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Archive for the ‘Farmers Fresh CSA’ Category

Don’t miss this new farmers’ market in Douglasville!

Every Thursday from 4-7pm (Winter Hours)
Crossroads Church
5960 Stewart Parkway
Douglasville, GA 30135

For more information contact us at: cafe1010market@gmail.com or visit them on Facebook.

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Here’s the produce that came in my CSA box this week.

Fuyu persimmons and apples

 

The persimmons look like tomatoes, don’t they? They’re a firm persimmon with a texture kind of like an apple and a tart, slightly spicy flavor. While, they can be eaten raw like apples, the texture wasn’t enough apple-like for me to eat a whole one raw. (Clearly, I did have a slice, though.)

Instead, I made persimmon mini-cobblers. The idea was solid. The only problem was that two persimmons makes about 1 ½ cups of diced fruit – about half of what I needed. I should have made half a dozen cobblers, but I spread the fruit thin and went with the whole dozen.

It’s tasty as cobbler, but the cobbler part completely overwhelms the persimmon part. (more…)

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two big, beautiful apples

hydroponic lettuce and broccoli

The head of lettuce is very dense. It yields more salad servings than you might imagine. Also, don’t sweat the brown/yellow color on the broccoli. It’s from cold weather and doesn’t affect the taste. Steamed broccoli became the vegetable of choice at so many restaurants that I got tired of it. Local broccoli right out of the ground, however, brings the romance back. (more…)

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Amazingly enough, some summer veggies have lasted into November:

grape tomatoes and Asian eggplant

 

Last week, I made a yummy, simple pasta dish with these tomatoes. First, I heated olive oil with a crushed clove of garlic on low until the clove was just brown.

While the garlic was heating, I tore over to Lucy’s herb garden for some fresh thyme. Thankfully, the garlic takes a long time to cook on low.

Then I chopped the little tomatoes in halves and quarters and added them, the thyme, and some salt  to the pan.

Looks like I removed the garlic clove, too.

 

At some point, I added a little red wine and let in bubble. (more…)

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Get to your produce right away this week. The incredibly humid past couple of days will mess up your stash fast. My produce was practically dripping when I pulled it out of the box.

Pull it out, dry it off, and rebag it. Just turn the bag it came in inside out. If it’s leafy stuff, put a paper towel in the bag to absorb some of the moisture.

And remember it’s great to have some rain!

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There were lots of colorful things in this week’s box, but the radishes were the most amazing. They are so big, bright, and smooth.

The baby squash are really pretty, too.

To carve or not to carve? This beautiful, dark orange pumpkin is a pie pumpkin, which means I could bake it like a winter squash and make pie, soup, or just baked pumpkin.

Or we could make a jack-o-lantern. I’ll talk it over with Chris and decide.

Lettuce and grape tomatoes

No clever ideas necessary here – just salad with tomatoes (and beautiful radishes). These little tomatoes also make great snacks.

Arugula smells so dreamy when you dump it out of the bag! I like arugula best as salad, but we’ve got so much salad, that I will blanch and freeze this in preparation for a creamy pasta dish in the future.

Enormous and pretty pac choi! Pac choi leaves have wonderful color and texture. These leaves are large enough to make stir-fry “cabbage wraps.” Basically the idea is to steam the leaves just until they’re pliable. (Microwave them in a stack like tortillas, for example.) Then load them up with stir-fried vegetables or seasoned meat or curried lentils or whatever. Treat the stems like celery. Chop them up and add them to stir-fries or soup.

Them’s baking apples, but you can snack on them in a pinch. They taste like sour apple candy. I’m going to core, peel, halve and roast these, however, to give me an excuse to make more bourbon sauce.

Carolina Gold rice, eggs, and Sea Island red peas

The rice and the peas will hang out in the fridge for a while. I’ve got too much produce to be eaten first before resorting to dried foods. One possibility, though, is making fried rice or steaming this rice and using it as part of the pac choi wrap filling.

Fresh eggs always rock. Accept no substitute.

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Lo mein is my current favorite “clean out the fridge” meal. (When you’re doing your meal planning, always leave room for at least one of these meals. Chef salads, vegetable soup, fried rice, and meaty or cheesy casseroles also work.)

This last minute lo mein was inspired by a forgotten zucchini at the bottom of my crisper.

Starring pac choi, eggs, radishes, garlic, frozen lemongrass stems, and one aging zucchini

Here’s how it went down. (more…)

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This week I’ve made two great things from suggestions left by fellow bloggers.

Grilled cheese with arugula and muscadine jelly

Jenna at Jenna’s Cupcakes explained how to make muscadine jelly and then offered this tasty recipe. I used arugula and multi-grain bread from the CSA and Fontina cheese from Sam’s.

Take some nice rich bread (2 slices), slather with butter, grill in a pan butter side down. (Totally had me at “slather with butter.”) (more…)

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What month is it again?

  • sweet corn
  • green beans
  • zucchini

I’m going to serve green beans, corn on the cob, and fried okra tomorrow for a late, late summer meal. (more…)

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  • cheeses!
  • hydroponic lettuce
  • apples
  • butternut squash
  • spinach
  • eggs
  • butter beans
  • okra
  • Shiitakes
  • basil

Check out the cheeses!

That’s queso blanco, fromage blanc, and some early cheddar that some mouse got into. (Just kidding, it was me.) The cheddar has a very delicate cheddar taste if you can imagine. It’s nice and soft, too.

The queso blanco reminded me of the tomatillo sauce I bought from Farmers’ Fresh a few weeks ago. I’m going to defrost some turkey thighs and make turkey enchiladas this week.

Fromage blanc tastes like a cross between goat cheese and crème fraiche. (more…)

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Last night Chris and I ate well. We had shrimp poached in lemon cream sauce with handmade egg linguine; an arugula salad with toasted walnuts, goat cheese,  and muscadine vinaigrette dressing; and a bottle of Proseco.

The handmade pasta was a gift from my neighbor Lucy.

Read Lucy’s account of its creation here.

The shrimp, crème fraiche, garlic, arugula, and muscadines were from Farmers’ Fresh. The goat cheese was local, too, from Decimal Place Farm. Very nice stuff. The walnuts were from Planters via Amazon. The olive oil and Proseco were from Trader Joe’s. I think that’s about everything. (more…)

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