Sunday, July 26, 2009

CSA Catchup

With the excitement over the bathroom remodel and pastry camp (combined with my general laziness) I have fallen behind on CSA posts. Let's remedy that, shall we?



Week four to me marked the end of spring produce. We got more lettuces (salads, natch), more berries, and more scapes. The scapes were very long lasting, which is good because we are pretty slow to use them. The last of them are actually going into a stir fry for lunch today.

We also started getting hearty greens in week 4, which we actually quite enjoy. These ended up in a pasta dish, though we have many uses for them. The zucchini flow continued unabated as well, and we tried some muffins with a cinnamon topping with some of this batch.


Week five brought more summer produce our way. Zucchini was used as a vegetable, as well as turned into zucchini bread. Cabbage is usually a tough one for us, because most recipes call for at most half a head, and make many many (many) servings. We made a slaw and soup with this head, though half the soup went straight to the freezer.

We were super excited to see the first beets of the season. We roasted them and tossed them with feta and onions as we always do, because it's a recipe that never lets us down. It was wonderful again this time. We actually had a similar salad that a friend made for a cookout that put the beets and (in this case) goat cheese over baby spinach, and it was a great combination. We'll try that later in the season when we get arugula, since it would probably translate well.

This week also signaled the end of the berries. Alas, poor berries, we hardly knew ye. We love the CSA fruit, since it's usually so perfectly ripe and sweet, but the season can't last forever.


By week six, we'd usually be nearing tomato season. Sadly, this has been a very cold summer, so the summer crops (corn, tomatoes) have been slow growing. We fear that this also means they will be smaller and appear is less quantity, and for that we weep. Tomatoes and corn are two of our favorite produce items, so it's sad that we may see less of them this year. Oh well, at least we didn't get grape leaves.

We oddly saw a decline in zucchini this week. It seems a bit early for it to peter out, so I suspect that it's just saving it's energy for a serious onslaught next week. Cucumbers, on the other hand, are coming on strong. One a week is a pretty brisk pace for us, so getting two this week will present a challenge. They'll likely get tossed with feta and cherry tomatoes and served as a side.

As always, we keep meaning to bring celery as snacks to work, but fail to do so. The broccoli is going into a stir fry (the great clearninghouse of vegetables) and the basil onto a pizza we are making for dinner tonight.

Chard, finally, went into a skillet meal with onions and parsley (which also lasted an impressively long time) with eggs and asiago cheese. It was delicious and woudl actually make us seek out chard again to make it.

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