Saturday, October 16, 2010

Friday, October 15, 2010

A Love Letter for My CSA

This Wednesday evening was both happy and sad in my kitchen...it was the end of the season for my CSA with Bull Run Mountain Vegetable Farm.  It's been one heck of a run, as you can see by perusing the posts over the summer.

I am incredibly glad I tried it.  I am even more glad that I did all the research on local CSAs available to me.  The Washington Post Food Section publishes a list of local CSAs every winter, usually in February.  When the 2010 list came out, I narrowed it down to those that deliver in Virginia, then began by looking at all the websites.  I will confess that one didn't get considered because it didn't have a website, even though the description sounded great.  I narrowed it further to those that offer fruit shares, because I wanted to get fruit as well.  I researched and read and explored online and then took a plunge - I emailed Bull Run to inquire about shares.  I got a pleasant email response from a person, Leigh, within a day and a half - and decided that response was enough to make me commit.  A real person was on the end of the line there, and that means something.  I may not go to the bricks-and-mortar bank often, but when I do, I still bank with the same inconvenient credit union because of the people.  I figured this CSA would work for my first run.

On my CSA's website, the farm has a link to an opinion piece about CSAs not being for everyone.  I read all of those details, that you can't always know what you'll get because of the weather and animals eating the greens and onions that refuse to grow, and I thought "I'll try it - I think this is for me."  I know folks who have gone the CSA route and had a wonderful season, but hated the bureaucracy associated with that particular CSA.  I know folks who have had a poor experience with a CSA.  It truly runs the gamut, and you can never know what to expect.  Feeling a little unsure about what to expect from Bull Run, I was relieved that the CSA folks acknowledge that not everyone enjoys the CSA experience.  Thus I entered the experience thinking it would be okay if it was terrible, too - I would just know it's "not for me."

The first day, I showed up, gave my name, got a bag, and walked down the row of bins picking up my vegetables.  Leigh was the guy there checking names, the farmer, the delivery guy - the one-man wonder who served as the face of Bull Run to me.  He was pleasant and full of information about the vegetables and ideas on how to use them, but only offered advice when asked.  He was honest, telling us a few weeks into the season, that the onions weren't growing, and he was going to pull them and give us baby onions.  When I missed my first of two weeks of plums, he gave me extra plums the second week to make up for it because I told him I LOVE plums.  He told us not to saute the sorrel, as it would turn into a gray blob.  Other than that first week, I don't think I told him my name again, but Leigh became a part of my weekly routine.

Now at the end of the summer, I realize I won't be stopping in Alexandria every Wednesday to pick up vegetables, apples and eggs, and I will miss it.  I still have two dozen eggs in the fridge, a bowl full of apples, and - an end of season treat! - honey from Bull Run's bees.  I ate one of the sweet potatoes and an apple from this week's haul already, and as it dwindles down, I'll look back at my pictures of the summer's bounty and smile.  For now I get to eagerly await next spring, when I return to that parking lot, to the fresh eggs, to the wonderful vegetables, and to summer's fruit...when I return to my Bull Run Mountain Vegetable Farm CSA - I can't imagine a better CSA for me.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Curry-ing Favor

So I recently cooked for two, after a long spell of cooking for one.  My proportions seemed a bit off (I had way too much rice!), but the dinner was fun - and it's so much easier to cook for two!

I had some lovely sweet potatoes, some peppers, a load of garlic, some frozen shrimp, canned coconut milk, canned pineapple tidbits, a lime and some jarred Thai red curry.  All the ingredients necessary to concoct a lovely curry...except Jasmine rice.  I did have some sushi rice, and while the short grain is not ideal in my mind, it certain serves the grain's purpose in a curry dish, soaking up some flavors and serving as a conduit of the mixture.

I started by sautéing the peppers and garlic in a little bit of sesame oil.  While these heated and began to soften, I popped the sweet potatoes in the microwave.  While this is a little cheat, it cuts out so much time, making it very appealing for hastening dinner to the table.  They cooked in the microwave, then I peeled and chopped the hot potatoes, and added them and the canned pineapple to the pan with the peppers and garlic.  I also added approximately two teaspoons of the red curry paste.  Stirring and heating, this was making the kitchen smell so yummy!

After most of the water had evaporated from the addition of the pineapple, I added in the frozen shrimp, stirred and let heat for a few minutes.  Then I added in half a can of coconut milk, stirred, and let it cook and mingle the flavors.

I salted the rice, put it in bowls, and topped the rice with the curry.  What a lovely way to use the sweet potatoes, as they took on some of the heat, but maintained their rich flavor and consistency.  A wonderful, and fairly quick, weeknight dinner!


Thursday, October 7, 2010

Plums Galore!

This summer I missed a week of my CSA while I was away.  That week there were PLUMS in the fruit share.  I simply adore plums.  The following week, I expressed my excitement about the availability of plums that week, too, as I had missed the first week.  My wonderful CSA farmer exclaimed, "Oh you missed them last week?  Let me give you more!"  And thus I went home with 30 plums.




I am not kidding when I say I love plums, but a person can only eat so many plums in a week, before they start to go bad and get a little soft.  However, finding myself newly interested in making jams, I decided that plum jam could be a lovely adventure!

I pulled peels from the plums, and measured out how much fruit I had, then used a little over one part sugar to two parts fruit (it was about 60% sugar to 100% fruit).  I added some lemon juice and let it cook down.  Those plums broke down quickly into a soupy, sweet, fruity compote, but still required some intensive cooking time to take on that jammy consistency.





Sweet and richly purple, this jam was not very chunky with fruit, but was still very thick and amply fruity.  I quickly used the funnel to pour jam into the sterilized jars.  I sealed them, processed them and let them cool until they made that lovely little POP that told me they had sealed.  One jar went away as a gift, but the other is awaiting opening for some lovely hot biscuits, or perhaps with some pork tenderloin.  I can't wait!

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Veggie Chowdah...

So the bounty of late summer left me with a drawer full of veggies in my fridge, and I was thinking about creative ways to use all of them, perhaps even in a manner that I could enjoy later this year!  My mind turned to soups, and I smiled.  I love chowders (or chowdahs, as New Englanders in my life like to say!), so decided I would make a non-traditional veggie chowder.




I started by cutting up all my veggies.  I used potatoes, corn, mushrooms (not from my CSA, but I love mushrooms!), bell peppers, a couple hot peppers, some onions and some garlic.  I started by boiling the potatoes until they were relatively soft.  I then drained them, added some fresh water to the pot, and pureed some of them with my immersion blender.



Separately, I sauteed the mushrooms, then added those.  I then sauteed the onions and garlic together, then when they began to caramelize I added the bell and hot peppers.  I added all of this to my potato mixture, pureed a bit more, and added my corn.  At this point, I added a bit more water and let it cook down a while as the vegetable flavors melded.  To this point, the only seasoning was the hot peppers adding a nice bite to the soup. 






After another quick puree, I added a bit of salt, stirred and cooked.  Then I tasted again, added a bit of cream to make it a touch richer, and stirred.  It was spicy, fresh and rich, with only a touch of cream to make it less healthy. 



I poured most of the soup into freezer containers, and have it in the freezer for later in the fall, and even winter!  Some of it, though, I had to have for dinner then.  It had a nice, slow heat to it, and tasted like a garden of fresh vegetables.  I am excited about enjoying it in the cold weather, too!