Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Lucky Moon Farm CSA 2016- Week 1!

Hi everyone,
Welcome to the 2016 growing season! If this is your first time in our CSA (Community Supported Agriculture, fyi), thanks for joining us! We hope you enjoy partnering directly with a local farmer. We'll work hard to grow truly superb produce for you and your family to enjoy.

In the bags this week are a variety of tasty greens and other spring treats. Here's the lineup:
Salad Mix
Spinach
Radishes
Arugula
Rhubarb


I love the spring greens- after a drab, long, grey winter, those vibrant, juicy leaves are packed with all sorts of goodness! So make a big bowl of salad, or a skillet of wilted spinach or a pasta with arugula pesto and restore some green to your menu.


I don't usually consider myself a radish fan- the flavor of them raw is a bit sharp for my taste. Though I know they are great to pep up a salad or toss in a stir fry for some spicy crunch. But, if like me, you've never been in love with the little red beauties, why not try roasting them with some butter and maple syrup? I had never seen this before, but I was at an event where I was volunteering in the kitchen, and my job was to sautee radishes in butter and maple syrup until they were soft. They were completely transformed into sweet, tender root veggies that made a beautiful and tasty side dish.  I don't have the exact recipe, but here's a similar one I found where you bake the radishes:
http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/roasted-maple-syrup-baked-radishes-recipe-zmrz11zalt.aspx


And rhubarb! One of my all time favorite things- It seems like such improbable food. If you've never seen a rhubarb plant, it's a giant mess of big leathery leaves and red/green stalks. We eat the stalks (never the leaves, because they are mildly poisonous) and when raw, they taste really sour and are crunchy and rather unappetizing. But pair rhubarb with strawberries, blueberries, or just a fair bit of sugar and it's delicious. 


So, off to do more planting! This time of year is a big rush to get everything seeded and transplanted right on schedule. The peas are up, the beans are planted and tomorrow we transplant the outdoor tomatoes.

So enjoy your veggies and we'll see you next week!

All the best,
Sarah VanNorstrand
for Lucky Moon Farm



Thursday, August 7, 2014

2014 CSA Week 10


Hello everyone,
Welcome to another week of beautiful veggies. I love the produce right now- the colors are so vibrant, and the plants are so productive! The tomatoes are flourishing in the greenhouse, though unfortunately, we did have to pull out and destroy the outdoor tomatoes due to an attack of Late Blight (for more information, see below). The summer squash is going at it full tilt, and the eggplant are producing a staggering amount of incredibly beautiful fruit. It's a nice time of year to be working on a farm growing food.

In your bags this week:

Salad Mix or Mixed Asian Greens
Summer Squash
White Onion or Purple Scallions
Basil
Green and Wax Beans
Carrots
Tomatoes
Cherry Tomatoes (remember to wash these and the large tomatoes before eating! We're spraying an organic agriculture-approved product to protect them from the blight. But you still don't want to eat it...)
Eggplant-all the regular shares on Thursday got it this week

Some recipe ideas to share:

Eggplant... a lot of people assume they don't like eggplant, but if you're like me, you probably just haven't been exposed to it very often, or in one of it's tastier forms. Recently, I've become an Eggie convert. When cooked long enough, it becomes incredibly tender and flavorful. Here are some ways to try preparing it:

1) Slice the eggplant into 1/4 inch thick rounds or slices, brush with olive oil, then coat with (spiced) bread crumbs. Bake them on a cookie sheet in a 400 degree oven until tender and browned. Serve with pasta and tomato sauce, or just eat them up as a side dish!

2) Make a simple version of ratatouille by layering sliced summer squash, tomatoes and eggplant in an oiled casserole dish, adding a little olive oil between each layer, then top with bread crumbs and parmesan cheese. Bake in a hot oven until all the layers are cooked through and tender. 400-450 degrees for about an hour? But check it sooner in case I'm not remembering correctly.

3) You can also take the whole eggplant, skip peeling it, but rub it with oil and poke it a few times with a fork. Stick it under the broiler and cook it about 20 minutes, turning it occasionally, until it's charred on all sides and the insides are soft. Remove it from the oven, allow it to cool, then cut it open and the insides can be scooped out and used to make Baba Ghanoush (Greek) or Baingan Bharta (Indian), both of which are excellent.

Asian Greens... I'll admit, I don't always know what to do with greens. But whenever we harvest the Asian Greens, I munch a few leaves and I feel like there must be some excellent ways to prepare these highly flavorful, zingy greens. I was speaking with my friend (who's an excellent cook and also a Lucky Moon CSA member) and he recommended this recipe:

Asian Greens Stir Fry
2 Cloves Garlic, minced,
1 Hot Pepper Sliced in rings (optional)
1 big handful of Green/Yellow beans, trimmed
2 summer squash/zucchini sliced thick (too thin and they get mushy)
2 large handfuls of Asian greens rinsed (make sure to spin or shake off excess water)

Sauce:
1 TBSP Oyster Sauce
1 TBSP Soy Sauce
1/2 TBSP Rice Vinegar
1/2 tsp ground fresh Galangal or Ginger
1/2 tsp Sesame Oil
1 clove minced garlic
3 shakes/dashes cumin

