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

   

Tomatoes (All)

Sweet Corn (All)  

Red Onions (All)

Watermelon (All)

Carrots (All)  

Peaches (All) 

 

Summer Squash (S,L)

   

Green Beans (M,L)

Beets (M,L) 

Painted Serpent Cukes (M,L) 

   

Basil (L)

 

Items may be substituted without notice.



Newsletter Archive
Find last week's, last month's or last year's newsletters.
Quick Links
Find Us:
www.terrafirmafarm.com
email:  csa@terrafirmafarm.com
Instagram: @terrafirmafarm

Get More Fruit!
Right now you can get an 8 lb. box of Peaches or 12 lb. box of Tomatoes delivered with your CSA box.

Order one week at a time, or subscribe for the season.  Go to the Web Store section of your TFF account to sign up.


CSA Rates 2013
Boxes are  charged on Monday for the week's deliveries at:

$16  Small
$27  Medium
$36  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.
 


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

   


  Tomatoes have one of the most delicate flowers imaginable.  Tiny and frail, it must withstand the elements for long enough to pollinate.  (Tomatoes do not require bees for pollination, although bumble bees do frequent the flowers)  Wind, either cold or hot, can shrivel the flowers.  Cold nights can stop them from pollinating.  And heavy rain can rot them or knock them off.  Most do not survive this process, which is why healthy tomato plants set many dozens of flowers. 

Tomato blossoms



The flowers are attached to the plant with stems just millimeters thick, yet somehow capable of delivering enough water and nutrients to produce a fruit that can swell in just a few weeks to a half a pound or more.  Extremely hot weather can interfere with this process  by overwhelming the plant's ability to deliver enough water from the roots to the foliage.  When stressed in this way, tomato plants abandon their flowers first, and then their fruit.  When the flow of water is interrupted to the fruit, a calcium deficiency can occur that causes the bottom to rot and turn black.

Hybridized tomato varieties have been bred over the years to better withstand the effects of hot and cold weather.  They set lots of flowers over a long period, which improves the chances that a large number of them will set fruit.

Heirloom tomatoes, on the other hand, are much less tolerant of extreme weather.  Some varieties do well in the heat but can't stand cool nights.  Others are the opposite.  Almost none do well in both.

For over ten years now in the Central Valley of California, high temperatures in the summer have been trending up.  A large number of new record daily highs are being set every year.  This year, most of the record-breaking days were in the spring, but the high temperature has been "above average" almost every day this summer.  2014 might end up setting a record for the number of  "above average" temperature days.

Luckily for us, tomatoes don't seem to mind "above average" heat.  And "record high" temperatures of 85 or 90 degrees in April actually benefit tomato plants.  The record highs of 114 in July like we had last summer, on the other hand, essentially wiped out most of our heirloom varieties for the rest of the summer.

It doesn't take a lot of extreme weather to damage a crop.  All over the world, short-term events like heatwaves, tornadoes and hard freezes have always caused local catastrophes.  The question is whether climate change will make these so common that food production worldwide will suffer, and the answer increasingly appears to be "Yes". 

For the last several years that has certainly been the case on our farm.  So we are happy -- and keeping our fingers crossed -- to have a normal summer, even if it still "above average".  Now if we could just have "above average" rain next winter, without it breaking any records, we'd be thrilled.

Thanks,

Pablito

   
Ripening Tips
It just so happens that Tomatoes and Peaches ripen under the same conditions and in more or less the same way.  Here is the drill:
1) Do not refrigerate
2) Store in a warm but well-ventilated place (not a closet)
3) Remove them from the bag.  A wire basket or colander is the ideal place to keep them.  If you put them in a bowl, don't stack too high.
4) Check them individually every day.  They may not all ripen the same day.
5) In 1-3 days, they will be ready to eat.  Press gently with one finger on the bottom of the fruit.  If it gives slightly, it is ready to eat!
6) If you have a good sense of smell, you can use your nose instead of your finger to test ripeness.



This Week's Boxes
The Green Beans in your boxes are the last before they go on their annual summer hiatus.  You see, they really don't like extreme heat, which causes them to get tough and curl up.  We've had great luck this year with our spring-planted beans because we have only had a couple of hot spells and they didn't last long.  But most years, we lose at least one planting to hot weather, and historically that has happened most often in mid-summer.

We started planting beans again on July 1st, and we should start harvest again just after Labor Day.  The fall season will continue until late October or whenever frost or heavy rain brings it to an end.

Watermelons -- unlike other melons -- are picked fully ripe and do not continue ripening once off the vine.  They will, however, get soft and mushy if kept at the wrong temperature.  Make sure to store in your fridge (or in cool place out of the sun in San Francisco) until you eat it. 
 
Recipe:  Borsczpacho
Cold soups from different parts of the globe come together in this wacky summer recipe, which involves very little cooking.  Serve cold or at room temperature.

Cut 2-3 beets in quarters and boil or steam until tender.  Drain, rinse to cool and then peel.

Mince red onion to make 1/2 C.  Soak in 3 T. red wine vinegar.

Core and chop 4-6 tomatoes.  You want about 4 C. Place in a bowl and salt generously.

Peel and mince 1 clove of garlic or more if you like.

Puree the tomatoes, beets, garlic and onions with their vinegar in a food processor.  Add 3 T. olive oil.  Make it as smooth or as chunky as you like.

Cut 1 cucumber into a fine dice and stir into the soup.  Add a small amount of water if the soup is too thick.

Let the soup sit for an hour (in or out of the fridge), then taste and season with salt, pepper, and more red wine vinegar.

Serve with a side of plain yogurt to stir in and add creaminess, and croutons or toasted bread.