Cooking from the garden

The first weeks from the garden…your own or a CSA – heavy on the greens!

Somewhere in the neighborhood of ten years ago, I subscribed to an organic delivery service. I received a weekly delivery of organic produce. The group that delivered received the kind of organic produce that is now common place in grocery organic sections, but at that time – not. It was ultimately my introduction to some vegetables that I had never bought nor eaten. It proved to be a wonderful experience as I was “forced” to research some items and then decide how to incorporate them into my meals.

So, this go around, with my CSA subscription from Swallow Crest Farm…I am better prepared. Also, I have ten additional years of cooking experience :)!

Week 1: spinach, spring greens, cilantro, red leaf lettuce, scallions, radishes

The challenge of week 1 was the spring greens. I am not a “leafy green salad” afficianado and I had that beautiful red leaf lettuce. The “spring green” mix I am …or thought I was…a bit ho-hum about, but after this morning’s processing (end of this post), I am now looking forward to what they will be!

Sunday breakfast: A spinach, bacon, mushroom quiche – with a twist…a shredded potato crust. The side is a pickled radish-cucumber-cilantro-onion slaw. The pickled slaw – I’ve been making a version of it with cucumbers and onions. The addition of the radishes was a bonus. So simple: slice cucumber (I used an English cucumber) and radish, chop sweet onion and cilantro. Over all pour a dressing of vinegar, sugar, wee bit of oil. Optional additions are soy sauce, teriyaki, chili oil, sesame oil, mustard… For this version, I went fairly bland with the dressing. I knew I was going to use it with very flavorful and spicy main dishes. But it is wonderful with the Asian twist of sesame oil and mustard if serving with salmon or halibut, etc. Let the mix sit several hours or overnight or a day or so. It keeps getting better.

One of my “go to” meals is a quick saute of rice, beans and whatever else I have handy. When I’m out, I typically cook a pot of brown or brown and wild rice and a pot of beans. They sit in the frig waiting. On this night: brown rice, white beans, spinach and a bit of meat from baby back ribs with a side of pineapple and a glass of hibiscus refigerator tea spiked with pineapple and ginger syrup. It hit the spot!

Many, many years ago…before I moved to Montana…I lived in West Los Angeles. And I went nearly every day to the UCLA campus to work on-site. A favorite lunch from one of the many campus bistros, was a spinach-mushroom quesadilla. It was HUGE! But I was 30-something…

My current version is much smaller and uses my homemade corn tortillas instead of a GIANT flour tortilla. But it is STUFFED with spinach, mushrooms, guacamole (actually mashed avocado) and cheese. And it is good. This was actually breakfast. So the beverage is a hot cup of strong, black coffee. Yea.

While green, leafy, salads are not normally a big part of my eating…that red leaf lettuce….SO good and tender and I enjoyed it on sandwiches. But I also enjoyed it in this salad:

Red leaf lettuce, roasted red beets, goat cheese and walnuts. I dressed the lettuce and beets with a vinagrette: white wine vinegar, olive oil and fresh squeezed orange juice. That worked for my supper several nights.

So, this morning…with another distribution due in the afternoon…more greens to come and I hadn’t used all of the spinach and none of the spring greens.

Plan B: process and freeze

I washed (vinegar/water spritz and then a good rinse) and destemmed the spinach.

A blitz in the food processor with just enough olive oil to clean the sides of the bowl…

Into a ziploc bag, flattened and into the freezer.

I had intended to freeze any leftover greens as pesto – with garlic, nuts, etc., but on further thought, decided to freeze with just a bit of olive oil so I could use however I wanted when I thaw them.

I ended up with a bag of spinach, a bag of spinach and basil – basil not from the CSA. I had the basil on hand and it needed to be used – perfect fit for the end of the spinach that didn’t fit in bag 1.

The third bag was the spring greens. Again with just enough olive oil to clean the bowl.

Ultimately, nothing wasted. All was eaten or frozen for later use.

On to week 2!

Teaser

First bounty from my CSA share:

red leaf lettuce
spinach
spring greens
green onions
radishes WITH greens!!!
cilantro

Hopefully, I will be posting weekly how I use the bounty.

The plan for this week’s haul:

BLTs with the red leaf lettuce
Spinach-Ricotta cups (to freeze)
Cucumber-radish slaw (uses radishes and cilantro)
sauteed greens (radish, spinach and spring greens)
Spinach Gnocchi
Spinach Pasta
Spinach and Spring green “pesto” (to freeze)

May Day morning (Pita Pockets!)

