this week's 
HARVEST  LIST
 
Gorgeous veggies
This list may change, but here's our best guess of what you'll be getting in your share this week. 


Broccoli
Garlic scapes
Kale
Lil Gem lettuce
Radishes
Scallions
Sunflower sprouts
Winter Density lettuce

KEEP US IN  

THE LOOP!

Rushton Farm Staff

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
RQP sign


Rushton Farm is located within the 85-acre Rushton Woods Preserve on Delchester Road, just south of Goshen Road in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania. 



Address: 
911 Delchester Road Newtown Square, PA 
SAVE THE DATES! 


 
Friday, July 1st               
Tuesday, July 19th
Friday, August 5th               

Friday, September 9th
 
Back by popular demand! Come enjoy the sunset and listen to WCT's Eric Hetzel and his band, The Hetzel Brothers. Sit back and enjoy the farm with the farmers and fellow CSA members.  Stay after your pick up or just stop by! We will have beer and refreshments. Hope to see you there!
 
 
Sunrise in late spring.




Noah admires an early harvest of Broccoli.



Chelsea_s ready with some herbs_
Chelsea is ready with some herbs!



Many hands make light work when

planting onions.




Raspberries are among the pick-your-own delights available to CSA members later in the season. Watch the blackboard in the farmshed!



Tomatoes are yet to come!





This year's Tomato Tasting is

July 30, 2016.




Volunteer Wednesdays at Rushton Farm are off to a great start. Just show up between 9 and 4, and we'll put you

to work!




RECIPES WANTED! 


     10th Anniversary Cookbook

Recipes Wanted!


It's hard to believe that next year will mark 10 years since the CSA began at Rushton Farm.  What a wonderful journey it has been.  A cookbook is in the works to help celebrate the occasion.  We have many recipes in our coffers but would like to have CSA members share a favorite recipe or two. Recipes that use the fruit or vegetables found in our shares are preferred. Please email recipes to Allyson McTear at
amctear@verizon.net or place hard copies in the folder in the farmshed by September 2nd.  Many thanks and stay tuned for cookbook updates. 


Fred de Long - Director of Community Farm 
Noah Gress - Field Manager
Chelsea Allen - Field Manager
Eliza Gowen - Outreach Coordinator
Todd Alleger - Agroecology Project Coordinator 
Molly Clark - Rushton Farm Apprentice 
Fabien Richard - Student Research Apprentice 
Katie Pflaumer - Student Research 
Apprentice from the University of Pennsylvania   
 
ARCHIVES
See prior email communications from Willistown Conservation Trust, including recipes and past issues of the Wild Carrot.
Go to the archive.   


Week of June 13, 2016 | Volume IX  |  Issue No. 4



IN THE BAG Tidbits from the staff



Feverfew was just one of the glorious varieties of flowers available to members in last year's cutting garden.



When you visit Rushton Farm for your weekly pick-up you may notice that in addition to the crops in the field, the farm features several small gardens.



The first is the native garden located on the south side of the entrance to Rushton Farm. This beautiful garden features native perennial flowering plants. There is also a quiet sitting area located within the garden if you care to take a quiet moment of reflection (or hide from the oppressive heat).
 
In front of the Farmshed pick-up area is a culinary garden featuring herbs, perennial flowers and vegetables. Each week, featured herbs will be listed on the chalkboard in the Farmshed. These herbs and others are available for our members to harvest. There is a map of the garden inside the Farmshed to help guide you through the garden. We ask that you check with a staff member before you harvest herbs not listed on the chalkboard as they may not be fully established.
 
To the left of the Farmshed Garden is the cutting garden. This garden features many varieties of flowers that members are welcome to cut as the flowers bloom throughout the season. To the left of this garden is our perennial garden which offers some beautiful flowers as well. The cutting garden will be open towards the end of June. Like the Farmshed Garden, we ask that you look to the chalkboard or ask a staff member before cutting from maturing plants once the garden is open.
 
These gardens offer an opportunity to harvest herbs, cut flowers and learn more about the plants that are native to our landscape. We thank our dedicated volunteers who help to maintain and manage these wonderful additions to the landscape of Rushton Farm.
 
