CSA Week #20

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of October 12th

VEGETABLE SHARE 

Red Batavian or Green Crisp Lettuce or Spinach - 1 head/bunch
Fennel - 2 pieces
Carrots - 1 bunch
Chioggia or Red Beets - 1 bunch
Peppers - 2 pieces 
Green Beans - 3/4 lb. bag
Potatoes - Keuka or Russet Variety - Keuka is great for boiling and mashing, Russet is best for baking - 2 lb. bag
Garlic - 1 piece 
Winter Squash - Sweet Dumpling or Acorn variety - 2 pieces
Broccoli - 2 pieces 

FRUIT SHARE
Bosc Pears & Apples - 1 bag - Bosc pears are ripe when they turn an even brown color. They are still firm when ripe!  Refrigerate immediately when ripe. If left to soften, they will be rotten when you cut them open, so be careful!

Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

NEWS FROM THE FARM

THIS WEEKEND!!!  CSA HARVEST FESTIVAL - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18th, 11am-3pm!

Please join us for our annual CSA Harvest Festival!  RAIN or SHINE!  

When: Sunday, October 18th from 11am to 3pm
Where: At the Farm in Jamesport.  Map & Directions
Activities: Walking Tours, Animal Shearing, Open Farmstand, Kids Haystack
Details: Please wear sturdy shoes for touring our fields.  Bring your own picnic lunch and blanket/chairs. No potluck this year due to the unusual flu season.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Fennel Mashed Potatoes
Maple Glazed Winter Squash

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #19

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of October 5th

VEGETABLE SHARE

French Breakfast Radishes - 1 bunch
Romaine Lettuce - 1 head
Baby Salad Turnips - 1 bunch 
Green Bell Pepper - 1 piece
Green Beans - 1 lb. bag!
Zucchini - 1 piece - We thought the zuke season was over, but there were still a few more out in the field!
Red Kale - 1 bunch
Cherry Tomatoes* - mixed colors - 1 pint
Curly Cress - 1 bunch - This cress variety is known as "Wrinkled Crinkled Crumpled Cress"- quite a mouthful! It's the first time we're growing it for the CSA, although Matthew and I grew it in our greenhouse last winter and it became one of our new favorite additions to salads and sandwiches.  Let us know what you think!    

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.  

FRUIT SHARE
Bosc Pears & Apples - 1 bag - Bosc pears are ripe when they turn an even brown color. They are still firm when ripe!  Refrigerate immediately when ripe. If left to soften, they will be rotten when you cut them open, so be careful!

Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

NEWS FROM THE FARM

CSA HARVEST FESTIVAL - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18th, 11am-3pm!

Please join us for our annual CSA Harvest Festival!

When: Sunday, October 18th from 11am to 3pm
Where: At the Farm in Jamesport.  Map & Directions
Activities: Walking Tours, Animal Shearing, Open Farmstand, Kids Haystack
Details: Please wear sturdy shoes for touring our fields.  Bring your own picnic lunch and blanket/chairs. No potluck this year due to the unusual flu season.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Kale & Chickpea Soup
Japanese Salad Turnips with Miso

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #18

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of September 28th

VEGETABLE SHARE

Arugula - 1/2 lb. bag
Lettuce Mix - 1/2 lb. bag
Red Radishes or Baby Salad Turnips - 1 bunch 
Green Long or Bell Peppers - 1-3 pieces 
Green Beans - 3/4 lb. bag -  The beans are now coming in nicely, making picking a little easier!
Kiddie Sized Sweet Potatoes or Russet or Yellow Potatoes - 1 1/2 lb.
Acorn Squash - 1 piece -  We did not have a large yield of this variety, so you're all receiving 1 to kick off the winter squash season. There will be lots more winter squash to come!
Cherry Tomatoes - mixed colors - 1 pint
Green Kale - 1 bunch
Broccoli or Cabbage - 1 piece - Look out for a few worms on the broccoli when you wash it.  

FRUIT SHARE
1 bag mixed Bosc Pears & Apples - Bosc pears are ripe when they turn an even brown color. They are still firm when ripe!  Refrigerate immediately when ripe.  If left to soften, they will be rotten when you cut them open, so be careful!

Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

LETTER FROM YOUR FARMER - SEASON UPDATE - PART 3

...Picking up where we left off last week with our seasonal crop update...

