Monadnock Table magazine

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Monadnock Table magazine
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_____________________
Monadnock
TableIt’s Local!
Issue 5 • Summer 2011
TM
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
Summer’s
Splendor
Cultivating School &
Community Gardens
Plus: PYO Berries
Farmers’ Markets & CSAs
Farm Directory
Summer Events
Gardening Tips
_
978.448.5320
www.op-aRChiteCts.Com
o’NEIL PENNoYER
• A R C H I T E C T S •
Fine “Estate” Wines from our French
American Hybrid and Cold-Climate
Grapes -- Spectacular Views
Mountain View Winery
at Barnett Hill Vineyard LLC
www.bhvineyard.com
(603) 756-3948
114 Barnett Hill Rd.
Walpole, NH 03608
Tastings Saturdays
11 am to 6 pm &
by appointment
(for more information,
please check the directory)
. Residential .
institutional
Campus planning
Michael
Reilly
Your Local Renewable Energy Solution
Fine Art
www.portraitofjazz.com
•
603-827-4176
Your Loc
German John’s Bakery
Hearty German Sourdough Breads,
Original Soft Pretzels,
Crusty Rolls, Pastries and
Seasonal Specialties
Also: Deli meats, German chocolate,Your
coffee, cookbooks, CDs and more!
Wed 11-3:30 (5pm from 6/15), Thurs-Sat 9:30-5
Also 11-3:30 Tues (from 6/14) & Sun (from 7/10)
Call for orders: 464-5079
Always made from scratch!
2
5 West Main St., Hillsboro
www.germanjohnsbakery.net
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____________________
Contents
Features
Our Local Farmer: Father of the First CSA
10
Local Eats: Meet Sunflowers’ New Chef
12
Community Gardens Sprouting in Keene
16
School Gardens: Cultivating Young Minds
18-20
Columns:
Publishers’ Note: Take that Side Trip4
Table Talk: News from Around the Region6-7
Commentary: I’m a Latecomer, but I’m In8
Dig In!: Summer Gardening Questions Answered14
Future Farmer: Jacob Blake22
Made Here: Cheshire Garden23
Local Bookshelf: This Life is in Your Hands32
The Back Page Backyard: On Blueberry Hill34
In-Season Recipes:
Blueberry and Red Onion Compote
12
20
20
24
24
Colorful Confetti Pancakes
Veggie Boats
Italian Bread Salad (Panzanella)
Fresh Blueberry Crostatas
Calendar of events 30
Directories
Pick Your own berries
farmers’ markets and CSAs
FARM guide
list of advertisers
17
26
28-29
35
on the cover Sawyer Fields by Dan Thibeault. Oil on canvas. 16” x 20.”
Daniel Thibeault is a New Hampshire native who is widely recognized throughout the area for
his artistic and entrepreneurial skills. Thibeault began painting at the age of twelve and after
high school enrolled in a commercial art school in Boston. To earn money for school, he worked
as a chef. Dan paints almost every day. His work hangs in galleries in New England and is
collected by many for his scenes of Vermont, New Hampshire and Italy. For more information
about Daniel Thibeault’s work, contact him by email at: [email protected].
Photos (top to bottom): Summer barn in Chesterfield by Shaundi Kane; Sunflowers Restaurant entrée by Michael Moore; children in the garden
courtesy Sophia’s Hearth; Blueberries by Jodi Genest; Cheshire Garden berries by Trish Crapo; Jacob Blake courtesy Cheshire County Cooperative
Extension; Dan Thibeault by Jodi Genest. Al Karevy took the photograph of our cover painting.
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
3
T
Take that Side Trip
Publishers
Marcia Passos Duffy
Jodi Genest
Editorial
EDITOR: Marcia Passos Duffy
COPY EDITOR: Donna Moxley
PROOFREADER: Carol Urofsky
It is easy to take our farms for granted. We may even put off buying something
at a farmstand, farm store or farmers’ market because it may be a bit out of the
way, or we are simply just too much in a hurry to stop.
We make a mental note to stop in “next time.” After all, with all this abundance
our farms will always be there for us the next time, right?
But we all know that farmers struggle – and sometimes they don’t make it. The
evidence of that often hits us when we are making our rounds distributing this
magazine. A farm that may have been open one season is shuttered the next –
its barn eerily quiet, a quickly scrawled “closed” sign at the door.
The Monadnock Region is fortunate to have such a diversity and plenitude
of farms: For this issue we have 132 farms listed in our farm directory and this
summer there’s a farmers’ market for each day of the week (see page 26). Not
bad for a small region with a mixture of great to poor farming soil, not to
mention a short growing season. Our farmers are to be commended for doing
such a great job getting so much food and farm products to us. But they can’t
survive without us.
So this summer, do more than make a mental note to stop. Take that drive
down that long dirt road to buy fresh eggs, stop at that roadside farmstand for
your tomatoes and corn, and visit your farmers’ market. Our region’s farms will
flourish because of those little steps – and side trips.
Contributing Writers:
Steve Chase, Katherine Cox, Dave Eisenstadter,
Katrina Hall, Amanda Maurmann,
Christine Parshall, Jeanne Prevett Sable
DESIGN
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Jodi Genest
CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS:
Maryann Mullett, Daniel Thibeault
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS:
Shaundi Kane, Al Karevy, Michael Moore
PRODUCTION: Laura Borden, Margo Hrubec
Advertising
DIRECTOR: James Duffy
SALES ASSOCIATES: Angy Lombara,
Liz MacEachran, Jane MacLachlan, Jeanne Morin
Advisory Board
Jacqueline Caserta, The Inn at Valley Farms
Amanda Costello,
Cheshire County Conservation District
Russ Fiorey, Crescendo Acres Farm
Bonnie Hudspeth,
Monadnock Community Market Co-op
Amanda Maurmann, Stonewall Farm
Kate O’Connor, Keene State College
Jen Risley, Hannah Grimes Center
Contact Us
Monadnock Table, LLC • PO Box 1504
Keene, NH 03431
[email protected]
www.monadnocktable.com
(603) 357-8761 • (603) 358-6954
Follow us on Facebook & Twitter
Monadnock Table is published quarterly by
Monadnock Table, LLC and distributed throughout the
Monadnock Region of southwestern New Hampshire.
Monadnock Table, LLC supports our local farmers and
food producers and aims to connect them with
Monadnock Region consumers. Our goal is to inform
the Monadnock community about the art and science
of growing, preparing, cooking and storing local foods,
to highlight local farms and food events, and to
promote local foods and products.
Copyright © 2011 Monadnock Table, LLC. All rights reserved.
No part of this periodical may be reproduced without written
consent. The publisher assumes no responsibility for any mistakes
in advertisements or editorial. Statements/opinions expressed in
this publication do not necessarily reflect or represent those of the
publishers or editor. While every effort has been made to ensure
the accuracy of the information contained in this publication,
Monadnock Table, LLC and Monadnock Table disclaim all
responsibility for omissions or errors.
Marcia Passos Duffy
4
Jodi Genest
Monadnock Table is printed on FSC certified,
50% Post Consumer Recycled paper. Printed by SPC,
an FSC-Certified Printer, in Springfield, Vermont.
www.spccsp.com.
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos: top, Rosaly’s Farm Stand - Jodi Genest; bottom left - Emily Duffy, bottom right - Mei Genest
It’s so easy to think about our region’s farms in the summer. After all, summer
is that time of year when our farms are bursting at the seams with all kinds of
goodies: plump berries, colorful vegetables; eggs in brown, tan and blue, crispy
greens in all hues. We see the fruits of our farmers’ labors displayed with
flourish at farmers’ markets, farmstands, in our village markets and local stores.
Monadnock Rotary Bread Challenge “Best Bread” 2009 & 2010
B 42
akery
Cookies • Cakes
Fine Desserts
Artisan Breads
46 Main Street
Antrim, NH 03440
603.588.4242
Rosaly’s Garden
& Farmstand
• Panini, Salads, and
Belgian Fries
• Vegetarian and
Gluten-Free Options
• Wide Selection of
Locally Sourced Food
NH’s Oldest & Largest Organic Farm
Vegetables, Herbs, Berries
& Flowers
Live, Family-Friendly Entertainment
Thursday & Friday NighTs
45 Main Street • Keene, NH 03431 • (603) 357-6393
www.fritztheplacetoeat.com • Open 7 days for Lunch and Dinner
Open: May 20 to Columbus Day
Daily 10-6
Route 123, just south of Route 101
Peterborough, NH
www.rosalysgarden.com
924-7774
Gilsum VillaGe store
OOOOOO
Visit us to stock up on local foods
(including honey and eggs), groceries,
traditional penny candy, frozen foods,
ice-cold beer, wine, and fresh meats.
We also make fresh deli sandwiches and
serve fresh hot coffee all day.
Now offering Flower & Vegetable Plants
OOOOOO
18 Main Street • Gilsum, NH 03448
(603) 352-3220 • Open 7 days
Serving Customers Since 1881
Jingles Christmas & Country Shop
country home décor • table linens • candles
town signs • plates • wreaths • braided rugs
byers’ choice carolers • willow tree angels
fontanini nativity sets • department 56 villages
snow babies • annalee dolls • homemade fudge
antiques and collectables
1024 Route 12 • Westmoreland, NH
(603) 399-4972
Tues-Sat 10-5 • Sunday 11-4
Summer 2011
Daniel Thibeault
at Union Mill, West Peterborough
924-7941
Oil on Canvas • Local Scenes
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
5
Table Talk
food and farm news from the region and beyond
PETERBOROUGH—Nubanusit Neighborhood and Farm, a condominium co-housing
community, has won a 2011 Plan NH Merit
Award of Excellence. The community, located
on over 70 acres of farmland, fields and woodlands with trails, a pond, and nearly a mile of
riverfront, also runs an organic farm and CSA.
Each year Plan NH (Plannh.org) recognizes
outstanding projects that exemplify excellence
in planning, design and/or development, while
incorporating smart growth principles, social
responsibility and/or collaboration and coopThe Nubanusit Neighborhood and Farm runs an organic farm and CSA
eration. The neighborhood, one of four N.H.
a safe pedestrian environment for its residents. In addition, the
recipients of this year’s award, was designed by O’Neil Pennoyer
Nubanusit Neighborhood and Farm incorporates all eight of the
Architects and built by Bruss Construction for Nubi River
NH Smart Growth principles including fostering neighborhood
Partners, owners.
scale and community life.
The project was viewed by the Plan NH jury as “…an innovaOther Plan NH award recipients for 2011 included: Hanover
tive planned community approach to living, with multiple sustainable design and construction elements,” according to a press release. Coop Community Market, Manchester’s N.H. Institute of Art
and The Flying Monkey Movie House and Performance Center
The organization also praised the project’s preserved agricultural
in Plymouth.
land, and its approach to minimizing infrastructure and creating
Nubanusit Neighborhood & Farm
www.peterboroughcohousing.org
Whole Community Living ~ Tours Sundays 2-4 PM
Rooted in Clay
Pottery Studio
Hand-built & wood-fired
Retail pottery, classes & workshops,
wood-fired ovens, clay instruments & more!
Studio Hours: Wed.-Sun. 10-4 pm
208 Middle Winchendon Rd. Rindge NH 03461
www.rootedinclay.com * 603-899-3120
6
42 Main Street • Keene, NH 03431 • 603.352.5063
www.hannahgrimes.com • Open 7 days a week
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: Clive Russ
Nubanusit Neighborhood and
Farm Receives Award
WALPOLE — Two Monadnock Region
farms have won the 2011 N.H. Farm of
Distinction award: Walpole Valley Farms and
Alyson’s Orchards. A total of four state farms
were chosen to receive the distinction this
year and were selected by an independent
panel of state agricultural leaders, historic
preservationists and the general public. The
other N.H. farms that won the award were
Stoneridge Farm of Bradford and Zorvino
Vineyards and Winery of Sandown.
Alyson’s Orchard of Walpole features 50
varieties of apples, as well as peaches, pears,
plums, berries and grapes – available in PYO
and at the farm stand. The orchard also has a
large function hall and lodging on the site to
host weddings and other events.
Walpole Valley Farms is a multi-generational family farm that raises grass-fed beef,
livestock and poultry. Beef, turkey and eggs
are available at the farm and at numerous
local stores and restaurants. There is also a
bed and breakfast on the property, the Inn
at Valley Farm, which is a renovated 1774
farmhouse.
N.H. Farm of Distinction awards attractive
farms with well-tended and maintained crops,
fields and livestock.
Monadnock Waldorf School Awarded Farm-to-School Grant
KEENE — Monadnock Waldorf School was recently awarded a $500
grant from Stonewall Farm as part of the New Hampshire Farm-toSchool Program. The grant will be matched with a gift from the Parent
Council at the school. It will allow the school to expand its gardening
program through the purchase of garden tools, soaker hoses and fencing, as well as fruit stock like blackberries, blueberries and raspberries.
The gardening activities happen at Monadnock Waldorf School NurseryKindergarten on Old Walpole Road in Keene. The garden, planted and
tended by children, teachers and parents, provides beans, potatoes,
carrots, pumpkins, gourds and squash for the school program and for special events. Third
graders are building a specially designed beehive the grant will also help to fund. Stonewall
Farm established the grant program to make healthy eating habits, fresh food and gardening more accessible to schools in the Monadnock Region. Using the grant awards and local
resources, it is hoped that teachers will enhance their curriculums.
To learn more about Waldorf education or Monadnock Waldorf School, visit
Monadnockwaldorfschool.org.
