Hi everyone-
It's the first of September, and things are progressing pretty well on the farm. This week, you're getting:
Salad mix (lettuce, Asian greens, arugula, baby Swiss chard, spinach)
Beans
Broccoli
Potatoes (Nicola)
Onion
Summer Squash (enjoy it while it lasts!)
Tomatoes
Cherry Tomatoes
Eggplant (everyone will get some over the season; we're keeping track of who's received it so far and who hasn't)
Cilantro
So here are a bunch of recipes in case you're looking for a new way to prepare some of these veggies:
Summer Squash Saute- serves 8
2 Tbsp olive oil
6 cloves garlic, sliced
1 tsp red pepper flakes
3 Lbs assorted summer squash, thinly sliced into disks
1/2 tsp salt
- In a large nonstick skillet over medium heat, combine oil, garlic and pepper flakes. Cook for 2-3 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the garlic begins to turn golden. Add the squash and salt and toss to coat. Cover, reduce heat to medium-low and cook for 30 minutes, stiring occasionally, until the squash begins to break apart.
- Uncover the pan and increase the heat to medium. Cook for 10-12 minutes, or until the liquid is almost gone. Sprinkle with sunflower seeds.
Chocolate Zucchini snack cake- 12 servings
1 3/4 c. whole wheat pastry flour (or just use regular flour)
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
2 eggs
1/2 c. sugar
1/2 c. vanilla yogurt
1/3 c. vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/2 c. shredded zucchini
3 cups chocolate chips
- Preheat oven to 350, grease a 11 x 8 inch baking pan.
-Combine flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a large bowl.
-whisk the eggs, sugar, yogurt, oil and vanilla in a medium bowl. Add the zucchini and 1 1/2 cups of the chips. Add to the flour mixture and stir until blended. Spread in the pan and bake for 30 minutes, or until lightly browned and a toothpick comes out clean from the center.
-Remove from the oven and sprinkle the remaining 1 1/2 cups of chocolate chips over the cake. Spread with a spatula as the chocolate melts, placing back in the warm oven if necessary.
Heirloom Tomato Salad w/ Aioli and capers
2 medium tomatoes, thinly sliced
1 recipe for Lemon Aioli (see below)
2 paper thin slices red onion
1/4 cup basil leaves
2 tsp capers, rinsed, drained and finely chopped
-Arrange the tomato slices on 4 salad plates
Use the back of a spoon to spread aioli on the tomatoes. Separate the onion rings and scatter over the aioli. Scatter on the basil and capers.
Aioli:
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 Tbsp lemon or lime juice
1/2 tsp lemon or lime zest
1/2 tsp Dijon mustard
1 clove garlic minced
-Combine all ingredients in a small bowl.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Week 13
Hello-
Cool, rainy start to week 13 that is reminding me that the summer is starting to wane. Of course, we often have a really nice September and the first half of October here in CNY, so it's not like the good times are over yet... but still, it makes me think.
This week you're getting a nice variety:
Green Cabbage
Broccoli or Cauliflower
Summer Squash
Red Cipolinni onions
Bag of assorted tomatoes (to find out what kinds they are, see my last post)
Cherry tomatoes
Dill
Salad mix (lettuce, asian greens, beet greens and baby swiss chard)
Arugula
I have just been given a whole bunch of recipes, so I'll be posting them soon.
Here's one that has been tested and found to be very tasty:
Broccoli-Cashew Salad - 4 servings
3 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 Tbsp red or white wine vinegar
1/8 tsp salt
2 cups broccoli florets, cut into small, uniform pieces
1/2 cup roasted, unsalted cashews
1/4 cup slivered red onion
1/2 tsp red-pepper flakes
Combine mayonnaise, vinegar and salt in a large serving bowl. Whisk until smooth.
Add the broccoli, cashews, onion and red-pepper flakes. Toss to coat. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Cool, rainy start to week 13 that is reminding me that the summer is starting to wane. Of course, we often have a really nice September and the first half of October here in CNY, so it's not like the good times are over yet... but still, it makes me think.
This week you're getting a nice variety:
Green Cabbage
Broccoli or Cauliflower
Summer Squash
Red Cipolinni onions
Bag of assorted tomatoes (to find out what kinds they are, see my last post)
Cherry tomatoes
Dill
Salad mix (lettuce, asian greens, beet greens and baby swiss chard)
Arugula
I have just been given a whole bunch of recipes, so I'll be posting them soon.
Here's one that has been tested and found to be very tasty:
Broccoli-Cashew Salad - 4 servings
3 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 Tbsp red or white wine vinegar
1/8 tsp salt
2 cups broccoli florets, cut into small, uniform pieces
1/2 cup roasted, unsalted cashews
1/4 cup slivered red onion
1/2 tsp red-pepper flakes
Combine mayonnaise, vinegar and salt in a large serving bowl. Whisk until smooth.
Add the broccoli, cashews, onion and red-pepper flakes. Toss to coat. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Week 12 (I think!)

