab-

Scallions–Wonderful fresh or cooked in place of onion

Green Garlic: use just like garlic but the whole stem. These are the “scallions” of garlic.

Spring Turnips- white bottoms that look like a radish but have a sweeter flavor. Use greens cooked and eat bottoms sauted, roasted or raw

Napa (Chinese) Cabbage- stir fry, slaw and spring roll specials

Oyster Mushrooms: pink, grey, brown and white. All are great cooked with meat, in stir fry or fried in butter.

Kohlrabi Fulls only

Cucumbers: Fulls Only

 

Important Reminders

ü  Make sure wash salad greens well. It was a muddy week!

ü  See the announcements for the pancake breakfast and Midwest Renewable Energy Fair on the back!

ü  Please DO NOT BRING BOXES HOME. We are missing about 30.

 

Next Week’s Best Guess:  Spring Turnips, peas, lettuce heads, napa cabbage, carrots, scallions, cucumbers, kale.

Recipes From Heather Busigs Kitchen

 

Pasta with garlicky broccoli raab (from Smitten Kitchen), serves 4-6, time: 30 minutes. Ingredients: 1 lb pasta, any chunky shape, 1 lb broccoli raab (heavy stems removed, remaining stems and leaves cut into 1-2 inch sections, matching the pasta length), 1/2 cup olive oil, 5 garlic cloves peeled and minced (or 5-6 tsp minced green garlic), 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (or more/less to taste), about 1 heaping tsp kosher salt (or more/less to taste), grated parmesan or roman cheese for serving. Directions: Bring a huge pot of salted water to boil. Add pasta an 5 minutes before it’s cooking time is up, add the broccoli raab. It will seem like too much for the water, but with a stir or two, the raab should wilt and cook alongside the pasta. Drain the rabe and pasta together and pour into a serving bowl. In the same pot or a tiny one, heat the oil with the garlic, pepper flakes and salt over moderate heat, stirring frequently for 3-4 minutes, until the garlic is lightly golden. Pour mixture over pasta and toss to evenly coat. Shower with freshly grated cheese and eat promptly.

 

Spicy No-Mayo Coleslaw (from Mark Bittman, How to Cook Everything, vegetarian): serves 8, time: 30 minutes. Ingredients: 2 TBSP Dijon mustard, 2 TBSP sherry or red wine vinegar, 1 small clove garlic, minced (or 2 tsp minced green garlic), 1 TPSP minced fresh chile (jalapeño, Thai, serrano or habanero), or to taste (optional), 1/4 cup peanut oil or extra virgin olive oil, 6 cups cored and shredded Napa, Savoy, green and/or red cabbage, 1 large red or yellow bell pepper, seeded and diced, 1/3 cup diced scallion, 1/4 cup minced parsley, salt and pepper to taste. Directions: Whisk the mustard, vinegar, garlic and chile together in a small bowl. Add the oil a little at a time while continuing to whisk. 2. Combine the cabbage, pepper and scallion and toss with the dressing. Season with salt and pepper and refrigerate until ready to serve. (best if it rests for at least 1 hour and up to 24 hours, just drain the slaw before continuing). Toss with parsley before serving.

 

 

Join Us for Our

10th Annual CSA Local Food Pancake Brunch

Sunday

June 26th 9:00am - 1:00pm

 

Join us for food from 9-12 including Stoney Acres whole wheat pancakes, maple syrup, maple herb sausage, egg veggie fritatas, local coffee, local cream line milk and yogurt and more all sourced from our farm and local farm and food businesses. Sausage and eggs are gluten free. Call or email with food questions or concerns.

 

We will have regular farm tours and visits to pigs and chickens.

 

11am we will have a planting party (Aimed at kids but open to anyone)– plant your own herb seedlings or bean seeds to bring home and tend!

 

12pm we will collect eggs with the chickens.

 

This is a free CSA event. We will have a small farmer’s market table, t-shirts and seasonal cook books available for sale.

 

The Energy Fair    June 17-19, 2016   7558 Deer Road, Custer, WI

We love the fair and every year we take our whole family but this year is extra exciting since Tony is a keynote speaker in the morning Saturday talking about family farm and democracy of energy in the countryside.

The Energy Fair, brings over 15,000 attendees together to learn about clean energy and sustainability, connect with others, and take action towards a more sustainable future. The Fair features over 250 workshops and over 200 exhibitors, with live music, inspiring keynotes, and activities for the whole family. Hosted by the Midwest Renewable Energy Association in Central Wisconsin, The Energy Fair is the longest-running event of its kind in the nation. Learn more and purchase advance tickets at TheEnergyFair.org

CSA Newsletter Week 2 - June 9th 2016

Click here for the full PDF

In Your Box

Baby lettuce

Bok Choy –You can eat all parts of these

Scallions–Wonderful fresh or cooked in place of onion

 Lettuce head (fulls only)- romaine.

Mixed baby brazing greens or mizuna- spicy and mild baby greens for salad or cooking.

Pea Shoots- All the flavor of spring peas but in the greens. Great in a pea shoot pesto, lightly steamed or sauted or added to stir fry. Remove the tougher lower stem.

Radishes/daikon radish (Fulls only)

Green Garlic (small shares only): use just like garlic but the whole stem. These are the “scallions” of garlic.

Spring Turnips- white bottoms that look like a radish but have a sweeter flavor. Use greens cooked and eat bottoms sauted, roasted or raw

Next Week’s Best Guess:  lettuce, scallions, Chinese cabbage, baby turnips, oyster mushrooms, kohlrabi, broccoli raab, kale

Important Reminders

Remember to leave the boxes at dropsites and to bring bags.

- Mark your calendars for the first big CSA event of 2016, the All Local Pancake Breakfast Sunday June 26th

-Most of the CSA kinks are coming out. Please contact us if you need to change pick up sites. 

 

CSA Newsletter Storage Share #1 - October 23rd 2015

In Your Box

Brussels Sprouts- Break these off the stalks to store. To prepare clean off any dried leaves, rinse and cook.

Carrots –

Winter Squash – Red Kuri, Delicata and/or carnival. The red kuri are tear drop shaped, great for soup or mashing. Delicata and carnival are acorn types and nice in slices, rings or cut in half and roasted.  

Yellow onions

Swiss chard or braising greens

Winter Turnips- a white with bright purple (purple topped) or yellow with light green tops (golden) varieties.

Rutabaga – Great in stews, roasted or mashed. These have yellow skin with a pale dull purple top.

Sweet potatoes

Kale

Potatoes

 

News from the Farm

Storage Share #1 – Mark your calenders. The other storage share delivery/pickup dates are November 5th(or 7th at the market) and Novermber 19th (21st at the Market). Market pick ups are at 212 River Drive at the Winter Farmers Market.

Expect mushrooms in deliver #2 and Maple Syrup in #3. You will have greens in all three boxes this year and a similar mix of vegetables as this week with slightly different varieties and amounts. Also, please note that due to a huge amount of root crops from the late fall, storage shares also have the option of an additional free box or rutabagas, turnips, daikon radishes (or a mix or your choice) during the last delivery. You can also just take a few extras as well if that is too much.

In farm news we are almost done with the harvest – we expect to have carrots out of the ground late next week or early the following week, and are on pace to finish our out season. This is Jenny’s last week on the farm and Michelle will be here for another 2 weeks.

This Sunday we will be harvesting carrots for the neighbors’ place in Wausau from 1-5pm. They will be donated on Monday! Feel free to join us or to tell any friends who might want to come.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

Kat’s Kitchen

 

Root Vegetable “fries” – we make these with sweet potatoes and rutabaga but they work equally well with potatoes, slices of delicate squash (skin left on), turnips and daikons. Cut into rough fries peeing rutabaga, radishes or turnips. Coat with olive or sunflower oil (about 2 Tbs for 5 cups of veggies) and roast at 400 stirring every 15-20 minutes. Sook until they start to brown and squash are tender. Serve with honey mustard, aioli or ketchup.

 

Rutabagas (or turnips) 1 recipe 3 ways – cube 4 cups rutabaga or turnips and put into a large skillet with 2 cups broth and 1 tsp oil or butter. Add 1 tsp fresh or dried thyme or sage. Cook stirring to cook all sides of rutabaga until tender 5-7 minutes. When they are tender you can 1) pour off broth and salt and pepper to taste to serve as a side dish 2) puree in a food processor or with an immersion blender and serve as a side 3) Add additional broth and mash slightly with a potato masher and serve as a soup. Note you can add additional vegetables like parsnips, carrots and celeriac with similar results.

