cellio: (Default)
2022-10-06 02:18 pm
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ugly CSA week 12 (final)

The final week of the 412 Rescue Ugly CSA:

  • 1 spaghetti squash
  • 1 large cucumber
  • 5 medium-large yams
  • 1 large tomato
  • 8 Bosc pears
  • 3 heads garlic

Weight: about 10.5 pounds.

Definitely all stuff I can use! Winter squashes and root veggies are my favorite season.

The end-of-season survey included a question about interest in a winter share. Winter shares are uncommon, but the one my previous CSA did (before they shut it down) was very nice. I'd be happy to join one this year.

cellio: (Default)
2022-09-29 11:06 pm
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ugly CSA week 11

  • 1 large green cabbage
  • 1 large bunch kale
  • 2 medium-large tomatoes
  • 1 butternut squash
  • 4 Crimson Crisp apples
  • a dozen small red potatoes

Weight: about 10.5 pounds.

Yay, more squash!

The cabbage weighs about 4 pounds. Some of it will become cabbage soup (beef). Some will probably become coleslaw. That won't account for all of it unless I make a big batch of soup and freeze some. Which I might.

I hadn't heard of that apple variety before. The wisdom of the Internet suggests it's a good one to eat straight and doesn't talk about cooking with it. I can do that.

The folks running the CSA have kindly agreed to an alternate pickup day for those of us who can't pick up next Wednesday, Yom Kippur. Good; I was hoping to not have to miss the final share.

cellio: (Default)
2022-09-22 05:35 pm
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ugly CSA week 10

  • 2 bell peppers, 1 medium green and 1 very large half-orange (hoping it'll keep going)
  • 1 zucchino
  • 1 large acorn squash
  • 1 medium red onion
  • 8 medium Bartlet pears
  • 7 medium-large Macintosh? apples

Weight: about 9 pounds.

I like fall squashes -- butternut, acorn, delicata, all good! I would be happy to get more of those. (And I wouldn't say no to more onions; a singleton surprised me a little.)

The manifest said Macintosh apples. Most images I found are redder than these, but maybe that's an effect of when they were picked.

Last week's apples were very good as apple crisp. I might do more of that, or make applesauce, or maybe it's time to dry some. (I like dried fruit, but last time I made it I had a working dehydrator. Time to learn how to do that in an oven.)

cellio: (Default)
2022-09-14 05:57 pm
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ugly CSA week 9

  • large head leaf lettuce (email said red leaf but this is green, so not sure what variety it is)
  • 12 medium (on average) Yukon gold potatoes
  • 1 enormous tomato (more than a pound!)
  • 2 medium red beets
  • 10 medium-large carrots, about 2.5 pounds
  • about half a pound of green beans

About 7.5 pounds.

I roast root vegetables a lot when they're in season, so that's easy. (Some are in the oven now for tonight's dinner.) The tomato needs time to ripen, but I have some other tomatoes to go into salads with the lettuce. There might be some carrot-raisin salad. There might also be stew, though that's usually for colder weather than we have at the moment.

cellio: (Default)
2022-09-07 07:44 pm
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ugly CSA week 8

  • a bunch of kale
  • 5 Ginger Gold apples (they're more green than gold)
  • 4 medium yams (the perfect size to have one of as a side dish)
  • 12 banana peppers, mostly large, in various stages from green-yellow to almost-complete red
  • 1 cucumber
  • 1 head garlic

8.5 pounds.

Last week I said I hoped the balance between fruit and veggies would shift some; this week it sure did. (That's good, because I still have pears and apples from last week.) That's a lot of banana peppers, so I'm going to pickle some tonight and then distribute the rest among various meals (stuffed, on pizza or in pasta, not sure what else). Some of the kale and one of the peppers went into a curry tonight along with other veggies and some Thai basil that desperately needed to be pruned.

cellio: (Default)
2022-08-31 10:15 pm
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ugly CSA week 7

Fruit is good, but I do hope the balance shifts a little more toward the vegetable end of the spectrum next week! (For this purpose, we can count tomatoes as vegetables.)

