Friday, September 14, 2012

Spotlight on Pluots

The weather in San Francisco has been getting me down this past month, but I'm so pleased and excited to be getting some sun! Our undernourished plants are starting to put out new leaves, there's fresh pavement and bike lanes all over the city, and pluots, the perfect bike-sized snack, are at the market!


Pluots, you say? Not plumcots, not apriums, but pluots, a plum crossed with an apricot, and then crossed again as a second generation. Pluots are brightly colored, crunchy and sweet. 

While there are many varieties, I can never remember if my favorite is the flavor delight, flavor fall, flavor finale, flavor grenade, flavor heart, flavor jewel, flavor king, flavor prince, flavor penguin (!), flavor queen, flavor rich, flavor royal, or flavor supreme. So I usually just get one of each!

You can find many of these varieties of pluots from Twin Girls Farm or K & J Orchards, at the Ferry Building Tuesday and Saturday, and at the Mission Mercado Thursday, or from Kashiwase Farms at Ft. Mason or Inner Sunset Sundays, 4th and Market Tuesdays, and the Upper Haight Wednesdays.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Spotlight on Collard Greens

This week we picked up some fresh young collard greens from Serendipity 
Farms at the Castro Farmers Market (Weds, 4-8pm). Serendipity, located 
near the coast in Carmel Valley, has a reputation for bringing the sweetest 
greens to market. The collards are no exception, with a sugary stem and a 
good strong bite to the leaves. 


Collards are at the top of the charts for nutrient density (using the ANDI system), 
which measures the nutrients delivered per calorie. They are a sturdy and versatile 
green, good in combination with grains, beans, meats, and even fruits. 

For the sweet tooth:

1 onion, sliced into thin rings
1 bunch collard greens, washed and cut
1 apple, thinly sliced
1-2 cups cooked pinto beans
2 T raisins
2 T olive oil
salt

In a hot skillet, add olive oil and onions. Cook on medium heat until caramelized, 
about 10 minutes.
Add apple slices until lightly browned.
Add collard greens, stirring quickly so the leaves are coated with oil. Add more 
oil if necessary. Salt while cooking.
Add pinto beans, until they are heated through.
Stir in raisins, if desired, and serve.

For a savory dish:

1 bunch collard greens
1-2 T olive oil
1/2 - 1 t gluten-free tamari or balsamic vinegar
3-4 strips bacon, if desired

For a simpler savory dish, saute collards in olive oil with some tamari or vinegar. 
Cook on high until leaves turn bright green but are still crunchy. Serve with crisp 
bacon if desired. Brown rice is a perfect accompaniment.

You can find collard greens from the following farms:

Serendipity Farms - Castro, Ft. Mason, Sunset, Divisadero, Temescal
Tomatero Farms - Upper Haight, Mission Community Market
Blue House Farm - Upper Haight, Mission Community Market
Fifth Crow Farm - Sunset, Castro

Monday, September 3, 2012

Spotlight on Figs

Hello hello!

It's great to be back home in chilly, crisp San Francisco. The past week has 
been a great adventure, involving trains, bikes, highways, strip malls, family, 
and dolphins. Here's a little taste:


This week, we'll be making an old favorite, fig rosemary bread. The bread uses 
house-dried mission figs from Arata Farms, and fresh organic rosemary from 
Serendipity Farms. Order yours here today! (Photo by Vanessa Christie)


Figs, as it turns out, are a "false fruit," a sort of inside-out edible flower with 
seeds in the interior. As you may imagine, the pollination of an inside-out flower 
can be difficult. There are a few varieties of fig that do not require pollination to 
grow, and those are what you'll be seeing in the markets (black mission, turkey, 
etc.). 

I use figs as an appetizer or refreshing snack:

1. Serve sliced in half with a soft but tart cheese (try the sheep feta from 
Swallow Valley Farm, available at the Upper Haight, Sunset, and 
Divisadero Markets). 
2. Drizzle with some local honey (CityBees at the Castro and Sunset Markets).