NH Honey Bee Buys Bee Tree Farm
GILSUM — Will and Carole Vogeley, owners of Chesterfield-based
Bee Tree Farm, have retired and sold their 25-year-old business to
Gilsum-based The New Hampshire Honey Bee. While the Vogeleys
said they hope to travel and spend more time with their grandchildren
during retirement, they won’t be traveling too far for at least a year,
since they have agreed to help New Hampshire Honey Bee owners
John and Alison Solomonides with the transition.
John Solomonides says the company’s name has changed to
“Bee Tree Farm & The New Hampshire Honey Bee” and will continue to carry the Bee Tree Farm’s
label. The couple’s purchase of the Chesterfield business adds creamed honey, jams and jellies, hand
cream and lip balm to their existing offerings, which include honey, beeswax products and beekeeper
equipment. For more information visit NHhoneybee.com.
Donald H. Sienkiewicz
Attorney at Law
Estate Planning
Farm Transition
Planning
Photo: Marcia Passos Duffy
Farms of Distinction
When home is
where you
want to be...
Comfort, care and support for a lifetime
of independence, including:
• Visiting Nurses • Hospice
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• Geriatric Care Management
Keene 352-2253
Peterborough 532-8353
Charlestown 826-3322
April Bartley, R.N. Certified Case Manager
1-800-541-4145 • HCSservices.org
Agricultural Law
Conservation
Easements
603.654.8811
Admitted in New Hampshire & Massachusetts
www.dhslandlaw.com
Summer 2011
Look For This Logo
When You Shop
Why Buy Local?
Significantly more money re-circulates when
purchases are made at locally-owned, rather
than nationally-owned, businesses. Plus,
they tend to purchase from other local businesses, service providers and farms.
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
7
Commentary
I’m a Latecomer, but I’m In
By Steve Chase
8
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: Jodi Genest. Author photo: courtesy Steve Chase
O
I’m a latecomer to all of this. I used to think that promoting
n February 22, 2010, the national nonprofit
local food, community supported agriculture, farmers’ markets,
organization Transition U.S. sent out a press release
food cooperatives and household efforts to turn lawns into foodabout me and a handful of my neighbors in Keene.
Inspired by the international movement discussed in Rob Hopkin’s producing gardens were fine things to do, but a bit of a distraction
from creating much more urgent and needed social change. I now
“The Transition Handbook: From Oil Dependence to Local
think I was wrong.
Resilience,” the seven of us had formed the “Transition Keene
Let’s face it, without an adequate, sustainable and reasonably
Task Force” and applied to be recognized as an official Transition
healthy food supply a community will face severe strain and
Initiative. According to the Transition U.S. news release, our group
contraction and, in the worst case, even collapse. Local food
was “the 56th official Transition Initiative in the United States and
production is not just a middle-class, boutique issue of recreation
the first official Transition Initiative in New Hampshire.”
and aesthetics anymore. It is a genuine security question about
I smiled as I read these words and said to myself, “OK, it’s
whether we will be able to survive and thrive when there’s less
official — I’m a local transition organizer.”
fossil fuel available—with more competition for resources. This
What is different about being a transition organizer in Keene
situation could cause major shifts in the strength of the national
compared to other areas is that this movement already exists
and global economy, already riddled with social injustices, and force
here—and it is vibrant. There are hundreds of local people,
our communities to shorten their supply chains of food and other
organizations and businesses already facing up to key aspects of
necessities in order to survive.
peak oil, climate change and a dysfunctional global economy with
creativity, courage and a positive vision. To learn more, please go to The whole point of the global transition movement is to work
together to unleash the creativity of local communities to become
the Keene Transition Movement’s Community Website and Blog
much more resilient in the face of
(keenetransition.wordpress.com)
such challenges. We believe that
and check out the sidebar section
Local food production is not just
local change and adaptation driven
on the right of the page titled “Great
by prudent forethought and creative
Local Groups.” I guarantee that you
a middle-class, boutique issue of
design is going to be better than
will be impressed.
recreation and aesthetics anymore. abrupt change driven by shock,
What are the core goals of this
emergency and potential chaos.
informal, but very real, local movePersonally, I have also come to see how transitioning to a better
ment? To reduce our community’s overall energy use and shift
prepared and more resilient community could create a more
from fossil fuels to safe and renewable energy sources. We also
satisfying way of life than we have now. When I see the joy and
hope to enhance the heart and soul of what we love most about
excitement of the folks active in rebuilding our region’s local food
our community—even as we face the end of the “age of cheap
security, I’m thinking, “I want some of that.”
and abundant oil.” Our goals include helping to re-localize the
So, I might be a latecomer, but I’m all in. T
Monadnock Region’s economy, increase our green-collar jobs and
become more capable of producing many of the vital goods and
services we need to survive and thrive in the years ahead. A big
Steve Chase directs the environmental studies master’s
part of this effort includes enhancing our local and regional food
program in Advocacy for Social Justice and Sustainability
security, something several people in Keene and the Monadnock
at Antioch University New England. He is also a
Region have been working on very hard for at least a decade.
founding member of the Transition Keene Task Force.
Imagine That
HONEY!
The difference is in the partnership.
Dean & Jodi Turner
283 Matthews Road, Swanzey, NH
[email protected]
Serving Monadnock farmers and gardeners since the 1960s.
Your local source for organic planting seeds and
soil amendments.
www.achilleagway.com
Farm Stand OPEN DAILY Starting mid-June.
Featuring fresh, local veggies, eggs & New Hampshire made products:
NH20, Squamscot beverages, Ben’s Sugar Shack maple products,
Life’s Little Pleasures spices & many more NH made goodies
Mountain View Farm
Sweet Corn, Pumpkins &
Seasonal Veggies
127 Forest Road
Hancock NH
603.525.8005
Beekeeping Instruction ~ Hive Management ~ Backyard Pollination
It’s good for you, for your community, and for a sustainable future...
Fibers
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Yarns
Knitting
Classes
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Spinning
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•
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Pleasant
Street – Antrim
Anne
Hennessy
218 Pleasant Street, Antrim, NH 03440
t: 603-588-6637 e: [email protected]
1 column x 6.5 inches
SUPPORTING
MONADNOCK COMMUNITY
MARKET
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So does a portfolio in sync with your goals.
At Edward Jones, we spend time getting to know your
goals so we can help you reach them. To learn why it
makes sense to talk with Edward Jones about your savings
and investing strategies, schedule a no-cost, no-obligation
portfolio review.
Call or visit your local financial advisor today.
Allen Mendelson
Financial Advisor
.
151 West Street
Keene, NH 03431
603-357-7023
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
a portfolio in sync
AskSowithdoes
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Find Out More: www.monadnockcommunitymarket.com
Monadnock Community Market Co-op
Locally Owned. Locally Grown. Locally Eaten.
www.edwardjones.com
Summer 2011
Member SIPC
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
9
•
Local Farmer
Father of the First CSA
by Dave Eisenstadter
10
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos (Clockwise from top): Lincoln Geiger, Michael Moore, Dave Eisenstadter
T
variety of available prodhere are more
ucts. Today there are 110
than 12,500
mostly Temple and Wilton
Community
area families participatSupported
ing in the year-round
Agriculture
CSA. From the begin(CSA) farms now in the U.S.,
ning, the Temple-Wilton
according to a 2007 agriculture
Community Farm ran
census. But Wilton, N.H. farmer
on a democratic process,
Trauger Groh remembers when
beginning with the farm’s
there was just one: his.
yearly economic meeting
Groh, nearly 80, was born in
in April with its members.
Germany. He started farming
No matter what each
when he was not yet 13 in
family pays, all get equal
1945, a time when all the ablerights to the produce of
bodied men were fighting,
Temple-Wilton Community Farm
the farm, Groh says. “The
killed or prisoners of war. By
Farmer: Trauger Groh Type of Farm: CSA
situation of the families
the age of 20, he was indeis so different—some are
pendently farming 150 acres.
well-off people, but some are very much more poor people—and
“Soon I had a family and some children and I had to raise all the
the lack of money shouldn’t be a reason they don’t have good
money that was needed,” says Groh. “It was very, very difficult.”
nutrition,” says Groh.
Groh wanted a different, less risky, way to support the farming
Groh says his community farm is an extreme case, but CSA
lifestyle. Groh’s farm in Jever, a town in northern Germany near
farms should run based on their budget, rather than the price
the Dutch border, produced diverse products for sale including
of the produce.
milk, vegetables, meat, bread and cheese. While he had a steady
stream of customers, a crop failure always loomed large in his
“There is no other way today “If you sell
(produce), you
mind: It could mean economic disaster for his family.
to run a farm if you don’t
have to compete
While on a speaking tour in the U.S., Groh visited a farm
in Pennsylvania that was providing food for an institution for
have friends and other people with Walmart and
other food sources
the mentally handicapped. He became interested in the concept
who want to support it.”
that are totally arof what is known today as CSA farming, where members buy
tificial,” Groh says.
“shares” of the farm’s bounty before the growing season, providing
“Farming, in our sense, is not an industry, and shouldn’t be one.”
valuable up-front capital to
To spread the word about this new method of farming, Groh
the farmer. “That was going
teamed up with journalist Steven McFadden to pen the book
a step further than what I
Farms of Tomorrow. The book came out in 1990; a new edition,
could do in Germany,” says
Farms of Tomorrow Revisited, came out seven years later.
Groh.
Groh sees that there are more and more young people who
Groh sold his farm in the
would like to farm and they don’t have the facilities, capital or
1980s and moved to Wilton,
land. Community supported agriculture is a way to make the ecowhere he linked up with
nomics work for such people, Groh says. “Community farms come
local farmers Lincoln Geiger
and go, but there is a general trend upwards,” Groh said. “There
and
Anthony
Graham
to
start
Trauger Groh (pictured here with his wife,
is no other way today to run a farm if you don’t have friends and
what has been known as one
Alice) remembers when there was just
one CSA: his.
other people who want to support it.” T
of the country’s first operational CSAs, the Temple-Wilton Community Farm. (An apple
Dave Eisenstadter is a reporter for The Keene Sentinel.
harvest CSA was simultaneously formed in 1986 at Indian Line
His first book, about the December 2008 ice storm, “The
Farm in Egremont, Mass.)
Weight of the Ice,” was published by Surry Cottage books
The CSA started with about 30 families. Over the years, the
in 2009. He lives in Keene.
number of families participating in the CSA grew and so did the
100% Grass-Fed Beef • Pastured-Raised Chickens & Turkeys
Woodland Pork • Pasture-Raised Eggs
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Proudly offering
Handcrafted
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Milk ~ Cheese
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*Soap Making Classes Now Available*
Friday - Saturday - Sunday
May - November
Holland Homestead Farm
100 Nubanusit Road Nelson, NH
[email protected]
WalpoleValleyFarms.com (603) 756-2805
www.hollandhomestead.com
Upcoming Events:
National Ice Cream Day!
7/16/11 10:00 - 2:00pm
Summer Farm
Favorites Festival
8/27/11 10:00 - 2:00pm
DAIRY
BARN
Family Programming
1st & 3rd Saturdays &
Sundays in the summer
10:00 - 11:30am
What’s happening at Stonewall Farm’s Dairy Barn?
Come by Saturdays at 4:00pm & Sundays at 1:00pm to find out!
Changing the way New England
keeps agricultural lands
working
ALPACA
ORE
FARM ST
OPEN AT
29 Center Street • Keene, NH • 603.357.1600
[email protected] • www.landforgood.org
Family Programming and Dairy Barn tours sponsored by C & S Wholesale Grocers


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81 Muzzey Hill Road
Greenfield, NH
603-547-2964
Breeders of registered Huacaya alpacas
a
TO in
SHOP
WEEK D
variety of colors and pedigrees
Get the most from
your land
Site Evaluation & Construction
Pasture Restoration • Wildlife Habitats
Appropriate Energy • Root Cellars
Yarn and hand-knit garments in natural and
organic hand-dyed colors
- Items in the store -
Sweaters
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Mittens
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Socks
Stuffed Toys
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Farm store open by chance or appointment
See us at Fresh Chicks Outdoor Marketplace
at Monadnock Community Hospital
Every Monday 12- 6pm, May 2 thru October
Intelligent Energy, LLC
Farm tours welcome, please call ahead!
John Baybutt • 603-289-6846 • [email protected]
www.springpondfarm .com
Summer 2011
603-547-2964
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
11
Local Eats
Meet Sunflowers’ New Chef
By Jeanne Prevett Sable
12
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos: Michael Moore
T
When Daumé cooks at home in
here’s a lot that David
Greenfield, many ingredients are about
Daumé likes about
as local as they come. He taps his maple
being the new chef at
trees for syrup; the family’s 100-squareSunflowers Restaurant in Jaffrey.
foot garden yields a variety of vegPreviously the head chef at the nowetables. He even forages pungent wild
closed Acqua Bistro in Peterborough,
ramps from his backyard. His wife,
Daumé likes the Sunflowers kitchen set
Sarah, a teacher at the Well School in
up, where he can see the diners’ faces
Peterborough, tends to the flowers.
while they are eating. And they can see
Son Dylan, 9, and daughter Samantha,
him. It’s the personal connection he
4, are learning to enjoy veggies.
likes, whether creating a culinary
“They eat very well,” says Daumé.
delight, or shopping for the freshest
“It’s so important … We need to go
local ingredients.
back to the fifties. Everyone needs
Scouting out local markets and farm
a backyard garden, even to just grow
stands is as much a part of his job as
David Daumé serves up a Sunflowers Restaurant menu item:
a tomato.”
cooking. “That’s how I get to meet the
Salmon and kale with prickly pear vinaigrette
To watch David Daumé and get
people who grow the foods that feed
Lake Champlain, the Mile Away and the
a taste of what he’s talking about, visit
the people,” he said. “It’s reassuring.