Winter Squash - Just like the sweet potatoes I told you about last week, the winter squash was yet another crop that almost did not get planted this season. What would Autumn be like without a few winter squash decorating your table, porch, or balcony?  Of course we don’t like to grow food only for decoration, so you must eat them!

We grow a few different varieties of winter squash on our farm, including Butternut, Buttercup, Sunshine, Kabocha, Sweet Dumpling, Acorn, and occasionally Spaghetti (although not this year). We typically direct seed winter squash into the soil with a vaccum seeder driven by a tractor (and a human!).  They are seeded 12 inches apart, and after germination they are thinned by hoeing out the extra plants so they are spaced 24 -30 inches apart in the row. Depending on the variety, they can be very large rambling vines that stretch out more than 10 feet! It’s a great place for kids to hide, or even a woodchuck.  Every season a couple of woodchucks move into the field when the canopy fills in and covers the soil completely, thinking they have found the best home ever-- A well hidden home stocked full of more food than one could ever eat, until the evil humans come and harvest it.  Arggh!  

As a CSA member it’s important to realize that there are many competitors drooling over your CSA share.  Woodchucks are kind of cute until they eat the romaine lettuce you were supposed to get in your share, or your squash, or your watermelon, or your radicchio, or your baby bok choi, or your beans, or your… Well, you get the idea. Who else is on the list of veggie predators? Crows, various birds, deer with their cute little eyes peering through the deer fence, and even other CSA members!

Timing is essential when planting winter squash, because it only happens one time during the season-- usually seeded anytime between the end of May and the end of June, but preferably toward the beginning of June.  As with the sweet potatoes this year, the winter squash planting date kept getting postponed because we couldn’t get into the fields to prep and plant. There were about 7- 10 days left in our planting window and the weather report forecasted high chances of rain for many days.  It looked like seeding was not going to happen. Luckily, winter squash can also be grown from transplants seeded in the greenhouse and then planted into the field.  So right away we planted over 200 flats of the various varieties.  They germinated, and grew like crazy like good little squash plants do.  They will actually grow so fast in flats that they can get too big to pass through the transplanter, so you have to watch them very carefully.  A couple of weeks later we had a break in the weather and we planted all the squash.  And it took off!  I've noticed that they are a little smaller than last year, but the ones I’ve tasted so far have been great. 

Some squash varieties, such as Sweet Dumpling and Acorn, do not need to be cured before eating, as curing actually deteriorates their quality.  The others (Buttercups, Butternuts, and Sunshine) should be cured in a similar manner as sweet potatoes, in a warm, humid environment for 1-2 weeks.  This heals any skin wounds so they can be kept for a few months, and the process also seems to improve their flavor. Last year was our first trial with storing Butternuts into the winter, and although our storage room was not perfect, we had a lot of good squash through the end of January.  

You will soon be seeing some squash at your table, with a story of course, of how it trembled each time the woodchuck came out of its burrow to see if it was ready to eat!

Be well - Farmer Matt

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Savory Stuffed Winter Squash
Green Beans with Lemon & Pine Nuts 

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #17

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of September 21st

VEGETABLE SHARE

Attention Wednesday share members: The sweet potatoes harvested for Wednesday deliveries have cosmetic pitting and scarring on the skin. We have culled out the really bad ones.  The inside flesh is perfectly fine, but you will need to peel some areas of the skin. We have included an extra 1/2 to 1 pound of potatoes to make up for this problem.  For some odd reason this only occurred in this one place in the field.

Rosemary or Thyme - 1 bunch 
Red Beets or Chioggia Beets - 1 bunch - Finally some gorgeous beets! Seems like it's been forever since our early beets were harvested.
Long Green Peppers - 3 pieces  
Green Bell Pepper - 1 piece 
Slender Green Beans - .3 lb bag - We are just starting to pick from a beautiful planting. We assumed there would be quite a lot of beans for this week, but the quick shift to cool nighttime temperatures has really slowed their growth.  So you may receive smaller quantities over a longer period of time, but if the weather warms we should be able to get a bigger harvest soon.  Remember that these beans are a labor of love! It takes 4 people more than 9 hours to handpick the beans for our Tuesday and Wednesday deliveries- even with the light amounts we are giving out! And handpicking beans is no fun, as it requires a significant amount of time crawling on the ground. It is rare to eat a handpicked green bean these days. Most green beans are picked with machine harvesters, which is much faster. We just don’t grow enough beans to justify buying one. Maybe someday!
Sweet Potatoes - 2 lbs - These sweet potatoes are right out of the ground and should be eaten pretty soon.  They are kind of mellow tasting right now before they are cured- not overly sweet, but gentle and nutty.  The harvest this week is comprised of smaller sized sweet potatoes than you will get in a few weeks from now, and smaller than what you usually see in the store.  They taste just as good as larger ones. We will have a lot more sweet potatoes coming your way in the following months. See our season update below for more info on this crop.  
Zucchini - 1 piece
Cherry Tomato - 1 pint 
Toscano, Red or Green Kale - 1 bunch
Baby Romaine Lettuce - 1 bunch - Tuesday ONLY 
Broccoli - Wednesday & Thursday ONLY 