  • 3 small and 3 medium Bartlet pears
  • 5 Gala apples
  • 3 nectarines (not yet ripe)
  • 1 large tomato
  • 2 medium green peppers (here's hoping they'll ripen)
  • 1 head of romaine lettuce

Weight: about five pounds.

I also harvested my second red pepper tonight. (It was delicious in a stir-fry.) There are eight more full-grown ones on the plant in various stages in the journey from green to red. I lost one in a storm. For a long time it's looked like that was going to be it -- 11 peppers -- but in the last few days some new ones have started. I count seven, and there might be an eighth in a hard-to-see place. They're in the rapid-growth phase, so it should become clear soon. Nice -- a second round!

cellio: (Default)
2022-08-24 04:50 pm
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ugly CSA week 6

  • 3 ears corn
  • 2 largish tomatoes
  • 1 large red onion
  • 1 large zucchini (zucchinus?)
  • 2 peaches
  • 9 Bartlett pears

Total weight about 7.5 pounds.

Two peaches aren't enough to make cobbler; we'll just have to eat them straight, or grilled -- so not a hardship! That's a lot of pears; I should look for a pie recipe or make pearsauce, maybe. (Are Bartletts good in pies? I think I've usually baked with Bosc, though I don't have a ton of experience either way.)

cellio: (Default)
2022-08-17 07:37 pm
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ugly CSA "week 5"

Earlier this summer I found out about 412 Food Rescue, a local non-profit that tries to mitigate food waste by collecting what would otherwise be thrown away (e.g. by caterers) and distributing it to people in need. That's a worthy cause on its own and they'll go onto my year-end-donations list, but I also noticed that they run an "ugly CSA" -- food that local farmers can't sell to grocery stores. (They note that there is non-ugly produce too; it's a CSA, working with local farms, but they'll explicitly take the unsellable stuff first.) It was too late to join this year's, but I signed up for the waiting list for next year.

A couple weeks ago I got email that there were new spots in this year's and would I like to join for the rest of the season? Why yes, I said; this is an easy way to check it out at a slightly lower cost, and then I can decide about next year. Their site says to expect 10-15 pounds of fresh fruits and veggies each week.

Today was my first share. It included:
- a pound of green beans
- one giant tomato (about 12oz)
- three large ears of corn (had some tonight - tasty!)
- one large cucumber
- three nectarines
- one large and two humongous green bell peppers (oh well - can't win 'em all)

The humongous peppers weigh about a pound each, so while I didn't weigh the entire bag, this probably isn't far off from the low end of the predicted volume.

The peppers I'm growing are finally starting to turn red, so in a few more days I should be able to use a home-grown red pepper and the smallest green pepper to make stuffed peppers for us. (He doesn't mind green peppers; I do.) We had two of the ears of corn tonight and we'll split the other one soon. Aside from the remaining green peppers, I know things I can do with all of this.

cellio: (Default)
2020-05-24 08:15 pm
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this is how it begins

Last year one of my spring CSA boxes included a cute little basil seedling. And I said "huh -- I wonder if I can help it make more basil or if I should just recognize my ineptitude and eat it now". But lo! I decided to be daring, and I was rewarded -- that picture is from July, and it it just kept going and going (with periodic trimmings, a subject I still consider black magic). And I said to myself that hey, we should try that again. I entered this spring with plans to buy a basil seedling.

Then the pandemic happened, and the food-supply network is not as reliable as it once seemed, and [personal profile] siderea wisely counselled people to grow food if we can. And I said to myself that, well, I'm not going to try to plant a whole garden with attendant kneeling-on-ground (or in my case pavement) and weed-battling and the like (and anyway I don't have places with the right sun exposure), but I can expand from one pot. I ventured out to buy two seedlings, basil and rosemary, and one more pot because I only had the one.

But herbs, while delicious, aren't really food in the sense of sustenance, so I thought some more about what I use a lot of and what is practical in pots and durable enough to withstand my ministrations, and so when Grow Pittsburgh (the people who supplied that basil seedling to the CSA) started its weekly seedling sale and one week I was able to get stuff (as opposed to everything being sold out in the first few minutes), I decided to add cherry tomatoes and lunchbox peppers (those are the miniature ones that come in red, orange, and yellow) to my plans. And because my basil seedling that I'd had for a few weeks now was not looking super-perky and the basil had been the whole point of this excursion, I ordered a couple more basil seedlings, and a little redundancy for the others (for parity). I ordered a couple more pots from Amazon to hold them.

