Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘CSA notes’ Category

In an earlier post, I wrote about better nutrition and taste as reasons to be part of a CSA.

But you also get the warm, fuzzy feelings that come from “voting with your wallet” and “being part of the solution” for some important issues.

  • Reducing energy used to transport food
  • Improving the health of the soil and everything it’s connected to
  • Making local, sustainable farming a feasible career choice
  • Not giving (as much of) your money to industrial agriculture
  • Keeping money in the community
  • Knowing where your food comes from
  • Promoting good family meals at home
  • Protecting vital farming knowledge for the future

What do you think of these? Which are most important to you? Got some others?

Read Full Post »

Reasons to join a CSA Part 1: Food

My reasons for joining Farmers’ Fresh Produce fall into two categories: food and community. In this post, I’ll address the food reasons.

Nutrition

  • You get a variety of seasonal vegetables that you might not have eaten otherwise.

I have definitely eaten more and a larger variety of produce this year thanks to my CSA bag. Field peas, kale, radishes, acorn squash, and Asian turnips are just some of the vegetables I never would have dreamed of eating or buying in the grocery store to cook.

11-5b

  • Local, sustainably farmed produce more nutritious (?)

The research is hard to sift through. Some studies say yes, some say no, and no one who could be considered an uninterested party is asking the question. But the freshness of CSA produce seems important. When you buy at the grocery store, you don’t know how old the produce is. According to one report, spinach retains only 53% of its folate and 54% of its carotene after just eight days stored at fridge temperature.

  • CSA produce prevents colds.

Okay, so this is based on just on my experience, but this winter I haven’t been sick. I taught school in November and December, and many of the teachers and students had bad colds. My extended family had bad colds over Christmas. But so far, I’ve stayed well, and I’m usually someone who catches most anything that comes around. (Edit: I did get a sniffle last week, but it only lasted a couple of days and showed up after three weeks of no weekly CSA produce.)

10-22p

Taste

  • CSA produce tastes better than what you get at the store.

That’s a really good thing if you’re like me and never were a big vegetable eater.  How are you going to get people who have been raised on foods with high sugar and salt content to like vegetables if you feed them second-rate veggies? And did I tell you all about the night my 18-year-old step-son made himself a salad for dessert?

11-19s

Last summer when we were on vacation in Florida, I bought some zucchini at the grocery store to make our favorite vegetable dish – stir-fried zucchini. My guys (who are pretty good vegetable eaters in general) thought it was fine, but I ended up foisting all my zucchini off on them. It just didn’t taste anywhere near as good to me.

  • Better taste makes CSA vegetables easier to cook well.

When you start with produce this fresh, simple recipes come out really well. This builds confidence and encourages you to cook and eat more good food. If the first time I’d made stir-fried zucchini had been with store-bought produce, I don’t know if I’d have made it again. Same thing for field peas, beets, Brussel sprouts, eggplant, and lots of other veggies.

10-15-1

Increased anticipation

Seasonal vegetables give you something to look forward to. When everything’s available all the time, you miss out on the anticipation and the change of seasons. I remember when my brother and I would look forward to watching the Grinch every December. Now that people own the DVD and can watch it anytime, it seems to have lost its magic.

Fresh vegetables aren’t exactly the same as Christmas, but it’s still fun when the season and the produce starts to change. Last spring, we were tired of salad and ready for the summer vegetables to arrive . We dreamt of fresh tomatoes and zucchini dishes. Then, by the end of August, I couldn’t wait for lettuce again. It’s a wonderful cycle that’s fun to be a part of. If you really want lettuce, you can go and buy some. But it’s never as good. When I have broken down and bought lettuce at the store, it’s terribly disappointing  – unless it’s so out of season that I can’t remember what CSA lettuce tastes like.

South of Greenville, SC is the Happy Cow Creamery. It began with a dairy farmer who devised a year-long pasturing plan that has the cows regularly moving to, well, greener pastures. He says they get really excited and dance near the gates when he arrives to let them at their new eats.

happycow

I totally know how they feel.

Read Reasons to Join a CSA Part 2.

Read Full Post »

Get some style!

Sometimes diversity is not so good.
Consider sticking with a style of cooking for a couple of weeks or even a season. For instance, in the summer, we cook a lot of Italian dishes.  Sticking with a style makes for more efficient use of leftovers. You can throw things together in a pot or at least on the same plate and still feel like it’s a meal. This won’t work if you’ve got, say, an Asian-inspired vegetable dish and want to add it to leftover spaghetti with lots of Italian seasoning.

Getting good is good.
In addition to using leftovers, sticking with a style lets you develop expertise quickly. You learn what will work, how long it will take, what the pitfalls are, etc. This makes cooking more fun and you get more out of your bag of produce.

Be cost effective at Costco.
Also, you only have to keep certain spices or other dry staples around when you stick to a style. These are usually cheaper when bought in bulk, but you want to make sure you’ll use them up.

Change with the seasons.
Eventually, you get tired of cooking and eating the same types of things. Plus, different seasons bring different produce that lends itself to different styles. Once you’re comfortable with a style, think about what you want to try next and give it a shot. I’d like to get better at Asian cooking, so that may be my next challenge.