FRUIT SHARE
1 bag mixed Bosc Pears & Apples - Bosc pears are ripe when they turn an even brown color. They are still firm when ripe!  Refrigerate immediately when ripe.  If left to soften, they will be rotten when you cut them open, so be careful!

Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

LETTER FROM YOUR FARMER - SEASON UPDATE - PART 2

...Picking up where we left off last week with our seasonal crop update...

Peppers and Eggplants - Well, last year was a great year for these crops, and this year was not. Both peppers and eggplants love heat and this was a pretty cool-mild season, especially early on in June and July when they grow rapidly and set their fruit. Even though we cultivated and hand weeded a couple times, conditions were pretty wet for the first 2 months of their lives out in the field and the weeds flourished. Many farms grow these crops on top of black plastic, which heats up the soil and speeds up the crop. We choose not to use this plastic because we think it creates unnecessary waste at the end of the season when it's pulled up and thrown away.  (There is a biodegradable version that we tried a few years back, but it is not certified for use in organic production, so we were forced to stop using it.)  

Our eggplants have been especially lousy this year with very little fruit on the plants. For the first time ever, our crops were struck by lightning during one of several extreme thunderstorms that passed right over the farm earlier this summer.  Shortly after one of these we noticed two circular dead spots in our eggplant patch, each about 50 feet in diameter. The weeds eventually came back but the eggplant did not.

The peppers did not get hit by lightning, but have taken a very long time to ripen.  We have been giving out a small amount of green peppers but leaving many on the plant to turn red, orange or yellow.  Unfortunately, many of the green peppers are developing decay spots on their slow turn to becoming colorful peppers.  The nighttime temperatures are also cooler than usual for this time of year and the peppers are stubbornly resisting changing color.  We are probably going to start picking many more green ones and giving them out if the nights stay cold. 

Sweet potatoes - There was a time in June when we thought the sweet potatoes would never be planted. And it was truly by great luck that they made it into the ground! We have to use Certified Organic sweet potato slips which are not very easy to find.  Ours are purchased from a farm in North Carolina and are shipped up here to the farm. Sweet potato slips are grown by putting seed sweet potatoes in soil beds with or without heat depending on the climate. When the slips are the right size, they are plucked out, crammed into boxes and sent to us.  Scheduling the sweet potatoes slips delivery was very tough this year because they are very perishable and should be planted right away after they arrive. We needed to have dry conditions, the beds all prepped to plant, and the slips there just at just the right time. The planting date kept being postponed due to all the rain and it was nearing the end of the planting window for sweet potatoes on Long Island. The slips were shipped on Monday, and luckily they were dropped off early at 2:00 in the afternoon on Wednesday, June 17.  Rain was forecast for the next umpteen days so this was our last chance.  We had 26,000 slips to plant before dark and somehow they all made it into the ground. And then it rained a lot! And they all began to grow a few days later.

It has required a huge effort to keep the sweet potatoes weeded this year!  Several thousands of dollars of hand weeding labor was needed to keep the crop weed free, as it was too wet for many weeks to access the fields with our cultivating machinery. It’s all been worth it, however, as the crop is beautiful and is yielding well. Next up is the curing process! In order to store sweet potatoes for any amount of time they need to be cured. Curing requires 85 degree temperatures and 85% humidity for about a week. This heals over any wounds from harvesting and prevents infection. After the curing process is completed, the sweet potatoes can be stored at 60 degrees for a very long time.

More next week on Winter Squash, beans, lettuce, maybe more...

