| What's Growing This Week: | |
Summer Squash(All)
Strawberries (All)
Cherries (All)
Carrots (all)
Yellow Spring Onions (All)
Peaches (M,L)
Arugula (M,L)
Bunched Beets (M,L)
Snap Peas (All)
Shelling Peas (L)
Green Garlic (L)
Tangelos (L)
Items may be substituted without notice.
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Bulk Items
Half flats (6 baskets) of berries are available for delivery with your regular CSA box. 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.
Ruby Red Grapefruit and Peaches are also available in bulk.
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'm sure you've heard that garlic is good for you. For thousands of years, all around the world, people have attributed health benefits to eating the so-called stinking rose. But it also turns out to be a big help in keeping some crops healthy.
Organic gardening books for years have recommended planting garlic in and around your garden to help repel pests. Unfortunately, there isn't much evidence showing this to be effective, other than as a way to utilize small amounts of garden space to grow another crop. Instead, it is garlic oil, sprayed on crops, that turns out to be one of nature's most effective pesticides.
Oils in general are effective pesticides -- they coat and cover plant leaves, smothering a number of insect pests. Not every oil can be sprayed on plants though, without damaging the leaves or leaving undesirable residues. Meanwhile, certain natural oils -- clove, rosemary and neem trees -- are especially effective at killing pests. So is garlic.
But garlic has something that these other oils don't have: natural sulfur compounds. These are part of what give garlic its unique flavor as well as its tendency to produce gas when eaten. Sulfur is also a natural fungicide, and the particular sulfur molecules in garlic are especially effective at killing several of the most destructive fungi that infect many crops. So garlic oil is not just an insecticide, it is also a fungicide.
We spray garlic oil on our table grapes. Not only does it eliminate powdery mildew, it also kills leafhoppers -- a destructive pest that feeds on the leaves and can defoliate the vines. We also spray it on our onions, where it again does double duty: fighting downy mildew and killing a pest called thrips.
Sometimes we even spray garlic on, well, garlic. It turns out that the sulfur compounds in garlic cloves do not exist in the rest of the plant while it is growing. (This is why planting garlic in your garden does not do much to prevent pests) So the leaves are susceptible in wet years to a fungus called "rust" which, if left to spread unchecked, can kill the plants before they even have a chance to form bulbs. But garlic oil kills it.
The best thing about spraying garlic on our crops is how safe it is to use. While drinking a quart of garlic oil would give you pretty nasty heartburn, it is technically a food and the EPA does not even consider it a pesticide. Yet it works so well that some conventional growers have begun using it instead of much more toxic chemicals.
So on any given day of the year at Terra Firma, the smell of garlic may be wafting across the field, even if we have no garlic growing at the time. Oh yeah, and it also helps keep the vampires away.
Thanks,
Pablito
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In Your Boxes
There's just one basket of Strawberries in your boxes this week (all sizes). You can thank (as usual) the weather: last week's windy heatwave combined with torrential rain on Monday greatly reduced our berry harvest this week. We were very lucky in fact -- had the thunderstorms hit our farm earlier in the day as they did farms just ten miles away, we wouldn't have gotten any berries at all and neither would you. The good news is that the strawberries will continue to ripen more fruit and if we are lucky, there will be plenty more next week. Could those be? Really? Yes, in that little brown bag in your box (Medium and Large) today, there are a handful of small Peaches (or Nectarines ). The variety, called Rich May, isn't the best peach you'll have this year and they are small. But it probably will be the best ripe, locally grown peach you've eaten so far in 2013. The hot weather we had last week sweetened them up nicely, and they have the real juicy peach texture that you expect. We harvest peaches at a firm-ripe stage and they should be allowed to finish ripening for a day or two at room temperature. Storing these peaches (or any others) in your refrigerator will cause them to become mealy.  | Mario and Trinidad picking the first peaches of 2013
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Our Peach and Nectarine season is just getting started, and we have a very nice crop on the trees. We expect to be harvesting most weeks for the next 4 months. For the first time ever, we will be offering 10 lb. boxes of peaches and nectarines, as available. These will be slightly blemished fruit. In fact, we already have a few boxes available to purchase via the Web Store for delivery with your regular box. |
Size Up For Spring
Feeling like your box is a little light right now? Blowing through your berries, cherries, peas and greens? Many of our spring crops are high value items that take lots of time and energy to harvest, but not much time or energy to prepare and eat. We offer a few easy ways for you to get more good healthy food from the farm. 1) Size up your box. You can do this for a single week, if you like. Large boxes this week got double peas and berries as well as the additional items you see on the list. Small boxes next week will be getting cherries, but not berries -- Medium boxes will get both. Going up one box size costs $10. And you can switch back down any time. 2) Buy Bulk Items. We currently are offering half-flats of strawberries for delivery every week as well as 10 lb. boxes of Ruby Red Grapefruit. You can buy these items on a weekly basis, or set up a seasonal subscription. And if there is an item you use lots of and would like to get in bulk, just let us know via email. |
Recipe: Summer Squash Salad with Beets Two Ways This recipe uses ALL of the beets -- leaves and roots. If you like raw zucchini in salads this way, you should consider getting a spiralizer or other kitchen utensil that does it easier and quicker. Beet roots cooked this way have a texture and sweetness similar to dried figs.
Cut the tops off 1 bunch of beets. Soak the leaves in a bowl of water while you slice the roots in rounds about 1/4" thick.
Toss the sliced beets with 2 t. olive oil, salt, and pepper. Arrange on a baking sheet and bake at 350. When they are lightly browned on the bottom -- which will take 15-20 minutes -- flip them. The other side will brown much more quickly.
Meanwhile, drain the beet leaves, cut the stems off and then chop roughly. Chop 1 spring onion, whites and greens. Cook the onions in 1 T. olive oil until soft and beginning to brown, then add the beet greens and cook until tender, about 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
Slice 1 lb. of zucchini or sunburst squash thinly. Cut the squash slices into ribbons. Toss in a bowl with the hot beet greens and allow to sit for 5 minutes. Dress with 1 T. balsamic vinegar or fresh squeezed orange juice, 1 T. olive oil, salt and pepper.
Serve the salad topped with crumbled goat chevre or feta cheese and the roasted beet slices.
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