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Harvest Notes Week 14

10/21/2021

 
Picture
Edamame So yummy and simple to prepare! Remove the pods from the plant and discard the plant. Plop the pods in boiling water for a few minutes and, wallah! Remove from the water, salt, and then pop the green soybeans into your mouth. Edamame is a Japanese term for soybeans when they are in their fresh, green stage like the ones in your shares. They are protein packed!


Pointy Italian Sweet Peppers The large, pointy, red and/or yellow peppers in your share are sweet! They may look suspicious like they could be spicy but they actually have a delicious sweet flavor when roasted or eaten raw.


Cayenne The small, pointy red peppers, however, are quite spicy. These are cayenne hot peppers and they can be used fresh or dried.


Leeks These onion/scallion relatives are versatile. Cook them slowly to maximize flavor.


Peaches Peaches?!! We harvested these from a neighbor’s unsprayed orchard. If yours are a little firm, leave themon the counter for a day or two. If they are soft, eat them up or store in the fridge until you’re ready.


Rainbow Chard Toss in with eggs, soups, salads, curries, or stir-fries.


Cantaloupe These melons are so incredibly sweet! As with watermelons, there is some very careful discernment that happens in the field to determine which are ripe and ready to be picked. The process is usually successful but if you ever get a melon that isn’t yummy, please let us know! We’re happy to replace it for you and it’s just helpful for us to know.


Paste Tomatoes The narrow, oblong shaped tomatoes are often referred to as paste tomatoes or sauce tomatoes. They aren’t as juicy as slicing tomatoes and thus are more often used to make sauce since you don’t have to boil them down as long to get that concentrated tomato flavor. They are also often used for pico de gallo to get a firmer tester with less juice. That said, I make sauce out of slicing tomatoes all the time and salsa too and it’s all delicious! We grow two varieties of paste tomatoes, San Marzanos (a classic Italian type) and Speckled Roman (a gorgeous and delicious heirloom with golden stripes).


Slicing Tomatoes These are the round tomatoes in your share and are classically thought of as being suited for salads, sandwiches and, if you’re my seven year old, simply being sliced up and salted for raw consumption. Remember that there is a range of ripeness represented in your tomatoes so you can eat the ripest first and keep the less ripe ones on your counter top for a few days.



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  • THE CSA
    • CSA Details
    • Sliding Scale Pricing
    • What is a CSA?
  • The Farm
    • About the Farm >
      • About the Farm
      • Growing Practices
      • Composting
      • Cover Cropping
      • Agroforesty
      • Wildlife on the Farm
      • Reduced Tillage
      • Seedlings
      • Maple Syrup
      • Animals at Adamah
      • Onsite Composting Available
      • Equipment Rental
      • Jewish Farming FAQs
      • Eating Seasonally
  • Veggie Tips
    • Basil
    • Beets
    • Bok Choi
    • Broccoli
    • Cabbage
    • Carrots
    • Cauliflower
    • Celery
    • Chard
    • Cilantro
    • Collards
    • Cucamelons
    • Cucumber
    • Dill
    • Eggplant
    • Fennel
    • Garlic Scapes
    • Garlic
    • Green Beans
    • Green Onions
    • Hot Peppers
    • Kale
    • Kohlrabi
    • Leeks
    • Lemon Balm
    • Lettuce
    • Melons
    • Mint and Mountain Mint
    • Onions
    • Oregano
    • Parsley
    • Peas
    • Peppers
    • Potatoes
    • Radish
    • Sage
    • Salad Mix
    • Summer Squash
    • Tomatoes
    • Turnips
    • Winter Squash
  • Food Access Fund
  • After School Program
  • Contact
  • New Page