Rushton Farm Wild Carrot!
this week's
HARVEST
Rushton Farm Bag
This list may change, but here's our best guess of what you'll be getting in your share this week. 
l

Basil
Carrots
Celery
Eggplant
Fennel
Hot peppers
Onions
Summer squash
Sweet peppers
Tomatoes


  

Pick up time is 2 - 7 pm!

 


Tomato Celebration!

 

Digging Rushton Farm 

 

DIGGING RUSHTON FARM

 

We've got a blog!  More recipe ideas, musings about the farm and more...join the conversation at Digging Rushton Farm.

 
   
 

HAPPENINGS 

Complete and updated calendar always available at www.wctrust.org.    

 

August 3, 2011
And every Wednesday through October

"Just Show Up" Volunteer Day at the Farm

9:00 am
Here's a great way to get your hands dirty, help the farm, and learn about... more details
   

August 6, 2011 

And the first Saturday of each month through October

Family Volunteer Day at Rushton Farm

11:00 am
Description:   A healthy dose of fresh air and community spirit. No registration required. ... more details  

August 6, 2011 

Tomato Celebration and Potluck

5:00 pm
Description:   Tomatoes are the stars!  Bring your favorite dish... more details  

August 24, 2011

PA Young Birders Meeting @ Rushton Farm

 6:00 pm
Monarch Madness! ... more details

FORKS FARM

Now delivers to Rushton Farm regularly!   

 

Place your order for sustainably produced grass-fed beef, poultry, and other meats and dairy at Forks Farm.   



WORK AT THE TRUST!

 

We're looking for a special person to join our staff.  Learn more about the job.  

 
   

KEEP US IN THE LOOP!

 

Email is our primary means of communicating all CSA matters, so please contact us if your address changes, or if you'd like a family member's address to be added to the CSA mailing list.   




WHEREABOUTS
Rushton Farm SignRushton Farm is located on Delchester Road, just south of Goshen Road in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.


Ashley, Lisa, Joanna and Fred 
CONTACT US
Ashley
Lisa
Joanna
Fred
 

 

ARCHIVES
See prior recipes and read past issues of the Wild Carrot.     
Week  of  August 1 ~ Issue no. 13
IN THE BAG tidbits from Fred  
   

Tomatoes are the stars! This Saturday is our  Rushton Farm Tomato Celebration and Potluck Supper and it is FREE for CSA Members.   

 

This is a very casual low-key DELICIOUS gathering.  

 

Sign up in the farmshed at pick-up time, or email sam@wctrust.org to let us know you'll be joining us.

 

A highlight of this event will be the opportunity to sample the many varieties of tomatoes that we grow at the farm.  2011 is shaping up to be a fantastic year for tomatoes, so don't miss it!  

-Fred 

THE DIRT notes from the field 
   

Kids Love Getting their hands dirty at Rusthon FarmRain finally came last week giving us a break from irrigation chores.  With good moisture in the soil weeding has become a much more enjoyable task- roots now coming out with ease.  It had been too dry to cultivate some of our spring beds with the tractor.  When the soil is too dry, the spinning tines of the rototiller create clouds of dust and precious topsoil is lost to the wind.  By Thursday the moisture was perfect to till our spring field again and seed it with a cover crop of yellow clover and buckwheat.  

We have experimented with a number of different cover crops over the years and this year I am particularly excited about the yellow blossom clover.  Yellow blossom clover is a biennial legume that will overwinter and flower in the spring.  Like all legumes, the roots of clover form nodules that host a nitrogen-fixing rhizobia group of bacteria.  These bacteria provide nitrogen in a form that leguminous plants can use, while the legume provide the bacteria with sugars for energy.  

 

Yellow blossom clover is particularly good at nitrogen fixation, amassing up to 125 lbs of nitrogen per acre and its deep root system is very effective at mining for phosphorous and potassium located deeper in the soil profile. This makes it an excellent "green manure" because when we till it under in the spring, all that nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium will become available for the following vegetable crop.   

 

We sowed the yellow clover with buckwheat which will be killed by the first hard frosts of winter and will provide organic matter that can easily be incorporated into the soil in the spring.  Buckwheat is one of my favorite cover crops for its ability to access the often elusive nutrient, phosphorous, and for it remarkable ability to out-compete weeds.  Pretty cool way to improve our soil and it sure beats shoveling compost!  
 

-Ashley

Carrots!
Farm Market

Need more tomatoes? Need a special gift? How about some gourmet salt, tea or soap? Don't forget the Rushton Farm Market is open every Saturday from 11 to 4.

         


RECIPES what to do with all those veggies  
   

Roasted Fennel with Parmesan
 
4 tablespoons olive oil 

4 fennel bulbs, cut horizontally into 1/3-inch thick slices, fronds reserved

Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1/3 cup freshly shredded Parmesan

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Lightly oil the bottom of a 13 by 9 by 2-inch glass baking dish. Arrange the fennel in the dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, then with the Parmesan. Drizzle with the oil. Bake until the fennel is fork-tender and the top is golden brown, about 45 minutes. Chop enough fennel fronds to equal 2 teaspoons, then sprinkle over the roasted fennel and serve.
 

- Giada De Laurentiis

 

 

Potato-Fennel Gratin

 

2 small fennel bulbs
1 yellow onion, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons good olive oil
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
2 pounds russet potatoes (4 large potatoes)
2 cups plus 2 tablespoons heavy cream
2 1/2 cups grated Gruyère cheese (1/2 pound)
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Butter the inside of a 10-by-15-by-2-inch (10-cup) baking dish.
Remove the stalks from the fennel and cut the bulbs in half lengthwise. Remove the cores and thinly slice the bulbs crosswise, making approximately 4 cups of sliced fennel. Saute the fennel and onions in the olive oil and butter on medium-low heat for 15 minutes, until tender.

Peel the potatoes, then thinly slice them by hand or with a mandoline. Mix the sliced potatoes in a large bowl with 2 cups of cream, 2 cups of Gruyère, salt, and pepper. Add the sauteed fennel and onion and mix well.

Pour the potatoes into the baking dish. Press down to smooth the potatoes. Combine the remaining 2 tablespoons of cream and 1/2 cup of Gruyère and sprinkle on the top. Bake for 1 1/2 hours, until the potatoes are very tender and the top is browned and bubbly. Allow to set for 10 minutes and serve.

- Ina Garten, The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook

 

Flowers
Willistown Conservation Trust