-Fred


THE DIRT Notes from the field



The tractor shed was recently re-located to the northern edge of  Rushton Woods Preserve along Goshen Road.



In past years we have had an outstanding pea crop. Unfortunately this season we were not so lucky. The gray days and poor seed germination have limited our crop so we are going to open up the field for pick your own. You can ask a staff member to direct you to the pea field when you arrive for pick up. Quantities are limited.
-Rushton Farm Staff 


RECIPES  


SEVEN THINGS TO DO WITH GARLIC SCAPES

Adapted from Carolyn Cope 
 
1. Scape Pesto
Far and away my favorite use for garlic scapes is pesto, either straight-up or mixed with herbs like basil and dill. Pesto showcases raw scapes in all their glory. Scape pesto can be very pungent, but it mellows substantially after a few months in the freezer. I like it best in the middle of winter, but I think that's one part mellowing and two parts deprivation. 
 
Ingredients
1/4 cup pine nuts

3/4 cup coarsely chopped garlic scapes*

Juice and zest of 1/2 lemon

1/2 teaspoon salt

A few generous grinds of black pepper

1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

1/4 cup grated Parmigiano Reggiano cheese
*Or use half scapes and half herbs such as basil, dill and chervil



Directions
In a small, dry pan set over very low heat, lightly toast the pine nuts, stirring or tossing occasionally until just beginning to brown, about 2-3 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool for a few minutes.
Combine the scapes, pine nuts, lemon juice and zest, salt, and pepper in the bowl of a food processor fitted with the blade attachment. Pulse about 20 times, until fairly well combined. Pour in the olive oil slowly through the feed tube while the motor is running. When the oil is incorporated, transfer the pesto to a bowl and stir in the grated cheese. If you plan to freeze the pesto, wait to add the cheese until after you've defrosted it.
 
2. Grilled Scapes
Another great, and very different, way to showcase scapes is to grill them, tossed with a little olive oil, salt, and pepper, over direct heat for about two minutes. Flip them once, halfway through, and finish with an extra sprinkle of flaky salt and maybe a bit of lemon juice and zest. They'll be charred in spots and just soft enough, and their flavor will have sweetened and mellowed dramatically. Grilled scapes are surprisingly reminiscent of asparagus, and surprisingly different from raw scapes.



3. Scape Hummus
For the same reason they work well in pesto, scapes are a brilliant swap-in for garlic in your favorite homemade hummus. I think they work especially well in a lemony, tahini-free hummus, which really gives them a chance to shine. Edamame "hummus" with scapes works nicely too, and color coordination is tough to argue with.



4. Scape Compound Butter
Scapes would make a lovely compound butter
 with a little lemon and maybe some fresh thyme, salt and pepper. Just combine together in a food processor. You could use the butter to make a tarted-up garlic bread, and I can't think of much (except maybe fruit-I do have some boundaries) that could be tossed on the grill but not finished with a nice slice of this melting goodness.   



5. Scapes as aromatic
To take a more utilitarian approach, you can slice scapes to whatever length you like and use them as you would garlic, as an aromatic in a wide variety of recipes. Scapes lose a lot of their bite when sautéed, more so than garlic cloves, so use at least three or four times as much scape-age as you would clove-age.



6. Scapes as vegetable
Scapes also work well as a vegetable, cut into lengths and added to stir-fries or blanched and added to salads, much as you might use green beans. They're chameleons among vegetables, I tell you, though not karma chameleons. Karma-wise, they're all good.




(adapted from Carolyn Cope)
 

 

About Us

  

Rushton Farm is part of Willistown Conservation Trust's Community Farm Program.  donate nowWillistown  Conservation Trust is a non-profit organization working to preserve and manage the open land, rural character, scenic, recreational, historic, agricultural and natural resources of the Willistown area and nearby communities, and to share these unique resources with people of all ages and backgrounds to inspire, educate and develop a lifelong commitment to the land and the natural world.
 
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Willistown Conservation Trust | 925 Providence Road | Newtown Square | PA | 19073