1. Mix all sauce ingredients in small bowl
2. Heat 2 Tbsp Veg. Oil (oil with high smoking pt) over medium high heat in wok.
3. Add garlic, beans, and pepper (if using)
4. Let brown 1-2 minutes. Stir, let brown 1-2 minutes. (DONT OVERSTIR ,just a quick stir to keep it from sticking. Once is fine)
5 Add Zucchini and Squash, stir brieflly
6. Let brown 1-2 minutes. Stir, let brown 1-2 minutes.
7. Add Greens and turn heat to Medium Low. Stir constantly, and after 3 minutes taste the greens until they're cooked enough that the texture and spiceyness are to your liking.
8. Add sauce and serve over rice or lomein noodles.
9. Lomein noodles can be started after the greens have been added. If you add them to the wok, add them after the sauce and stir.


Late Blight


So Late Blight has officially hit Central New York for 2014. If you're a home gardener, please pay attention to this information, because it is up to all of us to do what we can to keep this nasty fungal disease at bay. First of, tomatoes can get a few different fungal diseases (commonly Early Blight and Septoria) which are detrimental to the plants, but won't usually kill them outright. These are characterized by brown spots and patches on the lower leaves, including yellowing and a bulls-eye effect on the leaves. Septoria is notable for its thousands of tiny black dots that appear all over the leaves and sometimes the stems. These are all bad. But Late Blight is really bad. It appears as black splotches on the leaves and black patches on the stems. It spreads incredibly quickly, especially in wet, humid, cool conditions (sound familiar?) and it will kill the tomato (or potato) crop. Once you see the black splotches on the stem, and on more than just a few leaves, you should pull the plants and put them in garbage bags and leave them in the sun to heat up. DO NOT compost the plants or leave them lying around. The spores of the fungi are airborne, and can spread miles around to infect your neighbors and neighboring farms. It's really disappointing to pull out what see like mostly healthy tomato plants, but it needs to be done. It's pretty impossible to save the plants once they've been hit, and especially with the weather conditions we've been having lately.


Also, potato plants are susceptible to the disease, but it can be harder to tell with them because often by the time they catch it, the plants are starting to die back anyways, as they normally do as the potatoes grow and mature underground. Because of this, it's best to always avoid putting potato plants or actual potatoes into your compost pile, because they could be carrying the disease and any volunteer potato plants that grow out of your compost pile could be broadcasting the fungal spores. Also, it's really necessary these days to plant seed potatoes that are certified disease-free. In the old days, you could simply save some extra potatoes from the previous year's harvest to plant in the ground for more potatoes. But that was before Late Blight occurred in the area. Now that it's here, planting your own seed potatoes is a really good way to accidentally spread the blight.

For more information, check out some articles on the Cornell Cooperative Extension Website.

Hope this was helpful- and thanks for taking the time to read it and put the methods into practice!

Be well and make good food for each other!
Best,
Sarah VanNorstrand
for Lucky Moon Farm


Friday, August 1, 2014

2014 CSA Week 9

Hello,
I can't believe it's already August! The weeks are flying by...
As you probably have heard, we've been having some ups and downs at the farm recently. It looks like we're going to have to pull all the outdoor tomato plants because of late blight (a really nasty disease!). So that's been a real bummer. Tomatoes are our most time-intensive crop, so losing so many is really disappointing. But if we don't pull them soon, the disease could spread to the greenhouse tomatoes or even the potatoes, which we want to avoid at all costs. So it goes- 

But other crops are doing well. The beans are really producing, the summer squash is up and running, and the indoor tomatoes are looking great! We have the first ones to distribute this week. 

In your bags:
Tomatoes
Cherry tomatoes
Summer squash
Green/Yellow (Wax) beans
Spinach
Kale
Salad mix
White onions or Purple scallions
Some people received eggplant

Lots of nice stuff! 
Here's a recipe from one of our members- tried and tested on her family of 6.

Savory Spinach Salad

1 1/8c. cooked Einkorn wheat
2 T. spicy brown mustard
2 T. red wine vinegar
4 T. olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
2 yellow squash, halved lengthwise, then cut crosswise 1/4 in. thick (I used zucchini, too)
1 c. button mushrooms (I left these out)
2 c. fresh baby spinach
4 scallions, thinly sliced
salt and pepper to taste

In a bowl, whisk together mustard, vinegar, 2 T. oil, salt and pepper.  In a skillet, heat remaining 2 T. oil.  Add onion and cook until golden brown.  Add squash, mushrooms, and spinach.  Cook, stirring until tender.  Remove from heat; transfer to a bowl.  Add cooked einkorn, scallions, and vinaigrette; gently toss.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

2014 CSA Week 8

Hello,
This is going to be a short post because it's been a long day and I'm beat.
But you have a nice assortment of veggies this week:
Salad Mix
Arugula or Mixed Asian Greens
Green/Yellow Beans
Summer Squash (!)
Garlic
Basil
Bell Pepper (green or purple)

Large Shares have an Eggplant this week
(don't worry, everyone gets them, but we don't usually have 75 eggplant ready all at the same time, so we stagger their distribution)

So make some tasty food! I don't have a great recipe to share this week, but I imagine you can think of some nice options with this mix of veggies.