Once they were in proper pots and getting more quality outdoor time they started to perk up, and the Internet told me that I was overcrowding some of them. And, well, this is how it begins.

photographic evidence )

cellio: (Default)
2019-11-14 10:43 pm
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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!

cellio: (Default)
2019-11-06 09:02 pm
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fall CSA, week 5

  • 7 poblano (?) peppers
  • rhubarb preserves
  • butternut squash
  • head green cabbage
  • delicata squash
  • 5 stayman winesap apples
  • 5 red potatoes
  • 7 rainbow carrots (most medium-large)
  • 1 red onion

The email said we'd be getting poblano peppers, which I'm used to being less long and skinny. These smell like they could be poblanos. Is this just a variant form (it's not like I've seen tons of these, after all)? If not, what are they?

Dani would like cabbage soup. The last time I went to the elves Google for a recipe, he thought it was ok but wasn't what he is used to as cabbage soup. He couldn't really articulate it, though. If there is such a thing as a canonical eastern-European-Jewish cabbage soup, please enlighten me.

The preserves were listed as "a surprise valued-added item". I wondered if this were a way for them to solve a "misc" problem (having assorted stuff but not enough of any one thing to list it). Perhaps it was, but everybody at my pickup location got the same preserves. These ones are good on toast.

cellio: (Default)
2019-11-03 09:13 pm
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fall CSA, weeks 3 and 4

Things have been hectic, so here's a belated post covering two weeks.

Week 3:

  • 5 carrots (1 white)
  • 5 yellow onions
  • 5 empire apples
  • butternut squash
  • head napa cabbage
  • small acorn (?) squash
  • bunch arugula
  • 11 small red potatoes
  • jar tomatillo salsa (last-minute substitution for maple syrup)

Week 4:

  • large acorn squash
  • head purple cabbage
  • bunch green kale
  • 3 red peppers (I don't know if the darker one is a different variety or if that's just normal color variation)
  • 5 yellow onions
  • 2 heads garlic
  • delicata squash
  • 5 roma apples
  • green tomato relish

The salsa and relish both appear to have a fair bit of liquid content. Suggestions on what they're best used for?

The napa cabbage mostly went into stir-fries; I'm not sure what I'll use the purple cabbage for. (That's a lot of coleslaw, but I don't know if I really want to make sauerkraut.) The squashes have been accumulating in my squash cellar (ok, bin on the basement landing, where it's cool and dark but accessible), from which I fairly regularly pull one to bake stuffed with apples. Much of this is staples, and well-timed; I was almost out of both onions and garlic.

Unfortunately the winter share got cancelled this year. I haven't yet looked for local alternatives. The winter share last year was my introduction to a CSA, and I particularly liked a lot of the winter produce, some of which I'd never seen before (i.e. is not in the local grocery store). I'm thinking particularly of the different types of radishes, and also baby turnips.

cellio: (Default)
2019-10-17 10:41 pm
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fall CSA, week 2

  • large bulb fennel (with fronds)
  • pie pumpkin
  • large bag green curly kale
  • head escarole
  • white eggplant
  • acorn squash
  • 8 carrots (3 large, 5 small)
  • 7 red carmen peppers
  • 5 D'Anjou pears
  • 1 enormous sweet potato

The escarole never even made it to the fridge; it went into a pot of risotto last night (yum!).

I'm not actually a big fan of pumpkin pie. I might roast it, or maybe it can be the basis of a soup (like butternut-squash soup, but with pumpkin). I'm definitely open to suggestions!

I'm not familiar with this type of pepper. One went into the beef stew I made tonight (for Shabbat lunch), along with some carrots and a turnip left over from last week. They're large enough to stuff.

Clearly it is time to do some baking with pears. And I need to find a field guide to pear varieties, so I know which types are best for what applications. So far, all of 'em have been good for eating raw.

cellio: (Default)
2019-10-10 09:51 pm
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fall CSA, week 1

The fall share is weekly for six weeks. This is the standard box.

