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One very cold January mid-morning, I visited the Morningside Market located on N. Highland Ave. just south of University. I was late. At 10:15, one of the vendors (Woodland Gardens) was packing up and headed out and others had just bits and pieces left. So heads up! Get to the Morningside Market early; the winter market starts at 8:00. There are many committed market-goers ready to beat you to the punch – even on a blustery winter morning.

For more details about the market, please visit my article on the Morningside Market at Examiner.com.

All produce at the market must be certified organically grown.

Customers examine produce brought by Crystal Organic Farm. (crystalorganicfarm.wordpress.com)

Got this photo of microgreens from Woodland Gardens on the back of their truck as they were nearly sold out and calling it a day.

So many lovely varieties of soap from Hazelbrand Farm soaps ...

... and so nicely packaged! (www.hazelbrand.com)

Crackers from Magnolia Bread Company (www.magnolia-bread.com),

treats from Pure Bliss Organics (pureblissorganics.com),

and warm clothing were all for sale.

It was an excellent day to purchase a warm hat!

People lined up to buy Riverview Farms' ...

grass-fed beef ...

and Berkshire pork. (www.grassfedcow.com)

So come out (early and often) to Morningside Market (www.morningsidemarket.com) and see what you can find!

Here are bunch of photos of the Decatur Farmers Market. Also, please visit my description of the Decatur Farmers Market at Examiner.com.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Patrons brave the rain and cold to see what's at Wednesday's Decatur Farmers Market.

Beautiful produce grown by Steve Miller in Clarkston (The carrots and beet greens were especially tasty.)

Steve's full line-up including lettuce, parsley, cabbage, and greens

Steve is happy to talk about his produce and his gardening methods. He credits his late in-the-ground growing season to lots of compost and protection from westerly winds.

Patrons browse what's on hand at Besmaid Garden Essentials owned by Bobby Britt on Wesley Chapel Rd. Bobby provides produce for many local restaurants. (And some top-notch arugula to me. It was so good I went back for more at the Saturday market.)

Broccoli from Besmaid Garden Essentials

Mustard greens from Besmaid Garden Essentials

Bobby with a beauty of a Savoy cabbage

Barbara Pearson of Simply Scrumptious brought baked goods and chili for sale. Boy, did that chili look good!

Luis Martinez of Zocalo Salsas (www.zocalosalsas.com) had chips and salsas on hand to try as well as tamales!

Mary and Duane of Magnolia Bread Company (www.magnolia-bread.com) selling whole-grain breads and crackers.

Magnolia Bread Company booth (sans Mary and Duane)

Paul of Johnston Family Farm (www.johnstonfamilyfarm.com) proudly selling milk, heavy cream, and some mozzarella cheese

Tink of Tink's Beef (www.tinksbeef.com) deep in discussion with customers. Tink's Beef sells grass-fed, all-natural beef...

... and all-natural, farm-raised pork.

Duane Marcus, the market manager, selling kale, Komatsuna, and a collection of preserves

Ross, Rebecca, and little Josephine were handing out eggs for their egg CSA subscription program. Soon their farm, Many Fold Farm (www.manyfoldfarm.com), will be producing sheep's cheese as well.

Lauren makes Big Daddy Biscuits - all-natural, organic dog biscuits made with food you'd eat yourself. (www.bigdaddybiscuits.com)

Saturday January 8, 2011

Lauren treats a regular client at the Saturday Decatur Farmers Market.

Saturday's market patrons braved a blustery January morning.

Bobby and Steve talk shop (presumably).

Arugula grown by Steve Miller

Bok Choy from Bobby Britt and Besmaid Garden Essentials

Goodness Gracious Granola (www.goodnessgraciousgranola.com) brought the goods - including this delicious cranberry-pecan-almond variety.

Parking is a snap at the metered spots heretofore unpatrolled on Saturday mornings.

Joseph Costa of Costa's Pasta (www.costaspasta.com) made my trip with some homemade egg fettuccine. Currently on the hunt for some AtlantaFresh Artisan Creamery crème fraiche...

So visit the Decatur Farmers Market! Go on a Saturday morning or a Wednesday afternoon, but brave the weather and go!

I’ve taken on a new position as Atlanta Farmers Market Examiner for Examiner.com in order to learn more about the larger local food scene in Atlanta.

So I’ll do my best to keep track of farmers market happenings in the area, too.

Here’s my first article highlighting farmers markets holding their forts during winter: Atlanta farmers markets open in January.

See all my articles here.

It’s preseason, and the most January of Januaries I can remember with frozen snow and 5 days of school closings.

Still, the Farmers Fresh CSA farmers worked some serious overtime to get all the produce in before Snow Jam ’11 and then out to us afterward. Here’s what I got for my first preseason Family pack delivery.

CSA, CSA delivery, January, Atlanta, local food

  • 4 cups of vegetable broth
  • green cabbage
  • Komatsuna greens
  • 3 heads of hydroponic lettuce (1 Romaine, 2 butterhead/bibb?)
  • baby spinach
  • 4 zucchini (Beats the heck out of me, too! Guess someone’s got a greenhouse.)
  • Havarti cheese!!
  • dozen apples (in great condition and flavor for snacking – so good!)
  • dozen eggs (only half pictured here)
  • 2 kohlrabi bulbs
  • garlic
  • ~1 pound of corn grits
  • half a dozen sweet potatoes
  • pound of sausage (delicious stuff!)
  • whole-wheat sourdough loaf

Whew! That’s a lot of food, but we’ve got two weeks to use it. The first week, we’ll make the most of the butterhead lettuce and baby spinach with large salads. The Romaine will last a little longer and the Komatsuna and cabbage, longer still.

We’ll have afternoon snacks of cheese, bread, and apples until all are gone. I’m going to freeze half of this loaf. The bakers at Magnolia Bread don’t recommend putting bread in the refrigerator; it’s in freezer or on the counter. Because Chris and I have a hard time getting through a whole loaf before it starts to mold, I’ll put half of this in the freezer now.

The kohlrabi bulbs, the large Komatsuna stems (Larger than the diameter of a pencil is one rule of thumb.), and a bulb or two of garlic will star in a stir-fry sometime during the next couple of weeks. I’ve been enjoying stir-fries more since making my own sauces of soy sauce, fish sauce, and sherry plus a little sesame oil and rice vinegar. (Who knew sherry was the secret to Chinese cooking? My mother did when I asked her about it. But who else?) I’ve been stretching the sauce with pasta water, but next time I’ll use either this vegetable broth or my own chicken broth I made last week. Can’t wait!

The sausage is a real treat, but for now it’s going in the freezer. I’ve got some poultry and meat in there I need to cycle through before cooking something new. I’d recommend trying this sausage first as just plain old patties. That will give you a sense of how good the flavor is before covering it up with other flavors. I’ve got recipes that call for sausage, but I rarely use them because the sausage is so perfect on its own. It’s the same with the eggs; try them just scrambled at some point to taste the difference between fresh, local eggs and their store-bought cousins. You could have an incredible snow day breakfast with sausage, eggs, and grits.

The Komatsuna greens will get sautéed with raisins and walnuts. This is one of our favorite dishes, and it is based on Cartoon Kitchen’s Kale with Raisins and Pine Nuts recipe. Komatsuna are delicious greens and the least bitter of the family. So if you’re greens-shy, start with these and see what you think.

My Komatsuna greens arrived rather wet. With all the produce, I dump it out of the plastic bags to inspect it and then turn the bag inside out before putting the bag in the crisper. I like to believe this is a form of moisture control. Sometimes, however, the produce is simply too wet, so I spread it out on a towel while I deal with the rest of the contents.

Komatsuna greens

Komatsuna greens drying out before re-bagging

I probably should have done the same with the baby spinach. I’ll reinspect it today.

Recently we had a supper of just kale, raisins, and walnuts, but usually we prefer to eat some winter squash or sweet potatoes along with it. Sweet potatoes are easy to bake whole, but sometimes it’s better to peel, chop, and roast them. Here are three such scenarios:

  1. There are some bad spots on the potatoes, so you need to cut those off leaving you with deformed or shortened potatoes. Plus you want to make sure there aren’t any hidden bad spots inside.
  2. The number or size of potatoes you have doesn’t match the number you need to serve. Four people and three good-sized potatoes and one runt – who gets the short end?
  3. You’re short on time and don’t have the hour it takes for a sweet potato to bake in the oven. (Okay, so you can use the microwave, but I haven’t had much success with that lately. My potatoes end up with poorer texture than when I use the regular oven.)

So preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Peel the potatoes, removing any icky spots, and chop them in very rough half-inch squares. Toss them in a bowl with some olive oil, salt, and pepper and roast them on a rimmed pan for about 20 minutes, checking and turning halfway. They’ll get soft and a little brown when they’re ready. This recipe also works with butternut, acorn, and Kabocha squash as well as real potatoes.

