| What's Growing This Week: | |
Asparagus(All) - %
Strawberries (All)
Carrots (All)
Green Garlic (all)
Salad Mix (All)
Peas (All)
Apples (All) -- #
Spring Onions (M,L)
Beets (M,L)
Radishes (L)
Fennel (L)
Spinach (L)
% -- Asparagus comes from CCOF certified Jim and Deborah Durst as well as CCOF certified Riverdog Farm.
# -- Apples come from CCOF certified organic Cuyama Valley Orchards.
Items may be substituted without notice.
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Get More Berries
Beginning next week, we will start delivering half flats (6 baskets) of berries to drop sites for subscribers who want more than one or two baskets. You can order two ways:
1) subscribe to our berry season and get 1 or more half-flats each week, or 2) Place a one-time order whenever you feel the berry need. The berries will be there the next time you pick up your CSA box.
To sign up, log in to your account and go to the Web Store.
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Contact Us:
| terrafirmafarm.com csa@terrafirmafarm.com
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| CSA Rates 2013 | Boxes are charged on Monday for the week's deliveries at:
$14 Small $24 Medium $32 Large
For a payment of $300, get a 3% bonus. Your account balance will be $309.
For a payment of$850, get a 5% bonus. Your account will be posted as $892.00
For a payment of $1,400, get a 7% bonus. Your payment will be posted as $1,498. Vacations are charged weekly when notice is given as a fee, no charges occur during the vacation week.
$4 Small $8 Medium $11 Large
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Pledge of Authenticity
Terra Firma is a real farm. We grow 99% of the produce that goes into our boxes on our 220 acres of certified organic land in Winters. If we do buy produce from other farms, it's almost always from a neighboring farm and we give them full credit in the box list. The owners of Terra Firma are involved in every aspect of making your boxes a reality: walking the fields, planting the crops, selecting and checking what goes in the boxes and finally delivering them to you. We eat the crops from our fields every day, just like you do. Thanks for supporting our efforts and enjoying the food we grow. Paul, Pablito, & Hector
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Payments, Billing, and Changes
| Schedule vacations, change box sizes, make payments or sign up for autopay by logging in to your subscriber account at terrafirmafarm.com
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News From Terra Firma Farm
Community Supported Agriculture |
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Greetings!
I had thought about addressing a big issue this week like the just-released proposed immigration legislation or the FDA's food safety regulations, but with the sad news from Boston I'm going to drill down a bit into the comforting world of growing vegetables...
With our Leek season officially over and the first Spring Onions of 2013 in your boxes, it seems like a good time to talk about growing the pungent orbs that provide the underpinning for so many great recipes from so many different cuisines. All over the world wherever there is winter, fresh onions in some form have been one of the first new vegetables of spring, savored by humans for thousands of years.
As ubiquitous as onions are in farm fields, markets, and kitchens around the world, it might be difficult to imagine that they are one of the trickiest vegetables to grow. Why? First and foremost, they grow slowly and have few leaves. This means they must be carefully tended and kept free of weeds for most of their life, which can be as long as 9 months. Unlike most vegetable plants, which have large leaves that shade the ground around them, onions have tall, thin leaves that grow almost straight up.
Second, there are several different types of onions adapted to specific growing areas and seasons. "Short-day" onions are grown in areas closer to the equator where there is little variation between the length of day or temperature over the course of the year. Further north or south, growers must be careful to choose the right variety for the time of year and their specific geographic location, from among hundreds.
Here at Terra Firma, we plant onions in the fall that grow through the winter, bulb up as the days start to get longer in the spring, and are ready for harvest in June. These are commonly called "overwintering" onions, and are the ones we harvest fresh this time of year for your boxes. But we are also planting onions now that will grow through the heat of the summer for harvest in September -- so called "Long Day" varieties.
Unless you farm in a place like Walla Walla Washington, or Vidalia, Georgia, no one can tell you exactly what variety of onion to plant or what day you should plant it. And yet these two critical details make the difference between getting a nice crop of big bulbs or a field of tiny ones. Onions can fail in other ways to: an entire planting can go to seed without making a single onion, or the plants may just grow straight like leeks without ever making a bulb.
We've learned from experience that getting it right with onions one year doesn't ensure success the next year, so we always hedge our bets. We plant different varieties at different times, spreading out the risk that any one combination will fail -- but also lowering the chance that we will ever have a great crop.
The third factor that makes growing onions so difficult is properly curing and storing them. Onions need warm, dry weather to develop the skins that preserve them after harvest. Too much humidity during this time will cause them to get moldy, which is why most onions in tropical areas are eaten fresh. And direct sun or excessive heat at this time will actually cook the onions.
Once harvested, onions will keep nicely if stored at the proper temperature and humidity with enough airflow. But if any one of these factors gets out of whack, the onions will quickly rot into mush. More than once, we've harvested a beautiful crop of big, pretty bulbs only to lose a large percentage in storage.
The field of onions we are harvesting for your boxes today had a rough time in January during the extended freeze. Many of the leaves were burned and eventually died, but the plants grew back nicely and are doing well. But there's still over a month until they will be ready for harvest as bulbs, and we never know how they are going to turn out. In the meantime, we are happy to get some of them harvested and into your kitchens so you can enjoy them.
Thanks,
Pablito
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In Your Boxes
Spring Onions are fresh vegetable and should be kept refrigerated until you use them. At their current size, both the tops and bulbs are tasty. You can slice them in half lengthwise, brush with oil and grill or roast. Or chop them up and use them as you would any other onion. The difference is their fresh mild flavor. Another first of Spring in your boxes today: Fresh Peas. You may get either Sugar Snap or English Shelling Peas today. Can't tell which they are? Just try to rip one in half. If it breaks in two, it's a Snap Pea -- the entire pod is edible, other than the little tab and string on one end. If the pod is tough and leathery, it's a Shelling Pea: Zip it open lengthwise and remove the edible peas inside. As Pea season progresses, you will get both types of peas, depending on what is ready to harvest that week. There is a basket of Strawberries in everyone's box this week, and two in the Large box. Beginning next week the Medium boxes will also get two baskets most weeks. If you need more berries than what's in your box, we have a solution: bulk Strawberries delivered with your regular box. See the text box on the right for details. |
Coming Soon:
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Recipe: Beet-Asparagus "Pilaf" Not really a pilaf, you cook the vegetables and the grain separately and combine them just before serving.
Coat 1 large or two small baking sheets lightly with olive oil.
Trim 1 bunch of asparagus and cut into half-inch pieces.
Scrub 3 beets and cut into small dice about the same size.
Trim 2-3 spring onions and chop.
Lay the vegetables out in a single layer on the sheet(s). Keep the beets separate, as they might take longer to cook and tend to bleed. Sprinkle salt and pepper over all.
Bake at 400 degrees, until the asparagus is light browned, the onions are nicely browned, and the beets are tender but not soft. Deglaze the pan with the juice of 1 lemon or orange.
Meanwhile, cook 2 C. quinoa, bulgar wheat, or couscous according to the directions, using salted water.
Combine the vegetables and cooked grains in a large ovenproof bowl or pot, and drizzle with the lemon (orange) juice. Cover it and return to the warm oven (now turned off) for 10 minutes.
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