Posts in Bok Choy
Week 12; September 3, 2015

What's in the box? 

medium share

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  • Sweet corn
  • tomatoes
  • arugula
  • onions
  • Potatoes
  • bell peppers
  • broccoli
  • brussel sprout tops
  • pac choi (large and medium)
  • carrots  
  • beets (large)

Notes on the box.

This is the last of the sweet corn!  It was harvested in the pouring rain, so the silks may be limp and wet.  You may want to pull them off before they go in your fridge to avoid spoilage.  Get the last of your favorite sweet corn recipes made.  Until next year...

We've had quite a lot of rain in the last few weeks.  Our tomatoes have succumbed to disease (they don't like all that moisture).  We might have another week with them, but they are dropping off, for sure. 

Brussel sprout tops?  These are the bunch of greens that look like smallish collards.  They are very nice and tender and cook down quite a lot.  They taste like brussel sprouts and you can use them as you would kale or swiss chard.  We take the tops off the plants to encourage the sprouts to form on the stalks.  In the past we just dropped them on the ground, but then saw the tops being sold at the farmers market and decided to try them out.  We were skeptical, but they are really nice greens and we enjoyed them.  Hope you like them, too! 

Pac Choi (aka bok choy) may be new to our peak season members.  Enjoy it in a stir fry.  You can use it as a substitute for cabbage in cooked dishes.  It's so delicious! 

Take the tops off the carrots before you put them in your fridge for storage!

Cheese shares.

This week is a washed curd cheese (different than a washed rind) that is similar to a Gouda type of cheese.  Not sure if this will be one that we make regularly in the future, but it's tasty!  A nice cheese for cooking or snacking.  Cheese soufflé?  Yum.  

Dutch Baby Pancake with Gouda, Crispy Bacon, and a Fried Egg

Recipes.

Corn Chowder Salad from Smitten Kitchen

Sesame Salmon Fillets with Bok Choy

  • 1/2 cup sesame seeds
  • 1/2 Tbsp. garted fresh ginger
  • 1 tsp ground black pepper
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 egg
  • 1 pound salmon fillets
  • 1 tbsp oil
  • 4 cups or more thinly sliced bok choy
  • 1/2 red bell pepper, seeded and diced
  • 1 tsp. rice vinegar
  • 1 tsp soy sauce
  • 1 tsp sesame oil

In a shallow dish combine the sesame seeds, ginger, black pepper, and salt stirring together until the mixture resembles wet sand.  In another dish, lightly beat the egg.  Dip each salmon fillet into the egg, letting the excess drip off.  Gently press the fillets into the sesame mixture, turning to coat both sides (if the fillet has skin, only coat the skinless side). 

In a large nonstick skillet, heat the vegetable oil over medium high heat. Cook the salmon, turning once, for 4-8 minutes, or until cooked to your preferred doneness.  Transfer to a plate. 

increase the heat to high.  Add the bok choy, bell pepper, vinegar, soy saice, and sesame oil to the skillet.  Cook stirring often, for 2-3 minutes or until the bok choy is wilted.  Arrange the bok choy on plates and top with the salmon.  Serve with wasabi mashed potatoes or rice. 

On the farm.

More variety in the box this week.  Greens again.  Color on the bell peppers.  Picking tomatoes green.  It means Summer is just about over.  Sigh.  It's been a good one.  This week looks like it will stay fairly warm, but next weeks forecast is looking down right chilly.  We are keeping fingers crossed the the cantaloupe and musk melon can ripen before the frost hits. 
 

Week 1 delivery, June 18, 2015

Welcome to our new members and welcome back to our returning members!  We are happy to have the first box of the season out to you.  This is our online newsletter.  It will follow a format each week.  A picture and list of the contents of the weeks box followed by notes about the veggies and storage tips.  Next a few recipes focusing on veggies that you may not be familiar with or that we have in quantity.  Finally, pictures of what's been going on at the farm, musings from your farmers, and news about farm events or announcements.  Your CSA experience will be greatly enhanced if you look at the blog each week!  It will help you feel connected to the farm and use up your veggies.  So here we go...  

What's in the box?

All Shares -

  • herb pot
  • dino kale
  • salad turnips
  • radishes
  • spinach
  • arugula
  • garlic scapes

Medium and Large 

  • pac choi
  • green onions
  • vitamin greens

What's what with the green stuff?!

 

Notes on the box...

 This box has quite a few veggies that might be new to first-time CSA members.  We grew a lot of them after getting positive feedback last season from members.  They were enjoyed and we hope that you like them!  If a lot of these are new to you, we invite you to taste, try, and experiment.  