A couple of my sweet potatoes has some really icky spots on the ends, so I was in a hurry to use those. We chopped them up and roasted them as described above, and they were delicious. We also had some of the grits and a salad made with the Bibb or Butterhead lettuce topped with green onions, Asian turnips, and organic vinaigrette dressing from last year’s deliveries, feta cheese (from Kroger), and some beets I picked up at the Decatur Farmers Market last week.

sweet potatoes, hydroponic lettuce with green onions, beets, turnips, and feta, and local grits with local butter

Even being from the South, I’d always thought of grits as the stuff you get at Waffle House. But these grits are a completely different animal and have tremendous texture and flavor. They have weight without being heavy. (And no need to add the cheesy-flavoring!) I usually make a double recipe, so we get some for breakfast the next morning. And I always use milk instead of water. Or at least half milk. Mmmm… grits.

We will definitely be well-fed and well-entertained for the next couple of weeks.

I love preseason. Having two weeks to work through a box is easier. And there’s usually cheese.

Check out last year’s three pre-season deliveries:

Week 1

Week 2

Week 3

This preseason is four deliveries and comes in two sizes: dinner for two at $180 and family at $240. The boxes are larger than regular weekly deliveries. There’s more information on the Farmers Fresh CSA Sign-Up page.

In order to participate in preseason or a regular season CSA (starting March 8 & 9), you have to join as a member for 2011, too. It’s $100 if you’re new and $60 to renew. Membership includes a member pack (which is usually a box of interesting non-perishable stuff like honey and grains) and a discount on store purchases both online and in person at the Carrollton store.

2010 renewal member pack

2009 member pack

Usually I report the contents of my CSA delivery within a couple of days, so this post is over a week late. Whoops. But the delay lets me describe what I really did with the produce instead of my sometimes out-sized hopes and dreams.

The final delivery of 2010

garlic, green onions, hydroponic lettuce

garlic, green onions, and hydroponic lettuce

I now have a bag and a half of green onions in my crisper. I’m pleased with how well they’re holding up; I’d thought they would get slimy quickly. We’ve loved them chopped in salads and added to pretty much any meal. Go, green onions!

turnips, broccoli

turnips and broccoli

The broccoli florets can be steamed a few minutes for a quick and delicious side dish. You can either steam the stems a little longer or save them for another meal. If they’re in good shape, don’t throw them out! The stems have just as much flavor as the florets if they’re cooked till tender (and not till mushy).

Here’s a trick for turnips: slice, brush with butter and salt, and put them in a 300 degree oven until they’re brown at the edges (maybe 30 minutes for thin slices). I was surprised at how good this was. The turnips got all melty-tasting and downright palatable. Continue Reading »

Cafe 10:10 Farmers Market in Douglasville will be open every Thursday through January and February.

A Farmers Market in January? Yes! There’s not a lot of produce during winter, but you will find

  • eggs
  • poultry
  • meat
  • honey
  • grains
  • salsa and tamales!
  • baked goods
  • and occasional greens from greenhouses

And you can buy all of it direct from local farmers (who really appreciate the winter sales).

For instance, yesterday I scored a mess of gorgeous Tuscan kale ($4 for a large bag that takes up my entire crisper).

kale, Tuscan kale

The lighting isn't doing much for the kale, but trust me, it's dark and beautiful.

I’ll cook at least half of the kale tomorrow for New Year’s Day along with some field peas I dried this summer. Look at me, going back to my roots! Continue Reading »

Last night, we had bok choy with raisins and walnuts and baked pumpkin.

Whenever I eat bok choy, I remember meeting Marcus Samuelsson, who proudly served collards mixed with bok choy. Chef Samuelsson suggested the addition of bok choy makes collards more pleasing for the collard-phobic. No dice. I choked mine down because I didn’t want him (or me) to look bad. Honestly, if salt pork can’t make collards palatable, what chance does bok choy have?

Bok choy by itself, however, is quite nice. Continue Reading »

We ate up Chef Bryan’s yummy bruschetta mix as pico de gallo with sour cream and toasted tortilla chips. The mix had that bright, fresh taste that makes pico such a treat.

 

My bowl of brusch-salsa is on the right. I blended it because I’m still such a baby about fresh tomatoes.

 

And we’re enjoying fromage blanc on muffins heated just a touch in the microwave.

It is unbelievably good. The slight tang of the fromage blanc complements the sweet muffins really well.

It’s a biscotti Christmas!

This year, I’m baking Christmas with walnut-craisin biscotti. It’s the only thing I bake well enough to give as a gift.

The original recipe is Martha Stewart’s. My changes are

  • spelt flour instead of whole-wheat,
  • craisins instead of raisins,
  • chopping up the walnut halves, and
  • cutting the sugar to ¼ cup (or less)

Not too sweet and makes the best breakfast or afternoon snack.

So far, I’ve made four loaves worth. Well, five if you count the one I forgot to add the sugar to. I get to keep that one. It’s surprisingly good, and a little honey makes it perfect.

Four more loaves to go before Friday. Wish me luck!