Ripening Weather

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Good Morning Folks,

Hope y'all are finding good ways to stay cool out there!  These 95 degree days are really only good for tomato and pepper ripening and that is exactly what I'm thinking about when we are struggling through the heat of the day.  Looking like we might be getting a little relief in the next few days with a 30-40% chance of afternoon showers.  The good folks at the National Weather Service are calling for heavy rain...just time for us to seed our winter carrots.  Most moisture is good for farmers this time of year but heavy rain can wash the tiny carrot seed away and cause our soil to crust.  We are keeping our fingers crossed for some gentler showers so that we can all enjoy sweet winter carrots in December. We are just starting to see the first heirloom tomatoes ripening in the hoop houses, so it won't be long now before we will all be reaping the rewards of the summer heat.  This week also marks the start of our big fall planting push which lasts for the next month or so. Fall broccoli, storage kohlrabi, napa cabbage, cauliflower, kale, and chard are all going in the ground this week and we will be prepping for weekly plantings of spinach, radishes, and turnips over the next few weeks.

Green Beans have made it to the market stand this week and they are tasty!  Hard to go wrong with these guys as they are a lovely side for just about any meal.  Fresh green beans are such a summer treat and why they are part of a strange Thanksgiving casserole still baffles me (apologies to anyone who holds this tradition near and dear, I total agree that it is tasty, just strange).  Grill some nice pork chops, steam some of these beans and serve with shallot butter.  Can't go wrong. We continue to enjoy the fruits of summer in our family and have been trying to think outside the box.  This weekend we made a raw cucumber salad with shaved fennel and sweet onions.  Tossed with a lemony dill dressing and it was quite a refreshing treat.  The New York Times Cooking site has some great ideas for zucchini which I am excited to try this week.  I love the easy recipes like zucchini with fettuccine and pine nuts or zucchini fritters with feta and yogurt sauce.  Someone mentioned something about Shaksuka, of which there appears to be many variations of.  I think I will try it eggplant and zucchini this weekend.

A couple of logistics, I know many of you have been wondering how many weeks we have left in the CSA and you will be happy to know that we are not even half way there yet!  Counting this week, we have 15 weeks left, plenty of time for cooking and enjoying summer and fall bounty.  The last day to use your accounts in October 28th.  After that, we will be starting our winter CSA program that is an super way to keep eating seasonally and locally all the way through March.  We have been gradually increasing our winter CSA every year and every year we sell out, so if you are interested in the awesomeness that is the winter program, be sure to sign up soon.  Winter info can be found on our website here

Looking forward to seeing you all real soon!

Katie


This Week's Harvest

Kale

Chard

Head Lettuce

Sweet Onion

Beets

Carrots

Green Beans

Cucumber

Zucchini and Summer Squash

Broccoli

Basil

Garlic

Give your Famers a high five today!

Inside the lettuce fortress: We planted our next succession of head lettuce and harvested our first succession of carrots today! See y'all at the market!

Inside the lettuce fortress: We planted our next succession of head lettuce and harvested our first succession of carrots today! See y'all at the market!

Good Morning Folks!

And what a good morning it is!  The cloud cover and cooler temps feel so luxurious this morning, I just want to swim around in it until my fingers get all pruney and hope that the feeling sticks with me when we are back in the 90s. It is just what we needed, a break from the heat and the grind of July. I say it every year, so why change now, July is tough for farmers.  It is the crux of the climb, the time when you get your grit.  The time when everything seems like it is going wrong and you are just putting out fires, hoping to make it to August harvest time.  The stress is tremendous and everyone is feeling to some degree "hissed" (our combination of hot and pissed).  Coolers can't keep up, irrigation pumps are breaking (because they are running around the clock), and the pest pressure is intense.  Luckily there is swimming.  I often think back to 2012 when there wasn't any swimming in July, when it was 103 degrees and the ash from the fires made the river black and uninviting...and I'm reminded that we'll get through it just fine.   BUT, if you are feeling up for it, give your farmers a high-five today and let them know they are doing a good job.  They deserve it!