  • large bunch white turnips with greens
  • 1 red onion
  • 2 "sun tan" bell peppers
  • bunch Japanese garlic chives
  • bunch basil
  • head hydroponic lettuce
  • bag green beans
  • 1 white acorn squash
  • 4 d'Anjou pears
  • 9 mini peppers
  • 6 fingerling sweet potatoes

I don't know what "sun tan" bell peppers are. One is green; the other is mostly green but has a red patch. Do they taste like green bell peppers or something else?

I've never had a white squash before. Is this just aesthetics or is there something different about how it tastes?

I'm glad to have more sweet potatoes! Also turnips, though I'm particularly looking forward to the baby turnips we got last winter. So tender! We had the turnip greens tonight, sauteed in sesame oil with shallots. (I think the dish wanted garlic too -- note for next time.)

One of the pears has a small bruise, which just means I should eat that one first. I can manage that. :-)

cellio: (Default)
2019-09-25 09:35 pm
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summer CSA, week 17

  • large heirloom tomato
  • sweet potato
  • fairytale eggplant (I've never heard that name before)
  • bunch of white turnips with greens
  • green bell pepper
  • large acorn squash
  • 7 McIntosh apples
  • 6 Bartlet pears
  • 4 assorted mild peppers, to be identified
  • bunch parsley

The preview email said the pepper medley would include green peppers, no-heat jalapenos, cubanelles, and poblanos. I'm not sure which of these peppers are which. The one that looks like a green bell pepper doesn't smell like one and makes me think poblano. The pictures I found of cubanelles are various colors, with the only green being light green -- don't know if that's what I've got there. Anybody who can help with pepper identification, please speak up. :-)

I sometimes stuff acorn squash with apples; I might try pears for a change. I'll roast the turnips, maybe with a mustard sauce. I sauteed the greens tonight with ginger, shallot, and red and yellow mini-peppers from the last share. The eggplant will be all for me because Dani hates eggplant; I might bread and fry it.

cellio: (Default)
2019-09-11 08:20 pm
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summer CSA, week 15

  • 1 bulb fennel with fronds
  • 2 bulbs garlic
  • 1 honeydew
  • 4 ears sweet corn
  • 2 green bell peppers
  • 8 mini peppers ("snack peppers") (yellow, red, orange)
  • 4 bartlett pears
  • 5 roma tomatoes
  • 1 bunch red radishes with greens

Small share got: fennel, roma tomatoes, pears, corn, white potatoes, shallots, "semi-hot block peppers" (?).

I've roasted some of the past corn and made corn fritters with some (making kind of a mess of the "remove raw corn from ears" part). This week's email included a recipe (warning: site full of invasive ads and crap) for Caribbean boiled corn on the cob that I might try. The recipe fails to mention when to add the coconut milk, but I think it's implied by the series of photos.

I might make pasta with roasted fennel and lemon with the fennel.

Alongside the share I got a bag of Japanese eggplant (because I've never had that kind and I like eggplant). That'll be for me; Dani hates eggplant. I can have eggplant while he's having whatever I do with the green peppers, which I don't like. I'll roast some of the eggplant and I invite other suggestions. These are the long, skinny ones.

cellio: (Default)
2019-08-28 07:57 pm
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summer CSA, week 13

  • 5 roma tomatoes
  • pint? assorted grape tomatoes
  • green beans
  • large red onion
  • 4 ears sweet corn
  • bunch red kale
  • 5 ginger gold apples
  • 6 yellow peaches
  • 9 hot banana peppers, one different :-)

(Small share got: red potatoes, roma tomatoes, kale, sweet corn, inferno banana peppers, blueberries, peaches.)

I thought banana peppers were, by definition, yellow or greenish-yellow. I don't know whether that singleton red pepper in the bag is also a banana pepper or if I got a sample of something else. I plan to pickle some of these (I've never done that); some might get stuffed with cheese and baked, and some might go onto a pizza.

My basil plant is still producing, though it's obviously in the final stretch, so that and some of the tomatoes will go into a salad with cheese. Roma tomatoes also work well sliced on top of baked whitefish (such as tilapia).