Colonel Shepherd House in Milford and a
Sunflowers Restaurant, 21 Main Street,
Everyone wants to know where their food
series of country clubs around Nashua.
Jaffrey. For reservations, call 593-3303. T
is coming from.”
He is impressed by the progress the
Daumé has always had a garden,
Jeanne Prevett Sable is a writer, musician
especially growing up in the “Garden State” localvore movement has made here in the
and author of “Seed Keepers of Crescentville.”
Monadnock
Region
over
the
past
decade,
of New Jersey, where they grew “everyShe lives in Fitzwilliam.
even
beyond
what
he
observed
on
“the
thing.” He recalls his first fresh
vegetables—green beans, right “off the vine, other side of Temple Mountain” in the
eastern part of the state.
and into the pan.”
Ideally, that’s what you want, he says:
Blueberry and
“…produce so fresh, it’s never been under
refrigeration. Like strawberries. . .mmmm.”
Red Onion Compote
His specialty? Global flavors with a French
1 large red onion, peeled, sliced thinly
technique, but he’s partial to New England
1 teaspoon olive oil
flavors, which he describes as “simple,
4 cups red wine
hearty and flavorful.” He likes to “keep
Pinch of sugar
things simple. Fresh vegetables need to
Pinch of salt and pepper
taste like fresh vegetables.”
1 pound fresh blueberries
Daumé started cooking professionally
at 18, when the cooks at a restaurant
Cook onions in oil in a medium-sized pan until lightly browned. Add wine. Cook
(where he was waiting tables) took him
on low heat until mixture is thick and caramelized. Add sugar and a pinch of salt
under their wing. He later attended college
and pepper.
in Vermont, and continued to cook and
Turn off the heat and add blueberries. Stir well. Serve it warm or cold with fried
earn promotions at various restaurants
chicken, grilled salmon or spicy steak.
between Vermont and the Milford, N.H.
area, where his wife, Sarah, is from. He has
From David Daumé, Executive Chef, Sunflowers Restaurant, Jaffrey
worked at the Dockside Restaurant on
21B Main Street, Jaffrey • 603-593-3303
www.sunflowerscatering.com
Hand Dyed Yarns
“Best-Rounded Menu — A cheery gathering spot that’s as
good for locally sourced salads and great pastries as it is
for Philly cheese steak and pan-seared duck. The mimosas
are famous.”
Yankee Magazine’s Travel Guide to New England
Including Local Alpaca Yarn
We also carry yarns by Alpaca Yarn Company,
knitting accessories and patterns
www.Nightingalefibers.com
603-547-6645
Open on Mon, Wed, Thurs, Fri, & Sat (closed Tues) • Lunch 11am–3pm, Dinner 5pm–9pm
Sunday Brunch 9am–3pm, Dinner 5–8pm • Live Music Sunday Evenings
Shaundi Kane
Professional PhotograPher
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Weddings, Portraits,
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Call 603-358-6954 or email: [email protected]
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Knew?
The chantrelle mushroom has an apricot essence
and can be used to sweeten any dish!
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WicHlaNd Woods
mushrooms • teas • organics
consulting • workshops • books
mycological landscaping
wichlandwoods.com
(603) 357-2758 • Keene, NH 03431
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
13
Dig In!
your gardening questions answered
by Amanda Maurmann
How can I replenish the soil in my backyard garden?
It takes a long time to build organic matter in your soil, which
is vital to a healthy garden. Organic matter is the living humus
system that provides and stores nutrients for your garden plants.
Probably the most destructive force that acts against organic matter
is tillage. Tillage (digging, stirring or overturning the soil) breaks
up the aggregates (the “clumps” of soil) that are home to billions
of living and decomposing organisms.
To keep your soil healthy, reduce tillage to once or twice a year.
Other methods to rejuvenate your soil include adding compost
and cover cropping. To add a cover crop after the summer harvest,
sow an annual crop of rye, oat, field pea, vetch, soybean or buckwheat. These cover crops do double duty, feeding the soil while
growing and providing nutrients to the soil when they die off in
the winter.
When I plant my backyard garden I tend to leave lots of space
around each plant. But I’ve seen lots of backyard gardens
where the plants are very close to one another. Any advice?
In the garden,
there are no hard
and fast rules.
Our Town Landscaping, Inc.
A family owned business since 1969
r
Plants: supplier for the best quality trees, shrubs, perennials
r Lawns: repair, restoration, hydroseeding
r Sitework: excavation, grading, drainage
r Stonework: walks, walls, patios
r Maintenance: lawns, gardens
r Gardens: planning/planting
George Lohmiller
r
to a hole, seed your cilantro anywhere and everywhere, and by all
means seed arugula in between your carrot rows. After all, one of
the most rewarding aspects to growing your own food is learning
from your successes and failures. T
Amanda Maurmann is Monadnock Table’s “Dig In”
columnist and the garden manager at Stonewall Farm
in Keene. Do you have a gardening or farming
question for Amanda? Email her at askafarmer@
monadnocktable.com.
Are You Interested in Season Extension
and Preserving the Harvest?
Learn how to make these practices effective
and economical for your farm or garden.
Attend an Energy for Food Workshop.
603-525-3794
www.ourtownlandscaping.com
14
Not all your veggies need to be planted far apart.
Pictured here: lettuce and red cabbage grow happily together.
To learn more contact us at www.energyforfood.com or
603.756.2988, ext.116 or [email protected]
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos: courtesy Amanda Maurmann
I’m going to get in a lot of trouble for saying this but I hardly
ever follow the spacing guidelines found in the seed catalogs. That
said, plant spacing depends largely on how healthy your soil is (see
first question). If you have
healthy soil that consistently provides you with
an abundant harvest, by all
means plant closer together
this year.
But if your soil could use
some TLC, keep your plants
spaced farther apart; just keep in mind that most plants do just fine
touching their neighbors. The one exception to this is if you are
growing greenhouse tomatoes (air circulation between plants is
important since it prevents disease from spreading).
In the garden, there are no hard and fast rules. Experiment:
plant your bok choy and lettuce at the base of your pea fencing,
plant lettuce in between broccoli plants. Place onions two
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Office: 603-547-8947 • Cell: 508-612-3864 • Francestown, NH
[email protected]
Potting Soil and Compost
Delivery Available
603-924-5050
www.idealcompost.com
[email protected]
Since 1988
Barrett’s Greenhouse & Nursery
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258 Gunn Road
Keene, NH 03431
Open Daily 9-5
603-352-8665
Bedding Plants • Perennials • Herbs • Vegetable Starts
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We regularly stock:
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• Hi-tensile Electric
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• Tenax Plastic Deer Control Mesh
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• Welded Mesh Gates
PO Box 9, Chesterfield, NH • 603-363-8489 • [email protected]
Wellscroft
Harrisville, NH
T: 603.827.3464 | F: 603.827.2999
E: [email protected] | W: www.wellscroft.com
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
15
Community Gardens
a Are Sprouting in Keene a
By Marcia Passos Duffy
W
will continue through the summer by
children participating in the recreation center’s summer camp at Robin
Hood and Wheelock Parks. “A garden
club will be offered with the summer
camp, and they will do some of the
maintenance and gardening through
the summer months,” says Colt.
c
“Food is a great way
to bring people
together.”
oversee and guide the process of gardenbuilding; the gardens will be maintained
by program participants, residents and
Antioch student volunteers. The grant
provides all the wood for the raised beds,
mulch, soil, compost, plus wheelbarrows,
water and seeds for the garden. Beyond
that, there are also workshops for program
participants on how to build and maintain
a vegetable garden.
16
The whole point of the Keene Community
Gardens Connections is self-sufficiency
Keene Recreation Center
This garden is located on the Keene Recreation Center grounds between the outdoor
playground and the War Memorial. Four
raised beds will provide vegetables for children in the center’s kindergarten through
6th-grade after school program, CATCH
Kid’s Club (Coordinated Approach to
Child Health), which teaches children to
eat healthy foods and exercise regularly. The
recreation center is collaborating with
Keene State College’s Early Sprouts Garden
Project to create the garden.
“We’re working with the kids to design
the beds,” says Robin Colt, a graduate
student in Antioch’s environmental studies
department and co-coordinator of the
Community Garden Connections team
who is working at the recreation center
garden with fellow graduate student Anna
Cynar.
The vegetables selected for the garden
include: bell peppers, green beans, tomatoes,
Swiss chard, butternut squash and
carrots. “There’s potential for more diversity of crops, if that’s what the kids want,”
says Colt.
While the planting will be done by children in the after school program, the work
Harper Acres
The Harper Acres garden site serves
a population of fixed-income elderly
residents in 112 apartment units.
There is an active group of senior
citizens involved in the project; when
the garden is ready for harvest, some of the
produce will be available to residents for
free in the Mill Building community room.
“We wanted a site that was visible to the
community,” says Libby Weiland, an Antioch
graduate student and co-coordinator of the
CGC who is working on the project with
fellow graduate student Susan Baron. “The
garden site is right off the bike path next to
the Ashuelot River,” she says.
This garden project is a partnership with
the Keene Housing Authority, which manages the apartment complex, and Big
Brothers/Big Sisters, which will provide
intergenerational learning between the
young and elders in the community, says
Weiland.
“The whole point of this entire project
is self-sufficiency,” she points out. “Food is
a great way to bring people together …
and gardening even more so.”
Colt agrees: “There’s many layers to this
project … Bringing fresh nutritious vegetables in an affordable way, strengthening
social capacity, sourcing food locally, reducing emissions from trucking food,” says
Colt. “All these things come together by
creating a community garden.”
For more information about the Keene
Community Garden Connections, visit
AntiochNE.edu/cgc. T
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: courtesy Antioch University New England
hile there are only a
handful of working
farms left in Keene, the
rich valley soil does not
go to waste: There is an
abundance of backyard,
neighborhood and community vegetable gardens within the city limits
that produce an untold number of
pounds of food each year.
Add five more gardens to that
count. Thanks to Antioch University
New England’s new program, Keene
Community Gardens Connections
(CGC), funded by a $25,000 donation
from the Rashti Foundation, more Keene
residents will reap the benefits of the city’s
soil and harvest locally grown vegetables
this year.
Two centrally located raised-bed gardens
have been chosen for the project at the
Keene Recreation Center on Washington
Street and Harper Acres on Castle Street.
Three more gardens will be built in other
Keene locations next year.
The project is run by a group of
Antioch University New England environmental studies graduate students who will
1780 Farm: Blueberries. Downtown
Chesterfield. 363-4476
All Good Farm: Blueberries.
217 Halfmoon Pond Road, Washington.
495-0520
Alyson’s Orchard: Blueberries.
57 Alyson’s Lane, Walpole. 756-9800
Barrett Hill Farm: Blueberries, strawberries.
149 Barrett Hill Road, Mason. 878-2351
Comstock Family Farm: Blueberries,
raspberries. Hill Road at Comstock Road,
Alstead. 835-6182
Elsesser Blueberry Acres: Blueberries,
raspberries. Derry Hill Road, Acworth.
835-2259
Hi-Berry Farm: Highbush blueberries.
338 Curtis Farm Road, Wilton. 654-9819
High Hopes Orchard: Blueberries,
raspberries, 582 Glebe Road, Westmoreland.
399-4305
RETT HIL
R
BA FARM L
From our fields to your table
Opening Early June with Strawberries
(Pre-picked and PYO)
Meats: Beef, Lamb, Pork • Mixed Vegetables
Fruits: Strawberries, Raspberries, Blueberries,
Peaches & Apples
Homestead Farms: Blueberries, strawberries.
16 River Rd. South, Walpole. 756-4800
The Mellen Patch: Blueberries.
39 Merril Road, Hillsborough. 464-3706
Monadnock Berries: Blackberries, blueberries,
currants (red and black), gooseberries, raspberries,
strawberries. 545 West Hill Road, Troy. 242-6417
Pitcher Mountain/Andorra Forest:
Blueberries. 60 Queen St., Stoddard. 446-3655
Sweetwood Farm: Blueberries.
128 Amherst Street, Milford. 672-6855
Rosaly’s Farmstand: Blueberries, raspberries.
South of Route 101 on Route 123,
Peterborough. 924-7774
Smith’s Blueberries: Blueberries.
265 Turnpike Road, New Ipswich. 878-1719
Tenney Farm: Strawberries.
1 Main Street, Antrim. 588-2020
Photo: Jodi Genest
PYO Berries
Call ahead for
availability and
conditions
Ready
Picked
Pick Your
Own
Blueberries, Raspberries, Currants & Gooseberries
Mid-July thru Mid-September; Open 8 - 6pm, 7 Days a Week
Superb Mountain View, Picnic Site, Animals, Crafts & Refreshments
Visit Our Garden Center & Farm Stand
Flowers, Plants, Veggie Plants, Fruit Bushes, Fruit Trees & Produce
April 1st thru Oct 31st; Open Tues-Sun, Rt. 12 North, Troy
545 West Hill Rd, Troy, NH 03465 • (603) 242- 6417
www.monadnockberries.com
Pitcher Mountain/Andorra Forest
Wild Highbush Blueberries
603-446-3655
Visit our
Farm Stand and
BarrettHill.com
450 Fitchburg Rd. (Intersection of Rts. 124 & 31)
Mason, NH • 603-878-4022
Summer 2011
Pick your own: $1. per quart
Open 7 am to 7 pm mid-July thru August
Great views! Bring a lunch!
