Entries in cheese (2)

Tuesday
06Oct2009

Farm Cooking: Bluebird Grain Farms 

Fall Farro Salad with Beets, Beet Greens, and Feta
by Martha Rose Shulman, published in the New York Times

1 cup farro, soaked for one hour in water to cover & drained
2 medium-sized cooked beets, plus their leaves
salt, preferably kosher salt, to taste
2 tablespoons sherry vinegar
1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar
1 small garlic clove, minced or pureed
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil (may substitute 1 to 2 tablespoons walnut oil for 1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil)
1/2 cup broken walnut pieces
2 ounces feta or goat cheese, crumbled (more if desired for garnish)*
1/4 cup chopped fresh herbs, such as parsley, tarragon, marjoram, chives, mint

1. Bring 2 quarts water to a boil in a medium saucepan. Fill a bowl with ice water. When the water comes to a boil, add salt to taste and the greens. Blanch for two minutes, and transfer to the ice water. Allow to cool for a few minutes, then drain and squeeze out excess water. Chop coarsely and set aside.

2. Bring the water back to a boil, and add the farro. Reduce the heat, cover and simmer 45 minutes, stirring from time to time, or until the farro is tender. Remove from the heat and allow the grains to swell in the cooking water for 10 minutes, then drain.

3. While the farro is cooking, make the vinaigrette. Whisk together the vinegars, salt, garlic and mustard. Whisk in the oil(s). Add to the farro. Peel and dice the beets and add, along with the beet greens, feta or goat cheese, herbs and walnuts.  Toss together, and serve warm or room temperature with a little more cheese sprinkled over the top if you wish.

*Try Larkhaven Farm’s Whitestone Feta

 

Farro with Sausage and Apples

1 cup whole-grain Emmer Farro
3/4 cup bulk pork sausage (about 3 oz.) or pork sausages, casings removed
Butter or olive oil (if needed)
4 ½ cups fat-skimmed chicken broth
1 cup finely chopped parsley
1 Fuji apple (8 oz.)
2 tablespoons lemon juice
Salt and pepper

1. Sort farro, discarding straw like bits of hulls and other debris. Pour farro into a bowl, cover completely with cool water, stir, and skim off and discard any additional hulls that float to the surface. Drain farro.

2. In a 5- to 6-quart pan over high heat, crumble sausage with a spoon and stir often until browned, about 5 minutes. Spoon out and discard all but 1 tablespoon fat or, if necessary, add butter to equal 1 tablespoon fat in pan. Add farro to sausage in pan and stir until grains are dried, about 2 minutes.

3. Add broth and bring to a boil, then reduce heat, cover pan, and simmer (mixture foams, so check and stir occasionally to keep it from boiling over) until farro is tender to bite and no longer tastes starchy, about 50 minutes. Stir in parsley, cover, remove from heat, and let stand 10 minutes.

4. Meanwhile, peel and core apple; cut into about 1/4-inch dice and mix with lemon juice. Stir into farro, season to taste with salt and pepper, and pour into a bowl to serve.

Tuesday
23Jun2009

Food with a Face: Clare Paris and Sam Howell, Larkhaven Farmstead Cheese, Tonasket, WA

Guy and I are not the only ones crazy enough to try and make a living off the land.  Clare Paris and Sam Howell are doing it with style.  On their remote ranch outside Tonasket, WA, they are making some of the finest cheeses I have tasted in a long time.  We had the pleasure of touring their homey and efficient raw milk dairy and cheese room last fall.

Clare first got into gardening and cheesemaking as a way to provide good, healthy food for her own children.  Now her children have grown up and moved on, and the herd and the operation has grown to about 30 goats and 30 sheep.  Clare and Sam began with the goal of developing a sustainable and healthy lifestyle for their family, and along the way began to feel a responsibility to the community that supported that lifestyle.  “We both feel so committed to this place,” she says. “This is where our hearts are, and we wanted to come up with a way that a family can make a living on a small farm out here.”  Thankfully for us they’ve come up with not only a way to make a living, but also a way to make truly superb cheese!