Rutiz Family Farms
Newsletter

Welcome to Rutiz FarmsStand
 
Remember, the stand is now on "winter" hours...which means that we will be closing at roughly 5pm on Tuesdays and Fridays ( a few minutes later if there is adequate light in the sky).
 Saturdays will still be open the regular hours, 10am to 3pm.

For those of you receiving our Harvest Boxes delivered to the SLO city pick up locations...this Thursday, Nov. 18 is the last delivery for this season.  Watch in this coming spring's newsletters for sign up info in mid March.

Looking forward toward next week...the stand will be open Tuesday Nov. 23 with all our regular fruits and veggies plus Anya's breads available for your Thanksgiving meal.  We will be closed Friday, Nov 26, but open on Saturday, Nov. 27.
For those of you who want to try your hand at using a fresh pumpkin for making a pumpkin pie, we have the "sugar pie" pumpkins...especially breed for cooking and pie making.  For a great pumpkin pie recipe and instructions on roasting pumpkin seeds go to the following web site link: http://www.pumpkinpatchesandmore.org/pumpkinpie.php
Be sure to scroll down on the web page to see the recipes!
I actually used their recipe and made a great pumpkin pie!

WHAT'S NEW IN THE BOX THIS WEEK

Celery, green beans, Brussel Spouts, and potatoes to help make your Thanksgiving meal and a sugar pie pumpkin if you are inspired to make a pie from scratch ( you can blend the butternut squash with the pumpkin for more pie filling).


 The "Sierra Gold" potatoes are great for mashed, steamed, fried or roasting...my favorite is:
--scrub the dirt off the skin---no need to peel the potatoes ( the skins have much of the vitamins of the potato)
--cut into 1 to 1 1/2 inch cubes
--place in a bowl and sprinkle with olive oil and seasonings 
--place on a cookie sheet or roasting pan, single layer
--roast in the oven at 425 degrees for about 35 minutes or until the outsides are crispy and the insides are still moist and soft.
When using the potatoes for mashed potatoes...be sure not to overcook the potatoes and mash them first, then add warm milk and butter...that way you won't end up with "glue".



ITEMS FROM OTHER LOCAL GROWERS, FISHERMEN AND BAKERS AVAILABLE AT OUR STAND

Heirloom  Sonora Whole Wheat Flour from Huasna Valley Farm.

"Locally Grown, Freshly Milled"

  The price will be $6.75 for a 21/2 pound bag of freshly milled flour.

Recipes will be available at www.huasnavalleyfarm.com.

See below under the " recipe" section for more info on using this great wheat product.


  Margie ( the fish lady ) is still taking new members for her fish CSA .  Her contact is slofreshcatch@hughes.net or call her at 805-481-5827.  


FRESH BAKED BREAD NOW AT OUR STAND EVERY SATURDAY
We are now featuring fresh baked "Artisan" breads for sale at our stand every Saturday.  The breads are created and baked every Friday night by our friend Anya in collaboration with The Eclair Bakery in the Arroyo Grande Village. For those of you thinking about breads for the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday...Anya will have some special breads and rolls available for sale at our stand on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.  Sign up to reserve your holiday orders when you visit the stand this Saturday.
 

Be sure to check out our "new and improved" web site at www.Rutizfarms.com.  You will find many of our recipes and past newsletters archived and a "blog" page where you can see pictures and discussion of current and past events at the farm!

Available at the Standstrawberry
Here are the items that we should have on the "table" for this Friday along with the prices so you may plan your meals and your budget
"Blue Lake"  or "Romano" green beans--$2.50/ pound
"Sierra Gold" potatoes--$1.50/ pound
sweet peppers--$2.50/ pound
Brussels sprouts---$2.50/ pound
cabbage--75c/ pound
romaine or red leaf lettuce--$1 each
pie pumpkins--75c/ pound
winter squashes---$1/ pound, butternut, kabocha, spaghetti, red kuri, musque de provence
delicata squash--$1.50/ pound
"Tuscano" kale--$1.75/ bunch
"rainbow" colored chard--$1.75/ bunch
broccoli--$2/ pound
cauliflower--$2/ pound for white, $3/ pound for the orange color
jicama--$2/ pound
carrots--$1.75/ bunch
beets--$1.75/ bunch
leeks--$1.75/ bunch
baby mixed salad greens--$2/ bag of about 1/2 pound
spinach--$2/ bag of about 1/2 pound
"sunflower" sprouts--$2.50 for !/4 pound
fennel bulb--$1 each
Italian flat-leaf parsley, mint, cilantro, rosemary, thyme,  arugula, basil--$1/ bunch
apples--$1.50/ pound
pomegranates--$1.50 each
"Haas" avocados--$1 to $1.25 each
 honey: 1 pound--$10,
       "flavored" cream honey varieties--$8/jar
 ( all honey products from David's Blue Ribbon Honey,
               Arroyo Grande)
"Anja's Breads--$5 each
 fresh flowers: $5  to $9 per bunch
                         

