Sunday, August 26, 2012

CSA Week 10

Week 10 brought:
A head of lettuce, corn, basil, a mixed bunch of braising greens - kale, rainbow chard, bok choy, baby carrots, shallots, okra, tomatoes and peaches.

To start off, I've decided to start celebrating food holidays! Have you ever heard someone say "Hey, it's national s'mores day", or "Happy national doughnut day!" and wonder where the list of these days is kept? Well, thanks to The Kitchn, I found this website, which lists the food and drink you can celebrate on just about every day of the year. How 'official' it is, who knows? But I've taken note of the days I'd like to celebrate as a means of fun menu inspiration.

First up, last Sunday was both National Potato Day, and International Hot and Spicy Food Day. To celebrate, I found this mouth-watering recipe for spicy potato, bok choy and shallot hash at Serious Eats.

Heat the main ingredients in a skillet, and top with a fried egg and plenty of sriracha and gochujang (Korean red pepper paste), it's a hot, fiery, homey hash. These two sauces will burn the fear out of you.

 Next, I used the lettuce and carrots to make a milder meal - a large salad that included fennel, borlotti beans and tofu with a mustard vinaigrette and a side of local fresh bread.

 I'm running out of ideas for using up corn! I decided to try vegan corn chowder, which turned out sweet and delicious, with homemade croutons and I paired it with the braised greens and more local bread. 

 Lastly, the tomatoes and basil went into a tofu and eggplant curry, and I stewed the okra in a tamarind sauce, both recipes from The Complete Curry Cookbook.

Looking forward to Week 11!

Saturday, August 25, 2012

CSA Week 9

Week 9 has come! The time seems to be flying by. What am I going to do after October when my CSA ends?! This week brought:
Peaches, tomatoes, a bunch of basil, corn, a head of lettuce, eggplant, onions and green peppers.

I've also made a habit of picking up fruit every week from the Noquochoke Orchards stand at the farmer's market, and this week they had monster-sized Granny Smiths. This green giant weighed 3/4 of a pound!

A quick trip to the store for some pantry staples, and the first dish I made was a simple pasta with tomato sauce. But most importantly, it was fresh tomato sauce based off of a recipe from Silverbrook. Tomatoes, basil, olive oil, garlic, balsamic vinegar and a touch of crushed red pepper. Combine and let sit. The taste of summer.

Next I got a bit more complicated with coconut-crusted tofu with peach lemongrass salsa (via Eating Well), and an accompanying salad of lettuce, cucumber, edamame and mushrooms in a soy ginger dressing. Both dishes were delicious and I'd love to make the tofu and salsa again.

Another two dish dinner was next, with ginger-miso glazed eggplant (via Bon Appetit) paired with chilled crab and corn salad (via Martha Stewart). The eggplant was rich and savory, and went well with the cold crunch of the corn salad, which included onions and extra basil.

Last but not least, I made black rice salad with mango and peanuts, which I had been drooling over after seeing it in a recent issue of Bon Appetit.

Needing to use my green peppers, I stuffed them with the salad, which ended up working very well. I'd never had black (or forbidden) rice before, but it is very sweet, chewy and nutty, almost to the point where, if eaten alone, it is too rich to eat very much. But combining the salad with the fresh, crunchy peppers helped balance the taste.

To close, I wanted to share this hilarious clip from a recent Simpsons episode which featured a song about food blogging. (The episode also included a cameo by Anthony Bourdain. What's not to love?)


Until next time.

Monday, August 13, 2012

CSA Week 8

Week 8 brought:


More purple basil, leeks, a head of lettuce, 3 ears of corn, 2 green peppers, 2 tomatoes, 1 zucchini, and 4 peaches. I also bought a bunch of golden beets, a beautiful array of hot peppers, apples, plums and 2 lemon cukes.

What is a lemon cuke? I was wondering that myself, so I bought two. They are plain old cucumbers on the inside, but they are round and yellow like lemons. A great farmer's market find.

The cukes and lettuce went into bowls of bun, a cold Vietnamese noodle dish that's one of our favorites (see recipe in sidebar).

 Next, I made sure to use the purple basil as soon as possible. I made pesto for the first time, using this great recipe for a vegan version. It didn't come out black as I had thought, which was a plus.

The pesto went into a delectable batch of pesto risotto with roasted zucchini from the great vegan recipe site Post Punk Kitchen.

