Monthly Archive for July, 2007

CSA crop share 2007 07

We got the first glimpse of Tricia’s babies this week:

Aren’t they adorable? I can’t believe she let us take them home!


Here’s an extra shot of the share booty, taken from the other side. You can see the beautiful flowers better from this angle:

(Click on the photos to see larger images and notes at flick’r.)


The Blooming Glen newsletter this week had an easy-peasy-looking recipe for refrigerator pickles. Considering the cucumbers we got with the share and the ones pulled from our garden, I’m planning on giving them a shot. Details to be posted here, of course!

PS: Haha! The title of this post is fun :) (See my previous post’s heading.)

"I be up in the gym just working on my fitness."

Dewds.

I’m on my way out the door to go to the gym for my 120th visit.

Wo0T!

After the shower

When I get out of the shower and am toweling myself off, I almost always think of freshly-showered Cuba Gooding, Jr. in Jerry McGuire when he refuses a towel offered by Tom Cruise in a locker room. “No, I air-dry.”

OLS dinner 2007 02

Did you hear? One Local Summer got so big, it needed its very own website. In its honor, I present to you, a very big OLS post this week ;)

Nyuhm, nyuhm!


One Local Summer 2007, Dinner Menu 02

  • Fresh blueberries (someone’s front yard produce stand - 6 miles) and black raspberries (picked while on a bike ride through Lenape Park in Perkasie - 5 miles).
  • Troegs DreamWeaver Wheat Ale (Troeg’s Brewery - 95 miles).
  • Steamed Swiss chard, beet greens and kohrabi greens, sautéed with scallions and shredded kohlrabi (all from our Blooming Glen Farm CSA crop share - 5 miles). Nonlocal ingredients used: olive oil, salt, pepper.
  • Focaccia (Baker’s on Broad - 0 miles), spread with pink pesto made from garlic scapes, purple basil (both from Blooming Glen) and cherries (bought by kah for me at her CSA, Pennypack, who imported them from Lancaster, PA - 84 miles), then layered with steamed then lightly sautéed purple kale, and with steamed then lightly sautéed summer squash and scallions, and sprinkled with chopped basil and parsley (all Blooming Glen). Nonlocal ingredients used: olive oil, salt.
  • Stir fried seitan (Ray’s Seitan in Philadelphia - 37 miles), scallions, basil and parsley (from Blooming Glen, of course). Nonlocal ingredients used: olive oil.

I was recently turned onto a local organic flour source, the Annville Flouring Mill in Lancaster, by Meredith (edge effect). I’ve ordered flour, but until it arrives, I’m happy to feature bread from my favorite bakers (Linda and Raphael from Bakers on Broad) who live and bake just a couple blocks away. The opened shop just about two years ago, and I’ve been visiting a few times a month to buy their amazing complet bread and olive rolls. Occasionally, we’ll pick up some fun-to-decorate focaccia, too :)

I happened across kohlrabi patties on frugelmom’s photo stream earlier this week and I plan to veganize her recipe in the future. I couldn’t wait to try out her method of shredding kohlrabi, though. It was a great way to incorporate an additional texture and flavor into our usual steamed-stir-fried greens.

I split a share from our CSA with my sister and when we hooked up to break up the order, she mentioned a garlic scape pesto recipe she saw online. We talked a bit about it, and eying up the gorgeous purple basil we had just received and considering the remaining handful of garlic scapes from last week, I decided to make a spread for the focaccia. I processed all of the eight or nine garlic scapes, all four stems of purple basil and the last stem of green basil from last week’s share with some olive oil. The result was fragrant, but extremely bitter. Ugh. Realizing that I used all of my garlic scapes and basil, I quickly became bitter myself.

I certainly couldn’t toss the mixture; I had to find something sweet, local and currently in my kitchen, to add to the mix. I was frustrated, grumpy and pissy, banging around the kitchen, when Jason suggested adding a handful of the cherries I had out on the counter. Cherries? Cherries to pesto?! That would never… or would it?

Well… why not?


At like a million dollars a pint (or four, whatever), I couldn’t imagine it was the smart thing to do. I already used my entire lot of scapes and basil and now felt like I was getting ready to toss $8 worth of cherries. “And the cherry season is so shooort,” I whined.

Luckily, Jase tapped into his superhero patience and encouraged me to start with just a bit of chopped cherry and a teaspoon of the pesto. He’s so smart, I know.

It was passable, so we pitted and processed abut 15 cherries into the pesto and spread it onto the focaccia. I added a layer of greens and scallions, then summer squash, and baked it all at 400 degrees for 25 minutes. The end result was way more than passable. It was divine. The high temperature really brought out the cherry sugars, accentuating the garlic and basil flavors. Also, I think that just by baking the scapes, their bitterness was subdued.

I’m glad I didn’t just toss the pesto and give up. Something I don’t know I would have done, had I not been preparing my weekly local meal. Losing the ingredients was just not an option - I mean, I only get so many garlic scapes a season! Plus, what would the farmers at Blooming Glen think if I just wasted that food?! Man.

Another OLS week down! A little more dramatic than last week, but still fun to prepare and so delicious to eat :)

CSA crop share 2007 06

More colors are cropping up our lovely share. This week we got some pretty, pretty orange carrots and purple basil:

(Click on the photos to see larger photographs and notes at flick’r.)

I found myself reflecting a bit today’s pickup…

I tend to focus on the “A” part of CSA: Agriculture. I get so much joy out of beautiful, organic, local produce. The smells and colors of fresh veggies really touches me, and I truly love contemplating a handful of kale as I de-stem and slice it up for a family meal. Call me a nerd, but I consider the earth and sun and rain that went into its growth and it makes me smile :) I appreciate my part in sustaining durable agriculture practices. Besides that, produce is just plain pretty. I could look at the variety and colors all day.

This week, I was pleasantly reminded of the “C” in CSA: Community. On my way back from picking peas, I heard someone call my name and turned to see one of the directors at Avery’s school. We chatted about the travels she’s made to Tennessee this summer and I filled her in on Avery’s adventures to North Carolina and Riversport. Then on my way from clipping snapdragons, I ran into a fabulous volunteer from Habitat for Humanity’s Women Build program. We talked about how excited we were, being able to take part in a CSA - and one with such amazing and compassionate leadership, to boot (see: Tricia and Tom)!

Sigh.

A little touchy-feely this week, I know. I promise we’ll get back to focaccia porn ASAP!

Phillies

Jase and I scored two awesome tickets for a recent Phillies game. This was only the second time I’ve seen a professional baseball game live. The first was over a decade ago in Denver, at a stadium that, in my opinion, made the better move in naming itself after a beer instead of a bank.

Citizens Bank Park is well-designed, the bathrooms were clean and they serve local hot dogs and beers. The hard, plastic, tiny seats though, were truly sucky. It was incredibly hot and humid, and so when the clouds starting rolling in and the wind picked up, we were actually relieved.

The event was sold out thanks in part to it being a fireworks night. The game was tied in the sixth inning, it started raining in the ninth inning and Phillies won at the bottom of the tenth. The whole story is here - it was an exciting game!

And to make it even more enjoyable? Why, vegan beers and dogs, of course :)

Haha - I love it!




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