Same old story- I've been so busy I barely check email anymore, but things on the farm are going pretty well, as you may have guessed by the increasing weight of your bags every week.
This week has an especially pretty bunch of vegetables (tasty and aesthetically pleasing!)
You're getting:
Purple Viking potatoes (purple skins with pink splotches and very white flesh)
Rainbow carrots- an assortment of white, pink, orange, yellow and "Purple Haze" carrots
Beet Greens (which aren't green at all :>)
Saffron Shallots
Assorted summer squash- in all shades of yellow and green
Hot peppers (they are roughly equivalent to Jalapenos)
Assorted cherry tomatoes (including the sweetest of the sweet, Sungold, Black Cherry, Sweet Chelsea (big round red ones), Principe de Bourgese (red with a pointed end) Fargo Yellow Pear, and Juliets (firm, red, oval ones)
Broccoli or Cauliflower
Bag of assorted tomatoes- Note if you get a green tomato, it's not unripe- it's a variety called Aunt Ruby's German Green, and it's one of my favorites for sandwiches.
Arranged on a table, that would be quite a colorful picture!
My little sister (who's not so little anymore...) has expressed disbelief at the idea that tomatoes come in other colors than red, and I realize that many of the varieties that we grow at Lucky Moon are fairly unusual. So here's a list of the tomatoes that are grown at the farm, and where I can, I'll include a picture:
Sandwich Tomatoes-
Brandywine- ever popular, large pink tomato, probably the most famous of the Heirloom tomatoes

Aunt Ruby's German Green- green tomato that's beautiful when sliced- has a faint yellow-pink blush on the blossom end

Striped German- rainbow tomato!

Black Krim- dark purple tomato

Rutgers- the Campbell's soup tomato- it's a bright red

Cosmonaut Volkov- Large, round, bright red tomatoes

Jubilee- yellow/orange

Green Zebra- small round tomatoes, but they turn faintly yellow with dark green stripes

Rose de Berne- perfect small round tomatoes that are a lovely rose-pink color

Spring Shine- Small pink tomatoes with greenish shoulders
Paste Tomatoes- good for sauce or fresh eating!
Amish Paste- large, dark red, ox heart tomatoes (apparently the way they are shaped, but I've never seen an ox's heart, thankfully)

Orange Banana- medium-sized, oval, orange tomatoes

San Marzano- smooth oval , red tomatoes that are the classic Italian paste tomato

Cherry Tomatoes- so sweet and juicy!
Sungold- our favorite sweet orange bites of heaven

Fargo Yellow Pear- not the most flavorful, but the yellow pear-shaped fruits are so cute!


Principe de Bourgese- Italian-type, dark red with a pointed end, very good tomato flavor

Sweet Chelsea- large round, red cherry that has a wonderfully sweet flavor

Juliet- plants produce loads of firm, oval, blemish-free tomatoes that are great for drying, slicing in salads, adding to pasta or just eating fresh