Route 123, Stoddard, NH
2 miles from Route 10, 4.5 miles from Route 9
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
17
School Gardens:
by Katheri
F
ive years ago, the new playground equipment at
Symonds School in Keene was surrounded by landscape that was dusty, dry and without much greenery,
says first grade teacher Susan Meehan. Her vision: to create a play
space that was more natural for children.
Today the Symonds School playground is a lush garden of
flowering trees, shrubs, flowers, vegetables and natural sculptures,
thanks to the hard work and dedication of Meehan, her colleagues,
supportive parents and, of course, the students. While the garden
has beautified the
play area, it has,
more importantly, connected
the children
with nature and
taught them
the importance
of caring for
nature’s bounty.
“Children
are completely
Keene’s Symonds School now has a vegetable
removed from
garden in its play space. Pictured here, the
nature today,”
dedication ceremony in June of 2010.
Meehan says.
“Gardening heightens the awareness of where food comes from
and the fact that they can be near something that’s alive.” It also
heightens their senses: They smell the earth and the flowers; they
can touch the grapes to test for ripeness, taste the blueberries
and watch the bees and worms at work. And for the very young
children, there’s the endless fascination of playing with water and
digging in dirt.
Bonding with the Earth
“If you want children to protect and care for the earth, they have
to learn how to bond with it,” says Susan Weber, executive director
of Sophia’s Hearth Family Center in Keene, a day care program for
infants and children through age 5. Through gardening, children
also develop a sense of beauty, Weber says.
And then there are the life lessons on the less savory side of gardening, she says: composting. “They see the yuckiest thing in the
world turn into treasure. Compost demonstrates that everything
can be redeemed
and turned into
something good.”
Even water
provides an inherent
lesson. At Sophia’s
Hearth, the gardens
are watered with rain collected in a large rain barrel. Children
learn that water is finite, Weber says; when the barrel is dry,
Gardening heightens
kids’ senses and
awareness of where
food comes from.
18
School gardens provide “hands on” learning for kids. Child
there’s no more water, as opposed to watering gardens with a hose
that “provides endless water.”
Hands-on Learning
The opportunities for hands-on learning are boundless when you
pair gardens with children, says Sharon Koshar, curriculum coordinator at the Surry Village Charter School. She helped start an
organic school garden there five years ago, with sections designated
for each class, kindergarten through grade 6. The garden provides
opportunities for lessons in not only agriculture and nutrition, but
math, science, wildlife studies, journal-writing and drawing.
As with other schools that have gardens, the commitment of
parents is essential to a garden’s success, most notably during the
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Cultivating Young Minds
ine P. Cox
and fresh air they may not otherwise get in this harried age of busy
schedules and screen-centric lifestyles.
An Antidote to “Nature Deficit”
dren at Sophia’s Hearth Family Center in Keene pick beans.
summer. Families sign up to care for the garden in the summer,
Koshar said, and once a week the students, families and faculty
gather for harvest days. That’s when participants bring a picnic
lunch, pick vegetables, socialize “… and pick some weeds while
they’re at it,” she says.
“It creates a sense of a village school and a sense of connectedness,” Koshar said. “It’s a way for families to feel close to one
another.”
The garden is also a way to get kids to eat their vegetables, notes
Koshar: “The kids will eat things here that they don’t eat at home
because they’re invested in it. They don’t complain about the work
of weeding, composting and watering.”
Working in a garden also provides some children with exercise
Summer 2011
A kid who has taken care
of a garden sees the
world as a place that
needs care and cultivating.
Like their counterparts at other schools, the Jaffrey students
discovered the wonders, and tastes, of fresh food: “They became
aware of the possibilities of what you can put on the plate,” says
Moran. In addition to developing better eating habits, the children
also benefit from the collaborative nature of gardening. “They’re
working together and building friendships.”
But the ultimate benefit of bringing children into the garden is
instilling in their growing minds the sense of responsibility for the
planet, says Koshar: “A kid who has taken care of a garden sees the
world as a place that needs care and cultivating. And that kid is not
going to throw a candy wrapper on the ground.”
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
19
Photos (left to right): Jodi Genest, courtesy Sophia’s Hearth, courtesy Dolores Moran
“Some experts are now talking about ‘nature deficit disorder,’ ”
Koshar says. “They say that we need to look carefully at how our
kids spend their time because what educators are noticing these
days is that more kids are having trouble managing their behavior,
and even having trouble thinking … Gardening gives children the
chance to become aware of their bodies, to decompress from that
sensory overload.”
Dolores Moran, a special
education teacher at the
Jaffrey Grade School, helped
start a garden there three
years ago with several other
teachers. Working with
students in grades 3 to 5, their
first garden was just two small
raised beds at the front of the
school. They now have three
more gardens in back and
grow vegetables, herbs and
cut flowers.
“The kids love it!” Moran Dolores Moran, a special education
says. “When you put kids and teacher at the Jaffrey Grade School,
dirt together it’s a no-brainer.” holds an armful of the harvest from
Last year the students even the school’s garden.
sold their bumper crop of
tomatoes and other produce at the Jaffrey Farmers’ Market and
donated produce to the school cafeteria for use in salads and salsas.
10 Tips from the Field
Want to start a garden at your school? No need to pour in a huge investment of time, money or space.
“Start modestly and small so you can feel the experience,” suggests Weber.
8. Model behavior. Show the joy, wonder and enthusiasm of all aspects
of gardening as opposed to the work that’s involved. Don’t force children
to do something. “Wait until they see it as a task they want to do, from
imitation,” Weber says.
9. Go native. Use New Hampshire plants that can survive dry conditions
as well as wet weather, Meehan recommends.
10. Get advice. Get input from lots of people: students, parents, teachers, school organizations. Consult with a Master Gardener in the area to
help. Get to know your local organic farmer. Go to a local supplier for
equipment and begin building a relationship with this community business.
Start a garden club. Look into grants to help fund equipment, plants, soil
and other purchases.
For more information on starting a garden at your child’s school, visit the
Cheshire County Conservation District’s home page, www.CheshireConservation.org, where you can download “Feeding the Next Generation:
Stories from the Field.” This e-book contains case studies and helpful tips
about school gardening throughout the Monadnock Region (case studies
include some schools mentioned in this article). T
Katherine Cox is a freelance writer who has lived and
gardened in the Monadnock Region for 30 years. Her
work has appeared in The Keene Sentinel,Vermont’s
Local Banquet, SO Vermont Arts & Living, and the
anthology “Beyond the Notches: Stories of Place in
New Hampshire’s North Country.”
Fun & Simple Veggie Recipes for Kids
By Marcia Passos Duffy and Christine Parshall of Cheshire County UNH Cooperative Extension
¼ cup bell peppers (any color), chopped
½ cup vegetables of your choice (anything in
season such as eggplant, tomatoes,
green beans, etc.)
¼ cup Parmesan cheese
Once kids grow their own veggies, they’ll want
to eat them! While eating vegetables fresh
from the garden is delightful and delicious,
you may want to bring some of those colorful
veggies into the kitchen and try these fun
summer recipes.
Colorful Confetti Pancakes
Veggies aren’t just for dinner anymore. Add
the following grated vegetables to your own
homemade pancake mix (or use a good-quality
store-bought whole wheat mix):
½ cup finely grated zucchini
¼ cup grated carrots
¼ cup grated summer squash
¼ cup grated beets (optional)
Veggie Boats
Spoon the pancake batter and veggie mixture
onto a greased and heated pancake griddle
(use ¼ cupfuls or less if you’d like smaller
pancakes). Flip pancakes when they begin to
bubble. Brown the other side for a minute or
two. You can top pancakes with local maple
syrup or ¼ cup of grated beets for a colorful
twist.
20
These vegetable boats are as much fun to
create as they are to eat. There are two ways to
serve them up: hot as a side dish or as a cold
salad.
4 medium-sized zucchini
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 garlic cloves, diced
¼ cup onions, leeks or scallions, diced
Halve zucchini lengthwise. Scoop out flesh
with a spoon leaving some behind so the shell
remains intact; set shells aside. Chop zucchini
flesh and set aside. Heat oil in a large pan.
Add garlic and your choice of onions, leeks
or scallions and sauté for 1-2 minutes. Add
zucchini, peppers and vegetables of your
choice. Cook until vegetables are tender, not
mushy. Allow to cool slightly. Kids can help out
by stuffing the zucchini shells with the sautéed
vegetables. Place stuffed zucchini “boats” on
a cookie sheet, sprinkle with Parmesan cheese,
and bake at 400°F for 20 minutes.
For those who prefer their vegetables raw,
instead of adding cooked vegetables, dice ½
cup of raw vegetables of your choice. Toss
with your favorite salad dressing and scoop
back into the zucchini shells. Top with
Parmesan cheese. T
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: courtesy Sophia’s Hearth
Here are more tips:
1. Have a plan. Consider your space and establish well-defined areas for
planting as well as walking/playing. For the very young, set aside an area
for them to dig in.
2. Plant flowers, vegetables and herbs that grow quickly. Use
plants that have already been started at a local nursery or farm. (Moran
notes this is an excellent opportunity to develop a relationship with local
farms.)
3. Use large seeds. If using seeds, bigger seeds (such as pumpkin,
squash and beans) are easier for small hands to hold. Also provide tools
that fit kid-sized hands.
4. Have access to water. They can play with it, or water the plants,
depending on age. “Watering is the kids’ favorite part,” notes Meehan.
5. Avoid chemicals. Gardening without the chemicals—such as organic
gardening—is best around children. Instead of chemical fertilizer, use
natural soil amendments, such as compost. “Composting is a great experience for kids,” Weber says.
6. Be patient and make it fun. “Don’t be too
uptight about straight rows and how many seeds go
into one spot,” Moran says. “If plants get stepped
on, it’s okay.” Keep in mind the short attention span
of most children, and accept that it will be messy.
7. Give kids a voice. Depending on age, let them
make some of the decisions and get involved in
building, planting and maintaining the garden.
Mark Goranson
EPA RRP Certified Renovator
Yarns, Fiber, Needles, Books,
Knitting Bags, Classes,
Gift Certificates
$100 Home Lead Test
with full documentation
Call today to schedule your appointment
603-769-9495
Start small.
Dream big.
Providing academic excellence
and thoughtful development
from nursery school through
high school.
603-357-4442
Keene, NH
monadnockwaldorfschool.org
604 Gibbons Hwy (Rte 101) • Wilton, NH
603-654-7030 • www.thewoolerynh.com
Tuesday – Friday 10-5 • Saturday 10-4 • Sunday 12-4
...and women and new moms
Featuring:
• Ergobaby • Bumgenius Organic Diapers
• BéBé Au Lait Nursing Covers
• Moby Wraps • Green Toys
Mon-Thurs. 10 - 6; Fri & Sat 10 - 8, Sun. 11 - 5
417 West Street, Keene 603-352-4924 • Save @ www.dillys.com/coupons.htm
Breeding Stock, Yarn
and Knit Goods.
Come Visit!
John and Liz MacEachran
402 Spring Hill Rd. • Sharon, NH 03458
603-924-6113
kilblaanfarm.com • [email protected]
Alpacas
of Kilblaan Farm
Breeding Quality Alpacas Since 1997
The Orchard School & Community Center
E. Alstead, NH
603-835-2495
www.theorchardschool.org
Summer Day Camps for
2.5-14 yr olds
*Programs rooted in the arts,
environmental & social consciousness
and cultural exploration
*Affordable Rates &Tuition Assistance
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
21
Jacob Blake
Makes His Mark
by Andrea Sawyer
M
eet Jacob Blake, a 17-year-old
from Winchester, who is starting
to make his mark in the dairy
world. Blake, who comes from a nonfarming family, was first introduced to the
world of dairy cows while hanging out
with friends who were visiting Kelly-View
Farm in Winchester, home to world class
Brown Swiss and Holstein show animals.
Shortly after his visit to the farm, he
joined 4-H, and became involved in the
cow lease program offered by his local
4-H and Kelly-View Farm. At 13 he
started showing his leased cows at several
fairs and participated in 4-H judging
contests. Since then, Blake has become an
active member of the Future Farmers of
America (FFA) program
offered at Keene High
School, and recently won
the State Dairy Showmanship Championship. He
will be competing for the
national award in the fall.
Jacob was recently
named a State Achievement winner in 4-H
and won a trip to
the National 4-H
Dairy Conference in
Madison, Wisc.
What’s on the farming
horizon for Blake? He says
Jacob Blake poses with his recently-purchased 4-H Brown Swiss calf.
he will always keep dairy
animals, and is interested
caring for animals, he says. Becoming
in a career in veterinary medicine. For
a farmer has taught him “responsibility
now, he’ll continue to participate in 4-H
and perseverance.” T
and FFA, and says, “… I look forward to
showing my new calf.”
Andrea Sawyer is Extension Educator,
Becoming involved in dairy cows over
4-H Youth Development, Cheshire County
the past four years has not only been about Cooperative Extension.
Gracie’s Grain
The best things are
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Connolly Brothers Dairy Farm
Our own raw milk*, ice cream,
and farm-raised meats.
Composted manure available.
Visit our farm store!
Open daily 8 am-8 pm, 7 days a week.
•
•
Webster Highway Temple, NH (603) 924-5002
[email protected]
*We are a licensed raw milk producer.