Carrots are back on the farm this week and they should be here to stay for a while.  I probably don't need to talk too much about what to do with fresh carrots, but in case you what to spice them up a bit, make some delicious dipping sauce.  Andrea Bemis has a very simple recipe for garlic herb butter that she swears is great for dipping all veggies.  (butter, shockingly good). Why not ditch the ranch and chop up some fresh cucumbers, carrots, and turnips and let folks go nuts.  Walla Walla onions are ready this week.  These early sweet onions are super on the grill, but really make you want some onion rings.  Don't have a fry daddy? Yeah, we don't either, those things just make it too tempting to fry everything.  Instead, make a simple batter with beer and flour and do a light version on the stove, only a little oil needed.  If storing longer than a couple days, keep the Walla Walls in the fridge as they are a fresh onion that has not been cured and they will not do great on your counter.  Broccoli is back this week and we are overloaded.  We combined two plantings in May when it had been too wet to get into our fields and now we have a tsunami.  Please email me if you would like to get some bulk broccoli for freezing, it is 2.00 per lb for 10lb or more (normally $3.25 at the market).  Just let me know which market you would like to pick it up at and I will have it packed up and ready to go when you get there. 

Finally, I'm sure many of you have seen the gorgeous flower bouquets at the market stand this year.  Please feel free to pick some up and put them on your market accounts.  Olivia, our dedicated flower farmer has been working hard to bring you beautiful, organic flowers and we hope you will treat yourself.  (they are almost as good as swimming when it comes to vanquishing the July blues...although those blues might just be reserved for farmers).  She also does weddings and other special events, so feel free to spread the word!

See you all real soon!

Katie


 

This Week's Harvest

Kale

Collard

Chard

Head Lettuce

Basil

Eggplant

Broccoli

Beets

Cucumbers

Summer Squash Zucchini

Carrots

Sweet Onions

Garlic

The July "Lull"

Summer squash on full swing!

Summer squash on full swing!

Hello!

Your farmers have been busy irrigating, harvesting the season's garlic, weeding carrots, chilling doughnuts (yes, cold doughnuts go a long way on a Holiday) and finding the best secret swimming holes in town.  We are playing catch up on the farm this week as we have been running hard all June harvesting and moving food.  The July "lull" as we like to call it is upon us and we needed the harvesting break to catch up on some essentials.  The lull is the pause between spring and summer crops and this year is a little accentuated because of the strange weather roller coaster that we have had.  Things that are usually ready in July were ready in June!  Not to worry though, we should be back on track with the summer's bounty next week.

Cucumbers are starting to produce in earnest and there is nothing like a cool one with a little bit of salt to make you feel like summer is here.  They are a very refreshing vegetable that has a lot of versatility.  I love to make cucumber yogurt sauce with some fresh dill and slather it over some veggie gyros or zucchini latkes.  They make great salads with rice wine vinegar, sugar and some garlic or spring onions.  They are even great to just cut up and put in a cold jug of water, maybe with some mint...not bad on a 95 degree day. 

Good news for all you aubergine lovers out there.  We put them in a high tunnel this year and they have gone nuts with the heat.  This is certainly the earliest we have ever had them and it makes me think they will have a long, luxurious season.  We have both the Asian variety and the Italian variety this week so you can try them both.  I love to just slice them and salt them and put them on the grill. We got some rye bread at the market this weekend and I think there will be some eggplant paninis in my future.  Usually I reserve my fennel and eggplant pizza combination for September, but since we have both now, I can't see why I should wait.  

Last week for spinach until the fall.  Hoping to get another week out of it, but it really hates the heat. More broccoli coming soon as well as carrots and beans and possibly some new potatoes.  Lots to look forward to!

See you all real soon!

Katie

 


This Week's Harvest

Kale

Collards

Chard

Spinach

Grilling Onions

Beets

Salad Turnips

Basil

Zucchini and Summer Squash

Cucumbers

Asian and Italian Eggplant

Head Lettuce

Happy Summer!

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Greetings Folks!

Happy Summer!  With highs soaring into the mid-nineties this past week, it sure does feel like summer and its time for your farmers to beat the heat...in more ways than one.  After a hot morning on the farm, there is nothing better than a lunch time wallow in the cold mountain water of the Poudre River.  With only a 12 hour travel time from the top of Cameron pass, the water will take your breath away and leave you feeling as crisp and perky as a chilled kale bunch.  Ok, bad farmer joke, but I swear that is what you feel like.  Then its time to do some serious cooling on the farm.  To keep things like head lettuce and broccoli from going to seed, farmer Nic has to double down on the evaporative cooling which actually works for farmers too.  A wet long sleeve shirt goes a long way on a hot afternoon.  Aside from trying to stay cool, your farmers have been busy harvesting like crazy.  For some reason, our vegetables are behaving some what like the weather this year...unexpectedly.  Some things are early, some things are late and some things are just surprising.  Either way, it is making for an extra busy June.