Or, 

1. Cut in half, drizzle with honey and fresh thyme leaves (Happy Boy Farms, 
Castro, Noe Valley, Ft. Mason, Mission Community Market, or North Berkeley 
Market)
2. Bake at 350 until warm and soft, about 15 minutes.

Pick up a basket of figs today! You can find figs from Arata Farms at the Castro 
Market, Wednesdays from 4-8. Many vendors have figs for sale at the Saturday 
Ferry Plaza Market, and Capay Valley Farms has a gorgeous crop of candystripe 
fig (green striped exterior with a watermelon pink interior) at the Sunset Market.

Enjoy!

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Spotlight on Devoto Gardens

This week we stopped at the Inner Sunset farmers market to talk to Jolie 
of Devoto Gardens in Sebastopol. The farm, started by Jolie's parents Susan 
and Stan, is home to 55 varieties of heirloom apples, with funny names like 
Hubbardston Nonesuch, Ashmead's Kernel, and the humble Best Ever

In addition to being an apple expert, world traveler, and Gravenstein apple 
ambassador, Jolie and her fiance, Hunter, started their own business this summer,
and it's great for all us gluten-free folks! Welcome Applesauced, your source for 
local heirloom single origin hard cider. After planting 500 cider trees in 27 varieties, 
Jolie and Hunter will be starting their first batch of cider on Wednesday! 

Taking a break to get married in September, they'll be bringing their cider to 
farmers markets as soon as it's ready to drink (October). Look for it at the Inner 
Sunset market (Sundays 9-1), Ferry Plaza Market (Tuesdays 10-2, Saturdays 8-2), 
or take a trip up to the farm to see the operation first hand.


And in case there wasn't enough to do, Devoto Gardens has a small army of
beautiful organic flowers growing. Jolie and her mom, Susan, are the Devoto
florists, and bring their flowers to weddings, parties and farmers markets
throughout the Bay Area. Check out their mission to know your farmer, know
your flowers here.


You can find Devoto Gardens apples in this week's Apple Cinnamon Bread, and
Pink Pearl Rose Muffins. Order yours here or find us Thursday at the Mission 
Community Market.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Spotlight on beets

Hello all! 

We're switching things up with the spotlight this week, in order to feature one 
of our favorite vegetables: beets! We stocked up on red and golden beets at 
the Castro Farmers Market, destined for the Golden Beet and Savory 
Sourdough, the Beet Green and Chive Cornbread, and a bright red batch of 
Red Velvet Muffins. Order yours here.


While snapping some photos of the beets at Blue House Farm's stand, we met 
a fellow beet enthusiast, Gregory, who was kind enough to share his mother's 
recipe for Cold Beet Borscht. If you've never tried borscht, you're in for a tasty 
surprise. Served cold in the summer, this soup is refreshing, light and absolutely 
beautiful. Try it with plain yogurt or slices of avocado, garnish with dill, and eat 
outside in the sun.


You'll be able to find Gregory's recipe in this cookbook, coming soon!


Cold Borscht
            All family recipes are inexact and morph with the generations, so in 
veganizing my Lithuanian mother’s cold borscht—transmitted to me on a note 
card, perhaps the first time it had ever been written down—I am making it my 
own before I hand it on to my descendants. It’s a pretty simple recipe that, 
with its striking fuschia color and refreshing seasonal flavors, always gets 
stunning results at a summer luncheon. It loses nothing in veganizing.

4 beets
8 radishes
half an English cucumber
four scallions
a clove of garlic
hemp milk
salt and pepper
cider vinegar
fresh dill
new potatoes

Cook three or four beets in their jackets, cool them, peel them, 
and grate them. 
            Trim and dice a bunch of radishes and half a peeled and seeded 
            English cucumber. Add these to the beets.
            Thinly slice three or four scallions and add those too, along with a 
            small clove of crushed garlic.
            Add a liter of unsweetened milk substitute (I prefer hemp milk, but 
            almond or soy works fine) and a few tablespoons of apple cider vinegar. 
            Stir gently and add salt and pepper (and more vinegar) to taste.
            Put the soup in the fridge for a few hours to ripen the flavor and color.
            When it’s time to eat, stir the soup again and ladle it into bowls. Top 
            each bowl with warm boiled new potatoes and a generous sprinkling of 
            chopped fresh dill. 