 

Stuffed Sweet potatoes- Using large sweet potatoes bake whole in the oven at 350 covering with a thin coating of oil and piercing with a fork. Check periodically for tenderness – they should take 30+ minutes. Remove from oven and cut down the middle. While they are cooking place ½ lb pork sausage or ground pork in a skillet. Add ½ tsp fennel seed, 1 tbs maple syrup, 1 tsp black pepper, 2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced celeriac and 1 chopped onion. Cook until aromatic and the sausage is browning.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CSA Newsletter Week 20, October 15th 2015

Click here for the full PDF

 

In Your Box

Brussels Sprouts- Break these off the stalks to store. To prepare clean off any dried leaves, rinse and cook.

Carrots –

Winter Squash – Butternut (light brown) or buttercups (ook like dark green buttons). These are our two favorite squash. Both are sweet and wonderful in pie, soup, mashed or in soup.

Leeks or onions

Baby brassica/brasing mix- for salad and/or cooking. We have been making great salads topped with grated carrots and turnips!

Sweet Peppers

Winter Turnips- a white with bright purple (purple topped) or yellow with light green tops (golden) varieties.

Rutabaga – Great in stews, roasted or mashed. These have yellow skin with a pale dull purple top.

Sweet potatoes

Kale

 

 

News from the Farm

It is week 20. This is the last CSA delivery for the regular CSA season and we cannot thank you all enough for letting us live out our dream as your farmers at Stoney Acres. This has been our best farming season (of 10!) and as eaters you have allowed us to grow in so many ways.

We are still quite busy for the next three weeks even as the main season CSA wraps up – we finished planting 2400 bed feet of garlic yesterday and harvested 70 bushels (about 3400lbs) of beets on Tuesday, and will continue to harvest root crops for the next two weeks. We are estimating that we will have over 500 bushels of root crops for extended season CSA shares, the winter farmers market, local schools and some rural grocery store over the course of the next 6 months.

Wonder what we do in winter? We are also planning a family trip to NYC and New England, lots of family time and some much needed rest. We have conferences to attend, lots of reading and paperwork awaiting us.

We also want to thank our amazing worker shares for 2015 and of course our farm crew. Hannah is at college once again, Jenny has graciously helped for the past 6 weeks, and Michelle is literally the backbone of the farm. If you see Michelle let her know that you appreciate her work, because she does not get to hear it enough (we do). She has worked so hard for your food and our family this season and hopefully will be back full-time and year round in 2016! If you want to visit us we have 3 more pizza nights, and will be at the farmers market all fall and winter.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

Kat’s Kitchen  Squash Sauce – Rinse squash, cut in half and remove seeds (you can bake them). bake squash cut side down at 350 degrees until very soft and aromatic, scoop our flesh, combine with 1-2 cups milk or broth to make aa thick sauce, add salt and pepper. This can be used in lasagna in place of sauce, on noodles or on pizzas. You can also freeze any that is left over easily.   
Squash and Roasted Root Veggie Stew – Bake squash as above. While baking cut up 4-5 cups of root vegetables such as turnips, rutabaga, carrots, plus 2-3 leeks or 1 onion. Coat with oil and bake on bottom rack until starting to brown. Remove squash from oven, scoop out flesh, add 2 cups broth and 1 can coconut milk and blend. Add root vegetables and 1 cup cooked ham or chicken if desired. Salt to taste. Add 1 tsp pumpkin pie spice and 1 tsp smoked paprika or chili powder. Cook for 20-30 minutes (or in a slow cooker) for at least 30 minutes. Serve with crust bread or wild rice.   
Roasted Brussels sprouts with toasted almonds (you can add carrots or beets) – break brussels sprouts off of stem, remove any brown leaves, coat lightly with olive oil. Roast at 400 until slightly soft with edges browning. If you have very a large sprouts you can cut them in half before roasting. While roasting chop almonds roughly and toast in a dry pan on the stove top for several minutes making sure to stir and not burn. In a small bowl mix juice of 1 lemon, 1 tbs mustard, 1 tsp salt, 1 tsp black pepper, and 1 Tbs mayo (optional). Upon removing sprouts from oven, coat with dressing and toss with nuts. Serve or cool for a salad later   

 

What We’ve Learned and What We Plan

Every year for both our own reflection and for the benefit of CSA members understanding of our farm we look back at the season, as it is drawing to an end. This year has been spectacular for us in many ways – our farm crew, our knowledge, media attention, community support, farm techology and weather have come together to put us in a place where we cannot be thankful enough for what we have.

 

We finally learned how to compost! That might sound funny but our attention to fertility, espcieally in compost production has been a game changer for our soil and crops. We have also learned more about soil fertility and ammendments that have allowed us to finally grow great broccoli, great beets, big cabbages and things that we have struggled with historically.

 

Farm technology- we made some big leaps in mechanization in the past year and it has been wonderful both in terms of reducing our toil (the measure we use to evaluate technology) and in allowing us to be better farmers – planting more salad mix, getting plant spacing perfect, direct seeding and experimenting with new fall crops. We are planning on another couple of mechanization leaps next year to aid in weeding – as we spend at least a third of our summers on our hand and knees.

 

A reckoning- this winter we are trying to plan out our next 10 years. We are looking at what makes us most happy, what best supports our family, how we can create the best jobs and retain the best workers, and how we can make our farm better (not bigger). We have already started this process but are trying to improve many of our systems, schedules, and investments to align with our broader values.

 

Community- One big step for this coming season is that we are trying to figure out how to deepen the sense of community around the CSA. We will be planning a meeting of “core” CSA members where we will bring together about 10-15 volunteer members who are interested in helping us figure out how we can better build community and meet the support needs for our CSA members. We are already planning a new CSA member mentor program (so new overwhelmed CSA members have an experienced person to call, email etc with questions) and pesto parties in which we will provide pesto ingredients (basil and garlic) to groups of 5-10 CSA members to make pesto together in their own homes. If you are interested in being in the core group please email or call us. We will plan an event in Athens or Wausau in Decemeber.

 

Weather is still the most important variable in our lives – sounds silly we know but our stress, our marriage, our happpiness, our crops, our pizza nights all rest on weather. This year’s weather has been phenomenal.

 

We value and love our neighbors and farm compadres. We are so happy the Red Door Family Farm is in the neighorhood and that we have grown amazing friendships with local like-minded farmers that allow us a peer group in farming. Farming can be lonely at times, difficult and difficult to talk about with non-farmers. Having great neighbors and friends to share with, to depend on, to have a beer with, and to learn with is a transformative process. This is hard to commicate effectly but this has made a huge difference and also creates a larger community which can attract more young, new, and excited farming folk.

 

We have some specific farmstead plans in the work including a mudroom (starting in a few weeks), a small packshed expansion, and some small things like better tool racks, wall mounted whiteboards (all over the farm), and in the future a truck we can pack boxes into while standing up! We are expanding our solar power to cover 106% of our farm energy needs in the early summer of 2016. We have a new great strawberry patch started for next year and will be replanting raspberries to try to get more fruit in shares in the future.

 

We will be expanding our Abbotsford/Colby Area dropsite for 2016 thanks to Brianna Hultman who will be transporting boxes from the farm (yippy!). The Local food as a movement is growing – we have been thrilled to work increasingly with The Red Eye, Sconnies, and DownTown Grocery this year and are so hapy that food businesses like Navieve Formagerie (a new cheese shop in Wausau) are opening – and you can get almost all your groveries at farmers markets and local shops. We are so hopeful for the future of food and agriculture in the region and our CSA members are the backbone of this!

 

 

CSA Newsletter Week 19, October 8th 2015

Click here for the full PDF

 

In Your Box

Beets-

Carrots –

Pie Pumpkins – either a netted winter luxury or a smoothed skin New England Pie.

Leeks-

Red Radishes or Purple Daikon Radishes-

Brasing mix or Bok Choy –

Sweet Peppers

Turnips no tops- full shares only

Garlic

Rutabaga – Great in stews, roasted or mashed.

Sweet potatoes! A range of sizes. All are fully cured (sweet). Some are a purple with white (light green when cooked) center and others are the classic orange skin. To store move these into a brown paper bag and store in a dry dark place around 50 degrees. 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 19. The End of the season is upon us. Next Week 10/15 is the final delivery. Reminders- Please bring bags to your last CSA drop if possible so you can leave your box and take your veggies. We will still accept boxes after the season is complete but out of respect for our great sight hosts we would like have boxes back as soon as possible. We are also very short of brown full share boxes so if you have several at home please bring them back or to the farmers market this week J

            We have a super-duper Friday planned as the fall leaves peak and the weather is still warm. Kim Casey will be offering a cooking class using seasonal root and fall veggies at 5:45pm, we have a cool scarecrow made by our kids perfect for fall photos and we will have great fall themed pizza to boot. Join us for any or all parts of the fun.

            We are working on cleaning out the fields – harvesting, picking up irrigation and plastic mulch, and planting our last cover crops. We have about 4 more weeks of serious farm work as we expect to harvest tons (literally) of rutabaga, turnips, winter radishes, carrots and beets. We start on long term storage root crop harvest next week as we wrap up the CSA.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

 

Note:  We have a great storage resource http://stoneyacresfarm.net/member-resources/. If you find that you have extras of anything most veggies (other than greens) that we are delivering will store for weeks or months if stored properly.

 

Pumpkin or Squash Pie Filling – Use pumpkin and squash interchangeably because pumpkins are just a type of squash.

Either make or buy a pie crust to use with this filling – makes 2 pies. 1 cup milk, 3-4 cups roasted pumpkin or squash, 1.5 tsp pumpkin pie spice, ¾ cup maple syrup, 3 eggs, 1 pinch of salt. Puree in a food processor, bake in crust until set in center about 45 minutes at 375 degrees.                                                                                                 

 

Squash/Pumpkin Soup – Use pumpkin and squash interchangeably because pumpkins are just a type of squash.

This is a basic recipe but can be adapted by changing the spices used, using coconut milk in place of dairy, adding curry and making more or less sweet. 3 to 3 1/2 pounds squash, approximately seeded and quartered, 1 tablespoon kosher salt, plus 1 teaspoon, 1 teaspoon freshly ground white pepper, plus 1/2 teaspoon, 3 cups chicken or vegetable broth, 1/4 cup honey, 1 teaspoon minced fresh ginger, 1/2 cup heavy cream, 1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg. Heat the oven to 400 degrees F. Roast  Squash for 30 to 35 minutes or until the flesh is soft and tender cut side down. Scoop the flesh from the skin into a pot. Add the broth, honey and ginger. Place over medium heat and bring to a simmer, approximately 7 to 8 minutes. Using a stick blender puree the mixture until smooth if putting into blender or food processor allow it to cool. Stir in the cream and return to a low simmer. Season with the salt, pepper, nutmeg. Adapted from Alton Brown.

 

Sweet Potato and Leek Hash

3 tablespoons olive or coconut oil, divided, 2 medium sweet potatoes diced, 1 sweet pepper diced, Sea salt, ½ teaspoon ground cumin, ½ teaspoon smoked paprika, 2 medium or 4 small leeks, diced, 2 garlic cloves, minced, 4 eggs (optional), Black pepper to taste. Instructions Add 2 tablespoons of oil to a skillet over medium-high heat. Add the sweet potatoes along with a generous pinch of salt, cumin, and paprika. Cover the skillet with a tight-fitting lid and cook for about 5 minutes, tossing and flipping occasionally to ensure that all sides of the potatoes are browning and getting crisp. Add the leeks, peppers and garlic and cook for an additional 5 minutes, covered, tossing and flipping occasionally. The hash is done when the potatoes are cooked and crisp and leeks are soft. Top with sunny-side or over-easy eggs if desired or serve as a side dish for lunch or dinner.   

 

CSA Newsletter Week 18, October 1st 2015

Click here for the full PDF

In Your Box

 

Hakuri “spring” turnips with greens- remember to use the great greens!

Potatoes- red, yellow and/or whites. All great for roasting and boiling.

Carrots –

Winter Squash – delicata or carnival (see recipes)

Leeks-

Red Radishes- even better than in spring. Mild.

Baby brassica greens – wonderful in salads or stirfry.

Kale – sweet, beautiful and tender.

Kohlrabi- these are big ugly storage kohlrabi but they are wonderful under their skin.

Hot peppers

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 18. Happy Autumn . First a big thank you to everyone who came out to the pumpkin pick, pizza and pie event. It was spectacular weather and we were so excited to feed you, see you and to collect eggs with kids. If you were not able to make it and still want a jack-o-lantern pumpkin you can pick one up at the farm for the next week or 2. Just call or let us know if you are coming for pizza.

It finally frosted Wednesday and we are perfectly happy with it. We had time this week to finish to pumpkin and winter squash harvest, to get 2/3rds of the sweet potatoes harvested and all other frost sensitive crops other than peppers were done producing. We have all the peppers and hot peppers picked for the next few weeks and all of the fall greens like kale, baby brassica greens, cabbage and brussels sprouts will be sweeter and more tender!

In family news, Happy 10th Anniversary to us J We had a small ceremony in a community garden in Madison on October 2nd 2005. Can’t believe that our walk in life and farming started 10 years ago.

NOTE: STORAGE SHARES start on Oct 23rd for those signed up.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

Kat’s Kitchen

Winter squash Delicata, Sweet Dumpling, Acorn and Carnival- we grow many winter squash and everything we deliver to you is an eating (NOT GOURD) type of squash. This week you have Delicata &/or Carnival squash. Both are “acorn” types with a thinner skin and sweeter than acorn squash flesh which is best roasted. To prepare you can cut into slices, rings or just halve and roast at 350. Slices and rings should be oiled or cooked in a pan with added water or cider. Halved squash can be cooked cut side down. No need to sweeten these but if you want to a drizzle of melted butter and maple syrup or honey is fantastic. Some great CSA members recommended a chili-lime butter to top them as well.

 

Roasted Roots – on of the joys of fall, in our opinion is roasted root vegetable. You can prepare them, use them as a side or base of a meal and then can refrigerate and use them added to soups and stews, warmed up and topped with eggs for breakfast, mashed and refried into pancakes and much more. Combine 1 onion or several leeks, 2-3 cloves of minced garlic, and 2-4 lbs of cubed root vegetables including turnips, potatoes, carrots, beets, rutabaga and hot or sweet peppers if desired. Toss with 2-3 Tbs olive or sunflower oil, salt and pepper and if flavoring is desired smoked paprika, chili powder, rosemary and thyme or mixed seasoning blends. Roasted at 400 until roots start to brown stirring once if desired.

 

Great Fall Slaw -  ½-1 giant kohlrabi, 2-3 carrots, 3 radishes, 1 sweet pepper, celery or celery leaves if desired, 1 apple finely sliced. Grate Kohlrabi, radishes and Carrots, finely slice 2-3 celery stalks and pepper and apple – combine. In a jar or blender mix together 2 Tbs Mayo, 1 Tbs honey, 1 Tbs olive oil, 3 Tbs lemon juice or apple cider vinegar. Toss and serve with sunflower seeds. You can make this with beets grated in for a pink salad, with greens added for texture.

 

Turnips, their greens and bacon – cook 3-4 slices of bacon cut into chunks adding turnip bottoms sliced into rounds. While they are cooking roughly chop greens. Add once turnips begin to soften and bacon to brown further. Cook until greens are wilted and add fresh ground pepper

CSA Newsletter Week 17, September 24th 2015

Click Here for the full PDF

In Your Box

 

Hakuri “spring” turnips with greens- remember to use the great greens!

Beefsteak and/or Heirloom Tomatoes

Potatoes- red, yellow and/or whites. All great for roasting and boiling.

Carrots –

Beets

Onions- red and/or yellow. The range of sizes all store well.

Daikon radishes- a sample white, green topped white and purple varieties.

Bok Choy- back for this week only. Great in stirfrys and braised.

Celery—these are smaller and are best used in cooked dishes. See the mirepoix recipe

Sweet peppers- an assortment of many colors and shapes.

 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 17. The beautiful fall continues. We have a huge potato harvest this week – almost 80 bushels half of which will go into the CSA boxes and storage shares, the other half which will go into storage for the winter market. We started harvesting some other roots without tops like carrots, beets and daikon radishes for the box, and harvested squash at the end of yesterday which will be in the next 3 CSA boxes – including butternuts, butter cups, acorns are more!

Remember the pumpkin pick, pizza and pie event is this Saturday from 1-5pm. You will get to take home a pumpkin or two, snack on pizza and pie as well as fresh pressed apple cider. We will have a hayride to the pumpkins, will have several farm tours, will collect eggs from the chickens and can visit the piglets too! If you would like to get your pumpkin at an alternate time please call/text/message us.