Some suggested styles…

  • Asian-inspired style: mix and match leftover stir fries or make fried rice. A lot of summer vegetables are good in stir fries: yellow squash, zucchini, eggplant (purged!), garlic. In the fall and spring, you can switch to broccoli, cabbage, onions, and carrots. Prep vegetables by chopping them all the same size. Learn how long vegetables take to stir fry and segregate them by cooking time. Matching staples: soy sauce, fresh ginger, rice, chow mein noodles, sesame oil, corn starch.
  • Italian-inspired style: great for summer time vegetables. This is my house. My family loves Italian food, so it works really well for us. Tomatoes, zucchini, garlic, and basil just beg to be cooked together and thrown on top of pasta. Use tomatoes fresh or slightly cooked. I don’t like to cook tomatoes all the way down because they produce so little sauce. Better to use the CSA tomatoes to spike a can of crushed tomatoes if you need a lot of red sauce. When in doubt, saute chopped veggies in olive oil and toss over pasta with fresh herbs and parmesan. Bellissimo! Matching staples: olive oil, pasta, Italian seasoning (in case you run out of fresh herbs), Parmesan or Romano cheese.
  • Good ol’ Southern cooking: cooked vegetables, biscuits or cornbread, and a chicken or pork dish. These leftovers could be turned into casseroles or pot pies or just different combinations. My mother’s family is from Georgia since a long ways back, but this really isn’t my favorite cooking. It’s a good match, though, for locally grown produce. Matching staples: cornmeal mix, Bisquick, salt, ham hocks or other pig parts in the freezer.
  • French country?: During the fall, we stop being so Italian and switch to salads and baked and roasted vegetables. I don’t know if French is the right; I certainly don’t go crazy with the sauces. The meals are simple, and we use the oven a lot. Lots of soups, stews, and casseroles. Comfy food that you imagine eating on a chilly night. Matching staples: herbes de Provence, bread mix, onions, butter, various cheeses.

Read Full Post »

Meal planning

Getting a grab bag of seasonal produce requires more weekly meal planning. After all, you have to figure out what to do with all this interesting (and already paid for) food. .

Here are some tips for planning

  • Read the weekly CSA email. Patricia sends this around after the bags are delivered. It explains what’s in the bags, suggests some uses, as well as bringing up other CSA business like renewals and new drop-off locations. The preview emails are fun to read. But you never know what’s going to happen, and I’ve found it best not to plan for real until I have my bag. Who wants to plan twice? The preview emails are a good reminder to check the online store, though. If there’s something you really want to make sure you have or have enough of, you can order it before Sunday night.
  • Schedule separate time for planning. Not much time – maybe twenty minutes. It often makes sense to combine this time with prepping. Both should be considered distinct from cooking. Otherwise, you’ll drive yourself mad trying to do it all meal by meal at 6:30 every night.
  • Weekends work. If you can’t plan till the weekends, that’s cool. Just make your plan from weekend to weekend. Your new fresh CSA produce will wait patiently in the fridge from Wednesday to Saturday with a few exceptions.
  • Google is your friend. My laptop is one my favorite kitchen tools now. Just figure out what you’ve got and search for recipes. I still write out my meal plan longhand on a piece of paper, though, because I like to scratch out and draw arrows and make other notes. Then I make my grocery store list on the side and tear it off to take with me.
  • Shop second. Try not to go to the grocery store until after you’ve planned the coming week. Then you have a plan and a list and will shop more efficiently.
  • Cookbooks work, too. If you don’t have any useful cookbooks, see what your friends and relatives have. A lot of people end up with cookbooks they never use and might be happy to loan them out.  If you want your own, here are a few recommendations.
    How to Cook Everything
    How to Cook Everything Vegetarian
    More-with-Less Cookbook
  • Find a style. Sticking to a style of cooking for a couple of weeks or even a season has a bunch of benefits. Find out more here.

Read Full Post »

The exciting world of the prep cook

Before I joined Farmer’s Fresh, I never did much prepping. I’d chop some onions or potatoes now and then. But now I have a new job and you do, too – you are now your own prep cook.

Prepping is a big part of the extra time that eating real food requires. By prepping, I mean

  • washing and drying
  • chopping, slicing, dicing
  • cooking things that can be cooked or partially cooked ahead of time
  • preparing foods that are cold and can just sit in the fridge

Here’s how to survive this addition to your schedule:

Sooner is usually better. But most stuff will survive until the weekend. That’s one of the beauties of CSA produce. It’s so fresh that you have at least a couple days breathing room over anything in a grocery store.

If you are looking for absolute freshness, you may want to delay prepping until right before cooking. But that doesn’t work for me. In the past, I used to look in the fridge and think, “I could put some (insert produce) in this dish, but I don’t have time to wash it and cut it up.” Boo! Now I wash and prep everything at the beginning of the week and have it ready to use whenever I want it. If I don’t, I’m likely to put off using it and that doesn’t do anyone any good. Any loss of freshness is totally worth it to me.

Combine prepping and planning. When you’re washing and examining produce, it’s a great time to think about what it will be good for or with. Here’s more about meal planning.

Keep prepping separate from cooking. Prep in mid morning or mid afternoon on the weekends or even later at night – far away from any eventual meal. There’s too much to do to prep and cook a meal at one time. And the energy required is completely different from when you’re cooking an actual meal.

When you’re prepping you can let your mind wander, turn on the music or the tv, sing, or invite a friend or family member to come hang out. Even if they don’t help much, it will still be fun. When you’re cooking, it’s more about keeping track of different things and timing and what comes next. There’s not so much time for mind wandering.

Get one or two good knives. A good knife can make prepping fun; a mediocre one will drive you insane. You simply have too much chopping, slicing, and dicing to do to muck around with a lesser knife. Other tools are important, too, but knives are paramount.

Delegate. Once you’ve had some experience prepping, figure out what jobs you can pass on to others.

Delegate Part II: One of the reasons I enjoy cooking for my family is that they clean up. Once the plates are on the table, my part’s done. I’m incredibly lucky, I know, that my husband just assumes this is a fair trade. But see if you can’t work something out. Focus on the fairness aspect and let them clean any way they want to. Well, almost any way. I finally had to stop biting my lip and explain to my husband that my wooden utensils can’t go in the dishwasher.

Remember, even when you have to be your own prep cook, it’s still nice to have one.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts