Harvest Week 15 - Turn, Turn, Turn!

THIS WEEK’S HARVEST

Arugula, Mustard Mix, Little Gem Lettuces, Red Romaine Lettuce, Bel Fiore Radicchio, Escarole, Celery, Purple Daikon Radish, Carrots, Assorted Zucchini & Summer Squash, Sweet Peppers, Poblano Peppers, Eggplant, Bodega Red Potatoes, Cabernet Onions, Early Girl & Heirloom Tomatoes, Garlic

U-PICK

Don’t forget to branch out to the back areas to find the jack-pots!

  • Albion Strawberries | 4 pints per share

  • Padrón Peppers | 2 pints per share | We have it on good authority that the Padróns are now spicier than the Jalapeños!

  • Shishito Peppers | 3 pints per share | While still most likely to be mild, even shishitos can have a little heat towards the end of the season.

  • Cherry Tomatoes | 4 pints per share

  • Dragon Tongue Green Beans | 4 pints per share | See harvest note below

  • Hot Peppers:

    • Jalapeños | 10 peppers per share | To find the hottest ones, look for “checking”, the delicate cracks in the skin that indicate the pepper has aged into its heat, or pick the red ones for a sweet and spicy flavor.

    • Thai Chilis | 10 peppers | Pick when red

    • Cherry Bomb Peppers | Gleanings (help yourself to the little that’s left) | Pick when red

    • Habanero | 10 peppers per share | Pick when orange

  • Herbs: Italian, Purple and Thai Basil, Dill, Tulsi, Chamomile, Parsley, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Tarragon, Thyme, Oregano, Marjoram, Culinary Sage, Lemon Balm, Lemon Verbena, Vietnamese Coriander, Shiso (Perilla), Catnip, Pineapple, Sorrel, Assorted Mints & Husk Cherries!

  • Flowers!

HARVEST NOTES

  • Bodega Red Potatoes: These distinctively round, red-skinned tomatoes are a true local heirloom, grown in our region since the 1840’s. As with many true heirlooms, it’s often difficult to track down seed (in this case seed potatoes) to grow them, and we’re grateful to the folks at Slow Food Sonoma County North for their work in making them available! Bodega Reds have a rich, creamy and nutty potato flavor, and a texture that’s neither too starchy nor waxy. They’re quite versatile, so use them in any of your favorite dishes: baked, boiled, fried, or mashed. You’ll notice that the skin on the potatoes this week is quite delicate as they’re not fully cured.

PRESERVING THE HARVEST

With the Equinox, the tomatoes are showing signs of slowing down. Make sure to take advantage of bulk quantities while they’re still around! If you just don’t have time to process, but really want to save some for the cooler months, consider blending whole tomatoes, and pouring into freezer bags to make sauce out of later.

WINTER SISTER FARM CSA

Going to miss us this winter? Well you’re in luck! Our dear friends next door at Winter Sister Farm have got you covered with the freshest veggies money can buy all winter and spring.

All memberships include diverse winter-hardy veggies such as broccoli, carrots, potatoes, onions, winter squash, lettuce, kale, chard, as well as access to a small u-pick garden with cold hardy herbs and spring flowers. Click here to get all the details on this wonderful CSA program and to reserve your spot today!

LOCAL FLOUR SHARES AVAILABLE!

We’re excited to share that our friend Farmer Mai is making their locally-grown flour available again this year as a winter subscription. Their freshly-ground, heirloom wheat flour is the most magical that we’ve ever baked with. There’s only one week left to sign up, so if you’re interested hop on it now!

The Farmer Mai Flour Share is a four-month subscription of freshly stone-milled, whole wheat flour each month. Choose from different bundles of identity-preserved, single-origin, and flavorful heirloom wheat. Pick-up is available at Green Valley Farm and Mill in Sebastopol.

NIÇOISE SALAD

by ANNA STOCKWELL via Bon Appetit

Farmer’s note: We are love the versatility of nicoise salad and how beautifully it highlights the flavor and freshness of really good vegetables. We recommend using this recipe as a template for beautiful meals all season.

This tuna niçoise salad recipe delivers big briny Mediterranean-inspired flavors, with lots of satisfying crunch. Bonus: It requires the bare minimum of prep time.