Be well - Farmer Matt

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Honey Roasted Sweet Potatoes
Roasted Beet Salad with Oranges and Beet Greens 

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #16

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of September 14th

VEGETABLE SHARE

Cell Phone! - 1 piece - Holly thinks she may have dropped her cell phone in one of the CSA boxes going out today.  If you find it, please call us at 631-722-3302.  Thank you!!!!!
Baby Arugula
- 1 bag
Cilantro or Dill - 1 bunch
Peppers - 1-2 pieces - if you happen to get a small red one, check to see if it’s hot before cooking or handling with kids!
Red Kale - 1 bunch - This is the beginning of our fall greens of which there will be many more to come.  Be sure to remove the hard stems before cooking.  I usually just rip the leaves off the center stem, which gets tossed in the compost.
Zucchini – 1 piece - Almost the end of the season!
Tomatoes* - 1-2 pieces -  The tomato ripening has come to a halt with the cool weather this past week, so we have a very limited number to send out.  Each week we send out everything we have harvested that is ripe for the week, so the volume you receive directly relates to the daytime and nighttime temperatures.  Have no fear- this is not the end of the tomatoes! 
Cherry Tomatoes - 1 pint
Garlic – 1 head - The garlic has been carefully graded *twice* to prevent any garlic that has internal breakdown from going out in the boxes.  Occasionally it’s impossible to tell from looking at the outside, so if you get a bad garlic by some chance, please let us know!
Watermelon - 1 piece 
Cantaloupe Melon - 1 piece - Tues & Wed ONLY - Picking melons is very tricky, so we've been very careful to pick ones that are just right-- but please let us know if you get a "dud".  
Green Beans -or- Beets - 1 bunch or bag - Thursday ONLY  

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.  Also be sure to ripen completely on the counter before eating!  They should be a deep red and slightly soft to the touch.

FRUIT SHARE
Tuesday - 1 bag mixed Bosc Pears & Apples - Bosc pears are ripe when they turn an even brown color. They are still firm when ripe!  Refrigerate immediately when ripe.  If left to soften, they will be rotten when you cut them open, so be careful!

Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

LETTER FROM YOUR FARMER - SEASON UPDATE - PART 1

Greetings!

At long last, your farm season update! After starting to put down my thoughts last night, I realized just how much information I have to share with you, so this will be Part 1 of several installments I'll write over the next few weeks.  

Our plantings are almost finished here at the farm, with only a couple plantings of baby greens, radishes, and spinach left to seed.  And of course, garlic!  Garlic is planted between mid-October and early November - whenever we have time - to be harvested next July. We also have a lot of cover cropping to do to protect and enrich the soil throughout the winter and into late spring.  We seed various plants after our crops are finished in a field.  Hairy vetch, rye, triticale, oats, crimson clover, and red clover are some of the cover crops we plant on our farm. 

So… things would seem to be slowing down at the farm, and to a certain extent, that is true.  The intensity of our field preparation, our planting, cultivating, irrigating and mental overload is definitely slowing.  We can be somewhat happy that the season so far has not been the disaster that it looked like it was destined to become back in July. And we can always do what many farmers love more than anything- dream about next year! But not quite yet…because there is so much stuff to harvest!  We have 11 more weeks of the 2009 CSA season and lots of good veggies coming your way, as long as the weather cooperates!

This is a great time to do a season and crop update to let all of you know the inside scoop about our farming season and some details of the state of our crops. Kind of like a State of Our (Your) Crops Address.  Sounds like fun! Well here it goes...  This not intended to depress anybody, but more importantly to connect you to your food and to enrich your experience with locally produced food.  After all, as a CSA member you directly experience the events of the season.

This year has been full of complication.  At this stage of farming, there is not much that can really wreck our season except really bad weather.  And for the most part, that means rain.  Rain and continuously wet conditions can not only destroy crops, but for a CSA farm where weekly succession plantings are integral to the program, it turns most plans upside down. Parts of June and almost all of July brought all of our very complex planting and seeding schedules to a standstill.  While the rain was not hurting our spring planted greens and other crops which were harvested through June and July, it became impossible to get very much planted or to cultivate many of our crops. June is a big month for us to plant many of our large acreage one planting crops like winter squash, sweet potatoes, late tomatoes, melons, watermelons, as well as other multiple planting crops like beans, lettuce, carrots, beets, broccoli, cabbage etc.  We had so few days to plant and weed during these 2 months that it became a nightmare of scrambling to do a couple weeks work in a couple of days.  Every small opportunity to plant or cultivate or prep fields became frenzied, marathon days from before dawn 'till after dark.  And as usual, the crops had to be picked, the boxes made up and all the rest of the normal farm functions went on as usual.  The planting schedule became, “what are most important crops that we can get planted as fast as possible, as soon as we have a chance”.  This is not normal for us.  While we are always working and modifying our plans around the weather, this year we were really not given a chance.  We just had to wait, all the while frustration building, until the ground was able to be planted.  This lasted for weeks at some points.  To most people lots of rain is just annoying or an inconvenience, but to farmers excessive rain and wet air conditions can spell disaster.  We are lucky on Long Island to have soils that drain well, and we have nice raised beds that keep all the crops above any standing water.  We rarely have standing water in our fields for more than an hour or two after heavy rains, but if the soil is saturated we cannot till and plant because it destroys the soil and the plants won’t grow very well- if at all.

