August 13, 2012
CSA Distribution Week #10
peppery yellow

Waltham Fields Community Farm

 

CSA Newsletter

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What's in the shares this week

This list is prepared before we harvest your share. Some guesswork is involved! We do our best to predict which crops will be ready to harvest, but sometimes crops are on the list that are not in the share, and sometimes crops will be in the share even  though they're not on the list.  

 

Mix-and-Match nine items this week from the following list: 

 
KaleKale should be around for most of the rest of the season.  Enjoy all three 'Red Russian', 'Winterbor' (curly) or 'Dinosaur' (Tuscan) varieties! 

Swiss Chard:  Colorful and packed with folate, vitamins A, K and C, magnesium, potassium and fiber, chard is one of the healthiest vegetables we grow.

Collard Greens:  Tender and delicious, collards are an underappreciated member of the greens family.  Check out some recipes and give them a try -- they'll be around for the rest of the season. 

Lettuce:  Back after a little break!  Time for a BLT! 

IPM Sweet Corn from Verrill Farm

Beets:
We have many plantings of beets and carrots throughout the season.  We always harvest a planting with the tops on first, and then clear it by harvesting with the tops off.  For that reason, you'll sometimes see beets bunched and sometimes loose by the pound; both types are fresh, sweet, and delicious. 

Carrots:  Take off the tops before storing them.

Zucchini
We grow three different types of zucchini:  the traditional green, a beautiful gold variety, and an heirloom variety called Costata Romanesco ('Roman Rib'), which is tasty even when it's very large, which, because it can hide easily in the giant leaves of the plant, it often is.

Summer Squash:
The traditional yellow 'Slick Pik' is joined by the green and yellow patty pans and the beautifully striped 'Zephyr'.  All are delicious on the grill, sauteed in butter, or made into summer's best enchiladas for a special meal. 

CucumbersStill coming! 

Eggplant Long, thin 'Orient Express', dark purple 'Italian' style globes, and tiny, beautiful 'Fairy Tale' eggplant are all tasty on the grill, in baba ganoush, or in ratatouille (see recipe at right).  Try them all and see which one is your favorite!

Celery:  Our celery is smaller, greener and more strongly flavored than the blanched white celery you traditionally see in the grocery store.  It is perfect in potato or pasta salads, where it adds a tantalizing crunch, soup stocks, or other recipes where you want the texture and flavor of celery.

Green PeppersThe beginning of a crop that should take us into early October.  We planted our red peppers a little later this year to try to avoid the pepper maggot fly, so we're not planning to see those until September.  For now, enjoy these beautiful green peppers in ratatouille or gazpacho!

TomatoesOur second crop of heirloom tomatoes and red slicers is coming on this week to join the early red, yellow and orange tomatoes from last week.  Enjoy them while they last!

Melons:  Tasty 'icebox' sized yellow and red watermelon and fragrant cantaloupe. 

And a farmers' choice of a few other surprise items throughout the week!

Pick-your-own crops this week:
  • Perennial garden herbs    Tomatillos
  • Basil
  • Dill
  • Cilantro
  • Parsley   
  • Hot peppers:  both jalapeno and serrano
  • Tomatilloes (at right)
  • Husk cherries (check out the recipe to the far right!) 
  • Cherry and plum tomatoes  -- please harvest only if plants are dry 
  • Flowers 

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Quick Links

Events and Programs

Potluck and Stargazing w Astronomer Andrew West

Join us Tues., Aug. 14th 7:30-8:30pm Potluck 8:30-10pm Stargazing FREE public event - All are welcome!

 

Andrew will have a telescope set up - bring yours too if you have one!

  

Waltham Fields Day at ARTEFACT HOME/GARDEN   

Wed., Aug. 15, 10am-6pm with mini farm stand 3-6pm

1000 Pleasant St., Belmont

Shop at Artefact with discounts on all store items throughout the day! 10% of proceeds will go to WFCF to support our food access and education programs. 

 

Indian Vegetarian Cooking with CSA shareholder Meena Kothandaraman

Fri., Aug. 24, 5-7pm

Click here to learn more! 

Husk Cherry Jam
 
Shareholder Laurie kindly sent this in quite some time ago, and now that the husk cherries are ripe, now is just the right time to send it out! 
 