Next came a failed attempt at beet salad. I cleaned the beets and wrapped them in foil, then baked them for an hour at 425 degrees, as instructed in various beet recipes, only to find out when the hour was up, that my toaster oven hadn't maintained the heat for the full amount of time. The beets were still hard as rocks and there was no way I was cooking them for another hour. Discouraged, I tossed the beets and made a wacky whatever-I-can-find salad out of lettuce, garlic sauteed beet greens and Trader Joe's vegetable pakoras (Indian vegetable fritter balls) to replace the beets. With a mustard vinaigrette and almonds, it was...unique. I served it with salmon in an onion-parsley butter sauce. Not the best meal we've had.

Last but not least, the green and hot peppers went into curried shrimp with coconut milk. Much to my surprise, one of the green peppers had a little spider living inside - that's how you know it's farm fresh! I also used a chayote for the first time, an awesome squash that looks like this. I also had thought up until this point that the leeks I had recieved in my share were scallions. (It's kind of hard to distinguish between a skinny leek and a scallion without cutting them.) When I began cleaning and chopping them for a garnish, I thought something was differnt, and it took GP and I awhile to agree that they were leeks. This led to the term 'sneaky leeks'. (A food industry version of WikiLeaks?) In the end, the shrimp were great.


We gifted the corn and remaining leeks to GP's parents, and I snacked on the fruit and tomatoes.

Week 9, here I come!

Sunday, August 12, 2012

CSA Week 7

Week 7, and we have:

Onions, 3 ears of corn, a head of lettuce, a bunch of purple basil (!), kale, 2 peppers, 1 cucumber, and baby  pattypan squash. The treat of the week was blueberries, but I already have over a pint frozen from last week, so I gave them to my office as a communal treat. 

First of all, purple basil! I didn't even know basil had a purple variety! The bad part: like last week's lettuce, it went bad before I got around to using it. I was going to make a pesto with it (though in retrospect, the pesto would have been black, maybe a blessing in disguise), but I've now learned my lesson - that a bunch of cut basil needs to be eaten pretty much immediately.

I started out making a massive taco salad using the lettuce, onions, corn and peppers, and adding tomatoes, pinto beans, jalapenos, cheese and tortilla chips. This fed us throughout the week and was incredibly tasty.

 More salad! I also picked up green beans and scallions at the farmer's market to make smitten kitchen's pesto potato salad with green beans. As previously mentioned, my pesto plans for the purple basil didn't pan out, so I dressed the potatoes and beans with scallions, herbs, vinegar, salt, pepper, garlic oil, almonds and parmesan cheese. The result was still yummy, even without the pesto! 

 After the salads, I got into a 'snacky' mood, and made kale chips and took my first stab a quick-pickling cucumbers, following this Japanese-style recipe from The Kitchn.

 Also in my snack mood, I made thumbprint jam cookies. Admittedly, I didn't use anything from my CSA this week, but the jam is from the farm that I received in past weeks.

Lastly, I used the squash in a delicious recipe I found for shrimp with squash in a butter parsley sauce.

On to week 8!

Sunday, August 5, 2012

CSA Week 6

Week 6. What's in store?
1 cucumber, 1 yellow squash, a bunch of basil, a head of lettuce, a bunch of kale, 4 ears of corn, onions, 2 purple peppers and the treat of the week: blueberries. I also bought a fennel bulb, cherry tomatoes and a bunch of cranberry beans separately.

It turned out to be a very 'beany' week. I started out making two veggie dishes: potatoes, green beans and corn in lemon brown butter sauce (courtesy of TheKitchn), and roasted squash and fennel with sage (courtesy of Eating Well - I swapped sage for the thyme). Both were sweet and earthy and complemented each other well.

Next, I went nuts with the cranberry beans, also called Borlotti beans. The beautiful pink and purple-speckled white pods contain even more beautiful pink and white beans. 

I first made a breakfast out of half the beans, following this recipe for warmed beans with onions, tomatoes and an egg. I garnished it with chopped basil and served it on a bed of brown rice. Definitely going to make this again!

The remainder of the beans went into a quick bean salad with corn, basil and a vinaigrette dressing.

The peppers, onions, remaining tomatoes, basil and kale went into one of my favorite one-pot vegan meals: Protein Power Goddess Bowls from the vegan blog Oh She Glows. You can eat this filling combo of grains and veggies hot or cold, and it's consistently flavorful and creamy thanks to a tahini-lemon dressing. 

As for the remainders: the cucumber went into a batch of our favorite cold soba noodles with wilted bok choy (see sidebar), the blueberries were frozen for as yet undetermined future use, and the lettuce unfortunately went bad before I could figure out what to do with it. Alas, the first casualty of my CSA! But what can you really do with lettuce besides salads or lettuce wraps?

I'll post next week's meals soon. I got another head of lettuce and put it to good use!