admine9519, Author at Morning Song Farm - Page 8 of 44

Winter Squash Soup

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I’ve always loved all things Winter Squash and have trialed numerous celebrated squashes in pursuit of the perfect squash, and I believe we may have found it in Sibley. Listed on the Ark of Taste, the awkward, strangely shaped bluish fruit lacks the qualities sought after in factory farmed produce. It doesn’t stack well. It offers nothing in the way of uniformity.  It ripens slowly over a few months, instead of all at once. It’s not disease resistant, and the seeds are expensive. But the taste is sublime, complex, even somewhat nutty. The unusual thing about Sibley, offered by a few heirloom seed companies, is that although it is a winter squash, meaning it has a hard shell and can be harvested and stored for later use…it can also be used like a zucchini when very young.  We’re growing Sibley and an heirloom zucchini, and are trying to put one or the other in all large boxes right now. I don’t think we could FIT a Sibley in a small box with everything else, although like I said, some Sibleys are huge and don’t fit in large boxes either…and occasionally we find one that is not much larger than a pummelo.

Ark of Taste Project is a special listing of unique foods established by Slow Food, the food advocacy organization. They’ve catalogued over a 1000 unique foods that are labeled extraordinarily delicious and endangered, including Sibley.

Here’s how I enjoyed the fruit this week with a friend for lunch: I halved the squash with a serrated knife, scooped out the seed (and saved it of course…Sibley is open pollinated so the seeds will come up true to type next year) and baked until soft at 350 degrees. I let cool to handle, and then spooned out the flesh into a Cuisinart with some low fat unflavored yogurt and a quarter cup of walnuts. I tossed in a couple cloves of garlic, salt, pepper and a quarter of a jalapeno for heat, and pureed. I reheated just before serving and once in bowls I topped with bread crumbs and shredded parmesan cheese, and used a kitchen torch to toast and melt the cheese at the table.

 

 

 

Thanks for the tip!

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OK, although the google upload thing worked for some subscribers last week, others said they couldn’t get the file opened to view our harvest tickets. A member of the public ( thanks, Ms. Leeds) provided another suggestion, which is vastly easier and I’m trialing this week. So I’m using her suggestion,  Dropbox,  this week, which provides a link you have to click, and then the PDF should open for everyone. Please do let me know if it doesn’t open for you!

Don't Hate Me 'Cuz I'm Hairy ;)

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Notice the tiny root hairs and how
 the roots are growing together

Tuesday’s boxes have radish sprouts. Like all brassicas, radishes have tiny, web-like hairs that to the uninitiated can certainly look like something funky…. say, mold. Here’s an image provided by a fellow subscriber last week (last week, Wednesday boxes received radish sprouts, this week they’ll receive our French Garden mix sprouts (which is a sprightly blend of clover, arugula, cress, radish, fenugreek and dill.) It’s quite a moving target to get a radish sprout that is both green but not over grown. Harvest too soon, and the sprout isn’t green; and harvest too late and the sprout is hotter than most peoples’ tastes. Facility temperatures can affect the growth rate so that as the weather changes, we are constantly adjusting the start day/hour to get a perfect finish. Even brassica (kale, radish, etc.) sprouts that are harvested a full day too soon will have tiny hairs and connecting webs of roots. It’s most noticeable with radish seed because radish is the largest brassica seed we sprout, so their hairy roots are just more noticeable to the naked eye. Because radish sprouts are definitely spicy, I enjoy using them on sandwiches in lieu of boring….boring….boring alfalfa sprouts. Of course sprinkling your raw salad with a dash of crunchy, spicy, radishes is a tasty choice, too! My kids also enjoy rolling radish sprouts in rice paper and serving as an appetizer with a offsetting mild-flavored dip.

Farmer not an IT Professional

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Well, after much knashing of teeth and tearing of hair out, I think I have managed to figure out how to get PDF files to download over to this blog, with the intent of making our Harvest Tickets easier to read and access from different platforms. Mind blowingly complicated considering the download mechanism (Google’s “Drive”) AND the blog software are both owned by Google. Really, there can’t just be a “download PDF” button? It has to require studying 11 pages of instructions downloaded off the internet, viewing a U-Tube video from an Indian IT guru dozens of times to figure out and HTML code management (here….I’m not kidding…this is from page five: “after copying the code go to Blogger.com..create a new post…select HTML Tab, and paste the code where you would like to see the document to appear. Now within the code that you pasted few moments a go (sic) search for /preview and replace it with /edit?usp=sharing….)  Really?

Feedback of the results would be welcomed. Can you access the files as I think you should be able to?

Harvest Ticket September 3-4 2013

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Well, it’s absolutely sweltering out here and it’s been a rough day. What is it about the heat that makes everything mechanical or computer-related not work out here? I so would love to heave this computer into the ravine. Just sharing. If someone knows of a way to get a single PDF file onto blogger here without having to convert to GIF which breaks the file up into pieces (6 today), that would be awesome. It takes a long time, revisions are out of the question because of how long it takes to post, and positioning seems to be random. I just have to play with it forever to get the pages to end up sequential. Surely there is a remedy?

We got a remark about our peaches being mushy, and sure enough, they’re firm and great when we put them on the truck, but don’t hold up through the day’s deliveries in this heat…so we’re taking them off the ticket for tomorrow. Carl will be thrilled because peaches are among his favorite, no matter what their condition, and the other goats haven’t learned how to spit out the seed like he can, so he does enjoy showing his skills off.

Louie came back today with almost no returned boxes, so I need to ask everyone again…that our prices are based on the returned cartons for our reuse. Also, we are proud of keeping our landfill footprint to a minimum by recycling the boxes. So, if you are crazy busy and can’t remember to bring the box back, I get it, but please bring grocery bags to transfer your produce into, and leave the box behind altogether. I know there are a very few that ARE returning boxes, and we thank you…but the majority aren’t anymore. Please return our boxes!

Turns Out Naked Juice Isn't So Naked

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PepsiCo,   a significant donor who helped defeat California’s anti GMO proposition…has been found to have mislead their natural, healthy eating consumers in regards to their Naked Juice Product. Here’s another reason why I think, although it’s a big hassle, it’s smarter to make your own juice products in your own kitchen from produce that is certified organic, or Certified Natural. As a result of the class action settlement, you can file up to a $45 dollar claim without receipts at this website: www.nakedJuiceClass.com. (And who keeps years of juice receipts?)

Here’s what the Organic Consumers Association says about this:
“According to plaintiffs, Naked Juice used soy ingredients that are genetically engineered “by design or by contamination.” (Naked Juice intentionally used misleading language to give consumers “the false impression that the beverage’s vitamin content is due to the nutritious fruits and juices, rather than added synthetic compounds.” And the PepsiCo subsidiary contained a laundry list of synthetic chemicals, including calcium pantothenate (synthetically produced from formaldehyde).”

Yikes.

I use the Vitamix for most of my juicing needs unless I want to strain out the pulp, in which case I use a cheap Walmart juicer I got for $40 bucks or so. Juicing is hassle. But here’s the thing: being unhealthy is a hassle, too. I don’t always have time to cook, but juicing is fast and fairly straight forward. The cleanup usually takes longer than actually juicing.

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