22
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: courtesy Cheshire County Cooperative Extension
Future Farmer
Made Here
A Successful
Transplant
W
inchester’s Cheshire Garden began
in 1986 when Patti Powers and
her husband, Ralph Legrande,
a former chef, purchased a barren piece
of land on Burt Hill Road with the goal of
transforming it into fertile organic beds
and an orchard for the business. Today,
Cheshire Garden’s preserves, mustards and
vinegars are made from organically grown
heirloom berries, fruits and
herbs.
The couple grows
all the ingredients to
make their products
— and the distance
from plant to jar
is short. Harvest is
steps away from their
home; processing
happens in their
certified kitchen.
“We pick every fruit, vegetable and
berry at its sun-ripened peak.”
Find Cheshire Garden’s products
at Hannah Grimes Marketplace and
Stonewall Farm in Keene, Rosaly’s Garden
in Peterborough and The Bridges Inn in
Swanzey. Visit Cheshire Garden online at:
Cheshiregarden.com. T
Photos courtesy Patti Powers
by Jen Risley
“We pick every fruit,
vegetable and berry at its
sun-ripened peak,” says
Powers.
Cold weather doesn’t
stop production; berries
are kept fresh in seven
freezers powered by solar
panels. The distance from
Cheshire Garden to market
is also short — Powers sells
exclusively to local markets,
inns and farmers’ markets.
The Cheshire Garden
logo came from a drawing
given to the couple by a
friend. It’s their cat, Rita,
bringing strawberries
in from the garden, “… to celebrate the
successful transplanting of the strawberries
— and me,” says Powers, who began farming
in 1978 in Leyden, Mass.
She spent more than a decade as a
researcher in the department of entomology
at the University of Massachusetts, studying
the behavior of insects in the apple orchard
ecosystem.
Jen Risley is the education program
coordinator at the Hannah Grimes Center
in Keene.
Welcome to Kristin’s!
All-Natural
Honey
All-Natural
Honey
BeeswaxServices
Candles
Extraction
Beeswax
Home
madeCandles
Jams & Jellies
BeeKeeping Supplies
Handcreams
& Lipbalms
Your Downtown Keene Bistro & Bakery
At Kristin’s we take pride in creating the
tastiest of culinary delights using the freshest
ingredients. You’ll be delighted to find
everything from decadent desserts and an
array of Cool Beans and Terra Nova coffees
to the heartiest of incredible soups and
delicious sandwiches on homemade bread...
all prepared right here in our kitchen.
Beekeeping Supplies & Services
John & Alison Solomonides
The New
Hampshire
Honey Bee
John
& Alison
Solomonides,
Proprietors
Apiary & Beekeeping Supply, Co. LLC
138A Alstead Hill Road, Gilsum, NH 03448
Ph: 603-313-0186
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.nhhoneybee.com
Bee Tree Farm &
The New Hampshire Honey Bee
A Service-Disabled-Veteran-Owned Small Business
Apiary & Beekeeping Supply, Co. LLC
138A Alstead Hill Road, Gilsum, NH 03448
PH: 603-354-8019
e-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.nhhoneybee.com
Coffees & Confections
Breads & Baguettes
Lovely Lunches
Ice Cream
Gracious Catering
& Specialty
28 Washington St., Keene, NH • (603) 352-5700 • cateringbykristins.com
Mon.-Fri. 6am-4pm, Saturday 6am-3pm
A Service-Disabled-Veteran-Owned Small Business
CommerCial
arChiteCture
& Fine art Copy
310 Marlboro St.
Keene, NH 03431
t: 603.209.3252
e: [email protected]
w: karevy.com
Summer 2011
CHESHIRE GARDEN
Handmade and Homegrown
Preserves, Mustards and More ; Gift Boxes and Mail Order
www.cheshiregarden.com ; (800) 597-7822 ; (603) 239-4173
277 Burt Hill Road ; Winchester, NH 03470
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
23
Summ er Recipes
By Katrina Hall
Italian Bread Salad
(Panzanella)
Fresh Blueberry
Crostatas
This healthy summer salad has lots of fresh
summer vegetables and a zesty dressing. It’s
perfect to bring along on picnics or for a cool
lunch at the beach or lake.
Summer in New Hampshire means
the return of farmers’ markets and the
abundance of berries beginning with
strawberries, followed by raspberries,
and then, my favorite: blueberries. Enjoy
these individual fresh blueberry crostatas
(a traditional Italian baked dessert tart)
all through the blueberry season.
Dressing:
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2-3 garlic cloves, peeled and pressed
3 anchovy fillets, chopped
1 tablespoon small capers
1 tablespoon fresh slivered basil (or 1 teaspoon
dried basil)
1/3 cup olive oil
Kosher salt and fresh pepper, to taste
Salad:
2 cups slightly stale bread (any kind), hand
sliced into 1½-inch cubes
½ red or yellow pepper, seeded and chopped
½ red onion, peeled and sliced very thinly
1 medium cucumber, peeled, seeded and cut
into ½-inch chunks
1½ cups slightly seeded and chopped fresh
garden tomatoes
3 tablespoons roughly chopped parsley
4 or 5 tablespoons freshly pureed garden
tomatoes
Small mozzarella balls (optional)
Local ingredients available in summer: red
wine vinegar, garlic, basil, peppers, onions, cucumbers, parsley, tomatoes, mozzarella cheese
Stir together in a medium bowl all the dressing
ingredients: vinegar, garlic, anchovies, capers,
basil, olive oil, salt and pepper to taste. Stir
well.
Add bread, pepper, onion, cucumber,
chopped tomatoes, parsley, pureed tomatoes
and mozzarella balls (if desired). Toss gently, refrigerate an hour. Correct for seasoning. Serve.
24
Makes four 6-inch crostatas
Filling:
4 cups of blueberries
½ cup sugar (white or maple)
1½ tablespoons flour
¼ teaspoon ground mace, nutmeg
or cinnamon
½ teaspoon salt
Dough:
2½ cups King Arthur all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon sugar (white or maple)
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 sticks cold unsalted butter, cut into pieces
½ cup ice-cold water (will need slightly more
or less)
Powdered sugar (if desired)
Local ingredients available in the summer:
maple sugar (if using), blueberries, butter.
Mix together the filling ingredients:
blueberries, sugar, flour, spice and salt. Set
aside at room temperature until needed.
Place flour, sugar and salt in food processor
and pulse briefly. Add the cold butter pieces
and pulse until mixture is crumbly. Add the
ice-cold water, one tablespoon at a time,
pulsing each time, until the mixture forms
a dough ball.
Remove dough, pat into an oval, wrap
in plastic and chill in the refrigerator for
30 minutes.
Preheat oven to 375°F. Cover a baking
sheet with parchment or foil.
Remove dough from refrigerator and cut
into four equal pieces. Roll each piece into
a 6-inch circle on a floured surface then place
on baking sheet.
Carefully scoop up a cup of berries and
heap in the center of each dough circle. Fold
border over edge of fruit, leaving an open
center where the fruit peeks out. Repeat with
the remaining three rolled dough circles.
Bake 45 minutes, or until crust is golden
and berries are bubbly. Remove and cool.
Sprinkle with powdered sugar before serving,
if desired. T
Katrina Hall moved to
New Hampshire in 1978
after several years cooking
at Le Bocage in Cambridge,
Mass. She founded the Hancock Farmers’
Market in 1990, as well as catering, herb, and
baking businesses. She started a blog, “She’s in
the Kitchen,” in 2008, where her passion for
cooking, food, and photography has finally
found a home.
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos: Katrina Hall
Serves about 4
MORNING STAR MAPLE
Contact Ellen Denny
603-477-5533 for
share details.
Seven years of
nourishing the soil
and community at
Orchard Hill Farm,
East Alstead, NH.
A complete
selection of
maple products
made on the
premises.
Two Summer Sessions Available
June 20 -August 18 & August 22– October 20
AdLocalTableMonadnock 7/27/10 4:58 PM Page 1
Route 101, Dublin, NH 03444 • 603-563-9218
We ship our maple products anywhere in the United States!
the
fast food backlash
starts here.
delicious all-natural meals, locally sourced when possible
rBGH-free cheddar cheese from Vermont
organic Stonyfield yogurt & real fruit in our smoothies
wild Maine blueberries
cream cheese from Vermont family farms
cage-free eggs from New Hampshire
salmon smoked in Maine
all-natural, cage-free chicken & turkey
naturally-cured bacon & ham—no nitrites or nitrates
no hormones or antibiotics in our meats, ever
all-natural, unbleached, unbromated flour
rainforest alliance certified, one-plantation coffee
1 2 0 M a i n S t . , Ke e n e • 1 1 8 M a i n S t . , B r a t t l e b o r o
open 6 am to 6 pm
Summer 2011
worksbaker ycafe .com
Thank you for shopping locally owned!
603.352.1626 • www.YourKitchenStore.com
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
25
Farmers’
Markets...
There’s a farmers’ market in our region
every day of the week!
Monday
Saturday
Gilsum: May-October, 8 am-12 pm. At Gilsum Village Market,
Main St. 352-3220.
Tuesday
Hancock: May-October, 9 am-12 pm. Horse sheds behind church
in Hancock. 525-3172.
Wednesday
Hillsborough: July-September, 9 am-12 pm. Butler Park, corner
of Central and Main Streets. 464-2953 or visit www.hillsboroughpride.org.
Keene: May-October, 9 am-2 pm. Behind the Colonial Theatre,
Main St. 446-9474, Facebook: Keene FarmersMarket.
Peterborough: May-October, 3-6 pm. Depot Square.
[email protected].
Jaffrey: July-September, 9 am-12 pm. Coll’s Market and Deli
parking lot, Old Sharon Road. 532-7168.
Close by in Brattleboro, Vt.: May-October, 10 am-2 pm,
Rte 9. (802) 224-8885 or www.brattleborofarmersmarket.com.
Thursday
Milford: June 25-October, 9 am-12 pm. Granite Town Plaza
(in front of Tractor Supply), 101A between the Oval and Wilton.
Milfordnhfarmersmarket.com.
Friday
Keene: May-October, 9 am-2 pm.
Behind the Colonial Theatre, Main Street.
446-9474, Facebook: Keene FarmersMarket.
Rindge: Mid-June through October, 3-6 pm. West Rindge
Common Park, corner of Route 202 and Bradford St. 899-9805.
Walpole: May-October, 4-7 pm. Town Common. 756-3168 or
visit www.walpolefarmersmarket.com.
Close by in Bellows Falls, Vt.: May-October, 4-7 pm. Waypoint
Center in downtown Bellows Falls. [email protected]
or (802) 387-6128, or visit www.bffarmersmarket.com.
... and
CSAs
1780 Farm
Chesterfield • (603) 363-4476
(see ad page 21)
Abenaki Springs Farm
Walpole • (603) 445-2157
[email protected]
abenakispringsfarm.com
Coll’s Farm Market & Deli
Jaffrey • (603) 532-7540
collsfarmllc.com
(see ad page 33)
Elliot Street Market Basket
Brattleboro, VT • (802) 3348-9818
(Must qualify for SNAP/Food Stamps
to participate)
26
Temple: May-December,
10 am-1 pm.
Temple Town Common,
Route 45.
878-0802.
Nubanusit Neighborhood & Farm
Peterborough • (603) 924-7491
peterboroughcohousing.org
(see ad page 6)
Tracie’s Community Farm
Fitzwilliam • (603) 209-1851
[email protected]
traciesfarm.com
Fertile Fields Farm
Westmoreland • (603) 399-7772
[email protected]
fertilefieldsfarm.com
Picadilly Farm
Winchester • (603) 239-8718
[email protected]
picadillyfarm.com
(see ad page 27)
Village Roots CSA
Acworth, NH • (603) 477-5533
(see ad page 25)
Holland Farm CSA
Milford • (603) 673-0667
hollandfarmcsa.com
Darling Hill Community Farm
Greenville • (603) 878-3130
localharvest.org/farms/M14196
Sunday
Farmer John’s Plot
Dublin • (603) 289-5927
[email protected]
farmerjohnsplot.com
Hillside Springs Farm
Westmoreland • (603) 399-7288
hillsidespringsfarm.com
Daloz Mill and Farm CSA
Hancock • (603) 525-3788
[email protected]
dalozcsa.org
Close by in Goshen: June-October,
10 am-1 pm. Lot between fire station
and Grange Hall. 475-5082.
Hungry Bear Farm
Wilton • (603) 654-6626
[email protected]
hungrybearfarm.com
(see ad page 27)
Pitcher Mountain CSA
Stoddard • (603) 446-3922
[email protected]
pmcsa.org
Stonewall Farm
Keene • (603) 357-7278
stonewallfarm.org
(see ad page 11)
Temple-Wilton
Community Farm
Wilton • (603) 654-6082
templewiltoncommunityfarm.com
CSA stands for “community supported
agriculture,” a way for people to buy
fresh food directly from the farmer.
Typically, a CSA farm charges a set
price for membership during a growing
season. In return, members receive shares
in the farm’s bounty (usually weekly)
throughout the growing season. CSAs
are valuable to both members and farmers:Weekly members get a basket
of fresh local produce direct from the
farm; farmers get working capital in
advance to concentrate on the business
of farming.
CSAs fill up fast so call soon to reserve your space!
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: Jodi Genest
Peterborough: May 1-October, 12-6 pm at the northeast parking
lot of Monadnock Community Hospital. 357-1849 or 924-1913.
Facebook: Fresh Chicks Local Outdoor Market.
a wood-fired
artisan bakery
in alstead, nh
Available throughout the
region and on Tuesdays at
the Keene Farmers’ Market
Raw
Honey
dana farm
DubliN
llC
[email protected] • Dublin, NH • We Deliver!
Hungry Bear
Farm
HER MOUNTA
C
I
IT
FARM
Wilton, NH
N
P
www.orchardhillbreadworks.com
Veggies
salad Mix
Highland Cattle
organically grown
vegetables, herbs
and berries
A Leading Supplier of Breeding Stock
Offering a
Flexible CSA
Naturally Raised Beef for Sale
[email protected]
603-446-3350
www.HungryBearFarm.com 603 654-6626
2011 Season Shares Available
Full Season Shares, $525
25 weeks, June through Thanksgiving
Summer Season Shares, $310
12 weeks, June through mid September
Pick up at the farm, or in Keene,
Greenfield or Brattleboro.
Lovely Pick-Your-Own Garden
SIGN UP ON LINE
www.picadillyfarm.com
Keene
Farmers’
Market
come and meet your farmers
open every tuesday & saturday, 9am – 2pm
Through october — rain or shine
•
Located behind the coLoniaL theatre
main street, downtown Keene
Follow us on Facebook! • call: (603) 446-9474
Summer 2011
•
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
27
Acworth
Acworth Village Gardens
835-7986, Eggs, Vegetables
Blueberry Acres
835-2259, PYO Blueberries
Knight Farm
835-9077, Beef, Pork, Yogurt, Cheese
Two Girls Farm
Beef, Chicken, Eggs, Garlic, Pork,
twogirlsfarm.org
Alstead
Bascom Maple Farm
835-6361, Maple Syrup & Products,
bascommaple.com
Beryl Mountain View Farm
835-2246, Beef
Comstock Family Farm
835-6182, Fruits & Vegetables,
Farmstand, PYO,
comstockfamilyfarm.com
Darby Brook Farm
835-6624, Vegetables, PYO Fruit
Days Natural Family Farm
209-9133, Chicken, Duck, Eggs,
Rabbit, Goat
Dustin’s Sugarhouse
835-6070, Maple Syrup & Products
Flying Cloud Dairy
835-2519, Milk (Raw)*, Cream*
Kercewich Farm
835-2520, Cow & Goat’s Milk (Raw),
Cream (Raw), Yogurt (Raw), Artisan
Aged Cheeses, Grass-fed Beefalo,
Pork, Maple Syrup & Products,
Turkey, Lamb
Sanctuary’s Alpaca Farm
756-3410, Alpacas, Fiber
sanctuarysalpacafarm.com
Sunset Farm
835-6210, Vegetables, Cut Flowers
Village Roots CSA
477-5533, Vegetables, Herbs, CSA
(See ad p. 25)
Antrim
Hidden Hill Farm Alpacas
588-3320, Alpacas, Breeding Stock
hhfalpacas.com (See ad p. 31)
Tenney Farm ~ 588-2020
Lovin’ it Local! www.tenneyfarm.com
Strawberries, Sweet Corn, Pumpkins
Free Range Eggs, Unpasteurized Cider
Tomatoes, Locally Made Ice Cream
Open Daily 9-6, Apr-Nov
Tenney Farm
588-2020, Cider, Chickens, Eggs,
Fruit, Vegetables, Farmstand
tenneyfarm.com
Windfall Farm
588-3296, Fleeces, Yarns,
Turkeys*, Vegetables, Cut Flowers,
Free-Range Eggs (in season),
Farm Shop, windfallfarmnh.com
bennington
Back Mountain Beefalo Farm
289-6846, Beef, Pork, Turkey
Chesterfield
Hubner Farm
363-4675, Beef
*Certified Organic
28
The 1780 Farm
(818) 929-2901, Beef, Chicken,
Pork, Herbs, Vegetables, Farmstand,
PYO, CSA (See ad p. 21)
Dublin
Dana Farm
Honey, Vegetables
[email protected]
(See ad p. 27)
Farmer John’s Plot
289-5927, Vegetables, Farmstand
Morning Star Maple Sugar House
563-9218, Maple Syrup &
Products (See ad p. 25)
Fitzwilliam
Boulder Meadow Farm
585-3461, Sheep, Llamas,
Wool Processing
bouldermeadowfarm.com
Tracie’s Community Farm
209-1851, Eggs, Honey, Vegetables,
CSA, traciesfarm.com
Patchwork Southdowns
585-9814, Sheep Wool & Meat
Francestown
Green Ledge Farm
547-3454, Beef* (Grass-Fed),
Chicken, greenledgefarm.com
Lost Village Farm
547-3509, Beef (Grass-Fed)
Rocky Meadow Farm
547-6464, Beef (Grass-Fed)
Gilsum
Ridge View Farm
352-9044, Bedding Plants, Seedlings,
Fresh Vegetables
simplesite.com/ridgeviewfarm
(See ad p. 22)
Bee Tree Farm &
The New Hampshire Honey Bee
313-0186, Honey, Beekeeping
Supplies, nhhoneybee.com
(See ad p. 23)
Greenfield
Pamomile Fine Handmade Soaps
547-2198, Herbal Soaps,
pamomile.com
Spring Pond Farm
547-2964, Breeders of Registered
Huacaya Alpacas, Yarn, Hand-Knit
Garments, Farm Shop, Farm Tours
(See ad p. 11)
Greenville
Darling Hill Community Farm
878-3130, Eggs, Herbs*,
Vegetables*, CSA
Washburn Windy Hill Orchard
878-2101, Fruit, Vegetables,
PYO Apples & Pumpkins
Hancock
Brimstone Hollow Farm
525-3070, Lamb, NH-Made Romney
Fleeces, Natural and Hand-Dyed
Roving, Homespun Yarn, Felt
Daloz Mill & CSA
525-3788, Vegetables*, CSA
Longview Forest Products
525-3566, Maple Syrup
Mountain View Farm
525-8005, Maple Syrup, Vegetables,
NH-Made Products (See ad p. 9)
Norway Hill Orchard
525-4912, PYO Apples
Harrisville
Railroad Express Sugar House
827-3245 (call first), Maple Syrup &
Products
Wellscroft Farm and Wellscroft
Fence Systems, LLC
827-3464, Eggs, Lamb, Goat Meat
(See ad p. 15)
Hillsborough
Bit O’Heaven Fiber Farm
464-4392, Wool/Mohair, Wool/
Alpaca, Wool/Angora Roving, HandPainted Roving, Handspun Yarns
Clark Summit Alpacas
464-2910, Roving, Yarn, Handmade
Items. Open Farm Days Monthly,
clarksummitalpacas.com
Western View Farm
464-3015, Freezer Lambs, Shetland
Roving & Yarn
Jaffrey
Boutwell Sugar House
532-7621, Maple Syrup
Coll’s Farm Market & Deli
532-7540, Eggs, Maple Syrup &
Products, Vegetables, CSA,
collsfarmllc.com (See ad p. 33)
Hijinks Farm
562-5775, Eggs*, Fruit*,
Vegetables*, Honey, Maple Syrup,
Farmstand, hijinksfarm.com
(See ad p. 32)
Monadnock Sugar House
Maple Syrup & Products
monadnocksugarhouse.com
Wild Star Farm
532-2434, Rabbit Meat, Vegetables
Keene
Borden Maple Tree Farm
352-6466, Maple Syrup & Products
Green Wagon Farm
Honey, Maple Syrup & Products,
Vegetables, Farmstand,
PYO Strawberries
Maple Lane Farm
352-2329, Fruit, Maple Syrup &
Products, Vegetables, PYO Apples
Mt. Caesar Alpacas
355-3555, Yarn, Fiber, Clothing,
mtcaesaralpacas.com
Stonewall Farm
357-7278 , Beef, Eggs, Cheese,
Maple Syrup & Products, Vegetables,
PYO, CSA, stonewallfarm.org,
(See ad p. 11)
Wichland Woods
357-2758, Mushrooms,
wichlandwoods.com, (See ad p. 13)
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Illustration: Maryann Mullett
Farm Directory
Some farms are open seasonally.
Please call ahead.
Shorts Sugar House
835-2909, Maple Syrup & Products
Marlborough
Webber Sugar House
876-4554, Maple Syrup & Products
Marlow
Hodge Podge Farm
446-7917, Eggs, Turkey, Chicken,
Honey
Mack Hill Farm
446-6261, Beef, Eggs, Honey, Lamb,
Maple Syrup & Products, Mushrooms,
Pork, Turkey, mackhillfarm.com
Painted Shadow Farm
446-3944, Chicken, Turkey, Fiber
Ruffled Feathers Farm
446-9474, Eggs, Chicken, Herbs,
Pork, Rabbit, Vegetables (starts)
Mason
Barrett Hill Farm
878-4022, Fruit, Vegetables
barretthillfarm.com (See ad p. 17)
Milford
Butternut Farm
673-2963, Vegetables, Herb Plants,
Bedding Plants,
butternut veggies.com
Holland Farm
673-0667, Vegetables, Eggs, Goat
Products (Cheese, Milk & Soap),
Farmstand, hollandfarmcsa.com
Nelson
Hidden Birch Farm
96 Nubanusit Rd., Nelson, 827-2950
Chevon (Goat Meat), Meat Chickens,
Fresh Eggs & Thanksgiving Turkeys
Avail. @ Farm or Keene Farmers’ Mkt.
www.hiddenbirchfarm.com
Hidden Birch Farm
827-2950, Eggs, Maple Syrup &
Products, Chevon (Goat Meat),
Turkeys, Chickens,
hiddenbirchfarm.com
Holland Homestead Farm
827-3025, Goat Milk, Cheese, Soap &
Bath Products (See ad p. 11)
New Ipswich
Amazing Flower Farm
878-9876, Fruit, Vegetables (Starter
Plants), Annuals, Perennials
(See ad p. 32)
Sleeping Monk Farm Alpacas LLC
878-2183, Alpacas, Raw Fleeces,
Roving, Batts, Yarn, Felted Sheets,
Finished Goods,
sleepingmonkfarm.com
Smith’s Berries
878-1719, PYO Blueberries
Peterborough
Dancing Dog Farm
Organic Goat’s Milk, Cheese,
Kefir, Yogurt Shares, Classes, Tours
dancingdogfarm.wordpress.com
Far Sight Farm
924-4333, Chickens (pasture-raised)
Nubanusit Neighborhood & Farm
924-3850, CSA, Tours Every Sunday
2-4 pm, peterboroughcohousing.org
(See ad p. 6)
Rosaly’s Garden & Farmstand
924-3303, Fruit*, Herbs*,
Vegetables*, PYO, Farmstand,
rosalysgarden.com (See ad p. 5)
Sunnyfield Farm
924-4436, Beef, Chicken, Eggs,
Lamb, Milk, Pork, Vegetables,
sunnyfieldfarm.org
Rindge
Fairmont Farm
899-5445, Fleece
Fieldstone Farm
899-6009, Maple Syrup
Sunflower Field Farm
899-2817, Maple Syrup & Products
White’s Farm Stand
899-5000, Maple Syrup & Products,
Vegetables, Farmstand
Sharon
Alpacas of Kilblaan Farm
924-6113, Alpacas, Fiber,
kilblaanfarm.com, (See ad p. 21)
Stoddard
Pitcher Mountain Blueberries
446-3655, PYO Wild Blueberries
(See ad p. 17)
Pitcher Mountain CSA
446-7094, Vegetables, CSA,pmcsa.org
Pitcher Mountain Farm
446-3350, Beef, Chicken, Eggs
(See ad p. 27)
Sullivan
Bo-Riggs Cattle Company
352-9920, Beef, Lamb
Moon Meadows Farm
603-847-329, Boar Goat Meat
moonmeadowsfarm.com
Surry
Crescendo Acres
352-9380, Maple Syrup & Products,
Farmstand, crescendoacres.com
(See ad p. 21)
Surry’s Wild & Woolly Farm
352-7193, Eggs
Swanzey
Stowell’s
352-8059, Beef, Pork, Custom
Slaughtering, Wrapping, Curing,
Smoking
Temple
Autumn Hill Farm
878-0802, Fruit*, Vegetables*
Ben’s Sugar Shack
562-6595, Maple Syrup & Products,
Jams, Jellies, Maple Cotton Candy
Connolly Brothers Dairy Farm
924-5002, Beef, Eggs, Milk,
Ice Cream, (See ad p. 22)
Fiber Dreams Farm
396-9136, Sheep & Angora Rabbits,
Fiber (Roving, Batts, Yarn, Felt), Dyes
Herban Living Farm
878-0459, Beef, Chicken, Eggs,
Herbs, Vegetables,
herbanlivingbandb.com
New Field Farm
878-2063, Vegetables, Blueberries,
newfield.locallygrown.net
Temple Mountain Beef
878-4900, Beef
Troy
East Hill Farm
242-6495, Beef, Chicken, Honey,
Lamb, Pork, east-hill-farm.com,
(See ad p. 31)
Monadnock Berries
242 6417, Fruit, Vegetables, PYO,
monadnockberries.com
(See ad p. 17)
Tri-Well Farm
313-3264, Artisan Goat Milk
Cheeses, Raw Goat Milk,
[email protected]
Walpole
Abenaki Springs Farm
445-2147, Chicken, Fruit*, Pork,
Turkey, Vegetables*, CSA,
abenakispringsfarm.com
Alyson’s Orchard
756-9800, Fruit, PYO, Farmstand,
alysonsorchard.com
Boggy Meadow Farm
756-3300, Cheese & Other Farm
Products, boggymeadowfarm.com
Brookfield Farm
445-5104, Grass-Fed Beef*, Milk*,
Goat Meat, Lamb, Garden Compost
Crescent Farm
756-4049, Beef, Pork
Fletcher Farm
756-4230, Hay*, Milk*
Homestead Farms
756-4800, Vegetables,Maple Syrup,
Bedding Plants, PYO Berries, Farmstand (See ad p. 35)
Milkhouse at Great Brook Farm
756-4358, 313-8808, Beef,
Cheese, Eggs, Honey, Milk (Raw),
Maple Syrup, Pork
Walpole Creamery
445-5700, Ice Cream,
walpolecreamery.com
Walpole Mountain View Winery
at Barnett Hill Vineyard
114 Barnett Hill Rd., Walpole, NH
Fine Estate Wines. Weekly Tastings
Every Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm.
[email protected] • 603-756-3948
(See ad p. 2)
Walpole Valley Farms
756-2805, 100% Grass-Fed Beef,
Pastured Chickens, Turkeys, Eggs &
Pigs, Maple Syrup, Vegetables,
walpolevalleyfarms.com
(See ad p. 11)
Washington
All Good Farm
495-0520, Maple Syrup, Produce,
PYO Blueberries
Eccardt Farm
495-3157, Beef, Milk, Pork, Veal,
Farm Store
Lovell Mountain Farm & Gardens
495-0055, Eggs, Herbs, Vegetables
(Starter Plants), lovellmtn.com
Mirage Alpacas
495-3435, Alpacas, Goats, Sheep,
miragealpacas.com
West Chesterfield
Kizazo Farm
256-6764, Eggs, Chicken, Vegetables
Westmoreland
Edgefield Farm
399-9975, Lamb (Whole),
edgefieldsheep.com
Fertile Fields Farm
399-7772, Herbs*, Vegetables*, CSA,
fertilefieldsfarm.com
High Hopes Farm
399-4305, PYO Raspberries &
Blueberries, highhopesorchard.com
Hillside Springs Farm
399-7288, Fruit, Vegetables, CSA,
hillsidespringsfarm.com
Long Ridge Farm
313-8393, CVM/Romeldale Breeding
Stock, Raw Fleece, Yarns, Rovings,
longridgefarm.com
Milkweed Farm
209-8676, Vegetables
Old Ciderpress Farm
399-7210, Chestnuts, Heirloom Cider,
PYO Apples
Stuart & John’s Sugar House
399-7778, Maple Syrup & Products,
stuartandjohnssugarhouse.com
Wilton
Hungry Bear Farm
654-6626, Vegetables, Herbs,
hungrybearfarm.com (See ad p. 27)
Winchester
Black Cat Honey
392-0008, Honey, Bee Products,
blackcathoney.com
Cheshire Garden
239-4173, Fruit (Jams, Jellies),
cheshiregarden.com, (See ad p. 23)
Country Critters Farm
239-8657, Farmstead Goat Milk,
Cheeses (Aged and Fresh)
Full Measure Farm
239-4006, Lamb (Whole), Fiber
(Cotswold)
Manning Hill Farm
239-4397, Beef, Eggs, Milk, Pork,
manninghillfarm.com
My Old Farm Pure Maple Syrup
239-6751, Maple Syrup
Picadilly Farm
239-8718, Eggs, Lamb, Pork,
Vegetables*, CSA, picadillyfarm.com
(See ad p. 27)
CLOSE BY
Ashby, Ma
Silver Oak Farm
978-386-2515, Reg. Huacaya Alpacas
& Colored Angora Goats, Alpaca &
Mohair Fiber, Yarns, Farm tours by
appt. silveroakalpacas.com
HENNIKER, NH
Porkside Farm
748-3767, Free-range Pork, Chicken,
Beef
Monadnock Table’s farm directory listings are
free. Highlighted listings are $49. Contact us
at [email protected] and we’ll
include your local farm in our next issue.
*Certified Organic
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
29
Illustrations: Maryann Mullett
Langdon
Clark’s Sugar House/Valley View
Bison 835-6863, Bison Meat,
Maple Syrup
Monadnock Table Calendar of Events
June
28 Sun., 10 am-4 pm. Wild Mushroom
Foray & Medicinal Mushroom Tea Party,
Wichland Woods, Nelson. Mushroom identification, mushroom tea tasting. Potluck lunch and
mushroom feast. $45. (603) 357-2758.
Wichlandwoods.com
2 Thurs., 6 pm. Urban Gardening/
Container Gardening, Stonewall Farm,
Keene. Learn how to grow food and herbs
in a limited space. Register: Localvore.com,
(603) 756-2988, ext. 116.
Ongoing Events
3-5 Fri., Sat, Sun., 10 am-8 pm. 10th
Annual Strolling of the Heifers Weekend,
Brattleboro, Vt. Parade of 100 heifer calves,
bedecked in flowers and led by future farmers.
Strollingoftheheifers.com.
June – August
During farm business hours. Artists &
Photographers Welcome, Davis Brook
Farm Hancock. Visit the farm to draw, paint
or photograph. (603) 525-4728.
Davisbrookfarm.com.
11 & 12 Sat., Sun., 10 am-4 pm. 7th Annual
Spring into Summer Faire, Hillsborough.
Local arts and crafts for the home. German John’s
Bakery will cater lunch and snacks. (603) 4783544. Hillsboroughartisans.com.
12 Sun., 10 am-4 pm. Mycological Landscaping: Growing Mushrooms in the Garden & Straw Inoculation, Wichland Woods,
Nelson. Potluck lunch and mushroom feast. $45.
Register: Nofanh.org/herbworkshops.
18 Sat., 10 am-3 pm. Wilton Center Unitarian Church’s 4th Annual Strawberry
Festival. Strawberry goodies, craft fair with local
artisans and games for children. (603) 654-9561.
25 Sat., 10 am-4 pm. Secret Gardens of
Keene. An annual tour to benefit Cheshire
Housing Trust. Advance tickets available midMay for $12, $15 the day-of. (603) 357-7603.
25 Sat., 9 am-3 pm. Open House at
Orchard Hill Breadworks, East Alstead.
Meet the baker, get free samples and eat wood
fired pizza. Orchardhillbreadworks.com
25 Sat., (exact time TBA). Family Concert
and Strawberry Shortcake at Picadilly
Farm, Winchester. Organic strawberries,
homemade shortcake and local ice cream. (603)
239-8718. Picadillyfarm.com.
25-26 Sat., Sun., 8 am-12 pm. Whole Foods
Breakfast at 47th Annual Gilsum Rock
Swap and Mineral Show, Gilsum. Suggested
donation: $8 adults, $3 children; no one turned
away for lack of funds. Proceeds support the
Sustainability Project. (603) 357-0860. Emersonbrookforest.org.
July
9 Sat., 10 am-4 pm. Monadnock Rotary’s
Local Food Growers Tour, farms in Peterborough, Dublin, Jaffrey, Sharon, Hancock
and Harrisville. Advance tickets: $10 for adults;
children up to age 15 free, $25 per carload.
Day of event: $12 per adult. Tickets sold at the
Greater Peterborough Chamber of Commerce.
(603) 831-2897, Monadnockrotary.org.
30
16 Sat., 10 am-2 pm. Stonewall Farm
Celebrates National Ice Cream Day, Keene.
A day dedicated to ice cream and all the joys of
summer. (603)357-7278. Stonewallfarm.org.
17 Sun., 2-4 pm. Neighborhood Permaculture with Katy Locke, Keene. Register:
Localvore.com, (603) 756-2988, ext. 116.
23 Sat., 10 am-4 pm. A Taste of Hancock:
A Kitchen Tour & Culinary Fair, Hancock.
Visit seven remarkable kitchens in historic
homes. Includes gourmet lunch catered by
a local chef. Advance tickets: $20. Day-of: $25.
(603) 525-4970 or (603) 525-4192.
Hancockwomansclub.com/tour.html.
30 Sat., 7:30 pm. Walpole Valley Farms 7th
Annual Outdoor Movie Night, Walpole.
Sit on hay bales (or bring your own blanket
or chair) and watch great cinema projected on
the side of a century-old barn. (603) 756-2855.
Walpolevalleyfarms.com.
August
3-7 Wed. – Sun., 8 am-10 pm. Cheshire
Fair, Swanzey. Horse pulling, demo derby,
children’s fun barn, horse shows, midway.
(603) 357-4740. Cheshirefair.com.
6 Sat., 9 am-12 pm (weather permitting). Beginner Beekeeping, Imagine That
HONEY!, Swanzey. $25 per couple. Dean and
Jodi Turner (603) 381-1717.
7 Sun., 2 pm-4 pm. Backyard Chickens
with Darcy Wilson, Westmoreland. Register:
Localvore.com, (603) 756-2988, ext. 116.
14 Sun., 2-4 pm. Endangered Wild
Medicinals: Presentation & Garden Tour,
Keene. Register: Localvore.com,
(603) 756-2988, ext. 116.
27 Sat., 10 am-3 pm. Cheshire County
Farm’s Open Barn Day, Westmoreland.
Tours, animals and outdoor exhibits. (603) 3997338. Co.cheshire.nh.us/Farm/index.html.
27 Sat., 10 am-2 pm. Stonewall Farm’s
Summer Farm Favorites Festival, Keene.
Garden tour, guided creek walk, outdoor games,
hayrides. (603) 357-7278. Stonewallfarm.org.
June 14 – August 16
Tuesdays. Community Fundraiser Pizza
Night, Orchard Hill Breadworks,
East Alstead. Wood fired pizza made by you –
Orchard Hill provides crusts and will bake pizza.
$5 per crust. Fair weather only.
Orchardhillbreadworks.com
June – October
Third Tuesday of the Month. Monadnock
Community Gardening and Seed Saving
Initiative, Emerson Brook Forest Outdoor
Education Center, Gilsum. Hands-on lessons
in seed saving at various garden sites.
(603) 352-1887. Emersonbrookforest.org.
June – October
First Saturday of the Month. Farm Tours
at Walpole Valley Farms. Come see how a
sustainable, pasture-based farm works. 1.5 hour
personal guided tour. $5 per person. Children
12 and under free. Walpolevalleyfarms.com
June – August
Saturdays, 10 am. Stonewall Farm
Family Programming, Keene. An educator
leads groups of all ages to experience life on the
farm. (603)357-7278. Stonewallfarm.org.
June – August
Saturdays and Sundays, 4 pm. Stonewall
Farm Dairy Barn Tours. Learn how the last
working dairy in Keene operates and even try
milking. Meet at dairy barn. (603) 357-7278.
Stonewallfarm.org.
June 25, July 9, August 11. Times vary –
call first. Making Delicious Soft Cheeses.
Dancing Dog Farm, Peterborough. Learn
to make chevre, mozzarella, lemon cheese, kefir,
yogurt cheese and yogurt. Fee: $45.
(603) 289-2426, or [email protected].
Dancingdogfarm.wordpress.com
June 4, July 16, August 12, 9 am - 12 pm.
Keep it Simple! Composting, Vermiculture
(worms!) and Compost Tea workshop. Fee:
$35. (603) 289-2426, or [email protected].
Dancingdogfarm.wordpress.com
All calendar of event listings are free for advertisers. Community or non-profit events are also free to
list. For-profit workshops and events: $10 per listing.
For more information email Marcia Duffy, editor@
monadnocktable.com.
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photo: courtesy Cheshire Housing Trust
4 Sat., 9 am-12 pm (weather permitting). Beginner Beekeeping, Imagine That
HONEY!, Swanzey. $25 per couple. Dean and
Jodi Turner (603) 381-1717.
www.harlowspub.c o m
Corner of School
and Grove Streets in
beautiful downtown
Peterborough, NH
Live Music, Good Food
& Good Beer
603-924-6365
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
Genevieve
Groesbeck
www.GenevieveGroesbeck.com
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10% off dishware at the Sunapee Craft Fair with this ad. Booth #713. Aug. 6 -14.
Breeding Champion
Alpacas, One Elite
Fleece at a Time!
Farm visits welcome by appointment.
Our farm store, Artful Alpaca at Hidden Hill Farm
is open weekdays and features artful yarns,
knitted creations and unique gifts.
New! For non-knitters:
Learn to knit without limits
on our own AirLoom,
made here in NH!
www.alpacapremier.com • 603/588-3370
Summer 2011
w w w. g a l l e r y a t w e l l s w e e p . c o m
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
31
hijinks_ad.pdf
Local
Bookshelf
By Willard Williams
Co-owner, The Toadstool Bookshops
C
M
Y
CM
MY
1:57:46 PM
Hijinks
Farm
168 Ingalls Rd
Jaffrey, NH
(603) 532.5825
www.hijinksfarm.com
[email protected]
Farm stand hours:
Tues-Sun 9am-6pm
A certified organic producer of farm-fresh food.
CY
This Life is in Your Hands by Melissa Coleman
(Published by Harper Collins $25.99, April 2011)
4/18/2010
CMY

K
Gardeners of a certain age will remember the heady
days when Helen and Scott Nearing were the gurus of
the back-to-the-land movement. Gardeners of any age
will recognize the name of organic gardener extraordinaire Eliot Coleman; they’ll know of his books, of
Four Season Farm, and of Eliot’s current wife Barbara
Damrosch, author of The Garden Primer.
Cut Flowers

Eggs  Fruit

Honey

Maple Syrup  Vegetables
Coll’s
Garden Center
& Florist
Melissa Coleman was born to Eliot and Sue Coleman in the spring of 1969, six months after they had
purchased a forested parcel of land from the Nearings
on the coast of Maine. Both idealistic parents threw
themselves into the dream of a sustainable homestead.