 Kale should be stored in the fridge in your crisper in an open plastic bag.  It will last for at least a week and likely closer to two.  If it seems a little limp from the heat or from sitting in your fridge too long,  you can soak it in cold water and it will perk back up.  Remove the stems before cooking.  Hearty greens like kale are great simply sautéed in butter or oil with some chopped garlic (or garlic scapes!) until it is bright green.  You can add leaves to smoothies.  Kale can be washed, de-stemmed, blanched and frozen.  If you have tried kale before and thought that you didn’t like it, we encourage you to try it again.  Sometimes people have tasted kale from the heat of summer when it is at its toughest and most bitter.  We won’t give you tough, bitter kale.  If our kids won’t eat it raw, it won’t go in the box! 

Arugula, vitamin greens, and turnip and radish greens should be stored in an open platic bag in your crisper.  They are tender leaves and all make wonderful pestos and additions to salads.  

Radishes These are called french breakfast radishes.  Take the tops off of the radishes and put them in a baggie in your crisper.  The tops are edible as well. You can add your radish tops to stir fry or salads.  Radishes are a great spicy snack and if you've never tried thinly sliced radishes on buttered bread with a little salt, now is the time to try it!  We’ve been enjoying radishes diced small and added as a seasonal replacement to celery in egg salad and pasta salad.  They add a nice crunch and a little spicy flavor.

The lovely white globes are hakuri or Salad Turnips.  The tops of the salad turnips are edible.  They are nice chopped and added to salads or you can saute them.  They are very mild for turnip greens.  The turnips themselves are so sweet and nice sliced and added to a salad.  We rarely do that as we mostly just eat them whole as snacks.  They can also be sauteed or roasted, but try them fresh first!  

Bok Choi is perfect for stir fry.  The key to good pak choi is to cook it briefly (we add it to the very end of a stir fry) so that the stems stay crunchy and the greens aren't mushy.  Try it!  Last season it was almost unanimous in our survey that people trying it for the first time liked it, so here we have it! 

Green Onions and Garlic Scapes can be paired together where you would use green onions.  Or you can substitute the scapes for green onions.  The garlic scape is the flowering part of the garlic plant.  We pull the scape off to enjoy before the garlic bulb is ready.  Pulling the scape off helps the bulb size up more.  The scapes can be made into a pesto, chopped and added to scrambled eggs or salads, or put into a vase and enjoyed for its beauty (before you eat it).  They can also be grilled or roasted whole till tender.  If you are intimidated by them you can keep them in your crisper drawer until you work up the courage to eat them, as they won’t go bad for a long time. 

Recipes

 

Garlic Scape and Arugula Pesto

several garlic scapes, cut into bits
1/2  bunch arugula (or spinach, kale, or turnip greens) chopped
1/2 c seeds or nuts (optional)
1/4 c grated parmesan cheese (optional)
1/4 – 1/3 c olive oil
juice of 1/2 lemon (or more)
1/2 t  salt
1/2 t chili pepper flakes

Combine the garlic scapes, arugula, nuts, and cheese in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse a few times. Let the machine run and slowly pour in half the amount of oil along with the lemon juice, salt and chili flakes. Slowly add the remaining oil until you’ve reached a good consistency (you may not need all the oil). Store in a lidded jar in the fridge for a week or freeze in small jars. Serve with pasta, spread on sandwiches, mixed into eggs, drizzled onto pizza, tossed with roasted potatoes.... 

Goodness Greenness Pasta

  • pasta of your choice
  • 1 bunch garlic scape cut into 1 inch pieces
  • avocado
  • ½ lemon, juiced
  • ½ lime, juiced
  • fresh parsley, thyme, and/ or mint chopped
  • fresh basil leaves, chopped
  • ¼ cup sour cream, quark, cream cheese, chevre, or greek yogurt
  • olive oil
  • spring onion, finely chopped
  • 2 salad turnips, thinly sliced
  • chopped arugula, vitamin green, turnip greens, and/or spinach
  • salt and pepper
  1. Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil. Add the pasta and cook 6 minutes. Add the garlic scapes and cook an additional 3 minutes, or until the pasta is al dente. Drain.
  2. While the pasta cooks, prepare the sauce: Add the avocado, 2 tablespoons of olive oil, lemon juice, lime juice, and fresh herbs to a food processor or blender. Process on high for 20-30 seconds, or until smooth. Scrape into a small bowl and stir in the sour cream or your choice of creamy dairy. Set aside.
  3. Heat a little oil in a large pan set over medium heat. Add the spring onion and turnips and cook 2-3 minutes, or until soft. Add the arugula (and/ or other greens) and cook another 2-3 minutes, or until the greens are wilted. Turn off the heat and stir in the cooked pasta, garlic scapes, and sauce. Stir to combine; season with salt and pepper.