Just a handful of quality ingredients makes this summer salad special. Canned tuna plays the leading role, so splurge on a really good tin. For the briny elements, choose your own adventure. Tiny niçoise olivesare traditional, but meaty green Castelvetranos or robust black olives like Kalamata work too. Capers make another great addition, and they’re even better when you crisp them up. Peperoncini bring both tang and a touch of heat. Look for fresh green beans or haricot verts at the farmers market as well as crisp seedless cucumbers, which are at their best in summer.

A couple of Nicoise Salad-inspired dinners. On the left: Dragon Tongue beans with caramelized onions, cucumber, carrot, celery, lettuce, tomato and hard boiled egg with herby Ranch dressing. On the right: heirloom tomato, pan-fried potatoes, roasted zucchini, cucumbers and purple daikon with blue cheese, lettuce and sweet pepper, capers and sardines with the classic Nicoise dressing below.

To keep everything as simple as possible, the cooked elements are all boiled in a single pot of water: Cook the eggs first, then blanch the green beans, and finally simmer baby gold or red potatoes until they’re fork-tender. Use the cooking time to assemble everything else. When ready, drizzle a lemon vinaigrette over the composed salad, slice some crusty bread, and pour that rosé. No garnish is necessary, but if you have some fresh basil on hand, don’t let it go to waste.

INGREDIENTS

6–8 servings

  • ¾ cup extra-virgin olive oil

  • ¼ cup fresh lemon juice

  • 2 Tbsp. Dijon mustard

  • 1 tsp. honey

  • 1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

  • 1 tsp. kosher salt, plus more

  • 6 large eggs

  • 1 lb. green beans, trimmed and/or new or baby potatoes, halved if larger

  • 4 cups thinly sliced seedless cucumbers

  • 3 cups oil-packed tuna

  • Olives, capers, peperoncini, pickles, anchovies, or other pickled-briny ingredients, drained well (for serving)

  • Flaky sea salt

PREPARATION

  1. Whisk ¾ cup extra-virgin olive oil, ¼ cup fresh lemon juice, 2 Tbsp. Dijon mustard, 1 tsp. honey, 1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper, and 1 tsp. kosher salt in a medium bowl; set niçoise salad dressing aside.

  2. Bring a medium pot of salted water to a boil. Carefully add 6 large eggs and cook 7 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer eggs to a bowl of ice water (keep pot over high heat); chill eggs until cold, about 5 minutes. Peel; set aside.

  3. Meanwhile, add 1 lb. green beans, trimmed and/or new or baby potatoes, halved if larger to the same pot of boiling water and cook until just tender, 2–4 minutes for green beans, 10–15 minutes for potatoes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer to bowl of ice water; let sit until cold, about 3 minutes. Transfer to paper towels; pat dry.

  4. To serve, slice eggs in half and arrange on a large platter with green beans and/or potatoes, 4 cups seedless cucumbers, thinly sliced on a diagonal, and 3 cups oil-packed tuna. Top with olives, capers, peperoncini, pickles, anchovies, or other pickled-briny things, drained well, sprinkle with flaky sea salt, and drizzle some reserved dressing over. Serve with remaining dressing alongside.

    Do Ahead: Niçoise salad dressing can be made 5 days ahead; cover and chill. Eggs can be boiled and vegetables blanched 2 days ahead; cover and chill separately. 

FARMER’S LOG

Turn, Turn, Turn!

At 5:43 am this Sunday morning, the Earth will wobble its midline straight to the sun — the Autumnal Equinox. At that moment, if you listen closely, you might here a big “yipeee!” from thousands of Northern hemisphere farmers.

It’s not that we begrudge the summer. No. We just love the changes.

It struck me today how the tasks of pulling off a growing season harmonize with each other, and the seasons, such that it always seems like there is just enough time to do what needs to be done by the skin on our chinny-chin-chins.

The Byrds were right: To everything, there is a season. 

In the spring, we aren’t harvesting yet, so we have all the lengthening-day to prep the canvas; to tune-up the equipment and build irrigation systems; to seed 200 trays a week in the greenhouse; to pot up, stake, and trellis tomatoes; to mow cover crop, turn soil, and plant, plant, plant!

Then harvest seasons comes and two, three, then four days a week are consumed by harvest. We put down the shovel and the hammer and take up the harvest knife. All other projects cease. Planting and harvest become our lives (and maybe some weeding if we’re lucky). The days are at their longest. If there is ever a time to harvest hundreds of pounds of cucumbers, tomatoes and squash in the morning and then seed a mile of carrots in the afternoon, it’s summer.

Before we know it, it’s late-summer. The tomatoes start exploding, the cucumbers already are, we’re still planting like crazy and then the melons come in — and just when when we think we’ll break, that there isn’t enough time in the long hot days, we scroll through our crop plan and see that the plantings are nearly done. No more bed shaping. Greenhouse seedings slow down. We plant the last Fall brassicas and the tractor sits quiet for a minute and we can spend all day amongst the vines and in the cooler playing Tetris with boxes of summer fruit. 

Brent, Char and Sarah planting the very last seedlings of the year — 3,000 row ft of Salanova lettuce!

Then comes the Autumnal Equinox.

The tomatoes are still pumping and the onions and potatoes are calling to be harvested; the winter squash and corn are crisping up. The fall harvests are here. Space needs to be cleared, fields mowed and turned into cover crop, new garlic beds prepped and planted — and just when we think we’ll break, that there isn’t enough time in the shortening days, the heat starts to ebb and the tomatoes show signs of slowing down. Soon, a light frost will roll through the farm and nip the summer fruits. Smiling friends will come to help with the potato harvest. The chill morning air goes down like a draught of ambrosia. We plant the last lettuce bed of the season and have a moment to sit and seed cover crop.

All this is why you’ll rarely hear a farmer say, “Shucks! Summer is over.”

We are greedy for the turnings.

We love nothing more than a first harvest. But the glory of the first tomato fades under the weight of hundreds of tomato crates and then we crave cold hands and cozy coats and the crisp stem snap of a plump winter radicchio.

Change is our tonic — and one of the great sustaining elixirs of farm life.

Soon, winter will come. The rains will come and we will turn in — to rest, rejuvenation, and internality. We’ll clean up the farm, look back on the year, plan the next, sit, think, fix things, and sleep. 

But ample sleep turns into insomnia; too much internality into angst. Our harvest muscles will atrophy and we will get pudgy. We will forget why we are out puttering in the wet and the cold.

And just when we think we’ll break, that there is too much open-endedness in the too short days, the sun will start creeping back and we will hear the Red-winged Blackbirds calling us back out to the fields, beckoning us, “Build it up again! Plant again! Turn! Turn! Turn!”

See you in the fields,
David


CSA BASICS

Drive slow! Please drive slow on Cooper Rd. and in our driveway / parking lot area. Kids at play!

No dogs: Unfortunately, dogs are not allowed on the farm.

What time is harvest pick-up?:

  • Saturday harvest pick-ups run from 9:00 am - 2:00 pm

  • Tuesday harvest pick-ups will run from 1:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Oriented members can come to the farm any time, 7 days a week, sunrise to sunset, to u-pick and enjoy the farm.

Where is the farm? The member parking lot is located at 1720 Cooper Rd., Sebastopol, CA 95472.

Where is the food? The produce pick-up barn is just to the right of the solar panels and above our big greenhouse. You can’t miss it!

2024 CSA program dates: Our harvest season will run from Saturday, June 15th through Tuesday, December 10th this year.

Harvest Week 14 - September Echoes

THIS WEEK’S HARVEST

Arugula, Baby Mustard Mix, Cegolaine Little Gem Lettuce, Assorted Head Lettuce, Bel Fiore Radicchio, Dazzling Blue Dino Kale, Mei Qing Choi Bok Choi, Purple Daikon Radish, Fennel, Carrots, Assorted Zucchini & Summer Squash, Sweet Peppers, Eggplant, Fresh Walla Walla Onions, Early Girl & Heirloom Tomatoes

U-PICK

Don’t forget to branch out to the back areas to find the jack-pots!

  • Albion Strawberries | 4 pints per share

  • Padrón Peppers | 2 pints per share | Note that as Padróns age, they are more likely to be spicy!

  • Shishito Peppers | 3 pints per share | While still most likely to be mild, even shishitos can have a little heat towards the end of the season.

  • Cherry Tomatoes | 5 pints per share

  • Dragon Tongue Green Beans | 4 pints per share | See harvest note below

  • Hot Peppers:

    • Jalapeños | 7 peppers per share | To find the hottest ones, look for “checking”, the delicate cracks in the skin that indicate the pepper has aged into its heat.

    • Thai Chilis | 5 peppers | Pick when red

    • Cherry Bomb Peppers | 2 peppers per share | Pick when red

    • 🌟 Habanero | 2 peppers per share | Pick when orange

  • Herbs: Italian, Purple and Thai Basil, Dill, Tulsi, Chamomile, Parsley, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Tarragon, Thyme, Oregano, Marjoram, Culinary Sage, Lemon Balm, Lemon Verbena, Vietnamese Coriander, Shiso (Perilla), Catnip, Pineapple, Sorrel, Assorted Mints & Husk Cherries!

  • Flowers!

A big thank you to our floral ambassador, Cassidy, and everyone who made August 31's Flower Power Happy Hour so special!

HARVEST NOTES

  • Habanero Peppers: Habanero chilis, originally from the Amazon, and very popular in Yucatán Peninsula, are very hot, rated 100,000–350,000 on the Scoville scale. They’re very commonly used to make hot sauces and, if you can handle the heat, is often described as “fruity”.

  • Fresh Walla Walla Onions: Fresh out of the soil, this delicate, sweet, fresh-eating onion was developed in, you guessed it, Walla Walla, Washington. These are a delicacy. Try them in a way that you can show them off: lightly grilled on a good burger, raw in a salad with a delicate dressing, or as onion rings. They are so sweet and mild, some people even eat them raw like an apple! (We haven’t tried that yet! If you do, let us know how it goes!) Read more about Walla Wallas here.

PRESERVING THE HARVEST

The Tomatoes are showing signs of slowing down slightly, so make sure to take advantage of bulk quantities while they’re still around! If you just don’t have time to process, but really want to save some for the cooler months, consider blending whole tomatoes, and pouring into freezer bags to make sauce out of later.

WINTER SISTER FARM CSA SIGN-UPS OPEN!

Going to miss us this winter? Well you’re in luck! Our dear friends next door at Winter Sister Farm have got you covered for veggies all winter and spring. All memberships include diverse winter-hardy veggies such as broccoli, carrots, potatoes, onions, winter squash, lettuce, kale, chard, as well as access to a small u-pick garden with cold hardy herbs and spring flowers. Click here to get all the details on this wonderful CSA program and to reserve your spot today!

LOCAL FLOUR SHARES AVAILABLE!

We’re excited to share that our friend Farmer Mai is making their locally-grown flour available again this year as a winter subscription. Their freshly-ground, heirloom wheat flour is the most magical that we’ve ever baked with.

Farmer Mai is a James Beard award-winning farmer and social justice activist, the only Bay Area honoree in 2024, who uses agroecological methods to grow climate change-adapted and nutritious grains in Sebastopol, Sonoma County. 

Join the Farmer Mai Flour Share to receive a four-month subscription of freshly stone-milled, whole wheat flour each month. Choose from different bundles of identity-preserved, single-origin, and flavorful heirloom wheat. Pick-up is available at Green Valley Farm and Mill in Sebastopol.

APPLE CHICORY SALAD WITH FENNEL, WALNUTS, AND GRANA

Recipe by Alanna Taylor-Tobin

This simple salad highlights the gorgeous colors of this week’s Bel Fiore Chicory, Purple Daikon and Fennel and creates a perfect pairing of bitter, sweet and umami.

Ingredients

Vinaigrette:

  • 1 teaspoon minced shallot or yellow onion

  • ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt

  • 3 tablespoons (45 ml) apple cider vinegar

  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil (more to taste)

Salad:

  • 4 cups chicory leaves, torn into large pieces

  • 1 medium apple, thinly sliced

  • 1 medium watermelon radish or purple daikon, peeled lightly, halved and thinly sliced

  • 1 small fennel bulb, thinly sliced

  • 1-2 ounces grana, shaved (or other aged cheese such as parmesan, manchego, gruyere, or asiago)

  • ½ cup (50 g) walnuts, toasted and coarsely chopped or broken up

  • arils from half a large pomegranate (optional)

  • flaky salt such as Maldon

  • ground black pepper

Instructions

  • In a small jar, combine the shallot and salt. Mash with a small spoon until pulpy. Add the vinegar, stir to combine, then add the olive oil.

