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

      

Strawberries (All) 

Navel Oranges (All) -- #  

Spinach (All)  

Asparagus (All) -- % 

Snap Peas (All)  

 

Spring Onions (M,L)       

English Peas (M,L)
Arugula  (M,L)
Carrots (M,L)

Cilantro (M,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.

 

 

 

Items may be substituted without notice.



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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

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

   



Terra Firma subscribers are pretty aware that spinach and arugula, either on their own or mixed with baby lettuce, are key components of our CSA boxes for much of the year.

For you, they are convenient, tasty and healthy whether used as the basis for a salad or tossed with hot foods for a minute or two to wilt them.  For us, they are a fast growing "bonus crop" that reach maturity in less than two months.  Compare this to head lettuce, kale or cabbage that take 3-4 months.  This allows us to plant them in between two other crops.  For example, the spinach in your boxes today is growing in a field where we harvested cabbage in February.  And by June 1st, it will be planted in Winter Squash.

We plant spinach and arugula very densely, using up to 5 million seeds per acre.  But we rarely grow a full acre all at once, instead planting smaller fields every two weeks or so to ensure a steady supply.  Of course where the same sized field of another vegetable might produce many tons, the salad greens just produce a few hundred pounds.  But that is all we need to put a half pound bag in each of your CSA boxes.

Spinach Field at Sunrise


In order to have baby greens in your boxes nine months of the year, we now grow three different varieties of arugula and five of spinach depending on the time of year.  If you pay close attention, you can probably see the differences.

Large salad growers now have machines to harvest spinach, arugula and baby lettuce.  We still pick ours by hand; a laborious but efficient process.  In a well-planted spinach field without too many weeds, one person can easily harvest 50 lbs. of spinach an hour.

The real work comes after harvest, when we wash the greens and spin them dry in small batches.  We have 5 specialized designed dryers, each one holds just 5 pounds of leaves.  We empty the dryers into large plastic bags inside plastic bins; when the bins are full they hold a few hundred pounds.  The bins are refrigerated overnight to ensure that the leaves are fully chilled, then we bag up your individual portions.

On harvest days, we start picking salad greens at sunrise and finish in a couple of hours.  Washing the greens, however, takes twice as long.  Bagging them up you for takes all morning the next day.

Weather is always the biggest threat to our salad greens.  Excessive wet, wind or hot weather affects the quality and shortens the shelf life.  And there are days when we simply can't harvest because it's already too hot at 7 a.m.  And there are weeks when the greens are "perfect" sized on Friday, but we have to wait to pick them until Monday.  If it's a warm weekend, they will have doubled in size by then.


Thanks,

Pablito

   
Fuzz on Strawberries
So we've gotten a few complaints from subscribers about "white mold" covering their berries.  That fuzzy white stuff you may see on your berries, however, is not mold.  Not unless you've left them in your fridge for a week -- which of course you shouldn't do.

No, that white fuzz is the aerially born seeds of the giant Cottonwood trees that line the road alongside our berry patch.  It falls on the berries and plants and sticks right to the little hairs on the fruit.  We can't wash the berries before we send them to you, but it's easy enough for you to wash the fuzz off.  And since there is still a coating of dust on all the fruit from the last rainstorm anyway, you should be washing the berries anyway.

It is relevant to mention that the strawberry variety we have been sending you is extremely perishable with a very short "shelf life".  But it is the variety that most people think tastes best. We pick them just a day or two before we send them to you, and you should eat them within two days.  While they won't get moldy in three or four days, they will start to soften and discolor. 
This week's Boxes
Spring crops don't weigh much.  For the next several weeks you can expect your weekly box of Strawberries, Peas and salad greens to feel mighty light when you pick it up.

Arugula is a lightly peppery green that holds up well to being paired with strong flavors.  Sweet flavors will actually accentuate its spiciness; better to pair with strong flavors: mustard or blue cheese.  Salt is good too.

We have just one more week of Asparagus season so enjoy it while it lasts.  Happily, our summer squash will be ready in just over a week.

 
Recipe: Arugula-Strawberry Salad
Having just talked about not combining arugula with sweet ingredients, I am going with this recipe anyway.  Strawberries of course are not purely sweet, but rather like tomatoes a delicate balance of acid and sugar. And the  lemon ricotta is tangy and salty.  You can substitute cooked beets for the strawberries.

Soak and drain 4 C. arugula leaves.  Spin dry.  Chop roughly.

Remove the zest from 1 lemon, then juice it.  Add half the zest and juice to 3/4 C. ricotta cheese and whisk to combine.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

Cut the stems of 1 basket of strawberries and then cut them in 2-4 pieces.  Toss with the remaining lemon zest and juice.

Toast 1/2 C. almonds and toss with the berries.  Toss the arugula leaves with the berries, then drizzle the dressing over the salad and toss again.