 

Radiant bok choi, adapted from Vegetable Love

  • 1-2 heads of bok choi and a bunch of turnip greens or vitamin greens
  • 2 teaspoons of turmeric
  • Generous pinch of sea salt
  • 1 can of coconut milk
  • fresh ginger, minced
  • A few mushrooms (shiitake or oyster are best), de-stalked and caps sliced
  • Tamari or umeboshi vinegar 
  • 1 lime, cut into wedges
  1. Cut base from bok choi, seperate leaves and wash well.  Wash additional greens well and chop roughly.  
  2. Add the turmeric, sea salt, coconut milk and ginger in a lidded frying pan. Bring to a boil, cover and turn the heat down to medium. Simmer for 3 minutes.  Add bok choi and simmer 3 more minnutes with lid on. 
  3. Add the mushrooms, stir, and cover again. Simmer for 6 minutes.  
  4. Add aditional greens and cook til wilted.  
  5. Serve over rice with a little tamari or umeboshi vinegar and squeeze of lime.  

 

Cheese Shares!

Welcome to our cheese share members!  We have been really busy with getting this part of the farm up and running.  WOW!  We will tell you more about it in the coming weeks.  for now, we will let you know that the aged cheeses are ripening and so the first few weeks we will get to enjoy some fresh cheese. If you would like to add a cheese share, please contact us and we will be happy to pro-rate a share for you.  This week...

  • Cheese curds
  • Quark

These are cheddar cheese curds.  A Wisconsin classic.  If you like squeaky curds, allow them to warm up and the squeak will return.  If you don't like squeaky cheese, you can have them cold or let them age for a few weeks in the fridge.  At market we noticed that a lot of people said they don't like their cheese to squeak, but they still love these curds!  Curds are most commonly eaten just as they are as a snack.  They are also very popular fried (Dana likes to make a little batter out of flour, egg, a little baking powder salt and pepper then pan fries them in a little bit of oil.  SO yummy!)  And we love to float them in a vegetable or lentil soup!  We just throw them in at the end and they become soft while still holding their shape.  

The quark cheese is a type of fresh cheese very common in Europe.  It is versitile and can be enjoyed fresh or used in baking where you would cream cheese, but it has a slightly more tangy flavor.  We have made a garlic scape and arugula pesto and drizzled it over the quark and spread that on crackers or bread.  It's also nice on a baguette with thinly sliced radish and black pepper.  And a good friend suggests using it in a sauce for mac and cheese.  Hope you enjoy it!  

Want to see a cool time lapse video of boxes being packed??  Click the link at the bottom of the blog that goes to our facebook page to check it out!

First delivery information for new members: 

We are so happy to be your farmers!  Thanks for signing up.  A few things to remember to make your Summer of vegetables more enjoyable: 

1. Don't forget to pick up your box! We send an email when your box is delivered.  Picking up sooner on hot days will help keep your veggies fresh longer.  Always only take veggies from the box with your name on the label.  If you are unable to pick up, let your host know so that they may hold it for you until you can pick up or even better, arrange to have a friend or neighbor pick up your box.  Certain dropsites (such as the co-ops) are sometimes unable to hold your share.  If you have any problems or questions, please contact your host or the farm as soon as you can. 

2. If you are splitting a box it is your responsibility to decide how to divide the share.  Some members alternate weeks picking up.  Some members get together and decide who gets what.  Some members cook dinner together and then split up what wasn't used.  It's up to you!

3. We wash greens and lettuce before delivering them, but we suggest another rinse just in case of lingering dirt or sand.  

4. Some veggies hold for a long time, and others have a shorter shelf life.  When deciding what to cook, keep this is mind to get you box used up!  For certain crops such as tomatoes, we try to pack some of varied ripeness so that you have some to use earlier in the week and some to use later.  Try to use up veggies from the previous week before getting your next box so that you don't get overwhelmed and veggies don't get lost. 

5. Be sure to read storage tips to get the best flavor and value from your veggies.  Little things, like taking the tops off of radishes and carrots or putting a head of lettuce in a plastic bag will make these veggies hold a lot better. 

6. If you have any questions or issues or comments or suggestions, contact us.  We will do our best to get back to you right away.

 

Next week...

  • head lettuce
  • peas!
  • radishes
  • turnips
  • green onions 
  • garlic scapes
  • broccoli?


Week 15; October 2, 2014

What's in the box?  

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 pak choi

delicata and sweet dumpling winter squash

bagged spinach

head lettuce

broccoli

bell peppers

onion

green top carrots

cauliflower

Single Share

pak choi

delicata or sweet dumpling winter squash

bagged spinach

head lettuce

bell peppers

onions

carrots

cauliflower

arugula

Notes on the box...  