As the CSA season comes to end (3 weeks left – Oct 14th is the last delivery) remember to return any boxes you might have forgotten in past weeks. We do have space for CSA members in our storage shares. Remember these are farmers market or farm pick up only – we have to say it is going to be a wonderful fall for storage shares because of the greens and warm temperatures.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

Kat’s Kitchen

Mirepoix, soffritto, German Suppengrün and the holy trinity. These are all variations on a theme, aromatic vegetables used as a based for soups, roasts, stews and sauces. Mirepoix is a 2:1:1 ratio of onions, carrots and celery (you can use the leaves); the holy trinity uses peppers in place of carrots and is the base for gumbos and many classic Louisiana style soups; soffritto adds garlic and/or tomatoes and suppengrun uses leeks, celery root and carrot. In all cases vegetables should be diced very very finely and cooked in oil or butter until aromatic about 5 minutes. You can then add broth or just water with salt and make rich stews. All versions can be used to improve your favorite chili, in place of store bough broth and will make dishes rich and flavorful. Last but not least using these to flavor starches like rice or to pan fry potatoes make regular dishes even better. Mirepoix soup: 1 lbs of onions, 1 lbs carrots, 1 lb celery finely chopped. Saute in a mixture of 2 tbs olive oil and 1 tbs butter until fragrant, add 5-6 cups vegetable or chicken stock, fresh or dried thyme, salt and pepper to taste and puree. You can use ½ cup cream or coconut cream for a creamy version too.

 

Simple turnip, daikon and carrot kim chi-style salad – there are lots of recipes for real kim chi using these ingredients on the web. If you want to explore it further we have used this recipe with some added fish sauce and hot peppers works great http://www.foodwithlegs.com/wild-pickled-turnips/. We actually like making a milder unfermented version as a salad/side dish/condiment. Thinly slice 1 daikon radish, 2-3 small turnips, ½ onion, and shred a carrot. Combine in a non reactive bowl with 1 tsp salt and stir with hands. Let stand 15-30 minutes, rinse with clean water, add 1 tsp fish or soy sauce (for vegetarians), thinly sliced hot or sweet peppers, 1 clove garlic and fresh ginger. A great burger topping or served alongside rice dishes too. 

CSA Newsletter Week 16, September 17th 2015

Click Here for the Full PDF

In Your Box

Hakuri “spring” turnips with greens- they are back and they are sweet and tender!

Beefsteak and/or Heirloom Tomatoes

Cherry tomatoes/saladettes

Red Swan and/or Dragons Tongue Snap Beans-use like other snap beans.

Broccoli or Cauliflower (fulls only)- The newest planting is wonderful

Potatoes- red, yellow and/or whites. All great for roasting and boiling.

Carrots – back for the rest of the season.

Eggplant

Edamame- the last week for these.

Garlic-

Salad mix – baby greens are back

 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 16. We cannot believe how fast the weeks are speeding by. Our large harvest projects are lining up – all the onions are harvested and curing. Next week we are digging potatoes, harvesting and curing squash followed soon by sweet potatoes. Due to the warm weather, you can expect tomatoes and peppers in the box for at least two weeks more and we are trying to stock the box with greens too. Fall root crops, squash, and special fall crops like Brussels sprouts will be appearing as the weeks continue.  We are enjoying frost-free farming time but many of our favorite roots and brassica crops taste best when a frost has taken place so we will celebrate summer but wish for an early October frost too.

            The newsletter’s backside features the pumpkin pick, pie and pizza event which is next week. Keep an eye out for several important newsletters over the next few weeks including our annual survey and our early sign-up form for 2016.

            If you have a chance to make it to pizza night or the Wausau farmers market this weekend UW-Madison horticulture department will be here doing tasting of new trial varieties and we of course would love your feedback for the coming seasons. U-pick tomatoes will likely end next week, please call to sign up.

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

Kat’s Kitchen

Eggplant with beans and cherry tomatoes – epicurious.com   1.5 tablespoons Asian fish sauce (or soy sauce), 4 teaspoons sugar or honey, 2 teaspoons fresh lime juice, 1/2 eggplants (about 2 small or 1 large), 1/2 teaspoon vegetable oil, 1/2 green beans, 10 cherry tomatoes, 2 tablespoons fresh cilantro leaves (optional), 1 tablespoon roasted peanuts or sunflower seeds.

In a large bowl stir together fish/soy sauce, sugar, and lime juice and let stand, stirring occasionally, until sugar is dissolved, about 10 minutes. Preheat broiler/oven. Cut eggplants crosswise into 1/2-inch-thick slices. Lightly brush a small baking pan with some oil and arrange eggplant slices in pan. Brush eggplant with remaining oil and broil 3 to 4 inches from heat, turning it once, until tender and browned, about 8 minutes total. Add eggplant to fish-sauce mixture and toss. Have ready a bowl of ice and cold water. Cut beans into 1 1/2-inch lengths and in a saucepan cook in boiling salted water 2 minutes. Drain beans and transfer to ice water to stop cooking. Drain beans well and add to eggplant mixture. Halve tomatoes and coarsely chop cilantro. Finely chop peanuts. Add tomatoes, cilantro, and nuts to eggplant mixture, tossing to combine. Vegetables may be prepared 2 hours ahead. Serve vegetables at room temperature sprinkled with remaining nuts.

Edamame and carrot salad (we made this with tomatoes added too) - 1 1/2 cups shelled cooked edamame beans, 4 medium carrots (about 12 ounces), peeled, coarsely grated, 1/3 cup thinly sliced green onions/onion, 2 tablespoons rice vinegar,2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice,1 tablespoon vegetable oil,1 garlic clove, minced. Mix together the garlic with oil, vinegar and lemon juice. Toss other ingredients together and dress. Serve cold

 

 

Pumpkin Pick, Pizza and Pie

 

Join us Saturday Afternoon, September 26th from 1-5pm

 Celebrating the 2015 Harvest

 

Food – we will have seasonally themed pizzas to snack on, an assortment of pumpkin and squash pies, fresh pressed apple cider and a water cooler. Please bring your own mugs, cutlery and plates if possible

 

Pumpkins – we have tons of huge jack-o-lanterns, baby pumpkins, pie pumpkins and a few assorted colored pumpkins. Every CSA family can take one home as part of your share. We will have a hayride out to the pumpkin patch too.

 

What to Bring– Wear clothing appropriate for the weather and that can get muddy or wet. The pumpkin patch has weeds and uneven ground so plan accordingly. Visiting family or out of town visitors welcome. Have a friend interested in joining the CSA? Feel free to bring them too.

 

What to Leave at Home- Please leave pets at home.

 

Other Details- This is a CSA Event with no charge. We will have Maple Syrup, Additional Pumpkins, Cookbooks and Sign Up Forms for the 2016 Season available at the event as well. 

CSA Newsletter Week 15, Sept. 9th 2015

Click here and here for the front and backsides of the newsletter

In Your Box

Sweet peppers

Beefsteak, Heirloom Tomatoes

Rainbow Cherry tomatoes/saladettes

Red Swan or Dragons Tongue Snap Beans-use like other snap beans.

Broccoli or Cauliflower - The newest planting is wonderful

Beets with their greens-

Sweet Corn- Finally out new open pollinated corn is ready! A mix of yellow and bicolor cobs.

Spaghetti or Delicata squash – see recipes for details.

Muskmelons (cantaloupe) or Watermelon!

Basil

Cucumbers (fulls only)

 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 15. Wow we are ¾ through the season and the bounty of September is upon us. We literally had problems closing boxes and had to take out edamame from the boxes. They are also heavy – the full shares we weighed ranged from 27-31 lbs thanks to melons, beets, and squash. We were unable to harvest potatoes because of the wet weather but hope to have them for at least 4 of the next 5 weeks. In the next 2 weeks we will bring in a huge amount of vegetables for curing – squash, onions and potatoes followed by sweet potatoes and the roots lie carrots after the frost comes. Speaking of frost what a wonderful warm fall we are having. We are starting to feel the pressure of the cold weather even though it is not too cold – since we have about 10 weeks to harvest 50,000 lbs of vegetables (or more!).

If you want a chance to get your hands dirty we welcome help with the harvest – also we will announce a family harvest afternoon once we have a grasp on the fall weather, when you can come out to harvest carrots for donate to the Neighbors Place in Wausau.

Remember that the pumpkin pick, pie and pizza event is coming up on the 26th from 1-5pm. The large carving and pie pumpkins are outstanding. As we harvested squash yesterday Tony exclaimed about 30 times how impressed he was. If you are interested in harvesting your own edamame or hot peppers to preserve we have a ton. Just call to set up a time.  

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

Spaghetti and Delicata squash- roasting is the best way to cook all squash. Delicata are wonderful roasted in rings lightly covered in olive oil (maple syrup, chili powder, and salt optional). Spaghetti squash are best cut in half, roasted cut side down until tender and scraped out. You are use as pasta with sauce or top with butter, salt and pepper for a side dish.

 

Amazing roasted or grilled veggie for topping squash OR for stuffing tacos. We have made variations on this all week and our kids love them. You can roast on the grill or in the oven at 350-400 degrees. Combine a mixture of sliced peppers, onions, diced garlic, cauliflower and beans with olive or other mild oil. Roast until tender. For taco topping combine with black beans or browned meat, smoked paprika or chili power and serve topped with cheese. To top pasta or squash just toss together, add salt and pepper and parmesan cheese.

