fall CSA, week 6 (and final)

- Turk's turban squash (I'm just copying what the manifest called it...)
- 5 Rome apples
- 6 potatoes
- 6 rainbow carrots
- 2 heads garlic
- large yellow onion
- tomatillo salsa
- whole spelt flour
Anticipated but not present: watermelon radish. (Drat! Those are nice, and I've never seen them at the grocery store.)
They suggest that Rome apples are best for cooking. I've been doing baked apples a lot; maybe I'll make a cobbler with these ones.
Does anybody have suggestions for breads using spelt? I am particularly interested in recipes that work in a bread machine and ones for quick breads (which I would make in the oven). The CSA linked to a recipe for a blueberry/lemon quick bread, which sounds interesting except that it calls for several ingredients I would not otherwise buy. If I were to try that one, what do flaxseed meal and coconut sugar contribute to the result (chemically, flavor, baking properties, etc) and what can I safely substitute for them?
This was the last week of the fall share. I was looking forward to the winter share; that's when I started last year and we got a lot of great produce, including several things that were new to me. I learned that radishes come in more than two varieties (red and daikon)! And the baby turnips were great, and I cooked with rutabagas for the first time! Alas, they cancelled the winter share this year for a combination of supply issues and low subscription volume. I've heard good things about Imperfect Produce but they don't serve my city; a (remote) coworker recently mentioned Misfits, which apparently does, so I might give that a try. But for the locals, I'm also interested in hearing where I might shop for local produce, particularly things that Giant Eagle doesn't carry. Connect me with those radishes, parsnips, and baby turnips, please!

no subject
Thanks for the tips on baking with spelt. I'd like to find a bread recipe that uses it (or, really, anything non-dessert), so knowing that it's similar to whole wheat helps.