The weather forecast, for the forseeable future is showers…with occasional sun breaks. So when the sun breaks, Bear, Bob and I take advantage!

This morning, the sun broke. It was crisp, cool – that beautiful, after a good rain, clean air – with the sun shining over the mountains and through the trees. Bob had his morning out and about and then Bear and it was good!

I love baking in the morning no matter what the weather is like, but when that morning sun is shining in the kitchen, the birds are singing, Bob and Bear are content – it is heavenly to me to mix or roll dough and generally dawdle in the kitchen.

My work was caught up, Bear was lying in the yard, Bob was on his fleece inside – I baked.

Pita bread. FYI – not a tricky thing at all, at all! I use the same dough I like for english muffins, pizza crust, Naan and mini-boules – my own riff on the Portuguese Broa from Artisan Bread in 5 minutes a day. To make Pita, roll the dough to about 1/8 inch thick. Heat a pizza stone to 450 (the book says 500, but 450 works for me), put the dough directly on the stone and bake for 5-7 minutes until it puffs and browns slightly. Tough, huh?

May Day morning…breakfast Pita Pockets stuffed with sausage, white beans, scrambled egg, chopped cabbage and cheese – perfect!

Sunday morning

A new bread got Sunday off to a delicious start. It is not a high moisture artisanal bread as I’ve been making, but nearly as easy. Although it does use yeast, there is no knead and rise cycle. Mix everything together, spoon it into a breadpan, let it rise for 30 minutes and bake. See Heidi Swanson of 101 Cookbooks’ Easy little bread recipe … aptly named!

Outside, the sunny morning allowed the emerging larch needles to glow chartreuse against a deep blue sky.

Bear and I had a walk around the woods in the cool of the morning. (It got to 73F by afternoon – hot by Bear and my standards!)

And Bob shared the front porch with me as I finished my last cup of coffee.

Sunday morning.

Marmalade by the numbers

I finished the last of my cranberry citrus marmalade some months ago – just before Jennie Perillo posted on her blog: In Jennie’s Kitchen: Clementine Rosemary Marmalade. Perfect timing. And that post referenced a previous post of hers: Meyer Lemon, ginger & mint marmalade… oh, YUM!

Jennie notes in the Clementine recipe that she used the same ratios as is in the Meyer Lemon recipe. I love understanding the ratios…be it baking or marmalade or any recipe…it is the ratios: how much of this with how much of that makes things come out right. huh…interesting life metaphor as well. But back to marmalade. I intended to make Jennie’s Clementine Rosemary marmalade the weekend following her post. But, life and motivation… Fast forward to several weeks ago when clementines became unavailable here. RATS!

Blood oranges and meyer lemons were done as well. BUT, I did manage to snag an order of blood oranges and pixie mandarins from a grower in the San Joaquin valley of California. A week and a half ago, 30 pounds of blood oranges and 20 pounds of pixie mandarins arrived on my doorstep.

Marmalade does not take a lot of fruit. And Jennie’s recipe is a perfect quantify that results in 2 pints, i.e. 4 half pints…enough to keep me going for awhile. And the other thing about that smaller recipe – although I procured a large canning pot and rack, it is so big and my stove burners are not big and it is a bit of a pain to deal with. The smaller recipe was perfect and allowed me to experiment with my citrus mix: 2 blood oranges, 3 pixie mandarins and 2 lemons.

This fruit is not organic so I let it swim in a bath of vinegar and water for a bit and then gave it a good scrub before slicing it.

So pretty!

The other thing I learned as I perused recipes is that the pith and seeds of citrus contains pectin. So…you do not need to add pectin when you make marmalade…pectin and sugar being the things that cause the fruit to “jell”.

A lot of recipes have you peeling the citrus, removing the pith and seeds, bunding the pith and seeds in cheesecloth and including that bundle in the cooking of the fruit and sugar, thus providing the pectin without the pith and seeds getting into the marmalade. A lot of work and for my money, not necessary. The pith and seeds cook down and they provide the bit of “bitter” that IS marmalade. I followed Jennie’s recipe of lopping off the ends of the fruit, halving (mandarin and lemon) or quartering (blood oranges) and slicing very thin.

The fruit/water/sugar mix is on the rolling boil, another pot holds the jars and a third has the lids.

And per the numbers in Jennie’s recipe, 4 half pint jars of gorgeous marmalade are the result. So easy, so much less mess than a huge batch. I will make another couple of small batches experienting with rosemary, ginger and basil.

Marmalade by the numbers!

For those not interested in marmalade… Mr. Bear – enjoying a lazy sunday afternoon…too bad he does not have a comfy place to nap…