August Farmer's Market

August Farmer's Market

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Root cellaring

In the middle of August's bounty, it's hard to imagine a time is coming when local food won't be so easy to buy.  It is a good time to at least begin thinking about longer term storage for some of the overflowing, fresh and local produce.  Here is a guide from a Chicago blog for "cellaring" produce with useful tips for storage.  And another Chicago blog, The Local Beet (which should win an award for its name) has tips for storing onions, garlic, and potatoes.  Who knew that the gasses from onions can cause potatoes to spoil?  Not me.  Keep them far apart from each other for long term storage.  

100 Mile Diet

This is a fun tool from the website, the 100 mile diet for mapping your own local 100 mile radius--even if you aren't restricting your diet to food grown within 100 miles of home, it will give you a sense of what local really means.  

http://100milediet.org/get-started/map

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Watermelon drink

What is more refreshing than watermelon in the summer?  Here is a great little recipe from Local Flavors.  You can omit the orange flower water (I'm not sure what that is, anyway) and substitute blackberries or strawberries.

Watermelon Agua Fresca
3 lbs watermelon, with rind
1/2 c. simple syrup
2 large limes
pinch salt
1 Tbs orange flower water

Remove rind and seeds and chop watermelon into large chunks.  Puree in a blender and sweeten with simple syrup as needed.  Squeeze one lime, add salt, and orange flower water and stir.  Pour over ice and garnish with lime wedge.  Makes one quart.  

Saturday, August 9, 2008

More author(s)!

Thanks to Laura in Colorado who will also be publishing to this blog.  For those of you with vegetable gardens, you will appreciate her first post on her backyard drip irrigation system.  Also, if posting to this blog is something you'd like to do, let me know so I might add you to the author list.  I originally hoped this blog would be a way to share information, so I'd love to hear more about your adventures in locavorish pursuits.

Broccoli & Potato Soup

The weather has been cooler this week, and I have been looking for warm things to eat.  This recipe is an adaptation of "New Favorite Green Soup" from the cookbook, The New Laurel's Kitchen.  The original recipe calls for 6-8 cups of fresh greens (spinach or chard).  I used broccoli, and it was fabulous.  

1 onion or bunch scallions
1 Tbs oil
2-3 potatoes, cut up
head of broccoli, including leaves and stems, cut up
milk
salt and pepper

Saute onion in oil.  Add the potatoes and water to cover.  Cook until tender and remove peels if you desire.  Add broccoli and simmer until soft.  Puree all.*  Add milk to thin and extend as desired, then add salt and pepper to taste. 

*Using a hand blender to puree this soup in the pot makes this recipe a breeze.  


Friday, August 8, 2008

High desert vegetables

I've been invited to post to cinnamongirl's blog about my locavoracious exploits in Colorado. Hello!

After moving out here from "back East," one of the first things we did was register for a Denver Urban Gardens spot. We were lucky enough to find a 20’ x 20’ square sunny plot in the neighborhood, which we’ve been tending since late May.

Watching the garden grow has been one of the chief amusements of our summer. In addition to the excitement of producing our own vegetables, we’re using the garden to showcase drip irrigation systems peddled to subsistence farmers in Africa and Asia by IDE: International Development Enterprises (hubby’s place of employment, in the interest of full disclosure). As we've learned, drip irrigation - essentially water containers that drip through hoses placed at the plant's roots - is a terrific way to fuel effectively without wasting water – a serious consideration here in the high desert – and without encouraging weeds (which need little encouragement) by watering everywhere.

This is our garden back in early June, after installing the irrigation barrel and most of our plantings:

The soil in our plot is awful: hard, clay, and automotive. (Before DUG turned the vacant lot into a garden, it was a car-repair zone for enthusiasts in the neighborhood. Broken glass and metal bits are still more populous than stones, several years later.) We amended like crazy with humus and other enriching dirt vitamins, and crossed our fingers.

The results have been more than encouraging:

We fill the 10 gal. tank and the two 5 gal. drip bags on each side of that T-post once each evening. Sometimes we add a bit of fish emulsion fertilizer if we’re feeling indulgent. It's working: our August garden has doubled in size since I took the shot above. And, it's produced zucchini like nobody’s business, summer squash, peppers, tomatoes, beans and peas, corn, fennel, and herbs - with more on the way.

The early August corn – it’s like dessert, so sweet! Aside from the usual cooking style, boiling and buttering and salting, one of the easiest ways to savor corn's full glory is to throw it on the grill – husks, silks and all – and let it steam in its own juices. Not much can top local summer corn, and what they say is true: it's even better when eaten the same day it's picked.