Terra Firma Farm
In This Issue
What's Growing this week
Recipe of the week
What's Growing This Week:

Leeks (All) 

Asparagus (All) -- %      

Oranges (All) -- #  

Potatoes  (All) 

Apples (All) -- &    

Spinach (All) 

    

Chioggia Beets (M) 

 

Green Kale (M,L)
Escarole (M,L)

Tangerines (L) - @
Radishes (L)

Carrots (L)

 

% Asparagus comes from our neighbors Jim and Deborah Durst in Esparto and is certified organic by CCOF.  

# -- Oranges come from Sespe Creek in Fillmore and are certified organically grown by CCOF.

 & -- Apples come from Cuyama Valley Ranches and are CCOF certified organic.

@ -- Tangerines come from B & J Ranches in Thermal and are CCOF certified organic. 

 

 

Items may be substituted without notice.



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Contact Us:
terrafirmafarm.com
csa@terrafirmafarm.com

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

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  
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

News From Terra Firma Farm
Community Supported Agriculture

   

How often do you stop and smell the flowers?  There is no better time than right now.  With the first day of official Spring just days away, the whole world is in bloom.

Almost every plant that survives the winter blooms in the spring, from the grass in the sidewalk cracks to daffodil bulbs.  Trees, bushes, shrubs. You name it.  Some have pretty flowers, often with a lovely fragrance.  Others have flowers that are  barely noticeable.  And still others have flower-like apparati such as foxtails or burrs that poke or grab onto your socks or clothes.

On the farm, everything we grow is also blooming -- or getting ready to.  Last week I mentioned all the fruit trees.  But our winter vegetables are also entering their reproductive phase, sending up tall seed stalks covered with flowers.  If we let them, those flowers would pollinate and eventually make seeds.  All of these crops are "annuals" or "bi-ennials", sprouting from seed one year and producing seed either the same year or the next year.  Once they finish reproducing, they die.

Plants that are in the same family have similar flowers.  Cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale and collard greens all have small yellow flowers similar to the fields of mustard you may have seen growing wild around Northern California. 
Green Kale starting to flower



Beets and spinach are in the same family as amaranth and quinoa, and make long pointy clusters of tiny flowers.  Leeks have the same flowers as onions, large fluffy purple balls.  And carrots make umbrella shaped white flowers like their relatives fennel, Queen Anne's Lace and hemlock.

The seeds of many of these crops are completely edible: carrot seed is sometimes used as a spice, and you could make "mustard" out of broccoli seeds.  Beet seed can be cooked like quinoa (but is very bitter).  But once the plant starts to reproduce, the previously edible parts of it become woody and bitter.  The technical term for this process is "bolting".

Almost all of the summer vegetables we grow are "annuals", at least in this area.  They grow, reproduce and die in a year or less.  But instead of eating the plant itself, as we do with winter vegetables, we eat the fruit and/or seeds they produce:  tomatoes, peppers, corn, green beans, squash, cucumbers and melons.  You most definitely would not want to eat the roots, leaves or stems of any.

As wonderful as flowers are, they don't make much of a meal.  And so we ask for your patience during this annual time of renewal, and the month or so of scarcity that accompanies it.  Happy Equinox.



Pablito
   
This week's Boxes
Asparagus is the exception to the rule -- the quintessential spring vegetable -- and we are thankful to have it.  It will play a critical role in your boxes from now until our Snap and English Pea fields start producing in three weeks or so.  Large boxes get two bunches this week, and both Medium and Large boxes will get two next week.

If you are a Large box subscriber and would like to see a third bunch in your boxes once or twice during the next month, please let us know.

Chioggia Beets are in the Medium boxes today.  They are light pink outside, and when you cut them crosswise they are a bullseye of white and red.  These are Italian "Chioggia" beets.  When cooked they don't bleed, and they maintain their bulleye appearance.  They also have the biggest, prettiest greens of any beets in our field right now, having grown back much more quickly after the freeze.  These greens taste very much like green chard, and can be prepared the same way.

 
Recipe: Spicy Asparagus Stir-Fry
This recipe also works nicely with salmon in place of the tofu.

Cut 1 lb. of firm tofu into chunks and marinate with 3 T. soy sauce and  1 T. sesame oil, mixed.

Clean and thinly slice 1 large leek.  Wash and trim 1 bunch of asparagus, then cut into bite-size pieces.  Cut any fat ones in half lengthwise.  Wash 4 C. spinach.

 Stir fry on medium heat in 2 T. canola oil.  When the leek is soft, add the asparagus, cut into bite-sized pieces.  Stir fry until the asparagus is just tender, then add the spinach and cook another minute or two.

Remove the vegetables from the wok and stir fry the tofu on high heat until it is browned and crisp on the outside.  Remove it from the wok and set aside.

Remove the zest from one orange, then juice it.  Mix the juice and zest with 3 T. soy sauce, 1 T. rice vinegar, 1 T. minced fresh ginger,  3 T. chopped green garlic, and 1 pinch or more of crushed red chili peppers.  Simmer in the wok for 5 minutes, then add 3 t. corn starch dissolved in 1/4 C. of water.  Stir until it begins to thicken, then return the vegetables to the wok and toss to coat.