So now everybody wants to know how their crops are doing!  Well, not too badly in general.  But specifically, here is our crop update.  This week I'll talk about Tomatoes and Potatoes.  Next week I'll address our other crops out there in the fields...

Tomatoes -  Many of you have learned about late blight this year.  It was here very early and caught many people off guard, including us in the beginning.  It’s easy to think, "Oh, it won’t happen here!”, until you know better.  Anyway, we were the second documented farm on Long Island, maybe in the northeast, to get late blight on one variety of potatoes.  (More about that in the potato section).  So then we started to take things seriously.  Luckily, it was early enough to get ready for the tomato battle to come.  Organic farmers don’t like spraying very much, but there wasn’t much of a choice if we wanted to give out any tomatoes in our CSA this year.  Basically, we had a new job, which somehow we were supposed to find time for in amongst everything else to do.  We’re on our 3rd method of spraying the tomatoes and after buying and borrowing the right equipment we now have the ultimate tomato spraying setup!  A super mini tractor fits down between the tomato rows with a little 50 gallon air blast sprayer attached to the back.  It provides excellent coverage of all the leaves and fruit with a very fine mist that doesn’t go all over the place. For organic farmers, the only way to prevent late blight currently is to have copper coating the plant before it becomes infected.  The leaves, fruit and stem can become affected.  If the weather is right, a beautiful field can turn black and die really quickly. No fun after spending many thousands of dollars on growing, staking, and tying a planting!  We have been successful with our first planting so far.  We're not out of the woods yet, however.  Our second planting of tomatoes was not sprayed at all during most of August when we were working on various sprayers and waiting for parts.  The weather was really great- sunny, warm, and barely any signs of blight.  Then, a couple of dewey mornings and one rain and it took off again! It was all sitting there just waiting for the right conditions. Luckily the new setup was working and the spraying continues in earnest.  The second planting is looking pretty good, so we hope it will continue.

Potatoes - Well, there are a decent amount of not very big, but very good looking and delicious potatoes this year.  They are not too big because it was so wet and we were so busy we couldn’t find time to spray to get rid of the potato beetles that arrive in the early summer.  We sprayed them 2 weeks late and by then they were no longer small larvae and were consuming potato leaves as fast as they could eat! Most of the beautiful 6 acre leafy field of potatoes looked like potato stick plants with all the leaves eaten in a matter of days.  But not all was lost because the plants had grown enough to produce some beautiful tubers, although smaller than normal.  And the best thing was, we didn’t get late blight on most of the potatoes because there was no live tissue to become infected.  The potato beetles did us a great favor after all! As I said before, we did get late blight on one variety, which we promptly flail mowed down so there would be no live tissue.  Some of these potatoes have already been given out in CSA shares so they can be cooked and eaten. They look great.  There will not be the same quantity of potatoes in the share as last year, but they are better looking spuds!  

...More to come next week about our successful sweet potato and bean crops and more!  

Be well, and remember, you are what you eat!  - Farmer Matt

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Sesame Kale Salad
Kale Chips 

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #15

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of September 7th

VEGETABLE SHARE
1 head Batavian Lettuce (Tues)
1 small Red Watermelon (Wed)
1 container Raspberries or Blackberries (Thurs)
1 bunch Basil
1 bunch Dill
1 pc. Rosa Bianca Eggplant
1 pint Cherry Tomatoes
1 pc. Zucchini
1 lb. Fingerling Potatoes (Tues & Wed)
2-3 lb. Red Tomatoes
1 small Cantaloupe Melon (Tues & Wed)
1 lb. Fingerling Potatoes or Cantaloupe Melon (Thurs)

Excellent new small variety that we're trying out this year.  So far the ones we've tasted have been great! Picking melons is very tricky, so we've been very careful to pick ones that are just right-- but please let us know if you get a "dud".  

