September 30, 2012
CSA Distribution Week #17
   Green bell peppers   

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 eight items (plus squash) this week from the following list: 

 
ChardIt's back!  Swiss chard makes a repeat appearance in the shares this week.   

Collard GreensTender and delicious, collards are an underappreciated member of the greens family.  Give them a try -- they'll be around for the rest of the season. 

Kale

Carrots

Beets

Purple Top Turnips
Very different from their sweet salad relatives, purple top turnips are an earthy, distinctively autumnal vegetable.  Try them in soup or braised as a side dish for a tasty roast chicken or beef. 

FennelBack for a fall appearance! 
 
Mustard Greens/ Yukina Savoy:  Great simply chopped into a salad or sauteed with some garlic, tomatoes and lemon juice!  Or tasty on grilled cheese sandwiches too.

Arugula:  A fall favorite, this crop of arugula looks lovely in the field.  We hope you enjoy it as much as we do.  Our friend Katy makes a delicious fettucine dish with pancetta, heavy cream, parmesan and arugula from Under the Tuscan Sun; it's so easy and tasty, it's hard to believe -- perfect for an easy weeknight meal and so good even kids love it.

Spinach

Escarole, frisee endive, and radicchio:  These tasty chicories flourish in cool weather.  They make great salads, are delicious in soups, and make a great side dish for steak or chicken.  They are also lovely wilted and put on a grown-up grilled cheese.    
 
Cabbage:  More beautiful heads of fresh, tasty cabbage are ready to come out of the fields.  You can make cabbage rolls, a tasty grilled cabbage slaw, or an autumnal salad -- there are lots of options for these sweet, crisp beauties!

Bok choyThis beautiful fall crop is tasty and full of vitamins. Use it in stir fries, a tasty seafood curry  or as a side dish for grilled chicken.
 
Radishes

Salad Turnips

Eggplant and Peppersthese will continue to trickle in in small amounts through the first frost -- enjoy them while they last. 

PotatoesCooler weather means baked, mashed, or roasted potatoes -- perfect in soups, too!

Delicata squash this is a moist, sweet winter squash that doesn't keep as well as some of the other squashes; store it on your counter (not in the fridge), but use it quickly.  Many folks love delicata rings baked with apples and raisins... yum.

Pie pumpkins These beautiful long pie pumpkins are delicious in your favorite autumn pies, puddings, and baked goods -- what's better than a pumpkin chocolate chip muffin on a cold morning?  Or use like any other winter squash if you prefer the savory route.  Also perfect for stuffing.  
  
And farmers' choice of a few surprises throughout the week! 
 
Pick-your-own crops this week:  Please note that when harvesting pick your own, you'll often find the easiest and most abundant picking at the middles and far ends of the beds.
  • Perennial garden herbs   
  • Basil
  • Dill
  • Parsley    
  • Okra 
  • Hot peppers -- many types! 
  • Tomatilloes 
  • Husk cherries
  • Flowers  
  • Raspberries

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Quick Links

 

WFCF CSA Info & Pickup Times 

 

Weekday shareholders:  Please remember to pick up on Tuesday or Thursday evenings!  This becomes even more critical during the fall months.  Email Amanda at the beginning of the week to request a one-time switch if you need to.   

 

WFCF Recipes

 

Events and Programs

 

Eat at The Elephant Walk
in Waltham this October!
All month - 3% of lunch and dinner sales will be donated in support of our food access and education programs.

 

Seed Saving Workshop with WFCF member Brian Madsen. Sat., Oct. 20, 2-4pm. Registration required.

 

Check out our full CALENDAR OF EVENTS 

Lentilles du Puy:
French Green Lentil Salad (with Fennel as a key ingredient)

Shareholder Suzanne wrote in:
 
Here is what has become one of my favorite ways to use those lovely fennel bulbs that Sutton tells me we'll be getting soon: French Green Lentil Salad. I'm sending you the link which which will need to be edited down to the essentials of the recipe if you decide to publish it. By the way, I did try making it once without the fennel and never again! Oh, and I make one nice addition of some chopped fennel fronds - a nice green touch and more anise flavor!
 
Enjoy!
 
Note from Susan: I tried, I really did try to edit the recipe, but I adore David Lebovitz's writing (Paris! Food! Bliss!)  and I think you should just go to his blog to read the directions. So there!

 


Do you have a recipe you'd like to share? We'd love to include it in our next newsletter! Please send it in to Susan Cassidy. And thanks in advance! 

barn
Notes from the Field

colorful peppers It's really fall on the farm.  It seemed to happen overnight; cool nights and rainy days brought the summer crops like tomatoes, eggplant and peppers to a screeching halt and brought on massive harvests of autumnal crops like greens, roots, and squashes.  The trees are beginning to color, we drink more hot coffee in the mornings, and although there's still a lot of harvesting to do, there's a moment at this time of year when something heavy and invisible lifts from our shoulders.  Farmer Dan Kaplan of Brookfield Farm in Amherst describes it as "a big hammer hanging over our heads", the potential for great disaster which exists in our profession from March through about the end of September.  Seedling loss in the greenhouse.  Late frost that takes out tomatoes, peppers, squash, melons.  Pests, diseases, rain, human error; any one of these at the wrong time can mean a major loss on the farm.  As Dan Kaplan says, "Sounds extreme.  I mean, it's just vegetables, right?!"  And it is.  Unlike many of you, our job does not put human lives or big financial figures at stake.  It's just vegetables.  And it's a relief to remember that fact every October -- about the same time we realize that big hammer has disappeared for another season. 
onions curing
Last year's beauties

By this time of year, things are what they are.  By this time, we have a pretty good idea of which crops did well for us this season (tomatoes, cucumbers and melons) and which crops did poorly.  Onions, leeks and shallots were major failures for us in 2012; planted at the non-irrigated Lyman Estate field, they didn't get any rain during the time that was critical for sizing up in late July and early August and have been small and not of great quality. It has been an average year for us for green peppers and eggplant, lettuce and beets; cabbages have been out-of-control good; carrots have been hit-and-miss depending on the particular succession, since we plant them about every three weeks.  Strawberries got weedy, although we Sweet potatoeshand-weeded them twice; raspberries were hit hard by spotted-wing drosophila.  We have to decide with both of these crops whether we will continue to try to grow them next season, since we'll have to spray them pretty heavily and consistently with organic pesticides in order to make them yield well.   On the other hand, thanks to this year's great field crew, we began our sweet potato harvest a little earlier than usual, so we have a nice crop of those curing in the greenhouse; you should see them next week.

In general, this season was one that included lots of sighs of relief.  There were many near-misses:  late blight and extreme weather loomed large throughout the season, but overall, despite the failures, our harvests have been pretty satisfying.  At the beginning of the year, we set goals for the value of the CSA share and our food access donations, which we track each week.  Last year, which was a pretty decent year for us, we met our food access goal in December.  This year, we met it by mid-September.  We met our planned CSA share value by October 1.  This growing season was one for the record books.  Don't worry, there's lots more food in the fields, and part of the CSA model is sharing in a bountiful year -- so there are three more weeks of summer share pickups to go after this week.  We'll start the renewal process for current shareholders in the next week or so, so look out for an email about that.  And in the meantime, enjoy this season of completion and balance.  And 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