 

Sweet corn ideas- contrary to many beliefs corn does not need to be cooked. It benefits from less steaming, boiling or grilling rather than more. You can shave it into salads fresh, roasted and top with herbs like fresh basil. Or set up a corn “bar” with salted spreads or flavored butters. We mostly eat it fresh or lightly boiled with butter as a side dish J

 

 

CSA Newsletter Week 15, Sept. 3rd 2015

It is actually week 14! 

click here to access the full PDF

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 14. We have reached another transitional time in the season as we shift from fruiting crops to more fall crops. While this will start next week as beets, potatoes and the first winter squash appear in the box we will hopefully have several more frost free weeks to provide more beans, tomatoes, peppers etc. Our late fall greens are all germinated and we are planting the final hoophouse crops later this week. We are also in the midst of assembling our new hoophouse. It will be the biggest thus far and should provide some great additional space for next year’s early crops and even more importantly space to allow for a good crop rotation. There are several farm events coming up this month – Friday September 18th we will be doing a tasting panel for vegetable varieties with some researchers at UW Madison during pizza night (and the next day at the farmers market). We hope to get good feedback on many vegetable varieties so we will know what to plant and trial for next season. The 19th we are also cohosting a yoga retreat on the farm - http://5koshasyoga.com/special-events/yoga-seasonal-harvest-preparation-with-community-meal-at-stoney-acres-family-farm/. There will be a full page feature next week. Also, mark your calender for the pumpkin pick, pizza and pie event which is for CSA folks only and will feature pumpkin (pie and large carving) picking, all you can eat fall themed pizzas and an array of pies, fresh cider and general fall fun. 

In Your Box

Red Onions

Tomatillos

Sweet peppers

Hot peppers

Celery

Kale

Beefsteak, Heirloom Tomatoes

Rainbow Cherry tomatoes– Note many of these are so ripe they split after we pick them. Refrigerate/ use right away.

Red Snap Beans (smalls only)-use like other snap beans.

Winecap Mushrooms (smalls only)-

Edamame (fulls only)see last week’s recipes for description and ideas

Broccoli or Cauliflower (fulls only)- The newest planting is wonderful

Eggplant (fulls only)

 

Winecap mushrooms: Great for any dish with a soft mushroom including curry, creamed soups, wine braised meats or veggies. We love these cooked fast (3 minutes max) with caramelized onions and a tablespoon of redwine or sweet vinegar. Use to top any starch or meat!

 

·         Celery, tomato and onion salad- 4-5 plum tomatoes, 2 slicers or the equivalent in halved cherry tomatoes, ½ medium onion, thinly sliced into ribbons, 2 stalks farm celery thinly sliced with 1/8 cup leaves included. Dressing ¼ cup olive oil, 3 Tbs balsamic vinegar or sweet vinegar), 2 tbs heavy cream. Wisk dressing, put on salt adjust with salt and pepper to taste. Great with crust bread and cheese!

·          

Roasted summer veggie casserole – we had this 3 times this week and no one was upset J The key is the preroasting which makes it a bit more labor intensive but also better. In a large bowl toss 4 cups of mixed vegetables including onion, minced garlic, thinly sliced eggplant and/or peppers, summer squash and/or plum/cherry tomatoes and mushrooms. Add 3 Tbs olive oil and roast in the oven at 350 for 25-30 minutes on 2 sheets. Remove from oven and transfer to deeper roasting/cake pan, add 2 tbs fresh herbs (cilantro or basil) or 1 tbs dried herbs (Italian seasoning, basil, oregano all work well), an 1 tsp mixed salt and pepper, add ½ cup crumbled feta cheese, toss and bake for 40 minutes until cheese starts to brown. You can use mozz or probably many other cheeses, add seasoned ground pork, beef or lamb, or make without cheese or meat with chickpeas added. All our versions tasted great!

 

Another kale salad! Both the curly and lacinato (dino) kale this week are perfect for salads. Enjoy with Kalamata or black olives and tomatoes topped with lemon juice, olive oil, pepper and parmesan cheese. 

 

CSA Newsletter Week 12, August 20th 2015

Welcome to week 12 - Click here for the full PDF

In Your Box

Onions-

Cucumbers- see the recipes for ideas. They loved the heat.

Zucchini/Summer Squash- Expect them for 1-2 weeks more.

Beefsteak, Heirloom Tomatoes

Cherry and/or saladette tomatoes –

Garlic-

Salad mix

Peppers-

Hot peppers- yellow hot wax, black Hungarian, green chili .  

Broccoli- The newest planting is wonderful

Carrots- rainbow with tops. Remember separate tops in storage and to use the tops.

Tomatillos – fulls

Eggplant-halves

 

 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 12.

We have had a great week. A great family vacation, great and needed rain fall, great crop growth in the warm weather. We have nine new piglets on the farm and they are all healthy and growing. We were extremely honored to be featured on NPRs Morning Edition on Wednesday Morning (you can read the short article on NPRs food blog The Salt). We are also sorry that we were unable to dig potatoes. It was FAR too wet. They will be there next week!

It is Athens Fair weekend. This is one of the highlights of living in our wonderful rural community. We will have our annual fair float (which we are working on during evenings) on Sunday during the parade, but you can see all the events on the backside of the newsletter.

This is also Hannah’s last week on the farm, as she is headed back to college. Next week’s newsletter will feature her essay on a vision for her future farm. We have enjoyed deepening our ties to her and her family.

Upick tomatoes are starting. We expect to have times for the next month or until frost. You can pick Monday-Wednesday 8am-5pm and Thursday afternoon. Call Ahead or text to set up a time. Each share includes a half bushel (20lbs) and you can pick additional tomatoes for $25/bushel. You can also pick tomatillos. We also have celery, onions, garlic, hot and sweet peppers available for picking for salsa or sauce.  Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

 

Kat’s Kitchen

Smashed cucumber Salad – common in Thailand and many neighboring countries, smashing the cucumbers versus cutting allows them to take up dressings better and changes the texture. Rinse 6-8 medium, 4 large or 10 small cucumbers and pat dry. Cut crosswise into pieces about 4 inches long. Cut each piece in half lengthwise. On a work surface, place a piece of cucumber (or several) cut side down. Lay the blade of a large knife flat on top the cucumber and smash down lightly with your other hand. The skin will begin to crack, the flesh will break down and the seeds will separate. Repeat until the whole piece is smashed. Break or slice diagonally into bite-size pieces, leaving the seeds behind. Place the cucumber pieces in a strainer and toss with a big pinch of salt and a big pinch of sugar. Place a plastic bag filled with ice on top of the cucumbers to serve as a weight and place the strainer over a bowl. Let drain 15 to 30 minutes on the counter, or in the refrigerator until ready to serve, up to 4 hours. In a food processor combine 1 Tbs cup olive oil, 1/3 cup tahini, juice of one lime (or lemon), 1 garlic clove, ¼  tsp cumin, 1/4  tsp oregano. Pour over cucumbers and if desired add 2 tsp toasted sesame seeds.

 

Easy Refrigerator Pickles- a great recipe from Tony’s Mother Doreen. 10 cucumbers unpeeled, 2 green peppers diced, 2 onions chopped, 1/3 cup salt, 2 cups sugar, 1.3 cups vinegar. You can also add celery, garlic, dill, and/or hot peppers. Mix add the ingredients well, add vegetables chopped into bite sized pieces for peppers and onions and rounds for cucumbers, and leave for 24 hours outside then refrigerate. These will last for several months and can be enjoyed after 2 days.

 

Roasted veggie and fresh tomato sauce (for pasta, couscous, bread, or stuffing peppers) – preheat the oven to 400. Cut up 3 cups of mixed vegetables into large bite sized pieces or rounds - choose from peppers, onions, eggplant, zucchini. Coat liberally with love oil (especially the eggplant) and roast for 15-20 minutes checking to prevent burning. While these cook caramelize ½ large onion, 2-4 cloves garlic in olive oil and dice 2-3 large tomatoes. When veggies are roasted add to stove top pan with fresh tomatoes and add salt and peppers to taste. Stir until tomatoes start to cook but are still “fresh looking”. And serve a top favorite starch or use as stuffing for peppers with rice or meat, top with cheese and bake. Stuffed peppers will cook faster if they are blanches in hot water for 3 minutes or roasted with veggies until

111th Athens Fair - August 20th-23rd, 2015.