FRUIT SHARE**
Tuesday - 1 bag mixed Peaches/Apples and 1 bag Damson Plums - Make jam this week with these special plums! Recipe link here
Wednesday & Thursday - 1 bag Peaches and 1 bag Apples

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.  Also be sure to ripen completely on the counter before eating!  They should be a deep red and slightly soft to the touch.

**Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

BOX NOTES

The fingerling potatoes have the most fantastic flavor and texture.  We made fingerling home fries over the weekend with shallots that were to die for!

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Fresh Tomato Sauce
Ratatouille

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

Guest User
CSA Week #14

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of August 31st

VEGETABLE SHARE
1/2 lb. bag Lettuce Mix -or- 1 head Batavian Lettuce
1 bunch Parsley -or- Rosemary -or- Thyme
3 pc. Shallots
2 pc. Cucumbers (Tues & Wed)
1/2 pint Raspberries or Blackberries (Thurs)
3-4 pc. Zucchini
4-5 lb. Red Tomatoes
1 pint Cherry Tomatoes 
1 small Cantaloupe Melon (Thurs) - Excellent new small variety that we're trying out this year.  So far the ones we've tasted have been great!  Picking melons is very tricky, so we've been very careful to pick ones that are just right-- but please let us know if you get a "dud".  Tuesday and Wednesday groups will get melon next week as they're just starting to ripen.

FRUIT SHARE**
1 bag mixed Peaches/Nectarines 1 bag Apples 
1
container Raspberries (Wed ONLY - Replacement for moldy berries last week.  The fruit farmer apologizes for the inconvenience.)

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.  Also be sure to ripen completely on the counter before eating!  They should be a deep red and slightly soft to the touch.

**Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

BOX NOTES
The tomatoes are in!  Most organic farms in the Northeast have lost their entire tomato crop this season due to late blight, so we should all be very thankful that we have plenty to go around.  You can thank your very diligent farmers, Matt and James, for their careful monitoring and preventative actions that made this year's tomato harvest possible. 

Shallots!  These have been in the works for several years, and they're finally coming through very well this season on a trial basis.  Shallots are not onions, but they are part of the Allium species.  They have a mildly sweet onion flavor that some say also has hints of garlic.  I like to use shallots in dressings and in place of onions in delicately flavored dishes.  Let us know what you think!  Should we grow more of them for next year's share?  

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Baked Cherry Tomatoes with Parmesan Topping
Cucumber "Noodle" Ginger Salad

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.

 

 

 

Guest User
CSA Week #13

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of August 24th

VEGETABLE SHARE
1 bunch Arugula (Tues & Wed)
1 bunch Purslane (Thurs)
1 bunch Baby Basil Tips
1 piece Green Bell Pepper
2 pieces Green Long Peppers
1 piece Eggplant (Rosa Bianco or Black)
9-10 pieces Zucchini 
1 piece Cucumber (Thurs)
2-3 pieces Tomatoes*
1 pint Cherry Tomatoes (Tues & Wed)
1 half pint Blackberries or Raspberries or Cherry Tomatoes (Thurs)
1 head Garlic 

FRUIT SHARE**
1 bag
Peaches 1 bag Apples (Tues)
1 bag Mixed Tree Fruit & 1 container Raspberries (Wed)

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.  Also be sure to ripen completely on the counter before eating!  They should be a deep red and slightly soft to the touch.

**Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

BOX NOTES
This is the first harvest of basil for the season, so we've picked just the tender tips of the plant. It's a small bunch, but basil packs a lot of flavor into its leaves.  There will be much more to come for making pesto and other basil recipes over the next few weeks.  
The long green peppers are supposed to be sweet, but in past years we've found that one or two may be hot, so please check first before cooking with children. 

LETTER FROM YOUR FARMER 

Hi Members-- It’s a zucchini bonanza!!  We know that 10 zucchini might challenge everybody’s creative cooking skills, but the bounty of the harvest is what is so exiting about CSA. We have a beautiful new planting of zucchini that just matured and we are harvesting about 1,000 pounds a day!  Since it must be picked daily, that means we're taking in 7,000 - 8,000 pounds a week-- And it’s all coming to you!  This will probably continue for a couple of weeks and then begin to abate.  And by then you will be so happy to see them go.