The corn from last time was very nice roasted. Maybe this time I'll cut some of it off the ears for a corn-based salad with some of the grape tomatoes.

The peaches from last time, by the way, were evenly divided between white and yellow, and made a very nice cobbler.

cellio: (Default)
2019-08-14 10:02 pm
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summer CSA, week 11

  • 1 giant leek
  • 4 ears sweet corn
  • 1 cantaloupe
  • small bunch parsley
  • cup or so of blueberries
  • 6 peaches
  • 2 small delicata squash
  • 2 heirloom tomatoes

(Small share got: corn, cherry tomatoes, blueberries, delicata squash, beans, and peaches.)

The manifest said "white or yellow peaches"; some of these look a little different on the outside than others, so I wonder if I got some of each. I'll know more when I cut or bite into them. :-)

When I saw both parsley and tomatoes on the list I though of tabbouleh, which they also suggested, and put bulgur wheat on the shopping list. This doesn't seem like enough parsley for that; I mean, yes, I could make a very small bowl of tabbouleh, or buy more parsley, but perhaps I'll use it in something else instead -- or maybe a tabbouleh-inspired salad with parsley, tomato, crumbled feta, cucumber, and a suitable dressing. (I have all that already.)

We haven't had fresh corn yet this season, so that will be a treat.

I've seen a few recipes using squash in things like curries or parmesan-crusted treatments, and none of them say to peel it first. Some have pictures that clearly show the peel present. Is the peel on this type of squash edible? It's not on butternut or spaghetti squash, but those are bigger.

I also got a few things on the side, which started because they were offering "seconds" of those delicious little watermelons from last time at a good price. (Then it was a matter of making the minimum order.) So I also have a pair of those, a bag of banana peppers (which I will stuff with something, not sure what yet), a bag of mixed carrots, and a bag of shallots.

cellio: (Default)
2019-08-01 07:12 pm
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summer CSA, week 9

  • small watermelon ("sweet beauty")
  • bunch large red beets, with greens
  • 4 green peppers
  • bag salanova lettuce
  • 4 yellow peaches
  • cup? blueberries
  • bag yellow beans
  • 3 zucchini
  • 1 yellow squash
  • 1 candy onion
  • bonus: jar rhubarb preserves

(Small share got: zucchini, blueberries, yellow beans, yellow peaches, canteloupe, leeks.)

There was a problem with the delivery yesterday and the driver couldn't get there before the hosting business closed. So they rescheduled for today, but I took today off from work for Pennsic prep, so they let me drop by their warehouse to pick it up this morning. When I got there the person tending the desk apologized again (hey, these things happen) and said my box contained some extras. The jar of preserves is definitely extra (wasn't in the email announcement); I don't know whether I also got more zucchini and/or peppers than I would have otherwise. (Those were loose while the peaches and beans were bagged, so I don't think they added to those.)

Peaches! Yay!

The emailed suggestions for the blueberries include blueberry-zucchini bread ("combine your blueberries with..."). I'm dubious. Blueberry muffins are good; zucchini bread is good; I don't really imagine those combining well. Blueberries go in cobbler, though I'll probably just eat these ones raw, perhaps in yogurt or cereal.

The first half of the watermelon was delicious.

Candy onions are new to me. This one is huge!

Dani observed that the dominant color of the farm-share box is getting yellower. Hey, I see representation from most of the rainbow there. :-)

Most of this will go to Pennsic with us.

cellio: (Default)
2019-07-19 06:26 pm
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summer CSA, week 7

  • bunch basil
  • bunch scallions
  • head red lettuce
  • head green cabbage
  • four large light-red beets (don't know what variety), with greens (edit: they turned out to be golden yellow inside)
  • bunch red kale
  • one fennel
  • one bulb garlic
  • half pint? blueberries
  • two zucchini

(Small share omitted lettuce and fennel. Both sizes were slated to get Roma beans but we didn't; I don't know if they did. Cabbage was not originally on our list but was for the small share. Garlic wasn't on either list.)

I was anticipating more blueberries and planning to make cobbler. Maybe I'll combine with peaches for that? I already got the vanilla ice cream that goes with cobbler. :-)

I haven't cooked with fennel before. What's the best way to use those delicate greens?