Bon Appetite!
Sarah
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Week Nine
It's high summer and I have to remind myself to enjoy every hot steamy minute of it. It comes and goes so quickly! The tomatoes are pouring in and I still can't get enough of them... the peppers are recovering pretty well from their aphid attack and are sending up new growth even as the first peppers on them are turning all sorts of bright colors- reds, oranges and yellows, mostly, but there are some lovely shades of purple and green, too. To control the aphids, which are tiny little bugs that reproduce incessantly and suck the juices out of the plants, leaving them brown and wilted, Sue bought a box of ladybugs and set them loose in the pepper tent. Ladybugs love to eat aphids, and they really went to town in there. We weeded the peppers today (which is very hot work, since the pepper tent is actually a pepper sauna...) and didn't find a single aphid, just lots of ladybug babies. I've read about using beneficial insects to control a problem like this often enough and I plant lots of flowers to try and attract beneficial insects to my garden, but I'd never seen what 4500 hungry ladybugs can actually do to an aphid infestation that must have numbered in the millions. Very cool-
Here's a picture of some not-so-lovely aphids:

And here's a ladybug nymph that turns into a full-grown ladybug

Here are some other pictures of summer!
Garlic that's drying before getting braided-
A delicious pasta "sauce" made from some of my heirloom tomatoes, fresh PA peaches and an Ailsa Craig onion from the garden. Yum!
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Happy Farm Day!

Today Lucky Moon Farm took part in Madison County Agriculture's Open Farm Day. It was the first year Lucky Moon has been involved in the program, though I think this is its third year running. Open Farm Day is the feature event of the county's "Eat Local Week." We spent many hours getting the farm looking its best and we were lucky to have good weather and lots of visitors! Thank you to everyone who came out to the farm and had a look around. It was nice meeting you and it was fun to show everyone who came what Lucky Moon Farm is all about. I was really impressed by how many people decided to take part in the giant farm open house that included 37 farms and 3 farmers' markets. If I wasn't busy helping out at Lucky Moon today, I would have loved to visit some of the farms on the list. Really, without a program like this, I would never have known about a lot of the places that were on the list of farms to visit. If you're interested in finding a local spot to get beef, pork, lamb, chicken, eggs, vegetables, miniature donkeys, organic grains, flour, lambs fleeces, yogurt, milk or even elk meat, then I suggest you take a look at the website: http://madisoncountyagriculture.com/buylocalweek/openfarm.html There are links to information about each one of the farms, and if you download the "passport" that people used today, then you can read a little bio/description about each one of the farms. I hope all of you who traveled around today had fun and hopefully found some local folks who produce some of the food you need.
For the rest of the season, we're planning on having a farm stand open on Saturdays (sorry if I told anyone differently today) and we'll be offering a variety of vegetables, including tomatoes, in the coming weeks. The "stand" will actually be inside the sugar shed which is the first building on the left as you pull into the driveway. It will usually be a serve-yourself kind of thing, but the veggies will be fresh and tasty!

Here's a dinner that seems rather gourmet for such a simple supper:
The other night, Andrew and I sliced up a bunch of cherry tomatoes and tossed them in with some whole wheat pasta (really good flavor!), olive oil, salt and pepper, some oregano and basil I had in the herb garden and a little Romano/Parmesan cheese for the top. Oh, and make sure to slice the tomatoes over the bowel that you toss the pasta, oil and herbs in so you don't lose any of the juicy goodness!
Have a nice weekend everyone-
Oh, and I'm looking for a good tomato sauce recipe if any of you have one that won't cause you to be disowned by your family if you share it. I know these recipes can be closely guarded family heirlooms. :>)
Monday, July 19, 2010
Week Eight
Hi everyone-
Sorry I missed a few weeks in there... life has been very busy.
Things at the farm are going well- we had a hot, dry start to July, and now we've had a nice amount of rain, so most everything is growing happily. We're harvesting very often to keep up with how quickly everything is ripening. The zucchini and summer squash are doing well despite the setback they had earlier in June when a fair number of them were washed away by heavy rains and a torrent of mud from a neighboring field. The peas are starting to fade, but there are still buckets of them coming in every few days, and now the beans are starting up.

And the really exciting news is that the tomatoes have arrived, ladies and gentlemen! Of course, not all at once, but there is a nice supply of cherry tomatoes that are ripe and practically bursting with juicy sweetness (I'm remembering how a few of them tasted today when we were working in the greenhouse) and some of the sandwich tomatoes are ready, too. We had two Black Krims for lunch- I forgot ho much I love tomato sandwiches. And for any of you who are in our CSA, you'll be enjoying them soon!