Amazingly, we missed all of the rain that surrounded us over the last few days.  Even though we could have used a nice soaking rain, we’re fine with it.  After this past June and July with almost nonstop rain, we could not be happier to see dusty farm roads, feel the intensity of the sun, and irrigate constantly. It feels like things are back to normal when the irrigation engines are running most of the time and any vegetation that is not irrigated starts to wilt in the hot sun and soon dehydrate completely.  One of the unique things about farming on Long Island is that much of the rain that comes to the east coast from the west in the summer never makes it out to us on the North Fork. 

All the heat and humidity last week was very unpleasant to most people, but it gets crops to ripen quickly.  The tomatoes are finally coming in relatively well, almost in full swing but not quite.  Between good weather and our extra attention we’ve managed to keep the infamous late blight from causing much harm, so far.  It even managed to infiltrate our high tunnel and affect a few of our tomato plants.   It is something we will have to deal with for the rest of the tomato season, so stay tuned.  -- Farmer Matt


We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Sicilian Eggplant Stuffed with Garlic & Cheese
Fettuccine with Zucchini, Arugula, Basil and Lemon

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.  

 

 

Guest User
CSA Week #12

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of August 17th

VEGETABLE SHARE
Yukon Gold or Keuka Gold Potatoes - 2 lb. bag (All Days)
Yellow Onions - 2 pieces (All Days )
Long Green Peppers - 2 pieces (All Days)
Green Bell Peppers - 1 piece (All Days)
Red Tomato* - 1 large or 2 small (Tuesday & Wednesday) - 2 lb (Thursday)
Zucchini  - 2 pieces (All Days)
Baby Arugula - 1 bag (All Days)
Asian Eggplant - 1 piece  (Tuesday)
Cherry Tomatoes -
 1 pint (Wednesday & Thursday) 

FRUIT SHARE**
1 bag UFO 
Peaches (Tuesday  & Wednesday)
1 bag White Peach & Nectarine Mix  (Wednesday & Thursday)
1 container Raspberries (Tuesday)
1 bag Ginger Gold Apples (Thursday) 

*The tomatoes have been sprayed with copper as a preventative for late blight fungus.  This spray is certified for use in organic production and is harmless to humans, but must be washed off before eating.

**Be sure to remove fruit from plastic bags immediately when you get them home.  They can ripen out on the counter or in a paper bag.  Store ripe fruit in the fridge.  

BOX NOTES
The long green peppers are supposed to be sweet, but in past years we've found that one or two may be hot, so please check first before cooking with children. Tomatoes are coming in slowly but they're looking great! Arugula is super baby sized and oh-so-tender!  

FARM NOTES
This hot sunny weather is just what the farmers ordered!  Our eggplants, tomatoes and peppers are thriving under these perfect summer conditions, so you'll be seeing lots more of them in your box in the coming weeks. We finished seeding all the late fall root crops last week and now we're trying to keep up with irrigating the fields.  It's very important to irrigate newly seeded crops so that they germinate properly!  

This week we have some visitors at the farm who are putting together a cookbook that will feature the Golden Earthworm Farm as well as a few other CSA farms from around the country.  The book will be written by Janet Fletcher and photographed by Sara Remington, both of whom are here this week to document the farm and all our busy activities!  The book will be published next year, and is a collaborative project with Sur la Table.  We'll definitely let you know when it becomes available!

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Zucchini with Garlic and Crushed Red Pepper
Baba Ghanoush 

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Guest User
CSA Week #11

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of August 10th

THE SHARE WILL DEFINITELY CHANGE FOR EACH DAY OF DELIVERY THIS WEEK.  Please check back for daily updates!

THURSDAY VEGETABLE SHARE
Red Onions - 3 pieces
Green Peppers - long and bell varieties - 3 pieces
Zucchini - 1 piece
Parsley - 1 bunch
Beets - 1 bunch
Swiss Chard - 1 bunch
Purple Potatoes - 2lb. bag
Surprise Veg! 

FRUIT SHARE
1 bag UFO
Peaches

BOX NOTES
The long green peppers are supposed to be sweet, but in past years we've found that one or two may be hot, so please check first before cooking with children. 

FARM NOTES
Where are the tomatoes?  Well, we're about 10 days behind schedule due to the cool June and July weather. Some of the tomatoes are starting to ripen, but it's a slow process.  As long as our plants hold out and we are able to keep the late blight in check, we'll have lots of tomatoes and other summer crops coming soon! 