Thursday - August 20th - Bargain Day!!
8:00am to Finish......Junior Fair Horse Show-all classes:  Showmanship, Halter, Horsemanship, Riding, Games
All open class light horses-between Jr. Fair halter and riding show
5pm.......................Miniatures Horse Show
Noon......................Entry Day in the Hall
1:30pm to 9:00pm...Face to Face Judging in the Hall (Jr. Fair Clothing; Knitting and Crocheting; Cake Decorating)
1:00pm to 8:00pm...Exploring and Cloverbuds
3:30pm..................Demonstration Judging
4:00pm..................Clothing Revue
6:30pm...................Earl's Rides - Midway Opens
7:00-8:00pm............Wood Carving Demonstration in Park
7:00pm to 8:00pm......Reduced prices on Midway and at Beer Stand
9:30pm......................Fireworks

Friday - August 21st
8:00am...............Dog Show -Show Ring
9:00am...............Judging of all exhibits in the Community Hall
12:30pm..............Judging of Sheep Showmanship, Sheep, Beef Showmanship, Beef, Goats in show ring followed by Cats, Poultry, and Rabbits in Park
1:00pm................Earl's Rides - Midway Opens    
6:00pm ...............Play Bingo in Commercial Building
4:00-7:00pm.........Fitting Contest Under Shelter
7:00pm................Wood Carving Demonstration in Park
8:00pm...............Old Timer's Band performs at the Village Square
8:45pm...............Clothing Revue on the Stage
9:00pm...............Queen Coronation on the Stage

Saturday - August 22nd
7:00am to 11:30am......Entry for Central Wisconsin Gladiolus Show
8:30am.......................Dairy Show- Showmanship; Junior Fair Young Stock
10:00am to 10:30pm.....Gladiolus Show (Open to the public)
10:00am.......................5K Fun Walk/Run (see below for the attachment for the Registration Form)
11:00am, 3:30pm & 5pm....Wood Carving Demonstration in Park
11:30am......................Judging of Gladiolus Show in Commercial Building
12:30pm.....................Earl's Rides -Midway Opens
1:00pm.......................Dairy Show - Open Class - Over the Hill - Junior Fair Cows and Judging Contest
1:00pm to 5:00pm........Wristband Special on the Midway -
2pm and 6:00pm ..........Play Bingo in Commercial Building
6:00pm........................Horse Show- Draft Horse Carts & Teams (Sponsored by AbbyBank and Meyer Manufacturing)
8:00pm........................Red Higgins and the Yankee Train (Beer Bar)

Sunday - August 23rd
8:30am.........................Horse Show - Draft Horse Halter Classes (Sponsored by Athens Vet Service)
9:00am to 5:00pm..........Gladiolus Show (Open to the public)
10:30am and 2:30pm......Wood Carving Demonstration in Park
12:30pm........................Earl's Rides - Midway Opens
1:15pm..........................Athens Fair Parade -  (Old Timers Band will be in the Parade and concert after parade)
2:30pm..........................Play Bingo in Commercial Building
4:00pm..........................Release of all Livestock Exhibits
6:30pm..........................Awards Program and Raffle Drawings on the Stage
7:00pm..........................Release of all Exhibits in the Community Hall

Enjoy lots of Food-Drink-Entertainment on the Grounds throughout the Fair!!!  Eat at one of the locally sponsored food stands - St. Anthony's, Trinity Lutheran, Christ United, Colby FFA, Holstein Breeders....St. Anthony's School hosts a fish fry on Friday night (4:30 - 7:30pm) and a charcoal chicken dinner on Sunday (10am -12:30pm).  Trinity Lutheran hosts a ham dinner on Sunday in their church basement.  Patronize the Legion/VFW Beer Stand in the park throughout the fair - live music provided on Thursday, Friday and Saturday night. View the exhibits - animals in the park and produce, flowers and crafts in the hall.

 

 

 

 

CSA Newsletter Week 11, August 13th 2015

Click here for the full PDF

 

In Your Box

Onions-

Cucumbers-

Zucchini/Summer Squash-

Beefsteak, Heirloom Tomatoes and/or Cherry and/or saladette tomatoes –Saladettes look like mini roma tomatoes. These are all sweet and wonderful

Garlic-

Sweet Peppers- Purple or Green

Red Cabbage-fulls

Broccoli- Halves

Broccoli leaf- use like kale discarding or finely shopping large stem.

Cilantro- make fresh salsa this week or add to a cucumber and sesame slaw.

Hot peppers-Anaheim, jalapeno, hot wax or black Hungarian.

Celery

 

Next Week’s Best Guess: cucumbers, tomatoes, sweet corn, broccoli, zucchini, garlic, potatoes, basil, salad mix, carrots, 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 11. In field news we are starting to gain on the weeds and the fall crops look wonderful. The rain on Thursday night, Friday, and Sunday was well timed. Our kids woke up yelling with delight about rain. The crops grew inches overnight and we were happy to get full nights of sleep now that irrigation is not needed for a while.

The barn dance was as good as it’s ever been. We loved meeting new CSA members, seeing old friends, eating great food, dancing and the general celebration. It is hard to believe that this is the 9th barn dance (10th of you count our wedding) and that we have been here for a decade farming away. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for supporting us and building a great community with us. Also, we raised just over $900 for the share-a-share fund to help support shares for lower income families. Thanks for all contributions and donations.

The only bad news of the week is that raccoons are raiding the sweet corn in a serious way. The second planting looks great but we will be setting up fencing to defend the crop. We have not had this issue in 8 years but apparently they are back. We are also excited for a little family time. We are heading out on our annual mini family vacation. Michelle and Hannah will be holding down the farm for 3 days while we are away so if you call, they may be the ones to return your phone call.

Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

 

Kat’s Kitchen

Summer eating- this is our favorite time of year to eat and have a whole list of ideas for simple meals on the hotter and most busy days of summer on the backside. Our meals at this time of year are almost all veggies and it is wonderful to indulge in a dinner of roasted and raw salads, simple carbs like pasta with veggies and mock apple/zucchini pie!

 

Tomato time- Last Week’s newsletter featured a tomato guide but was light on recipes and other ideas. This is the time of year to celebrate the ripe tomato. Some ideas without recipes (but trust me you can find many on the internet that fit these descriptions if you are a recipe cooker). Pasta with fresh tomato sauce (chop tomatoes and cook very briefly with olive oil and garlic) or with fresh cherry tomatoes, caramelized onion and ribbons of raw kale (added to hot pasta). Tomato frittata (egg, cheese, onions, garlic and tomatoes baked) or little tarts (you can buy small premade pastry shells and just add nice cheese (blue, goat or feta) with a slice of tomato and bake. Bake eggs in hallowed tomatoes (take mixed eggs, mix with onions, garlic, and tomato innards, and top with parmesan cheese bake at 350 until firm).

 

My simple summer squash recipe (that everyone likes)- halve small squash or cut medium/large squash into 4-5 inch ¼-1/2 inch thick slices. In a bowl mix with enough sunflower or olive oil to lightly coat. Toss with adobo seasoning or a mixture of garlic powder, salt, peppers, oregano and paprika. A thickly sliced onion can be added too. Put in a single layer on a baking sheet bake at 350 until squash skin starts to bubble and squash are tender but not mushy (20-30 minutes). Remove from oven, sprinkle generously with parmesan cheese. Serve hot.

 

Super Summer Recipes

Simple Sandwiches

All work great with wheat or crusty bread. Serve with a simple cucumber salad or a cabbage slaw for a full meal.

Caramelize onions in olive oil adding garlic, green or red peppers, and if desired strips of steak or zucchini. Serve on bread with salt and pepper and melted Gouda or cheddar cheese.

Drizzle Bread with olive oil, top with slices of fresh tomatoes, basil and fresh mozzarella. Also works well with tomatoes, cucumbers, and sliced feta. You can lightly melt the cheese and serve open faced or smush with force between two slices.

Use simple soft sandwich bread and top with mayo or garlic aoli, salt, pepper and tomato slices.

Bruschetta can be made by toasting bread in smaller pieces and topped with fresh diced tomatoes, onions, and peppers marinated in a bit of salt and lemon juice or mild vinegar.

Need more ideas? Martha Stewart, Ina Garden, Epicurious all have great ideas for picnic and summer cooking.

Cold Soups for Hot days

Serve with bread and/or fresh greens with nuts or a side of quesadillas (with veggie filling).

Cucumber soup- 3 medium seeded cucumbers, ¾ cup. Thinly sliced green onions or shaved onion, 1 tbsp. lemon juice, 1 tsp. lemon zest, 1 tsp. Sea Salt, 1/2 tsp. Freshly ground pepper, 1 1/2  cup vegetable broth, ½ cup sour cream. Combine all ingredients other than onion and sour cream in a blender and blend to desired texture. Stir in sour cream and top with onions when you serve.

