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(Fouke, Arkansas)
The Farmer's Market that comes to you.
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Slicing Tomatoes
Cherry tomatoes ’Black Cherry’
Eggplant
Apples 'Golden Delicious'
Rosemary
Sweet Basil
Baby Onions
Garlic
Potatoes
Bell peppers
Cucumber ‘Burpless’
Farm fresh eggs
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:08 PM CDT
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Slicing Tomatoes
Salad tomatoes – assorted, including ’Black Cherry’, ‘Sun Gold’, ‘Be My Baby’, and romas
Eggplant
Lemon Grass
Rosemary and Sweet Basil
Cabbage
Garlic
Potatoes ‘Kennebec’
Bell peppers
Cucumber ‘Burpless’
Farm fresh eggs
Lemongrass
Lemongrass is an ingredient in Thai and other Asian cooking. Lemongrass often flavors fish and chicken dishes and soups.
Lately there have been a few vendors at the farmer’s markets selling
Asian ingredients – they are providing much needed diversity in the
Texarkana food supply.
Here are some tips for using lemongrass from my online research. I will be trying this new seasoning along with all of you.
The useful part is the thick white end of the stalk. The rest of the
stalk and leaves can be tied in a bundle and added to soups as
seasoning or simply discarded.
The thick stalk can either be crushed and added whole for seasoning or minced and pureed and added as an ingredient to the dish.
To crush, split the stalk lengthwise and press with the flat of a knife
or any hard surface, such as the bottom of a heavy glass. You will
smell the fragrance being released. Add the whole crushed stalk to the
dish as it is cooking, and remove it before serving, as you would a bay
leaf..
To puree, cut the stalk into thin slices using a sharp knife, then
puree in a food processor or pound with a mortar and pestle. Then add
the resulting paste to your dish and allow at least 10 minutes cooking
time to soften the lemongrass fibers.
Look at thaifood.about.com for recipes or google “lemongrass” and a lot of recipes come up.
Have fun and enjoy!
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:07 PM CDT
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Slicing Tomatoes
Cherry tomatoes – assorted, including ‘Sun Gold’, ’Black Cherry’,
’Gold Nugget’, ‘Ruby Gold’, ‘Be My Baby’, red cherries and romas
Cantaloupe
Rosemary and Sweet Basil
Cabbage
Garlic
Potatoes ‘Yukon Gold’
Bell peppers
Farm fresh eggs
Baby onions
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:05 PM CDT
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Slicing Tomatoes
Cherry tomatoes – ‘Sun Gold’ and ‘Black Cherry’
Summer squash
Peaches ‘Loring’ and ‘Red Globe’
Rosemary ‘Tuscany’ and sweet basil
Cucumber ‘Burpless’
Garlic
Farm fresh eggs
Potatoes
Bell peppers
Green onions
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:04 PM CDT
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Tomatoes
Blackberries
Peaches ‘Harken’
Potatoes
Rosemary ‘Tuscany’
Garlic
Farm fresh eggs
Sweet Corn ‘G-90’
Green Beans ‘Kentucky Wonder’
OR
Sweet peppers – Bell and banana
If you did not get green beans this time, I will give you some next time – if they are still producing well.
I only have one row of green beans, and I had not intended them for
the veggie deliveries, only for my personal use. But they are growing
so prolifically that I thought I would share! However, they are hard
to pick, and I can only get enough at a time for half of the delivery
list.
I am hoping this works out! Next year I will plant more rows if I can come up with the trellising.
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:17 PM CDT
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Slicing Tomatoes and ‘Sun Gold’ Cherry tomatoes
Blackberries
Summer squash
Rosemary ‘Tuscany’ and basil
Cucumber
Garlic
Farm fresh eggs
Sweet Corn
Sweet and mild peppers – Bell, banana, and poblano
Baby red onions It is that time of year, tomato season, and that means it is time for the annual reissue of the Sunshine Tomato Salad recipe! Here it is:
For a platter salad, use slicing tomatoes and cut very thin. Lay in a single layer, and top with a drizzle of olive oil, salt to taste, finely minced garlic and fresh basil. Serve either chilled or room temp.