Yield: About 5 half-pints 
4-5 cups husk cherries (paper husks removed)* 
1/2 cup water, maybe a little more 
1 whole orange, with rind, chopped (seeds removed) 
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon 
1/2 of 1.75 oz. packet pectin for 4 C. of mashed cherries
 
*Putting husk cherries in water makes it easier to remove husks. 
Remove husks before measuring cherries. 
 
Put cherries in a large stew pot and crush w/ potato masher so that all are at least broken. 

Heat to a boiling along with enough water to get them to cook without burning, about 1/2 cup. Boil two (2) minutes.
 
Measure cooked cherries; this is the amount of sugar to add later (cup for cup). Return husk cherries to the pot.
 
Add the chopped orange with any juice that is oozing away. Add ground cinnamon, if using, and the pectin. Bring mixture to a full boil and boil one (1) minute. Add sugar in an amount equal to the volume of cooked husk cherries that was measured earlier. Bring to full boil for five (5) minutes.
 
Put into jars, and hot water bath process for ten (10) minutes. 
 
Enjoy...
Winter Shares and Fruit Shares for Sale!
Winter Share_Nov. 08WFCF has a very few of our own delicious winter shares for sale for $200!  Purchase one now to make sure you keep receiving tasty, organically grown veggies through the end of the year. 

Both primary shareholders and split share partners (secondary shareholders) can purchase their own winter shares, but please make sure we make a note of who is purchasing the share when you sign up!   

  

Winter shares consist of four distributions of a range of seasonal vegetables, including winter greens, cabbage, onions, leeks, carrots, turnips and other storage crops and include a selection of winter squash and potatoes from Picadilly Farm. These shares are a delicious way to celebrate the late-season harvest!

Note:  Winter shares are distributed on Saturday afternoons in November and December.  Please make a note of the distribution days to make sure you will be available to pick up your winter share!

 

2012 Winter CSA Share pick-ups will be as follows:

Saturday, November 3, 1-4 PM
Saturday, November 17, 1-4  PM
Saturday, December 1, 1-4  PM 

Saturday, December 15, 1-4 PM

 

Autumn Hills Orchard Fruit Share

WFCF is partnering with Autumn Hills Orchard again this year to offer 9-week fruit shares, beginning around August 15.  Autumn Hills, an 84 acre orchard operation in Groton, Mass., grows over 30 varieties of apples, as well as peaches, plums, pears and grapes.  For $70, fruit share customers will receive 9 weeks of a half-peck (or equivalent value if not apples) of what's in season and picked to order. Fruit shares are picked up at WFCF when you pick up your vegetable share.  To sign up, just pay by check or cash at any CSA pickup this week. 

 

Here's a sampling of what CSA shareholders have received in past seasons:

 

Early Season: Peaches, Bartlett Pears, Ginger Gold, Paula Red, Gala
Mid-Season: Italian Plums, Cortland, Macintosh, Empire, Cox' Orange Pippin, Spencer, Golden Delicious, Bosc Pears, Concord Grapes
Late-Season: Macoun, Mutsu, RI Greening, Spigold, Suncrisp, Red Delicious, Ida Red     

        

We typically feature two or three varieties each week - but sometimes we mix it up a bit depending on the week and what's available. Autumn Hills is open for pick your own during September and October. We also partner with CSA farms in Eastern Massachusetts and deliver fresh, picked to order, tree fruit as well as grapes to customers on a weekly basis. Our farm is three rolling drumlin hills and has panoramic views of the hills and mountains of Massachusetts and Southern New Hampshire - very good land for growing apples! Our staff has years of experience in farming responsibly and sustainably and we are careful to employ good farming practices. We are "extreme" followers of Integrated Pest Management techniques and consult regularly with UMass Extension and other agricultural experts to grow the best fruit possible. Learn more about us at
www.autumnhillsorchard.com.

 

Notes from the Field
All in Good Time
tons of tomatoes One of our favorite farmers, Clayton Carter, posted some photos from Failbetter Farm in Maine this week with the title 'August is Hell.'  These pictures were not of suffering sinners or rings of fire.  They were not even of extreme heat, tornadoes, or the terrible drought in the Midwest.  They were snapshots of beautiful vegetables including tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers ready to go to market, lovely tiny carrot plants growing for harvest in October, and other wholesome, vibrant, farm-y subjects that one would not normally associate with Hell, if one were inclined to think much about that dark place.  No one was being tortured, or even punished for anything, except maybe for the crime of planting a few too many vegetables to reasonably harvest.  In fact, those photos looked very much like what we envision when we think about a successful harvest as we create the farm plan for the year in midwinter. 