Also, a quick note:
This Saturday, July 26th, is the annual Madison County Open Farm Day!
It's a day where participating farmers open up their operations to visitors for a sort of "open house." It's quite a lot of fun, actually. You get to visit a bunch of different farms and try some samples and ask the farmers face-to-face about what they do to produce your food.
For more information, visit the website: http://www.openfarmdaymadisoncounty.com/passport/

Lucky Moon Farm will be participating, so if you have some time on Saturday, come by and say hi! It'd be great to show you around the place and answer any questions you might have. Plus, it's a beautiful place and the weather is supposed to be pretty nice, too. Hope to see you there!

Best,
Sarah VanNorstrand
for Lucky Moon Farm

Thursday, July 17, 2014

2014 CSA Week 7



Hi everyone,
Hope you all are doing well. Things at the farm are super busy- between rain storms we've been catching up on weeding projects, pruning and clipping-up tomatoes, and keeping up with harvesting the peas. The summer squash and zucchini are just starting up. We had the first picking the other day, so you can expect to start seeing them in your bags soon. And the beans are right behind them! Also, a few cherry tomatoes are ripening up and it won't be long before we're giving out tomatoes and eggplant, too!

Your bags this week include:
Spinach
Parsley
Young Onions
Salad Mix
Snow Peas
Sugar Snap Peas
Hot Peppers (either Poblanos, which are a dark green, Czech Black, which are wicked-looking little black peppers, or Hungarian Hotwax, which are a light, yellowy/green- see pics below)

Poblano Pepper
Czech Black (they eventually turn red)
Hungarian Hotwax (go from green, to yellow, to orange to red)

One of my favorite kinds of food is a good curry- Indian, Thai, whatever- I love it. And curries especially are great for using some of the veggies from this week and last. Here's a simple dish from Joy of Cooking:

Coconut Chicken (Or Tofu) Curry
4-6 Servings
2 lbs chicken thighs or breasts
Salt & pepper to taste
2 Tbsp vegetable oil
1 cup chopped onion
1 large carrot, sliced (or multiple smaller ones)
Snow peas, sliced in thirds
1 hot pepper, seeded (if you wish) and chopped
1 Tbsp finely chopped peeled ginger
2-3 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 1/2 cups unsweetened coconut milk
1/2 cup golden raisins
1 Tbsp curry powder (or more, to taste)
1 tsp salt
cooked rice

1) heat the oil in a large skillet or wok over high heat, add the chicken and brown on both sides. Remove from the pan.
2) Add to the same pan the onions, carrots, peas, hot pepper, ginger and garlic and cook until the veggies are soft, about 5 mins. 
3) Add and bring to a boil the coconut milk, raisins, curry powder, and salt. 
4) Add the chicken back, reduce the heat and simmer 20 minutes for breasts, 25 minutes for thighs, or until the sauce is thickened and the chicken is cooked. 
5) Serve over rice (Basmati is especially nice)

Best,
Sarah VanNorstrand 


Thursday, July 3, 2014

2014 CSA Week 5

Hi everyone,
Happy 4th of July! I hope you all have a great weekend celebrating-


Life on the farm continues- we've had some major thunder storms this week that have brought on more torrential rain that we would like. Since the whole farm is on a hill, working to prevent erosion is a constant struggle. But things are still doing pretty well. We got the cabbage and the first of the broccoli transplanted this week, the first picking of peas went well, and the indoor and outdoor tomatoes look very healthy and have little tomatoes on their way!

In your bags this week:

Salad Mix
Kale
Snow Peas
Garlic
Cilantro or Mixed Basil


The garlic is still a bit young, which means it's extra flavorful. We'll be harvesting all of it in a few more weeks, but we were able to pull a few on the early side. I used a few cloves in a spinach sauté I made last night, and it was delicious! I really love garlic, and when it's this fresh, it's hard to beat.


Here's a kale recipe that looks pretty good (and it's quick and easy!)

Garlicky Mushrooms and Kale
Ingredients
1 teaspoon olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
salt and pepper to taste
4 ounces cremini or button mushrooms, sliced (about 1 cup)
1/2 pound kale, coarse stems removed, leaves sliced or torn into pieces

Directions
Preheat a large skillet over medium heat. Sauté the garlic in the oil for about 2 minutes, being careful not to burn it. Spray it with a little nonstick cooking spray if needed. Add the mushrooms and sprinkle on the salt. Let them cook for 5 to 7 minutes, stirring often, until the moisture has released and the mushrooms are lightly browned. Add the kale and pepper, and use tongs to sauté for about 10 more minutes. Add splashes of water if the pan seems dry. The kale should be tender and cooked down pretty well. Serve immediately.

Here's another from the Martha Stewart website for a Kale and Chorizo soup (aka Caldo Verde)

Be well,
Sarah VanNorstrand