Gazpacho- adapted from the Barefoot Contessa

1 cucumber, halved and seeded, but not peeled, 2 bell peppers cored and seeded, 4 plum tomatoes, 1 onion 3 garlic cloves, minced, 3 cups ounces tomato juice (or pureed tomatoes), 1/4 cup white wine vinegar, 1/4 cup good olive oil, 1/2 tablespoon kosher salt, 1 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper

Roughly chop the cucumbers, bell peppers, small tomatoes, and red onions into 1-inch cubes. Put each vegetable separately into a food processor fitted with a steel blade and pulse until it is coarsely chopped. Do not overprocess! After each vegetable is processed, combine them in a large bowl and add the garlic, tomato juice (you can used 3 cups of pureed tomatoes instead), vinegar, olive oil, salt, and pepper. Mix well and chill before serving. The longer gazpacho sits, the more the flavors develop.

Summer Dips

Summer greens and garlic hummus – 2-3 cups greens destemmed, 1 can chickpeas rinsed and drained, ¼ cup (give or take a table spoon) olive oil, ¼ cup lemon juice (fresh is possible), 4 cloves garlic peeled (use 2 if you are not a garlic lover), ¼ cup tahini (not needed but it makes this much better), salt and pepper to taste (about ½ tsp of each). Put everything into a food processor (start with oil and garlic so garlic gets finely chopped), blend until creamy. Serve with veggies, in a wrap with roasted peppers and onions, or with pita or chips.

Cucumber, cilantro and yogurt dip – 2 cups plain yogurt (use Greek yogurt for a thicker dip), 1 cucumber coarsely grated (remove seeds first if large), 2 cloves minced garlic, ½ cup sour cream (optional if using Greek yogurt), 2 tbs lemon juice, ¼ cup fresh chopped cilantro, ¼ tsp black pepper. Combine all ingredients and mix well. Refrigerate for at least 20 minutes for tastes to combine

CSA Newsletter Week 10, August 6th 2015

Click Here for the full PDF

Remember this week is the barn dance!

In Your Box

Chicories- radiccio, frisse, escarole and sugar loaf types. NOT LETTUCE. These greens are more bitter than salad. See recipes for ideas.

Celery- Darker in color and stronger than the stuff grown on California sand.

Fresh Sweet Onions-

Cucumbers

Zucchini/Summer Squash-

Tomatoes – This newsletter has a full guide

Garlic-

Sweet Peppers- Purple or Green

Hot peppers-Perfect for salsa (Jalepenos, hot wax, black Hungarian or Anaheim). For less spice remove seeds.

Tomatillos- Halves. These look like mini green tomatoes/lanterns. See recipes for info.

Broccoli- Fulls only.

Fennel

Next Week’s Best Guess: onions, cucumbers, tomatoes, sweet corn, broccoli, zucchini, salad greens, cabbage, broccoli

 

News from the Farm

Welcome to Week 10. We are half way through the CSA. Oh how time flies in summer time. In your box for halves this week are tomatillos – use in salsa with onions and garlic; and Chicory use in roasted salads, soups and together with other salad ingredients in smaller amounts. We have been working on big weeding projects for all the fall crops and are done with 95% of our planting for the year. We really need rain and are hoping that the upcoming forecast is accurate – we are running drop irrigation 12 hours a day and our limited overhead system all night on newer plantings. Overall the dry conditions are not effecting things too much but things like carrots etc have slowed down.

The barn dance is coming this Saturday August 8th. The potluck is from 4:30-6:30pm at the farm (7002 Rangeline Rd) and the dance is from 7-11pm down the road 4 miles (1701 Windfall Hill Rd). This is a family centered event for all ages. Bring your own dishes and cutlery if possible. We will have our annual silent auction to raise money for shares for low-income families. If you have a local food related (or similar) item you can drop it off at the farmers market on Saturday morning or call us to set up a pick up.

Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple

Kat’s Kitchen

Chicory 101-  This bitter greens family is great for your health and some people love it while other find the bitterness overwhelming. Best served fresh finely chopped with hot dressing like bacon or sweet dressings like maple lemon vinaigrettes. The Red Eye in Wausau featured frisse topped with hot bacon dressing and a poached egg. Alternatively it can be added to classic soups like minestrone, to cooked beans, or roasted and served alongside other roasted veggies. Use in smaller amount with celery in slaws to add texture. We had it roasted on burgers last night. The core is the mildest part. The following recipes also work well for cabbage and kale!

 

Chicory with hot bacon dressing - 4 strips bacon, 1 large onion, thinly sliced, Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, 4 ounces mild blue cheese crumbled, 3 tablespoons white wine vinegar, 3 tablespoons olive oil, 1 large head escarole, radiccio etc, coarsely chopped. Cook the bacon over medium heat in a medium skillet until crispy. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate. To the drippings add the sliced onions and toss well. Cook until caramelized, stirring another 15 minutes. Season with 1/4 teaspoon each salt and pepper.Meanwhile, in a small bowl stir together the cheese, vinegar and oil. The dressing will be chunky and not completely emulsified. Place the escarole in a large serving bowl and crumble the bacon over it. When the onions are done and still warm, sprinkle over the chicory along with the dressing. Toss well.

 

Sauteed Chicory -2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil , 2 anchovy fillets, coarsely chopped (optional) , 1 head radicchio (about 10 ounces), trimmed and sliced into 1/2-inch pieces , 1 bunch chicory (about 1 1/2 pounds), trimmed and roughly chopped, Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper, Balsamic vinegar, for drizzling Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add anchovies, and cook 1 minute. Add radicchio and chicory; saute until slightly wilted, 1 to 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Transfer to serving platter, and drizzle with balsamic vinegar.

 

Basic tomato and tomatillo salsa

4-6 tomatillos or 1 large tomato (or a mix), ½ onion diced, hot pepper seeded and finely chopped, 1 clove garlic chopped, salt and pepper to taste, lime (optional). Roast tomatillos in oven at 400 until skins start to blacken then puree. Tomatoes can be roasted or just diced. Combine with other ingredients and add salt and pepper to taste. If you are not sure how much spice you want add peppers gradually. Serve fresh. 

Tomato Time: A Guide for 2015

 

Every season we write a tomato guide because unlike the store we grow many shapes, sizes, colors and or course flavors of tomatoes. For a newbie some of the green varieties look unripe and the scars that some heirlooms have and the patterns are hard

 

U-Pick: We will not start this until the end of the month and will announce times ahead of time. They will last for 3-4+ weeks from the end of August until frost.

 

General info- most heirloom tomatoes have “green shoulders” so the top may be green or harder while the tomato is actually ripe. The bottom of the tomato (or bottom ½) should be similar to the texture of an out stretched palm when ripe. Most Red slicing tomatoes are filly red when ripe and have even texture throughout.

 

Care- All tomatoes should be left on the counter if and when possible. They ripen best and taste best when not refrigerated. They are one of three crops that we do not cool down in anyway.

 

Varieties-We grow a lot of types of tomatoes. Most of what you will get are cherries, saladette, large heirlooms and slicers. You can also use these names to search online for images and next week we will post a picture of most types for the tomato curious.

 

Heirlooms/Slicers

 

Striped German – rainbow from light green shoulders to yellow orange with a red bottom

 Prudens Purple- a pink “brandywine” type. Larger uneven tops with a deep pink color

 Martha Washington-a pink round slicing type;

Cherokee Purple- dusty pink to a brown purple with some darker shoulders

 Paul Robeson- a purple to brown tomato much like Cherokee purple but browner

 Japanese Black Trifele- shaped like a pear with green shoulders and a deep purple red bottom

Cherokee Green -  ripe green tomato. It has a yellow bottom and ranges from light to bright green on top.

Valencia – An orange mild slicing tomato

Cosmonaut – A wonderful heirloom red slicer. Flatter and more flavor filled than the large big beef.

Big Beef - Classic red slicing tomatoes

Trials- we have several plants of these types as we participate in a trial from UW Madison. These look similar to brandywine types and other red slicers.

 

Cherries

 

Sungold- super sweet orange; black cherry-a dusty pink to deep purple large cherry;

Sweetie and peacevine cherry- both red types smaller cherry types;

Montesino – a grape tomato. Sweet and red

Juliet-not a cherry but a miniature roma/saladette oval that is sweet and firm.

Back Cherry- The Cherokee purple of cherry tomatoes, a larger dusky pink to brown color. Best flavor around.

Rainbow “Artisan” tomatoes- We are trialing a set of 7 colored saladette and large cherry types that range from green to pink and darker purple.