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Onion Tart

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.  

 

 

 

 

 

Guest User
CSA Week #10

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of August 3rd

Contents of the share may change depending on your delivery day.  Please check back for daily updates!

THURSDAY VEGETABLE SHARE
Green Cabbage1 head
Garlic1 head
Zucchini & Summer Squash - 1 piece
Onion - 1 piece
Green Romaine Lettuce - 1 head
Red Batavian Lettuce - 1 head
Swiss Chard1 bunch
Red Norland, Purple or Yukon Gold Potatoes - 2lb. bag AND 1 quart 

FRUIT SHARE
1 container Blueberries
1 bag 
Peaches 

FARM NOTES
Your newsletter writer has come down with a bad cold, so she's staying in bed for the meantime and will be back with more news from the farm next week!

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Simple Classic Coleslaw
Sesame Kale Salad

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Guest User
CSA Week #9

THIS WEEK IN THE BOX - week of July 27th

VEGETABLE SHARE
Purslane - 1 bunch - *See note below
Green Beans - 1 bag
Lettuce Mix - 1 bag unwashed
Zucchini & Summer Squash - 2 pieces
Cucumbers - 1 or 2 pieces
Green Romaine Lettuce - 1 head
Green Crisp Lettuce - 1 head
Cipollini Onions or Scallions - 1 bunch
Parsley - 1 bunch 
Broccoli - 2-3 pieces for Tuesday & Wednesday only
Red Norland Potatoes - 1 bag

FRUIT SHARE
1 container Blueberries
1 container Blackberries
1 bag
Peaches 

PRODUCE NOTES
You can thank the weather for a rather full box this week!  We were hoping that the thunderstorms would not hit us Sunday night and Monday so we could start our potato harvest, and it just happened to work out perfectly! The Red Norland variety of potatoes you'll find in your box are one of the most stunning varieties we grow because of their beautiful red skin tone. These are best steamed or boiled.  Try this week's potato recipe or if you still have your collards from last week, try last week's collards and potato salad recipe for dinner tonight!

Purslane?  Purslane is a wild green, meaning that it grows wild on our farm, and in many gardens and farms in our area. Can you believe that purslane contains more Omega-3 fatty acids (alpha-linolenic acid in particular) than any other leafy vegetable plant? Purslane has a lemony, salty flavor and can be eaten raw in salads or cooked like spinach. 

Lots of Lettuce!  We have a double planting of lettuce coming in now- just in time for this hot and humid week ahead. Take this perfect opportunity to turn salad into a quick, cool and refreshing dinner with the addition of some potatoes, grilled zucchini, and for the carnivore in some of us, grilled meat sliced on top. I think you can turn the entire box into enough salad meals for the remainder of the week!  

Cooking in the Heat  This time of year I love to cook in the morning before it gets too hot, and stock the fridge with delicious vegetable salads to plop on a plate for a quick lunch or dinner with minimal effort! This week I'm making a green bean salad, a grilled zucchini salad,  some quick pickled cucumbers and a rich potato salad to get us through the next few days. Oh yes, and maybe a chilled zucchini soup with purslane.  

ON THE FARM
We're still playing catch-up around here. The on-again, off-again rain pattern has created a logistical nightmare for us in terms of getting anything planted or cultivated on time, but we're doing our very best. We've also spotted a few cases of late blight on our tomatoes, but we continue our organic interventions to prevent further infestation and are keeping a very watchful eye. This humid weather with pop-up thunderstorms is the worst type of weather for late blight, as fungus loves to grow and spread under these wet conditions. We'll definitely keep you posted!

FRUIT SHARES are now in full swing!
Please remember that fruit shares are housed in separate RED crates.  Only members with FRUIT listed after their name may take the fruit share.  We only send enough for the members who have paid separately for the fruit, so please double check the list.  Thank you!

We welcome you to explore our website to learn more about our farm and the wonderful things you can do with your weekly share. You may find our PRODUCE STORAGE TIPS page useful in figuring out how to maximize the life of your veggies, and our RECIPE section to search for ways to cook up your box! And maybe you need help identifying a particular mystery vegetable? Try our CROP GUIDE.

THIS WEEK'S RECIPE SUGGESTIONS

Purslane Salad
Red Potatoes with Feta, Olives and Mint

More recipes for all the week's produce can be found here on our RECIPES page.  

 

Guest User