Terra Firma Farm
In This Issue
This Week's Box
Produce 101
Recipe of the week
This Week's Box:

   

Spinach (All)

Red Potatoes (All) 

Apples (All) 

Green Beans(All)   

Melon (All)

Onions (All) 

 

Arugula (M,L)  

Beets (M,L)  

Seedless Grapes (M,L) 

     

Broccoli (L)  

    

 

# -- Apples this week come from CCOF Certified Cuyama Valley Orchards in Cuyama.

 

 

Items may be substituted without notice.



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www.terrafirmafarm.com
email:  csa@terrafirmafarm.com
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CSA Rates 2014
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
   

Somewhere in Africa, a man gets on a plane bound for California.  He has visited several friends and relatives just before leaving, collecting letters and other items from them.  Once here, he again visits friends and relatives, delivering the letters and packages.  At each stop, tiny visitors are left behind.  They multiply and thrive for  a while without being noticed, until they begin to cause major devastation.

No, I'm not talking about the terrible Ebola virus.  In this case, the plague from Africa happens to be an insect called the Bagrada bug.  Bagradas first showed up in Southern California four years ago, when broccoli farmers discovered them in their fields.  They had most likely arrived several years before into Los Angeles airport in the baggage of a traveler from Africa.

Bagrada bugs are "stinkbugs", hard-shelled, fast moving critters that are known for three reasons:  they damage crops; they are extremely difficult to kill with pesticides, especially organically; and they smell bad when you crush them.  What stinkbugs are not generally known for, however, is reproducing quickly and abundantly.  The stinkbugs that are native to California tend to be low-level pests because there are rarely lots of them in a single field.

Bagrada bugs reproduce quickly -- every five days or so -- and prolifically.  They feed on a large number of plants including edible and ornamental crops, but their favorite food by far are brassicas or cole crops.  These include kale, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, arugula, mustard and brussel sprouts.  They don't actually munch on the leaves, but rather suck out their juices.  Small plants often die when they do this; larger plants end up deformed.  For example, cabbage or broccoli that has been attacked by the bugs does not make heads.  When the weather is warm, bagrada bugs can wipe out entire fields -- and they have.

Roughly half of the crops that we plant in the fall and harvest in the winter at Terra Firma are cole crops.  So you can imagine how we felt in late August when we discovered bagradas sucking on and killing our first planting of kale.  At first we thought the black and red Bagradas were Ladybugs, which help control aphids in brassica fields, and which they ironically resemble.   Another bit of irony:  it also turns out that the flowering allysum that we have been planting this year to attract beneficial insects to our fields also attracts the bagradas.

The bugs most likely arrived at our fields as hitchhikers on the broccoli and cabbage plants that we buy a nursery in Gilroy.  If the insect was a pest of a different, more widely planted crop -- say, almonds or grapes -- a quarantine would be in place to keep them from spreading in this way.  But with just a few (dozen thousand) acres of brassicas planted in California, state agriculture officials decided the expense was not worth the effort.  Instead, they are already working on identifying potential biocontrol agents -- parasites that target the Bagrada specifically and which could be released to control them.

Our broccoli and cabbage season is just beginning, and near as we can tell, the African attacker seems to be taking about a 10% toll or less on the crops.  There's not much more we can do other than wait and see whether the populations of the bug get bigger and more destructive next year -- all our fingers and toes are permanently crossed already.



Thanks,


Pablito
Farm Day October 25th

There's still time to get your tickets to our annual fall Farm Day, but don't wait too long.  The registration page is here.

Produce 101

Fall gets going in earnest this week on our farm and in your boxes.  You have two kinds of tender greens in your boxes today:  more Arugula as well as our first Spinach.  While it has been very hot in the afternoons this week, we are lucky to be having unusually cool nights and thus early morning temperatures that are quite conducive to harvesting high quality greens.

All Terra Firma bagged greens should be washed before eating.

In addition to the greens, you will find a bunch of our first Beets in your boxes today -- with their greens still attached.  Beet greens are packed with nutrition and cook in just minutes.  They are not bitter or spicy but do have a distinctive taste that is best complimented by other strong flavors.

 
Recipe:  Peruvian-themed Bowls

"Bowls" are everywhere.  And you are probably already making them at home.  But if you're not, here's a guideline for spending one night in the kitchen and turning this week's box into several days or nights worth of meals in a bowl.  You can add additional ingredients or sauces as you wish.

Boil salted water in a large pot.

Preheat the oven to 400.

Scrub 2 lbs. of potatoes and drop into the boiling water.  Cook until just tender, then drain and drop into a cold-water bath.

Rinse 1 1/2 C. quinoa and cook until tender and fluffy.

Cut the greens off 1 bunch of Beets.  Scrub the beets, then cut into squares or slices about 1/2" thick.  Arrange in a single layer on a baking sheet or large cast iron skillet, drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with salt.

Trim 1/2 lb. green beans then place in a single layer on a baking sheet, drizzle with oil and sprinkle with salt. (Alternately you can parboil them).

Roast the beets and green beans at the same time.  When the green beans begin to brown, add a tablespoon or more of your favorite chile paste (such as Aji Amarillo, Chile Paste with Garlic, or Sambal Olec) and stir to combine.  Cook another five minutes, then remove from the oven.

Turn or stir the beets once when they begin to brown on the bottom.  When they are tender and caramelized, remove from the oven and quickly toss with the juice of half a lemon.

While the oven veggies are cooking, saute thinly sliced onions until nicely browned, then add thinly sliced peppers and cook until they are soft.  Season with salt and pepper.

When the potatoes are cool, cut them into very small cubes.

When everything else is cooked, poach or fry eggs.

Assemble the bowls by putting a scoop each of potatoes and quinoa in the bottom, and then picking and choosing which veggies you want to add.  You can also add raw arugula or spinach, or spinach or beet greens sauteed with garlic.

Top each bowl with an egg.

Serve with crumbled feta cheese and lemon or lime slices.





 
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