Entries in fall (2)

Friday
13Nov2009

Farm Cooking:  Squash

One crop we always seem to do well with on the farm is winter squash.  This year the squash has been particularly good, since we let it ripen longer on the vine than in 2008.  We grew a new variety of butternut that turned out to be huge–enough to feed a family for a week!  Our buttercup variety has been especially nice—it’s the green squash with the blue button end, simliar to the Japanese kabocha squash.  It has dense, sweet, fiberless flesh and small seed cavity.  And then of course you have the old standby acorn squash! 

There are numberless recipes that use squash—and any of these will do your Thanksgiving table proud.  Here's a few to get you started.

 

Aromatic Butternut Squash Soup
from “Cooking from the Heart” by Michael J. Rosen

4-5 lbs butternut squash (about half of one of Sunshine’s!)
3 medium carrots, cut into thirds
2 medium red onions, thinly sliced
10 cups chicken or strong vegetable stock
6 Tbsp. unsalted butter
¼ cup plus 2 Tbsp. packed dark brown sugar
½ teaspoon ground ginger
½ teaspoon ground mace
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
½ cup fresh orange juice

Preheat oven to 350 F.  Place the squash halves, skin side down, in a shallow roasting pan.  Arrange the carrots and onions around the squash and pour 2 cups of broth into the pan.  Place 1½ Tbsp. each of butter and brown sugar in the center cavities of each squash half.  Cover the pan with foil.  Bake for 2 hours.  Uncover squash, and cool slightly. Scoop the squash pulp into a large heavy pan and discard skin.  Add the carrots, onions and cooking liquid from the roasting pan.  Add the remaining 8 cups of broth, as well as the ginger, mace, and salt and pepper to taste.  Bring to a boil, lower the heat, and simmer, partially covered, for 20 minutes.  

Cool the soup slightly and puree, either with a submersible hand blender or in small batches in a food processor or blender.  Return the puree to the pot and stir in the orange juice, taste and adjust the seasonings.  

 

Maple-Ginger Baked Acorn Squash
from “Starting with Ingredients:  Quintessential Recipes for the Way We Really Cook”

3 acorn squash
½ cup maple syrup
3 Tbsp. unsalted butter
2-inch section of ginger, peeled and grated
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Prick the acorn squash 2 to 3 times (to prevent from exploding), then microwave on high for 3 minutes.  Split squash in half and, using a large metal spoon, scrape out and discard seeds.  

Preheat the oven to 350 F.  Meanwhile, in the bowl of a food processor, combine maple syrup, butter, ginger, salt and pepper and process until creamy.  Divide maple-butter equally and spoon into the cavity of the acorn squash halves.  Arrange the acorn squash in a tightly fitting baking dish and bake 45 minutes, or until lightly browned and soft when pierced with a skewer.  

 

Buttercup Squash Quinoa Salad
from  the Hope for Healing blog
www.glutenfreehope.blogspot.com

1 medium yellow onion
1 Tbsp. of olive oil
1 cup dried quinoa
2 cups water
1 Tbsp. tamari or soy sauce
2 cups of diced, baked buttercup squash (dice squash, lay on cookie sheet and bake at 400 F for 1 hour, let cool and peel off skin)
1 cup of finely chopped fresh kale
1 cup of finely chopped fresh spinach
2-3 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar
1 Tbsp. maple syrup
½ cup of freshly chopped parsley
½ cup toasted walnuts/almonds
½ cup dried cranberries/cherries (optional)
Salt and pepper


Sautee onions in a little bit of olive oil in a medium saucepan.  Add 1 cup of dry quinoa and toast up for a few minutes before adding the water.  After 2-3 minutes add 2 cups of water and 1 Tbsp. tamari sauce.  Cook until to a boil, turn down to simmer and let cook for 15-20 minutes until there is no water left and there are air holes in the pot of cooked quinoa.  Set aside and let cool.  

In another frying pan, add 1 Tbsp. of olive oil to the bottom of the pan and place diced squash (already baked) in pan to warm up and fry.  After a few minutes of toasting the squash add the kale and spinach, slightly wilting the greens.  

In a large mixing bowl add the cooled quinoa mix, and the butternut squash and greens mix.  Toss in the vinegar, maple syrup and toasted nuts and berries.  Lastly, thoroughly mix in the parsley.


Friday
13Nov2009

Field Report

We’ve been blessed with plenty of good, sunny working days this fall.  The first week of November brought our final harvest days in the orchard.  After starting with cherries in July and moving through all those lovely peaches, nectarines, and apples, we finally reached the last piece of fruit to harvest:  the Pink Lady apple.  A few years back, I grafted a row over to the Pink Lady and have been really pleased with the apple.  I love it sweet-tangy flavor and its ever-present crunch.  We picked enough to sell them through the winter, so if you need apples, don’t hesitate to drop us a line.  This past season we were enjoying Pink Lady apples on our morning porridge all the way into June, so yes, it’s a good keeper!

Harvest hasn’t quite wrapped up in the veggie fields yet.  We are still harvesting collards, kale, cabbage, carrots, broccoli, and parsnips from outside.  We are even still getting some salad mix and head lettuce from our outside beds—those beds we have protected with row cover to mitigate the cold a bit.  And then there’s our high tunnel.Walking inside our high tunnel is like walking into spring—you open the door and your nostrils fill with the warm, fresh scent of active soil and greens growing.  In the morning, the condensation falls from the poly-film ceiling like a gentle rain.  Beets, spinach, lettuces, broccoli, kohlrabi, collards and kale—all so lush and verdant you feel like you’re in a different land.  We’ll start harvesting these greens when the ones outside are spent.

And who’s enjoying all these crops?  The lucky few members of our winter CSA are still picking up weekly boxes of food.  And we’re still selling plenty on the weekends when the market is open.  Campbell’s restaurant is still making arugula salad with our greens.  Holden Village is also enjoying some of our squash and carrots. 

Jesse puts up fence on our new, expanded goat pen above the market.November also means time to get to work on the projects we don’t have time for during the season.  So far these have included:  Expanding the parking at the market for easier access for RV’s and trailers;  moving our goat pen up the hill and expanding it six-fold (the new baby goats next year are going to love that!); and getting to work on some videos!   Our retail manager Scott was a broadcasting major in college and we’re taking advantage of his skills.  Check out new videos on planting garlic and cider pressing!