For a layered salad in a pretty clear glass container, do the same but stack the tomatoes with each layer dressed with the seasonings.
To use cherry tomatoes, just cut each one in half and dress with the seasonings. Serve as a side dish.
Leftovers (if there are any!) are wonderful on a sandwich.
If you lack fresh basil, just leave it out – the salad will still be delicious. Do not, under any circumstances, attempt to replace with dried basil!
About ‘Sun Gold’ tomatoes – these are an orange or gold color when ripe. They are the variety that is all the rage this year, and I think they are a winner.
I packed them in clamshell to prevent crushing in the bag, but they need ventilation, so open the shell as soon a possible. Conventional wisdom is to store tomatoes at room temp and not in the fridge, and I find that this is true. But these sugary little cherry tomatoes need to be eaten up rather promptly.
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 01:13 PM CDT
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 - rows of garlic in the winter garden
Sweet Onions
Baby Summer Squash – yellow crookneck and straightneck, gray and green zucchini, yellow zucchini ‘Gold Rush’
Carrots
Lettuce – mixed, washed whole leaves – red leaf, buttercrunch, oak leaf, and romaine
Radishes
Spring garlic
Farm fresh eggs
Blackberries and peaches??????
Normally by
this time we would be full on into blackberry season. My daughter’s
birthday is this week and I know that for eight birthdays there have
been blackberries and here is the ninth birthday, and no blackberries.
These early berries were damaged at the flower stage in a frost. There
will be berries soon when the later varieties come on.
The report
at the farmer’s market is that there is a half peach crop this year –
they aren’t in season yet, of course. Half is better than none! In
2007 there was a total loss, in 2008, a great crop, this year, 2009,
half. The life of a peach farmer is one of uncertainty.
Onions
The onions
in Fouke took a beating in the hail storm a few weeks ago. These
onions are delicious, but some have a soft core as a result of damage
to the stem. Keep them refrigerated and discard any soft parts. If we
were in pioneer days and growing onions to keep for our families
through the year, we would be going without this year. These soft
cored onions will not keep. I can imagine folks including onions in
every meal to get them all eaten up before they went bad, then going
months with no onions – an important seasoning ingredient for the bland
pioneer diet. No California or Georgia onions for them.
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 08:39 PM CDT
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 - New Potatoes
Spring onions
New potatoes – ‘Yukon Gold,’ and Red La Sota’
Kale
Edible pod peas – sugarsnap and snow peas
Cabbage
Spring garlic
Beets
Farm fresh eggs
Our first vegetable delivery of the 2009 season!
I might be getting started too early, because the bag feels a little
skimpy, but I will throw in something extra as soon as I can to make up
for it. I wanted to go ahead and get started because I have been
getting a lot of calls and questions about when I’ll be showing up with
veggies. But this is about 2 weeks earlier than we started last year.
Weather woes
Rain, rain,
and more rain. Oh, and let’s not forget hail. And a 3 day power
outage. And a little sunshine would be appreciated by my growing
plants. Although the rain event we have been experiencing these last
few weeks is over, the effects will linger. There is still standing
water in my garden. The bugs are tremendous in variety and quantity.
Most plants are growing through their tattered leaves and broken stems
sustained in the hail at the beginning of the rain onslaught. The
tomatoes and squash, for instance are pulling through and looking
good. Others either just didn’t make it at all, like the eggplant,
which was totally crushed and destroyed, and the onions, which are
alive but look terrible and won’t get any better.
Spring garlic
This is
like the soft-shelled crab of the garlic world. Peel off the outer
layer and inside is the developing head of garlic. The cloves are so
tender that you can just chop up the whole thing and use it – no
peeling.
This is a bit unorthodox, but we should enjoy this garlic while we
can. I am hoping that it continues to develop, but the soil is very
wet and the appearance of the plants is unfortunately declining. This
is so disappointing, because we tripled our garlic production for this
year based on positive feedback from last year’s crop. We planted in
the fall last year, it has been growing all winter and looking
beautiful, and now the leaves are yellowing and they should still be
growing vigorously. Too wet!
Looking forward to a great season!
Posted by Georgiaberry
@ 08:37 PM CDT
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