 

Romas

 

We grow several romas which are generally thought of as sauce tomatoes. The rounder Bellstar variety is our favorite but you will likely have a range of romas in your box as the season progresses. These are also the tomatoes we use for upick so expect to learn more about these as canning season comes in later august/early sept.

 

CSA Newsletter Week 7, July 16th 2015

Click Here for the Full PDF


Welcome to Week 7.     It is another beautiful week on the farm. We are weeding, planting and enjoying the increasing bounty of summer. The boys are loving zucchini season and have been helping harvest and competing in speed, number and size of squash they can find. We have been turning our attention to innovative ideas about how we can encourage and help young farmers, how to plan for our retirement (we know we are 35), and how we want to incorporate our kids as they get older. We are in our tenth season and it feels wonderful to begin to think about these things after many years of just trying to make the farm work on very basic levels. In less philosophical news carrots are back. Remember to use and enjoy carrot tops. We had a phone call several weeks ago from a wonderful CSA member who was waiting for carrot tops for her summer pesto – see the recipes and ideas below - the pesto is a staple in many of our CSA members’ homes. Beans and Zucchini are here and we have begun to harvest a few full sized tomatoes from the hoophouses and about 20 cherry tomatoes from the fields. We hope to bring you tomatoes and cucumbers next week or the week after! In family news, Ted turned five yesterday (the 15th) and we spent lots of time remembering how Kat picked a bushel of beans the day he was born, how the day of his birth was the first and only time we did not pack CSA boxes ourselves, and how wet 2010 was in the summer.                                                       

 Have a delicious week- Kat, Tony, Riley, Ted and Maple


In Your Box

Salad mix- baby lettuce greens.

Broccoli-

Arrow Head or Savoy (curly) Cabbage

Garlic scapes- the top sprouts of garlic, use all of them, just like garlic in any dish.

Carrots with their tops- make sure to see recipe and ideas for carrot tops.

Snap Beans

Zucchini/Summer Squash- See the backside for a guide and lots of recipes and ideas for the weeks to come.

Fennel – use both the bulb and fronds. See recipes for ideas an storage.

Next Week’s Best Guess: broccoli, fresh onions, lettuce heads, zucchini, snap beans, rainbow chard, new potatoes 


Fennel 101- Fennel is in the same family as carrots, celery, and dill. It is a fragrant vegetable that is also used as an herb to flavor bean dishes, salads and fish. The best way to store fennel is to detach the bulb and fronds. The bulb is much more mild and can roasted, shaved into other salads and slaws, or chopped and used to stuff fish. Fennel goes well with citrus as well. The fronds and stems are best used finely chopped and in smaller amounts as they have an anise like flavor which some people find strong. Roast alongside chicken or add to coleslaw. We like to add fronds to other dishes that normally feature dill or celery for a new twist like potato or egg salad. For a fennel egg salad combine 6 hard boiled eggs, 1/3 cup chopped fennel stalk, 3 tbs fennel leaves, 2-4 tbs chopped onion or 1 tsp chopped garlic, 4 tbs mayo, 1.5 tsp white wine vinegar, 2 tsp mustard and salt and pepper to taste.

 

Cooking with Carrot tops- When you get your carrots you should detach the bottoms and tops for storage but don’t throw out those tops. They are wonderful roughly chopped (take out tough stems) and used like dill or fennel in smaller amounts, used whole with other vegetable scraps to make a broth, and probably best known as a pesto ingredient. You can follow the greens pesto dish from week 5 using carrot tops or this simple recipe. Combine 2 cups carrot tops (stems removed and leaves coarsely chopped) with ½ cup olive or sunflower oil, 3 tbs pine or walnuts, ½ cup greens or fresh herbs (think kale, basil, chard…), 1 garlic clove or scape, and ¼ cup parmesan cheese. Pulse in food processor. This can top pasta, can be frozen in ice cube trays in then put into freezer bags for winter, or used on roasted or grilled veggies like zucchini, fennel, carrots.

 

Quick Meal Cabbage with Ham and Sesame Seeds

2 tbs. olive oil, 2tsp minced scapes, ½ tps red pepper flakes, ½ cup ham, 6 cups shredded cabbage, ½ chicken or veggie stock, salt pepper, lemon juice, toasted sesame seeds. Heat oil garlic and pepper flakes in skillet. Add Ham sauté one minute, Add cabbage. Stir in stock, cover simmer until most of the stock is absorbed (5-10 minutes) add salt pepper and lemon juice, Garnish with sesame seeds. Makes 4 servings.

 

Summer Squash 101

For a video background check out Tony talking Zucchini on Channel 7 (wsaw.com) search “farm to fork.”

Q: What is the difference between summer squash and zucchini?

A: Zucchini are one type of summer squash but increasingly there are new zucchini on the market including ones that are bright yellow, stripped, two tone, skinny and long or short and fat. All types of summer squash can be used interchangeably in recipes since there are only very small flavor differences.

Q: What is the best size summer squash to eat?

A: We tend to prefer the small to medium sized ones for every day cooking because they tend to be firmer and have less of a seed cavity. That said, bigger summer squash of all types are perfect for grating into bread and for stuffing and roasting.

Varieties- We will feature a picture on our facebook page this week and link it to the newsletter. Please note all of these are for eating and are not gourds. Zucchini- we grow two dark green varieties, a classic nutty heirloom called costa romaensco which is a duller white and light green and has a very nutty flavor, A new stripped variety Dario which is long shiny and stripped green and white, and a bright yellow zucchini called Goldy. We grow a classic straight neck pale yellow summer squash, a spaceship looking patty pan squash, and a Lebanese type called Alexandria which is pale yellow and shorter and fatter than a normal zucchini (it is prized for its flavor).

Cooking methods: summer squash can be roasted, grilled, steamed, sautéed, boiled, stuffed, breaded and fried, grated and added to salads or slaws raw, cut into thin ribbons to use in place of pasta and much more.

Sauted- The simplest way to prepare it is to cook in butter or olive oil with garlic (or garlic scapes) and salt and pepper and a bit of lemon juice.

Grill it- cut small squash is half and larger ones into strips. Rub with olive oil, herbs of your choice, and coarse salt and pepper and place on grill turning once after one side is browned (3-5 minutes depending on grill temperature). Serve hot or cool and use in a cold salad. You can grill a whole bunch and use it throughout the week in other dishes such as omelets, marinated or pasta salads etc.

Pasta ribbons- a trend in summer squash/zucchini eating is to use it in place of pasta. You can slice it long and thin and use in place of lasagna noodles (make sure to cook uncovered as it will give off juice), or can use a regular vegetable peeler to make noodle like strips. Peel off several from one side, then turn the zucchini and peel off more. Continue to turn and peel away ribbons until you get to the seeds at the core of the zucchini. Discard the core. You can also do this on a mandolin, adjusted to a very thin slice. These can then be cooked in boiling salted water for 2 minutes (not more) and served with your favorite sauce or pesto. You can also sauté them in olive oil without boiling to cook but make sure not to overcook.

Stuffed Zucchini are well suited to stuffing with other vegetables, rice, meat and cheese. Mixing one part rice with one part vegetables including grated carrots, tomatoes, onions, broccoli and/or fennel and a bit of sauce is a great stuffing. Top with cheese if desired (we like classic mozzarella or feta) and bake at 350 for 40 minutes. For smaller squash cook for less time. If using meat, prebrown it with the vegetables and rice then stuff.

Marinated Salads- zucchini can be roasted, grated or cut into small ribbons (as done for pasta substitute) and then marinated raw – This simple recipe from the NY times is a good intro. You can use lime juice and chili powder to change the flavor or a bit of curry in place of fresh herbs.  1 pound medium or small zucchini, preferably a mix of green and yellow, Salt to taste, 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice, 1 garlic clove, crushed or 1 garlic scape finely chopped, 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, 2 tablespoons finely chopped parsley, mint, chives, dill or a combination. 1. Slice the squash as thinly as you can. Sprinkle with salt, preferably kosher salt, and let sit for 15 to 30 minutes. Rinse and drain on paper towels. 2. Mix together the lemon juice, garlic and olive oil. Toss with the zucchini. Season with salt and pepper. Cover and refrigerate for four to six hours. 3. Remove from the refrigerator, and remove the garlic clove. Add the fresh herbs, and toss together. Taste, adjust seasoning, serve.

Pretending Zucchini is Apple in desserts- We know it sounds insane but just last summer Ted, our then 4 year old, cried when he found out he was eating a zucchini pie not an apple pie exclaiming “then how does it taste so yummy”. Honestly if you like apple desserts and need to use up some zucchini this is a great option. You can use most any apple pie recipe but zucchini should be boiled fast 2 minutes in cubes, then tossed with lemon juice and some corn starch – adding sugars etc as you would in an apple pie.