Harvest Box Info
You are welcome to come by and pick out individual items from the table or continue to pick up your reserved Harvest box or both( add items that may not be included in your Box that week)..The Harvest Boxes, which cost $14 / week , will be available for pick up during the Stand hours on Fridays only. I would ask you to kindly let me know by Thursday evening of each week, with a E mail response( use the link in the right hand column of this newsletter where it says  Order Your Harvest Box)  if you want a Box for the week.    Please take note:  this ordering link is only usable for the current week's newsletter....After Friday morning of each week, the ordering link becomes unusable!
If you are signed up for our deliveries at the Avila Bay Club, The Equlibrium Fitness Center, The Montessori School or Pacheco School ..you do not need to respond to our weekly newsletters...you are already on the "list" and pre-paid.
  
RECIPES

For more recipe ideas, go to our web site at www.Rutizfarms.com and click on the "recipe" page.
 
SPICY PARMESAN GREEN BEANS AND KALE
( given to us by one of our farm stand customers...thank you)
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, sliced
1/4 pound mushrooms, trimmed and quartered
1 pound green beans
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1/4 cup white wine
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 bunch kale, rinsed, stemmed, and roughly chopped
2 tablespoons lemon juice
3 tablespoons finely grated Parmesan cheese
Warm the oil in a large, heavy saute pan.  Add the onions and cook about 4 minutes.  Add the mushrooms, green beans, salt, and pepper and cook another 2 minutes.  Add the wine and continue cooking until the green beans are almost tender, about 5 minutes.  Add the pepper flakes and the kale and continue cooking until the kale has wilted, about another 4 to 5 minutes.  Add the lemon juice and the cheese.  Toss to coat and serve immediately.

Grain and Flour Storage

 ( from Huasna Valley Farm's web site)

Whole wheat flour is a perishable product and will eventually oxidize and go rancid. Many people store their flour in the fridge or the freezer to maintain its freshness. We don't know exactly how long our flour will last when stored in different situations but here is a loose guideline: Always try to store in a cool, dark place. Store at room temperature or in the fridge if the flour will be used in 2-4 weeks, and in the freezer if it will be used over the next few months. If your flour deteriorates in quality let us know. We will use this information to provide better storage suggestions in the future.  We store our flour at room temperature and use it within a few weeks and have never had any problem.

 

Wheat berries on the other hand can last a very long time. Seed can be viable for 20 years after harvested. It is best stored in a cool dark place. If you have room in the fridge or freezer it will certainly last longer, but the pantry is where we store our whole grains.

 

Protein and Gluten in Wheat

 

If you are a bread baker remember that the protein content in our wheat and whole wheat flour is 11.9%, a little lower than what is usually sold as bread flour in the market. I like to add some vital wheat gluten (VWG) to the flour in bread making to increase the protein content to 15%, which gives a loftier, lighter loaf. The ratio is 0.8 ounces VWG to 15.2 ounces whole wheat flour. If you don't have a scale you can use 1.5 teaspoon VWG per cup of flour. This amended flour will perform well in your whole wheat bread recipes. We buy VWG from Grande Foods in Arroyo Grande. A 1lb bag is about $3.75 and lasts us several months.

 

For those of you who don't know what gluten is, I thought it would be an appropriate topic for the start of our wheat-based CSA. Wheat has many proteins in it, and two of those proteins are glutenin and gliadin. These two proteins are referred to as gluten. VWG, which is 75% gluten, is made by isolating gluten from flour. You can try an experiment to do this yourself. If you chew on 10 or 20 wheat berries and try not to swallow what remains, and keep chewing, eventually you will be left with what feels like gum. All of the starches have been washed away and what remains is primarily the gluten proteins. Commercially VWG is made by a similar process, washing away starches and isolating the gluten proteins. The gluten is then dried and milled into gluten flour, also known as VWG.

