Monday, June 19, 2023

BGF NEWS - June 20, 2023 - VOL. 50, NO. 3

In this week’s box:


Beets: Cylindra
Baby Choi
Fennel
Garlic Scapes
Green Garlic
Head Lettuce, assorted varieties
Purslane
Sugar Snap Peas  

Snow Peas
Summer Squash: 8 Ball, Golden Glory, Slik Pik, Zephyr


and perhaps one of the following: (please see **NOTE after "A Little Detail..." below)
Broccoli: Gypsy
Cauliflower: Song (Japanese cauliflower)

Herb It! option: will start in a couple weeks as the annual herbs mature
Bread Share: Apple Bread

Featured Recipes:
Chinese Purslane Stir-fry

What’s up on the farm?

Precipitation in the past week: 0.45"

Well, technically we got our wish this week, it did rain. We got a little less than 1/2 inch between Saturday and Sunday. It was a lovely sight, but unfortunately just a "drop in the bucket" as the saying goes and we were back to playing round robin with the irrigation that day. 

We spent much of the past week in the tomato plot. Installing posts for trellising, pruning plants and putting in the first couple of rounds of trellising twine. This system is commonly called Florida Weave and it allows us to manage and harvest the plants more easily that using tomato cages. It does take more time and effort to install and manage than cages. We put in more than 250 tall steel posts to provide the structure and then by the end of the season will use about 32,000 feet of twine. However the plants have better airflow (less disease potential), are easier to harvest and much easier to manage for pest control and we don't have to store 700+ cages over the winter!

You won't be surprised to read that the balance of our week was filled with irrigating, cultivating, harvesting, a bit of hand weeding, clearing spent crops and transplanting head lettuce #6.

Harvesting time is increasing as we are now picking peas and summer squashes every other day. The high tunnel cucumbers will be added to that list later this week. Just one variety is producing right now and it will be a couple of weeks before the rest join in, but hopefully there will be many cucumbers in the not-to-distant future!

We are SO pleased with the photos that members have been submitting for the weekly "Show US Your Veg" photo contest! Thank you to everyone who has shared a pic and/or who have posted recipes/cooking ideas on the Community page. We love to see your ideas and meals! Keep up the great work!

A little detail on your produce this week:

Beets: Cut off greens, leaving an inch of stem. Refrigerate the unwashed greens in a closed plastic bag and use with your chard mix as beets and chard are closely related. Store the beet roots, unwashed, with the rootlets (or “tails”) attached, in a plastic bag in the crisper bin of your refrigerator. They will keep for several weeks, but their sweetness diminishes with time. Just before cooking, scrub beets well and remove any scraggly leaves and rootlets. If your recipe calls for raw beets, peel them with a knife or vegetable peeler, then grate or cut according to your needs baby/young beets usually don't need to be peeled.

Broccoli/Cauliflower: Wrap loosely in a plastic bag and keep it in the vegetable bin of your refrigerator for up to a week. Immediately before cooking, soak head down, in cold, salted water (1 teaspoon salt to a 8 cups of water) for 5 minutes. Any [organic] critters will float to the top where you can rescue them or allow them to suffer a salty death. (Note: If soaked in salt water before storing, it will become too rubbery and wilted to enjoy.) Slice the juicy, edible stems and use them wherever florets are called for. Peel particularly thick skin before using.

Fennel: Cut off the stalks where they emerge from the bulb. To use the feathery foliage as an herb, place the dry stalks upright in a glass filled with two inches of water, cover the glass loosely with a plastic bag, and store in the refrigerator for up to five days. The unwashed bulb will keep in a plastic bag in the refrigerator for at least a week. To use, remove any damaged spots or layers. Cut the bulb in half lengthwise and check the inner core. If it’s tough, remove it with a paring knife. Fennel should be washed carefully, because dirt can lodge between the layers of the bulb. Chop or mince the leaves.

Garlic Scapes: One of our favorite crops of the year. These curly green things are the emerging flower stalk from a hardneck garlic plant. We remove them to redirect more of the plant's energy into the bulb, but it also provides us with a delightful fresh garlic treat. These keep very well in a plastic bag in your produce drawer and can be used in any recipe calling for garlic. They would be perfect in last week's garlic salt recipe, make a great pesto and can be minced and added to room-temperature butter, which is then stored in log shape, in the freezer for a last minute dollop of goodness for vegetables, breads or meat.

Green Garlic: This is freshly harvested garlic that hasn't had time to cure yet. You will notice that the wrappers are soft and the garlic itself is very juicy. You can use it in any recipe calling for garlic. The flavor is so fresh and green that we like to use them in recipes that really highlight the flavor, like pesto or garlic butter.Store loosely wrapped in the refrigerator for best keeping quality.

Peas: We grow snow peas (flat pod with little bumps showing immature peas inside) and sugar snap peas (rounded pods with mature peas inside). Both have edible pods and can be used interchangeably in recipes. They are particularly good in stir-fries and salads, though we tend to eat them fresh as a snack. Peas keep best in their plastic container in the produce drawer of your refrigerator.

Purslane: This succulent plant is a valued green in many parts of the world, though here in the US, it is mostly known as an invasive weed. It is rich in vitamin E, vitamin C and beta carotene, and quite high in protein. Most noteworthy of all, it is considered a better source of essential omega-3 fatty acids than any other leafy plant. Enjoy raw or cooked in any recipe calling for greens, it is also ideal for juicing and green smoothies. Makes a terrific replacement for lettuce on tacos. Store in a paper towel (or cloth)-lined plastic bag in your crisper drawer and use within a week.


Summer Squash/Zucchini: Refrigerate unwashed zucchini and summer squash for up to a week and a half in a perforated plastic bag or in a sealed plastic container lined with a kitchen towel. These do not need to be peeled to use, just slice them up and go!

A few other details: All of your GREENS will keep best if stored in a plastic bag, with the top folded over and placed in the produce drawer of your refrigerator.

** NOTE: You will notice over the course of the season that some box contents listed above say "Perhaps one of the following..." These are items that we can’t harvest in sufficient quantities for the whole CSA to receive at one time. We do track who gets what and we will do our best to ensure that everyone eventually receives each item. On some items this may take several weeks, so please be patient.

Is a weekly newsletter not enough for you? Do you want to read more about our life on the farm and see more pictures? Follow us on Facebook at Blue Gate Farm or on Instagram at bluegatefarmfresh. CSA members can also connect with other BGF members to share recipes or ask questions on our FB community page at Blue Gate Farm Community.

That's about it for now.
If you have any questions or comments, be sure to let us know.

Best from the farm,
Jill & Sean (and the whole BGF crew)


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