Andrew and I made a version of Egg Foo Young for dinner tonight, and it was very tasty-
It's more of an Egg Foo scramble than an omlet, but we had it over some couscous, and loved it. Rice would be the more obvious choice, of course, but we had limited options.
Here's what we did:
Gravy: 1 cup water, 1 Tbsp soy sauce, 1 Tbsp cornstarch, 2 tsp sesame oil (or another oil)
Mix until smooth in a small sauce pan and then bring to a boil on high heat, stirring constantly. Reduce heat and simmer for about a minute until the gravy thickens and becomes clear.
Egg Foo Young:
In a wok pan (we just used a large, nonstick skillet) heat up some oil and add:
1 onion, chopped as fine as you like it
Some scallions (we used about 4)
1 green pepper, chopped
Peas- can be snow, snap or shelled peas- a good sized handful, and it helps to cut them into half or thirds
We also threw in some Arugula at the last minute and let it wilt down
NOTE: the great thing is all these veggies are optional and easily replaced by others- beans, bean sprouts, shredded broccoli or cabbage, chopped carrots, corn, etc. Whatever sounds tasty to you.
In a separate bowl, mix 4-6 eggs (depending on how many people you're trying to feed), 1 Tbsp soy sauce and some black pepper. I also had come Thai Basil in my garden, so I minced some of that and added it to the egg mixture.
Once the veggies have stir-fried until they're tender-crisp, reduce the heat to low and add the eggs. Cook until the eggs have set, and if there are more veggies than eggs, try scrambling the whole mixture- it works quite well.
Serve over rice or couscous with the gravy drizzled on top.
Hope you're all enjoying your summers!
Sarah
Sorry I missed a few weeks in there... life has been very busy.
Things at the farm are going well- we had a hot, dry start to July, and now we've had a nice amount of rain, so most everything is growing happily. We're harvesting very often to keep up with how quickly everything is ripening. The zucchini and summer squash are doing well despite the setback they had earlier in June when a fair number of them were washed away by heavy rains and a torrent of mud from a neighboring field. The peas are starting to fade, but there are still buckets of them coming in every few days, and now the beans are starting up.

And the really exciting news is that the tomatoes have arrived, ladies and gentlemen! Of course, not all at once, but there is a nice supply of cherry tomatoes that are ripe and practically bursting with juicy sweetness (I'm remembering how a few of them tasted today when we were working in the greenhouse) and some of the sandwich tomatoes are ready, too. We had two Black Krims for lunch- I forgot ho much I love tomato sandwiches. And for any of you who are in our CSA, you'll be enjoying them soon!


Andrew and I made a version of Egg Foo Young for dinner tonight, and it was very tasty-
It's more of an Egg Foo scramble than an omlet, but we had it over some couscous, and loved it. Rice would be the more obvious choice, of course, but we had limited options.
Here's what we did:
Gravy: 1 cup water, 1 Tbsp soy sauce, 1 Tbsp cornstarch, 2 tsp sesame oil (or another oil)
Mix until smooth in a small sauce pan and then bring to a boil on high heat, stirring constantly. Reduce heat and simmer for about a minute until the gravy thickens and becomes clear.
Egg Foo Young:
In a wok pan (we just used a large, nonstick skillet) heat up some oil and add:
1 onion, chopped as fine as you like it
Some scallions (we used about 4)
1 green pepper, chopped
Peas- can be snow, snap or shelled peas- a good sized handful, and it helps to cut them into half or thirds
We also threw in some Arugula at the last minute and let it wilt down
NOTE: the great thing is all these veggies are optional and easily replaced by others- beans, bean sprouts, shredded broccoli or cabbage, chopped carrots, corn, etc. Whatever sounds tasty to you.
In a separate bowl, mix 4-6 eggs (depending on how many people you're trying to feed), 1 Tbsp soy sauce and some black pepper. I also had come Thai Basil in my garden, so I minced some of that and added it to the egg mixture.
Once the veggies have stir-fried until they're tender-crisp, reduce the heat to low and add the eggs. Cook until the eggs have set, and if there are more veggies than eggs, try scrambling the whole mixture- it works quite well.
Serve over rice or couscous with the gravy drizzled on top.
Hope you're all enjoying your summers!
Sarah
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