At the beginning of last week, I was wondering if we were ever going to get enough cherry tomatoes for everyone to harvest.  I kept walking and driving by the field tomato patch, looking at the same green tomato every day, wondering if it was ever going to ripen.  It seemed to have been the same size and color for weeks.  Even the harvest records from last season, which clearly showed that our tomatoes don't really begin to ripen until the second week of August, did not convince me.  Watched pot never boils or not, I was starting to become a little obsessed. 

Tomatoes in flat After a few days of August weather (hot, but not too hot, and humid), it began to appear that that particular worry was probably misplaced energy.  By Thursday it was clear that we were DEFINITELY going to have enough cherry tomatoes for everyone to pick that afternoon.  Friday it rained, which causes the Sun Golds to split when they are very ripe, so there were lots of cherry tomatoes for, let's see, about 24 hours.  A few more hot, humid days, and it became difficult to explain to some enthusiastic Sunday evening cherry tomato pickers why we had ever had a 2-pint limit.   On Monday we picked 195 pounds of tomatoes.  Two days later, we picked more than 700 pounds.  I was reminded (once again) that while we can control certain things on the farm, like when crops are transplanted and when and how they're fertilized or weeded, one of the many, many things we cannot control is when they ripen.  They ripen when they are ready, and when they are ready they need to be picked.  Now.

cantaloupes August harvests, which are marvelous, are also backbreaking.  Peppers and eggplant and okra and tomatoes all put us in the same hunched posture for picking.  Summer squash and cucumbers require us to lean all the way down to the ground for hours at a time.  Melons are another thing entirely; they took Erinn and Andy all day long on Friday to pick after a morning in the squash plants -- lifting and tapping or smelling each one, examining it for signs of ripeness, then gently, gently sliding it from the vine and tossing it to the other person to load onto the truck.  All this picking doesn't leave very much time for transplanting (lettuce and spinach are still going in the ground for October harvest), seeding (arugula, radishes, turnips and other fall greens), fixing tractors (Gretta and Gus), weeding (those delicate fall carrots), fertilizing (broccoli!) or office work, which is why I'm writing the newsletter this week at 12:30 at night. 

Now, I'm not complaining.  Better this than the alternative.  Better abundance than scarcity. There's no way to rush this kind of summer harvest.  Staring at the tomatoes will not make them ripen; being anxious about them will not make them ripen.  Same with the melons.  Only their own good time, a little warm weather (but not too hot!  Not too windy!), and some ethylene gas can make it happen.  All we can do is be ready to pick them when they do.  All of them.  Right now. 

Enjoy the harvest,

Amanda, for the farm crew 

Waltham Fields Community Farm Year-Round Staff  

Claire Kozower, Executive Director

Kim Hunter, Education & Volunteer Coordinator

Amanda Cather, Farm Manger
 
Andy Scherer, Gateways Field Manager

Dan Roberts, Field Manager

Erinn Roberts, Greenhouse & Field Manager

Marla Rhodes, Development Coordinator

Deb Guttormsen, Bookkeeper & Tech Coordinator

 

Assistant Growers

Sutton Kiplinger, Zannah Porter   

Field Crew

Alison Denn, Anna Linck, Katherine Murray, David Taberner 

Weed Crew  

Becca Carden, Kathryn Cole, Annabelle Ho, Meghan Seifert

Learning Garden Educators

Rebecca Byard, Alison Dagger, Ian Howes

 

Work Sharers

Graphic Design, Neva Corbo-Hudak

CSA Newsletter, Susan Cassidy

Learning Garden Maintenance, Rebekah Carter

Container Garden, Dede Dussault

Perennial Garden Maintenance, Sabine Gerbatsch and Amy Hendrickson

Farm Work, Naomi Shea

CSA Distribution Coordinators: Joy Grimes, Natasha Hawke, Deepika Madan, Eileen Rojas, and Aneiage Van Bean  

www.communityfarms.org          781-899-2403  

Waltham Fields Community Farm | 240 Beaver Street | Waltham | MA | 02452