We are having a serious broccoli glut on the farm this week and it is equally as beautiful as it is abundant...so come and get it!  Spring broccoli can be hit or miss, but apparently this stuff liked that snow storm that we got in May.  I love it roasted or sautéed at on high heat, but in this weather, do it on the grill.  Just marinate it in some soy sauce and balsamic and throw it in your grill basket on high for 20 min or so.  It is awesome.  Be sure to eat the stalk!  It is nutritious and tasty and can be chopped up and grilled with the broccoli OR do 'em fried...check out a good recipe here

It's finally time for the great escape!  Garlic scape that is.  Many of you have been asking and they have finally arrived.  The scape is the seed stalk of the garlic and is magically delicious.  Sorta like garlic favored asparagus.  Many folks grill them or make pesto with them, but they are lovely chopped into a curry or stir fry too. We have a limited supply because the heavy snow knocked over a lot of our garlic and it never really stood back up.   They will be available this week only.  Speaking of this week only, last week for sugar snap peas.  They have surprised me a lot with continuous yields and that is great news for you pea lovers.  Get em while you can, we only have them once per year!  Finally, other surprises this week include cauliflower.  It is not usually ready until July and so I was surprised to see their heads peaking out at me while I was drowning in broccoli.  Some heads are more like art installations than actual food, so treat them gently.  Roasted cauliflower is my favorite, but I think I'm going to try it grilled this week, maybe marinated like a steak as I can not make my house warmer than it already is.  Don't forget the parmesan and garlic, it takes the cauliflower to the next level.

Looking forward to seeing many of you real soon!

Katie


This Week's Harvest

Kale

Collards

Chard

Salad Mix

Head Lettuce

Spinach 

Arugula

Salad Turnips

Radishes

Garlic Scapes

Sugar Snap Peas

Broccoli

Cauliflower

Zucchini

Baby Fennel Bunches

Beets

Spring Onions

Signs of June

Hello Folks,

Things are moving fast on the farm these days!  Our mid-June food push is officially underway with a lot to bring to the market stand this week as well as a lot to do in the field. More tomatoes to trellis, fall brassicas to plant, peas to pick, and weeds to pull!  Albeit dry, the weather has been particularly delightful these days (unless you count the tornado, apparently I was buried in beets and did not notice it) and it helps tremendously with all of the work that needs to get done in June.  Other sure signs of June...the dragon flies are back and busily being their carnivorous selves.  It is so magical to watch them hovering 2 feet from the ground, looking for prey in the evening light.  It is an assurance that some biological systems are still functioning in this crazy world.  Speaking of this crazy world, you can see pictures of much of the stuff we are doing on our Instagram and Facebook pages, so check it out if you are curious! 

This week we are back in baby mode, baby vegetables that is.  We have baby beets that are nice and easy to prepare, no need to peel them just chop the tops and roast them whole at 375 for about 30-40 min.  Slip the skins off if you want and toss with sautéed beet greens and balsamic.  Add some goat cheese or feta if you enjoy the dairy...nothing goes better with beets than goat cheese!  You can save some for a baby beet and goat cheese pizza too.  Add some arugula and you will be thrilled.  Substitute pasta or salad for the pizza part if you are so inclined.  Baby fennel is also back. One of my favorite spring treats, I slice this stuff thin and add it to a barley or farro salad...raw!  Roast it with the beets if you would like a more caramelized version.  Slowly cook it in a caste iron for pizza with pesto from the freezer and figs.  The fronds are much stronger than the bulbs, use some if you would like in pasta or as a finishing herb but a little goes a long way! 

Many folks are asking if you can eat the Kohlrabi greens, the answer is yes, but they are a bit tougher than many of the other greens...I like to refer to them as greens for the end times.  Your chickens will like them.

Looking forward to seeing you all real soon!

Katie


This Week's Harvest

Kale

Collard

Chard

Spinach

Arugula

Salad Mix

Radish

Salad Turnips

Baby Bok Choy

Kohlrabi

Baby Beets

Baby Fennel

Zucchini

Sugar Snap Peas