We've been enjoying spinach everyday this week.  It's so versatile, you can throw some in a soup at the very end of cooking, you can add it to lasagna, you can use it as a raw salad green, you can simply steam them down into a silky tender bunch of emerald goodness.  We hope you are enjoying it, too.  If you can't get through it in the week, you can steam it down freeze it in a freezer bag for later use.  

 Winter Squash can be stored on your counter until you are ready to use them.  The skins of both of these varieties are edible, but it is thinner, so the squash may not keep as long as other varieties.  Slicing and roasting these varieties together makes for a beautiful dish.  Recipes are below.  

Always remove the tops for your carrots when storing so they don't become soft and bendy.  Though, if you have soft, bendy carrots and tops, you can use them for soup stock.

Recipes...

Lots of roasted vegetable recipes links this week.  It's oven on weather!  

 Miso Harissa Delicata (and/or sweet dumpling) Squash with Carmelized Onions

Roasted Delicata (and/or Sweet Dumpling), Pomegranate, and Arugula Salad

Sriracha Cauliflower Bites with Peanut Dipping Sauce 

Spicy Roasted Pak Choi

A raw soup recipe for our vegan raw friends...  Our backyard mushroom logs are really popping, so we will be having a quick, cooked version of this soup with canned coconut milk.  Raw Coconut Pak Choi Spicy Soup

Italian Spinach Orzo Soup 

On the Farm...

Hey!  It's time to sign up for Winter Shares or, if you'd like to, sign up early for next season!  We put a flier in the box explaining why we really need you to go ahead and sign up for next season if you enjoyed this season.  This will be the online paragraph with the same information:  

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The last box of the regular season will be on October 23rd, just 3 weeks away.

If you are enjoying your Turnip Rock Summer CSA, we invite you to join us for 4 more weeks added on to the end of the growing season.

You can sign up for a Winter Share online that will deliver a full size box every Thursday at your usual pick up site from October 30- November 20th (the week before Thanksgiving).

The crops will be cold sweetend greens like lacinato and curly kale, collard greens, spinach, salad mix, brazing mixes, arugula, and head lettuce. Also storage crops like Butternut, Acorn and Pie Pumpkin, brussel sprouts, carrots, onions, beets, cabbage, and daikon radishes among other goodies.  

The cost of the Winter Share is $152 for 4 weeks and is a full size box. Many veggies store well into the winter with little extra care.  We have only 40 spots still open. So if you are interested, please sign up soon!  You can sign up by going to your account and adding the Winter Share, or you can simply email us (turniprock@gmail.com) and we will add it to your account for you.  

 Also, while you are there, we encourage you to reserve your spot for 2015 by going to your account and signing up for next season, with a minimum payment of 1/5th of your total. Egg shares sell out fast and the best way to get one is by signing up early.  We will not be expanding our CSA!

We need your support this fall as we are building an AMAZING cheese share option that no other CSA will have.  There will be very approachable farmstead, raw milk, aged cheese, and super fresh squeaky cheese curds made right here on our farm and going right in your box! We will keep you posted on progress, but we need an infusion of cash to complete our cheese making space to get it up and running in time for next Spring!  Your early sign up and signing up for a Winter share would help greatly!  Please contact us with any questions.  

MANY THANKS!  Your farmers, Josh, Rama and Turnip Rockers

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Signup
Signup

To add the Winter Share, go to your accountand press the Add Subscription button.  The Winter Share option should show up.  To sign up for 2015, you can go to your account, choose the season "2015" and then add a subscription.  If you have any trouble at all or any questions, please let us know!  There's often hiccups when we first put this out and we will try to fix any of them quickly!  

If you are splitting a share and want to sign up on your own next season, You can also follow this link to sign up for 2015.

As returning members can use the coupon code RETURNIP for a discount on your share, if you'd like to!    If you are a dropsite host, you will have a different discount code that will be emailed to you.  

Signing up early ensures that you will be charged this seasons price, if we find we need to raise the price of the shares.  Egg share options are first come first serve and we aren't expanding our flock!  Also, If you think you can handle the amount of veggies included and you easily went through your half share, please sign up for a full share! Thanks!

Picture time!

We took advantage of the last of the warm sunny weather that we saw in the forecast and enjoyed some puddle play in the packing shed.

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The weather cooled off at the beginning of the week and the leaves colors keep getting better and better.  The oaks are just starting to turn bronze.  Fall is so beautiful this season!  

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It was a cold, windy day and we found a cute garden gnome out in the field!

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We were shorthanded as a flu took down a couple of our employees.  We called in for reinforcements.  Thanks for helping out, MJ!