Sunday, July 26, 2015

CSA Newsletter for July 26, 2015

Farm Update


Fred was able to eat the very first
ripe cherry tomatoes this week,
 but it will probably be a week or
two before we start having them
in the shares.
Hello everyone!  The heat has really jump started the tomatoes and sweet potatoes, which have both put on a lot of growth over the last week. The tomato plants are now as tall as some of our employees and will be as tall as Fred later this week. The first three cherry tomatoes also ripened this week as well, and they were quickly eaten by Fred, but we should start seeing them in the shares in the next few weeks!  The weeds have continued to be a struggle, so we have been getting some help with weeding from a contract crew.  They have been doing a really nice job, and we can finally see some light at the end of the proverbial tunnel as far as that goes.  As for the chickens, they have been laying well and are happily eating all the summer bugs and green pasture.  Right now is a good time for people and animals at the farm, busy and productive.  Although it still feels like high summer, the back-to-school ads I've been seeing remind me that fall is coming, and with it an entirely new rhythm at the farm.



What to Expect in Your Share This Week

Rows of frisee look like a green
fireworks display in the field!
At the regular drop-offs:
  • Choice of beets or cucumbers
  • Choice of potatoes or blueberries
  • Choice of carrots or broccoli
  • Snap beans
  • Choice of zucchini or basil
  • Choice of romaine heads or spring mix
  • Choice of kale or chard

For home/workplace delivery:

A Share:                    B Share:
Beets                         Cucumbers
Blueberries                Potatoes
Carrots                      Broccoli
Snap beans                Snap beans
Zucchini                    Basil
Romaine head           Spring mix
Kale                          Chard




Veggie Spotlight: Zucchini

There is no vegetable that has such a reputation for abundance as zucchini.  Often overwhelming to those who have grown it in gardens, zucchini can put out a lot of fruits in a very short span of time. Fred’s Grandma from up north was infamous for trying to pawn endless bags of zucchini off to friends and fellow church parishioners during the height of the season. Most vegetables that are that productive have been bred for many centuries or even thousands of years, but zucchini is a relatively new vegetable to mankind.  The squash plant was native to the Americas and was brought back to Europe, after which the Italians started selecting plants for a more tender, quickly maturing squash.  The first real zucchinis came out in the late 1800s and were quickly spread through the rest of the world. 


Zucchini plants growing along the
edge of the coldframes.  It makes
 to plant it there because zucchini
benefits from the extra heat, and the
edges of the coldframes aren't tall
enough to accomodate some other
heat-loving veggies such as tomatoes.
Our squash blossoms are a very
popular item with a lot of our chefs,
who usually stuff them with a cheese
mixture and fry them up.
At our farm zucchini is more of a minor crop, and most of the plants are grown on the sides of our coldframes, along with a few plants outside.  These plants are all started in the greenhouse as transplants and then planted in the coldframes once the first early crop of greens has vacated the space.  At that point, we plant the tomatoes and zucchini plants on the space previously occupied by the earliest geens.  Then the zucchini plants quickly grow very large, much larger than they would outside.  These large plants put on large fruit as well, and we have found the squash to be much more tender and much more productive than the outside plants.  Not only do the plants produce the zucchini we look forward to every summer, but we also sell a lot of squash blooms to our higher-end restaurants.   These restaurants usually stuff them with some cheese mixture and then fry them.  We have yet to try this preparation at home, but it does sound delicious! As a farm, we actually make more money off the blooms than we do the fruit, which is often true for small farms like ours.  Unlike most of our crops where we plant many successive plantings, we usually plant just one crop of zucchini. The plants peaked in production last week and are now on the downhill slide.  At the end of their life here, there are a few weeks where the plants will be very large, and they will start to die back from powdery mildew and squash bugs as the hard-working plants will have expended all of their energy.


At our house Zucchini is looked forward to every summer (we are vegetable nerds)! We usually fry it or grill it with some combination of fresh basil and garlic.  This last week Fred grilled some zucchini with grilled stuffed chicken in a shallot-tomato-basil-cheese sauce that was amazing.  Hopefully, you folks will get to enjoy some great zucchini meals while it lasts, and don’t worry, we won’t try pawn big bags of it off on you anytime soon!


Recipes
There were a whole bunch of zucchini recipes in last week's newsletter, so instead this week, here are a few recipes for snap beans!   

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