  • In a large bowl, combine the chicories with the apple, radish, and fennel. Spoon over some of the vinaigrette, making sure to grab some of the vinegar and shallot that will settle on the bottom, and toss to combine. Sprinkle over the cheese, walnuts, pomegranate if using, and a few pinches of salt and pepper and toss gently. Taste, adding more vinaigrette, salt, pepper, or olive oil if you feel the salad needs it. Serve right away.

FARMER’S LOG

SEPTEMBER ECHOES

On the farm, time is full of echoes.

Moments, days, tasks, seasons… they return cyclically, as if from a long distance, the long distance of a year.

All it takes is a certain smell or taste, a certain slant of light, and it hits you — there you are again, flooded with memories of who you were, and who you were with, this time last year.

Last September 13th, we were also rich in late summer’s bounty with fall knocking at the door. Pig weed and prickly goat weed were scratching our arms while we harvested onions. The earthy tang of freshly-mowed potatoes filled the morning air. The first rustles of drying corn stalks could be heard on the wind. We were tasting the the last of the sweet, sweet melons. We were watching the plump Jack-O-Lanterns turn from green to orange and the sulfur cosmos light up like fire in the setting sun.

The slanting mid-September light is full of memory echoes.

We can hear them in the early morning, shimmering though the fog, and they make us smile.

And sometimes, when we are still, the echoes seem to continue on forward, strangely, and it is as if we can hear the echoes of mid-Septembers yet to come.

See you in the fields,
David


CSA BASICS

Drive slow! Please drive slow on Cooper Rd. and in our driveway / parking lot area. Kids at play!

No dogs: Unfortunately, dogs are not allowed on the farm.

What time is harvest pick-up?:

  • Saturday harvest pick-ups run from 9:00 am - 2:00 pm

  • Tuesday harvest pick-ups will run from 1:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Oriented members can come to the farm any time, 7 days a week, sunrise to sunset, to u-pick and enjoy the farm.

Where is the farm? The member parking lot is located at 1720 Cooper Rd., Sebastopol, CA 95472.

Where is the food? The produce pick-up barn is just to the right of the solar panels and above our big greenhouse. You can’t miss it!

2024 CSA program dates: Our harvest season will run from Saturday, June 15th through Tuesday, December 10th this year.

Harvest Week 13 - Mystery

THIS WEEK’S HARVEST

Salad Mix with Salanova Lettuce and Bel Fiore Radicchio, Assorted Little Gem Lettuces, Cherokee Summer Crisp Lettuce, Rainbow Chard, Mei Qing Choi Bok Choi, Hakurei Salad Turnips, Celery, Carrots, Assorted Zucchini & Summer Squash, Slicing Cucumbers, Sarah’s Choice Cantaloupe, Sweet Peppers, Eggplant, Farao Cabbage, Fresh Yellow Elsye Onions, Early Girl & Heirloom Tomatoes

U-PICK

Don’t forget to branch out to the back areas to find the jack-pots!

  • Albion Strawberries | 3 pints per share

  • Padrón Peppers | 2 pints per share | Note that as Padróns age, they are more likely to be spicy!

  • Shishito Peppers | 3 pints per share | While still most likely to be mild, even shishitos can have a little heat towards the end of the season.

  • Cherry Tomatoes | 6 pints per share

  • Dragon Tongue Green Beans | 3 pints per share | See harvest note below

  • Hot Peppers:

    • Jalapeños | 7 peppers per share | To find the hottest ones, look for “checking”, the delicate cracks in the skin that indicate the pepper has aged into its heat.

    • Thai Chilis | 3 peppers | Pick when red

    • Cherry Bomb Peppers | 2 peppers per share | Pick when red

  • Herbs: Italian, Purple and Thai Basil, Dill, Tulsi, