CSA
Transcription
CSA
We still have plenty of tomatoes! Left, Nicholas and Isaac marvel at a wagonload of them. You can still buy extras to can or freeze— a 25pound box costs $40. e -mail to order one or more in the coming month. CSA Our Labor Day Tomato Tasting and farm tour will be Monday, September 6th, from 3-5 PM. Let us know if you can come and how many people will be with you! Shareholder Newsletter August 18, 2010 Vol. 11, #6 Rachel Bynum & Eric Plaksin, 53 Waterpenny Lane, Sperryville, VA 22740 (540) 987-8567 e-mail: [email protected] Website: Www.waterpennyfarm.com Gazpacho Soup (from longtime Arlington shareholder Jay Michney) Ingredients: ½ onion, half of it finely diced and half of it left whole 4-5 tomatoes, washed and cored (it will be best if you use ripe in season tomatoes) 4 pickling cucumbers (or 2 regular cucumbers), 2 peeled and diced and 2 peeled whole 1 red pepper, seeded, ½ of it diced finely and ½ left whole ¾ teaspoon adobo seasoning ¾ teaspoon salt ½ teaspoon pepper 2/3 cup of water 1/3 cup of extra virgin olive oil Directions: Cut one onion in half, peeling off the outside skin. You will only use one half of the onion so you can set aside the other half for use in some other recipe. Of the half onion you keep out, cut it into two pieces. Throw one whole piece into a blender and dice the other piece finely. Set aside the diced onion in a dish, cover, and place in the refrigerator to chill. Wash the 4-5 tomatoes, remove the core and place them in the blender as well. Peel all four cucumbers. Throw two into the blender and dice two finely. Place the diced cucumber in a dish, cover, and set aside in refrigerator to chill. Wash a large red pepper, removing the seeds. Throw ½ of the red pepper in the blender and dice the other half finely. Place the diced red pepper in a dish, cover, and set aside in refrigerator to chill. Add the adobo seasoning, salt, and pepper to the blender. Pour the 2/3 cup of water over the top of the seasoning and veggies. Add the 1/3 cup of olive oil to the blender. Cover the blender and blend for 2-4 minutes on the highest setting (I prefer to use the highest setting and the ice crusher button on mine to get a smooth soup). Remove the blender from its base and set aside to chill in the refrigerator for about 20 minutes. When you are ready to eat, serve the soup chilled in bowls with the finely diced veggies on the side for people to add as much as they like. You could also serve croutons on the side, but I prefer it without after having had it just with diced vegetables in Barcelona. Meet an Intern… Andy King arrived in May, the sixth of our summer crew, and will be here through the season. His previous outdoor work experience has served him well here, and he’s been an important part of a great crew this year. He participates wholeheartedly in everything. Hello Shareholders! I want thank you all so much for supporting Waterpenny Farm: it is a wonderful place, run by a unique and hard working family, who seem to get quite a kick out of growing vegetables. I hope you all are getting as much out of eating Waterpenny's veggies as they seem to get out of growing them. I have enjoyed my time at Waterpenny thoroughly. I love cracking jokes with Kelly Shinn (who has just two weeks left before her sojourn out west to Colorado), talking food and directions with Rachel Best, playing Settlers of Catan with Anika Roth, listening to Andy Savoy play the piano every night, and seeing if I can make Miranda laugh on a daily basis (some successes, some failures). I am also looking forward to working more with our new intern Christina. Beyond the people, the melons and our copious amounts and varieties of tomatoes are keeping me sane in the summer heat. I have moved around a bit since finishing school (Maine, Oregon, California, Washington D.C., and now Sperryville, VA) and have built an odd resume (sternmen on a lobster boat, trail worker in Yosemite, technical writer for photo-tech company). But I must say that I have especially loved getting to have this experience-- working on this farm, in this steamy Virginia, in the shadow of the Shenandoah. The people, the food, the place: it's just a great combination. I have even found joy in the bundling of flowers on Friday evenings for Saturday markets. Thanks again for supporting this local, ecologically conscious, family farm that makes an effort to provide learning opportunities to aspiring farmers and gardeners, and otherly inclined young folks (like me). It's so appreciated! aNDY More than one way to cook a squash… It’s wonderful to have several new recipes from people who have been eating Waterpenny vegetables for many years in this week’s newsletter— The fun and easy recipe below is from longtime shareholder Eileen Hanning. On the left is one from Rebecca Krafft, who shared with us the very popular Penne with Swiss Chard and Cheese recipe on our website. DISAPPEARING ZUCCHINI ORZO (from Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle) ¾ lb pkg orzo pasta (multicolored is fun) Bring 6 cups water or chicken stock to a boil and add pasta. Cook 8 to 12 minutes 1 chopped onion, garlic to taste 3 large zucchini olive oil for sauté Use a cheese grater or mandoline to shred zucchini, sauté briefly with chopped onion and garlic until lightly golden. thyme oregano ¼ cup grated parmesan or any hard yellow cheese Add spices to zucchini mixture, stir thoroughly, and then remove mixture from heat. Combine with cheese and cooked orzo, salt to taste. Serve cool or at room temperature. Zucchini-Basil Muffins From longtime Arlington shareholder Rebecca Krafft— she says this one’s a keeper! This is a nice alternative to the traditional sugar- and caloriepacked zucchini bread – delicious savory muffins, with the depth added by parmesan cheese and sweetness from zucchini. Apparently you can also freeze them. The original recipe is from Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads, a breadmaker’s bible, which I was able to buy from Alibris.com for a song. Clayton’s recipe only calls for ½ cup of cheese. I increased to one cup, adding a ½ cup to the batter and sprinkled another ½ cup on top. • 2 large eggs • 3/4 cup whole milk • 2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil • 2 1/2 cups white flour • 1/4 cup sugar • 2 tsp. salt • 1 Tbs. baking powder • 2 cups grated zucchini (about 2 medium zucchini) • 2 Tbs finely minced fresh basil leaves • 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan or hard grating cheese (like Pecorino Romano) Preheat the oven to 425°F. Grease muffin tins. (Makes 18 regular size muffins) (Production note—in the food processor, grate the cheese with the metal chopping blade and empty into a container. Mince the basil with the metal blade; then switch to the grating blade and grate all the zucchini into the working bowl along with the basil.) Combine the eggs, milk and oil in a large bowl. Combine the flour, sugar, salt, baking powder and half of cheese in another bowl. Add the dry ingredients to the liquid, stirring by hand. Don't overblend! Stir in the zucchini and basil. Fill each muffin cup about 1/2 full. Sprinkle the top with the cheese. Bake for 20-25 minutes. Carefully run a knife around the edges of the muffins; they stick a little because of the cheese. Then turn out on rack to cool. Serve while warm. I am told these freeze very well. There’s pears in your shares! Above, a photo of our first-ever pear harvest yesterday! Before we moved here someone planted two pear trees outside our house. We’ve had some good pears some years and hardly any pears other years, and we’ve never paid too much attention to them. Three years back, Steffany pruned them heavily. This year, however, the trees are completely covered with hundreds of pears, so we decided to include them in your shares this week. We looked up harvesting pears and it’s actually quite complicated. Unlike apples, they should be harvested before they’re ripe, then chilled for few days to a few weeks before they have their best flavor. We haven’t been doing that and the ones we’ve eaten have been good, but to get the best flavor you might refrigerate yours for a week before eating them. In previous years we’ve also enjoyed cooked pears, made into pear sauce or canned with sugar syrup. This would be a good use if you don’t enjoy them raw. Above, a beautiful rainbow follows an afternoon thundershower on the farm— our dry spell has been broken by some good showers that have brought the river up and given us and our irrigation pump a break. Everything’s growing well and loving the increased moisture and continued hot weather.