(And if you must, in the traditional recipe just substitute buttermilk for the liquid 
and top with sliced boiled eggs along with the potatoes and dill.)


Monday, August 6, 2012

Spotlight on Happy Boy and Yerena Farms

These past two weeks we've been spending some extra time talking to people 
from Happy Boy and Yerena Farms at our new digs, the Mission Community 
Market. 

Happy Boy has long been one of my favorites from my days working in Fort 
Mason. Their produce is not only delicious, but beautiful, owing in no small 
part to the amazing market staff. Taking up a quadruple booth, Happy Boy 
Farms is one of the first to the market, setting up 2 hours early to make sure 
their display is top notch. Signs, made by designer and marketeer Tent Gillette
depict smiling tomatoes and dancing summer squash, complete with recipes. 

Check out their booth Wednesdays at Market x 16th (4-8p), Thursdays at 
Crocker Galleria (10-2), 21st x Bartlett (4-8p) and North Berkeley, 
Saturdays in Noe Valley and Grand Lake, and Sundays at Ft. Mason and 
Temescal. For a complete list of markets, visit their website.



Yerena Farms is becoming a new favorite. On 22 acres in Royal Oaks,
CA, Yerena Farms grows certified organic strawberries, raspberries,
blackberries, tayberries, yacon, cactus pears and summer squash. We
picked up a flat of raspberries and blackberries for this week's muffins,
and can't wait to bake them! The berries are exquisitely sweet, keep well
refrigerated, make an excellent jam, and turn muffins into muffin pies.

The folks at the Yerena market stands also work at the farm, so be ready
with a joke or something to lighten their afternoon! Find Yerena Tuesdays
and Saturdays at the Ferry Building, Wednesdays and Sundays at Civic
Center, and Thursdays at the Mission Community Market.


Here's a recipe for my favorite cold-weather summer snack:

Padron Pepper Poppers

1 basket padron or shishito peppers from Happy Boy Farms
1-2 T olive oil from O'Live Healthy
pinch of salt

In a hot skillet, add a generous amount of olive oil, and toss in rinsed peppers.
Sprinkle with salt. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 2-3 minutes. Serve hot.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Spotlight on Twin Girls Farm

Hello friends!

This coming week is going to be a bit of a doozy, with deliveries Tuesday, a
sandwich market Wednesday (11:30-2), AND the Mission Community 
Market on Thursday. To keep my sanity, I'll be taking my bicycle up North
for the weekend, enjoying some sunshine, rivers, and pedaling.

But before I do, I'd love to introduce Twin Girls Farm, growers of the sweetest
darn white nectarines I've ever had. 


Twin Girls Farm began with a 6.5 acre plot in Fresno county, and has since
grown to a whopping 518 acres of organic farmland! Growing everything from
jujubes to donut nectarines, Twin Girls attends markets year round.
The farm is named after farmers Ignacio and Casamira's twin daughters.

You can find Twin Girl Farms at the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market on Tuesdays and
Saturdays, the Mission Community Market on Thursday evenings, the Alemany
Farmers Market on Saturdays, and 24 other weekly markets throughout the Bay
Area. Holy stone fruits!

Insider tip: Twin Girls sells 5 pound bags of blemished fruits for $5. Look for a
sign! The fruits are easily cleaned up, and make the most delicious cobblers,
jams and cakes.

Come visit us and Twin Girls this Thursday at the Mission Community Market!
Meet Lucy, our wonderful new marketeer, and pick up your own bag of
nectarines from the farmer himself.