As Melissa recounts in her memoir, This Life is in Your
Hands, success came quickly through hard work and
thoughtful planning. The farm stand flourished, the
family added another daughter, and apprentices came
from afar to learn from them and the Nearings. But
ideals can not always be maintained in the wake of
marital distractions and then tragedy and blame.
Melissa Coleman’s book is an apt reminder of the
realities to “living the good life.”
of Jaffrey, LLC
~ All Occasions ~
~ Open Year ‘Round ~
“Grow With Us”
63 North St., Jaffrey, NH 03452 • (603) 532-7516
“Power Equipment Sales & Service”
Amazing Selection
Veggie Starter Plants & Herbs
•••
Mara de Bois
Everbearing Strawberry Baskets
One looks at the resurgence of young farmers here
in the Monadnock Region establishing CSAs, tending organic gardens and healthy livestock, and feels
reassured. While these young farmers approach their
new trades with idealism, they have the background,
education and commitment to be successful in fostering the sustainable production of food the Nearings
and Colemans envisioned.
•••
Fabulous Flowers:
Annuals & Perennials
•••
Our Own
Aged Chicken Manure
•••
Workshops
AmazingFlowerFarm.com
(603) 878-9876
202 Poor Farm Road
New Ipswich, NH 03071
Image: courtesy The Toadstool Bookshops
Read this book to relive those days or read it to
better understand the passions that gave us organic
gardening. Either way it’s quite a story.
Seed Keepers of
Crescentville
by Local Author Jeanne Prevett Sable
A gripping novel about a small Vermont
town caught in the crossfire of multinational agribusiness and genetically
contaminated crops.
“Thisbookisfarfromfanciful.Itportraysrealtechnologiesandthe
realresistanceofteed-offpeoplearoundtheworld.”–BillMcKibben
At your local bookstore, library, or online: booklocker.com/books/2001.html
32
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Shop Locally in Jaffrey!
Specializing in New and Vintage
Kitchen Wares and Linens
Breakfast & Lunch Specials Daily!
Salmagundi, llc
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8 Main Street, Jaffrey
603-593-5115
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Hours: Tues - Sat 10 am to 5 pm
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Stop By Throughout The Summer For Our
Delicious Lobster Roll!
Fawn’d Memories
New and Gently Used
Furniture and Home Décor,
Gifts, Local Maple Syrup
& Much More!
• Soups
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4 Stratton Rd. Suite 2 • Jaffrey, NH 603 - 532 - 5678
DAFFODILS
FLOWERS & GIFTS
Full Service Florist
Yankee Candle Authorized Dealer
11 Turnpike Road, Jaffrey, NH 03452
Monday - Friday 8:30 to 6 pm
Saturday 9 to 4 pm
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23 Main Street, Suite #1 • Jaffrey, NH 03452
(603) 532-4991
Coll’sAN Market
and
Deli
ALL-SEASONS MARkEt
www.daffodilsflowers.com
Lola's Fancys & Friends
Little Luxuries at Little Prices
Featuring Quality Local Produce & the Area’s Largest Organic & Natural Store
Farm-Fresh Eggs • Our Own Fresh-Picked Sweet Corn
Locally Baked Goods • Custom Cut Meats
Pure Maple Syrup
Monday - Saturday 9am - 6pm
Sundays & Holidays 9am - 5pm
“This must be the rhinestone mecca
of New Hampshire!”
Jewelry • Decoratives • Local Crafts
Mention this ad and get a free pair of earrings!
Weekend Breakfast 7:30am - 4pm
23 Main Street, Jaffrey
www.collsfarmllc.com
603-532-LOLA
Deli: 532-4618 • Market: 532-7540 • Fax: 532-6361 • Off Route 202N, Jaffrey, NH 03452
Kitchen & Bath
Cabinetry
Countertop Surfaces
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17 Turnpike Road • Jaffrey, NH
603.532.7007
www.renoirrenovations.com
Good for the planet,
practical-but-fun,
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& accessories
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Available exclusively at:
The Vintage
Rose Boutique & Botanicals
27 Main Street nJaffrey, NHn 603.593.3553
33
The Back Page Backyard
On Blu eberry Hill
By Marcia Passos Duffy
I
caught up with Jeanne in her kitchen as
she was making muffins from her stash
of blueberries frozen from last year. The
ingredients were as local as she could get: her
own blueberries, kefir made from milk from
the next door neighbor’s cows, local eggs and
maple syrup; the whole wheat flour from Vermont’s King Arthur Flour. I talked with Jeanne
about her blueberries and the fascinating
history of her land, which, she said, the locals
have long called “Blueberry Hill.”
When did you find the blueberries on
your property?
I didn’t discover them right away when we
moved here. I didn’t even notice them until a
previous neighbor cut down some trees at the
top of the hill. My blueberry bushes are mostly
in the woods. My neighbor has an open area
at the top of the hill that is easily accessible. If
I get lazy I’ll walk up there and grab some …
he doesn’t mind! Some years are good, some
are bust. Our record was 55 pounds—and that
didn’t even include what our neighbor picked
on his land. We juiced a lot of them and put
34
the rest in the freezer. I make a lot of muffins,
pancakes and blueberry sauce for waffles.
What kind of blueberries do you have?
There are many different types—it is like a
blueberry smorgasbord! There are nuances of
flavor, color and height—we have highbush
and lowbush. Some of the blueberries are too
big to be considered “wild.” They range from
light powdery blue to smaller berries that are
medium to navy blue. My favorite is the very
dark berries we always called “huckleberries”
… they are also called bilberries, sold for their
antioxidant value. The huckleberries are a little
bit spicy, with almost a cinnamon flavor. Other
blueberries are tart, others are super-sweet.
How did the bushes get on the land?
Because there’s so much variety, my guess is
that they may have been cultivated at one
time, probably in the 19th century. I once
wrote a story about Cheshire Village, an agricultural complex in east Rindge that operated
for about a dozen years during the mid-1800s.
Among the many things they produced there,
they had a vinegar works and bottling factory.
Through my research I discovered that they
made vinegar from blueberries. I interviewed
an elderly gentleman for the story—this was
back in 1985—who was one of the area’s
oldest residents. He said that little boys were
paid four cents a quart to pick blueberries
here, on what they called Blueberry Hill. In
fact, Fitzwilliam was known as the “blueberry
capital of the world” during that time.
When are the blueberries ready?
My scouting starts the end of May when the
blossoms appear. Did you know they carry a
light sweet aroma, with the hint of blueberries? These blossoms silently announce the size
and quantity I can expect to find. That is, if
nature cooperates. A pink blush to the blossom promises sweet, navy blue berries. Knowing in advance where my favorites are saves
hunting time and allows creative pruning to
coax the fruit along. The absolute peak of the
season is right around my birthday – August 1
– it is such a nice activity to do with kids.
Any tips on picking strategies?
Well, the casual picker usually uses the onehanded approach because they are carrying
a bucket in their other hand. The more dedicated will use the double-fisted method.
I cut open a plastic milk jug and tie it around
my waist so I can use two hands. That way I
can strip the berries off and just let them fall
into the jug. My neighbor once made a curious
observation: The more berries a person eats
while they are picking, the closer they were
born to the Mason-Dixon Line. True Yankees
won’t sample the berries until the bucket is
full. Me? I must be a true Yankee. T
The Back Page Backyard is a peek at what
our neighbors are growing and raising in
the Monadnock Region. Do you have a
garden or livestock you’d like featured on
this page? Email us: [email protected].
Monadnock TableIt’s Local! • www.monadnocktable.com
Photos: Marcia Passos Duffy; Blueberry photo provided by Jeanne Sable
Jeanne Sable is a writer, musician and
avid gardener who grows most of what
she eats; she has been gardening on her
plot of land in Fitzwilliam for almost
30 years. Her modest home is perched on
top of a hill at the end of a long winding
dirt road; the 12 acres of her land extends
across the road, where she cultivates
vegetables in 20 raised bed boxes. But her
favorite snack food is not something she
has grown from seed—she prefers succulent blueberries growing wild all over
her property.
Homestead Farms
16 River Road, Walpole, NH
Fresh Vegetables
PYO Strawberries & Blueberries
Homemade Doughnuts
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Our Own Sweet Corn
The Corner News
Convenience and more!
Your Source for:
Local Products • Newspapers • Magazines
Snacks • Beverages • Tobacco
Greyhound Bus Tickets • NH Lottery and More!
Special Orders Welcome
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Monday - Saturday 9-5:30
Closed Sunday
756-4800
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UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP
Monadnock Table Advertisers
Thanks to each and every one of our loyal advertisers. Please visit these businesses—in person or online. Let them know you saw their ad
in Monadnock Table magazine and that you appreciate their commitment to our local farms, food, and community!
Our Town Landscaping, Inc. - 14
Hidden Hill Farm - 31
Achille Agway - 9
Parker’s Maple Barn - back cover
Hijinks Farm - 32
Alpacas of Kilblaan Farm - 21
Picadilly Farm - 27
Holland Homestead Farm - 11
Amazing Flower Farm - 32
Pitcher Mountain Farm - 27
Home, Healthcare, Hospice & Community Services - 7
Antioch University New England - back cover
Pitcher Mountain/Andorra Forest - 17
Homestead Farms - 35
Bakery 42 - 5
Prime Roast Coffee Co. - 5
Horse & Buggy Feeds - 15
Barrett’s Greenhouse & Nursery - 15
Renoir Renovations - 33
Hungry Bear Farm - 27
Barrett Hill Farm - 17
Ridge View Farm - 22
Ideal Compost Co. - 15
Bee Tree Farm & The New Hampshire Honey Bee - 23
Rooted in Clay Pottery Studio - 6
Imagine that HONEY! - 9
Cheshire County Conservation District - 14
Rosaly’s Garden & Farm Stand - 5
Intelligent Energy - 11
Cheshire Garden - 23
Salmagundi - 33
Jingles Christmas & Country Shop - 5
Cheshire Tavern at the Fitzwilliam Inn - 25
Savings Bank of Walpole - 22
Karevy Photography - 23
Coll’s Garden Center & Florist - 32
Seed Keepers of Crescentville - 32
Keene Door - 35
Coll’s Market and Deli - 33
Shaundi Kane Photography - 13
Keene Farmers’ Market - 27
Connolly Brothers Dairy Farm - 22
Spring Pond Farm - 11
Kristina Wentzell Fine Art - 13
Crescendo Acres Farm Shoppe - 21
Stonewall Farm - 11
Kristin’s Bakery & Bistro - 23
Daffodils Flowers & Gifts - 33
Sunflowers Restaurant - 13
Land for Good - 11
Dana Farm Dublin - 27
The 1780 Farm - 21
Life is Sweet - 31
Daniel Thibeault Fine Art - 5
The Corner News - 35
Lola’s Fancys & Friends - 33
Dilly’s for Kids - 21
The Gallery at Well Sweep - 31
Mark Goranson, Certified Renovator - 21
Donald H. Sienkiewicz, Attorney at Law - 7
The Inn at East Hill Farm - 31
Michael Reilly Fine Art - 2
Edward Jones/Allen Mendelson - 9
The Orchard School & Community Center - 21
Michael Moore Photography - back cover
Elm City Restaurant & Brewery - back cover
The Vintage Rose Boutique & Botanicals - 33
Milford Farmers’ Market - 27
Farmboy Stuff - 15
The Woolery - 21
Monadnock Berries - 17
Fawn’d Memories - 33
The Wool Room - 9
Monadnock Buy Local - 7
Fritz: The Place to Eat - 5
The Works - 25
Monadnock Community Market Co-op - 9
Gemma’s Linzers - 25
Village Roots CSA - 25
Monadnock Waldorf School - 21
Genevieve Groesbeck Pottery - 31
Walpole Mountain View Winery
Moosewood Ecological - 15
German John’s Bakery - 2
at Barnett Hill Farm - 2
Morning Star Maple Sugar House & Gift Shop - 25
Gilsum Village Store - 5
Walpole Valley Farms - 11
Mountain View Farm - 9
Gracie’s Grain - 22
Wellscroft Fence Systems - 15
Nightingale Fibers - 13
Grand Finale Bakery & Café - 33
Wichland Woods - 13
Nubanusit Neighborhood & Farm - 6
Green Energy Options - 2
Your Kitchen Store - 25
O’Neil Pennoyer Architects - 2
Hannah Grimes Marketplace - 6
Orchard Hill Breadworks - 27
Harlow’s Pub - 31
Summer 2011
THE GUIDE TO OUR REGION’S FOOD, FARMS & COMMUNITY
35
Michael Moore Photography
For your complete photographic needs
• Professional wedding photography at an affordable price
• Adventure/action/sports photos of adults, children, pets
• Commercial, editorial, real estate
• Family and individual portraits • 30 Years Experience
603-352-4319
Our Restaurant & Gift Shop
Open February 9th
for the Season!
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Award-Winning
Pancakes!
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(603) 878•2308
1•800•832•2308
Our Local Table ad 1/28/11 7.375˝
x Brookline
4.825˝ Road
1316
Only 3 miles off Rte. 13. Call for best directions.
Mason, NH
Prepare for a sustainable future.
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES MASTER’S AND PHD PROGRAMS
Study sustainable development and climate change, resource management and conservation, advocacy,
conservation biology, or environmental education. Get your science teacher certification. Weekend, online
and weekday programs are available.
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social justice are as important as profit and growth. Weekend, online, and accelerated options are available.
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Because the world needs you now.
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800.568.9180
www.antiochne.edu/green