 

Gluten plays an important role in making bread rise. When dough is kneaded, the proteins link together and form a network in the bread. Yeast in bread dough eats simple sugars and releases carbon dioxide gas. The gas is then trapped in the bread by the network of gluten. With nowhere to go the gas makes the bread inflate like a balloon. In some cases bread flour doesn't have enough gluten, or the dough isn't kneaded enough to "develop" the gluten into a good matrix, and the gas will escape, the dough will not rise, and the final bread may be dense and flat. So make sure there is enough gluten and that you knead enough to develop it. (See the window pane test in the recipe section.)

 

However, when making pastries, you don't want to develop the gluten as it will make pastries chewy instead of cake-like and this is undesirable. So make sure not to stir your pancake or muffin batter too much, or you may develop the gluten when you don't want to.

 

Our job as farmers is to grow wheat that is good food, and performs well in baking. High protein levels means nutritious food and strong gluten levels for bread baking. Protein content has a lot to do with the fertility and nitrogen content of the soil, which is why we are working hard to develop a crop rotation that will maximize soil fertility and protein content. In conventional agriculture, these high protein levels are achieved with lots of chemical fertilizer, but we aim to match them by building healthy, life-filled soil.

 


Buttermilk Pancakes

These pancakes are simply amazing. Grab some buttermilk from the store and throw together a batch for what many people claim to be the best pancakes they have ever tasted. Makes about 1 dozen pancakes (3 to 4 servings).

 

2 cups Sonora whole wheat flour from Huasna Valley Farm

1 teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon salt

2 tablespoons sugar

2 1/3 cups buttermilk

2 eggs (local, farm-fresh, free-range eggs are best!)

3 tablespoons of your favorite vegetable oil (butter works, we use melted coconut oil)

 

1.      Mix together dry ingredients in medium bowl. In another bowl whisk together eggs, buttermilk and melted butter or oil. Pour liquid ingredients into dry ingredients and stir until incorporated (don't stir more than necessary).

Cook on medium heat skillet about 1/3 cup at a time for each pancake. Cook for about 3 minutes until bubbles form on top of the pancakes and then flip. Cook for another 30 seconds to one minute and serve.
  
ROASTED VEGETABLES
adapted from The Santa Monica Farmer's Cookbook by Amelia Saltsman

Roasting vegetables concentrates their flavors, develops and caramelizes natural sugars, and gives them that appetizing crisped look. Best of all, the same technique works for just about any vegetable you've got on hand, any time of the year. Follow these simple steps for great results.
Keep vegetables or vegetables pieces a uniform size for even cooking.
Toss cleaned, trimmed vegetables with 1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil, kosher or sea salt, and freshly ground pepper. For convenience, do this directly in the pan.
Always preheat the oven.

Roast dense vegetables, such as beets or potatoes, at 400 degrees, quick-cooking ones, such as asparagus or tomatoes, at 425 to 450 degrees.
Don't crowd the pan, or your vegetables will steam rather than brown. Large baking sheets and heatproof-glass dishes are ideal for roasting.

Roast vegetables uncovered in the upper third of the oven for better browning.
r -- to taste
Halfway through the cooking time, remove the pan from the oven and give it a shake or use a spatula to loosen and turn the vegetables.
When the vegetables are browned and tender, season again with your favorite seasonings...salt, pepper, garlic powder.
 
If serving the vegetables at room temperature, allow them to cool before piling them onto a serving dish( so they won't steam themselves and get soft).


Week of Nov 19 , 2010

In This Issue
Available at the Stand
Harvest Box Info
Recipes

Order Your Harvest Box
Harvest Box

This Weeks Harvest Box should Include:

celery

 carrots

Brussel Sprouts

Blue Lake green beans

"Sierra Gold" potatoes

assorted colors of sweet peppers

a bag of salad mix

butternut squash

a sugar pie pumpkin

  See Canyon Apples


PLEASE bring back the empty boxes each week.
Stand Hours 

Tuesdays and Fridays.. 1 to 5 pm
Saturdays...10am to 3pm

FARM STAND LOCATION:
1075 "The Pike" in Arroyo Grande.
We are located on the south side of The Pike, between Halcyon Road and Elm Street. Visit our web site at www.Rutizfarms.com for a map to the farm.

Our mailing address is:
Rutiz Farms
333 Miller Way
Arroyo Grande,  Ca 93420


 
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Thank you for choosing to support our farm and local, pesticide free, sustainable agriculture.

Jerry Rutiz
Rutiz Family Farms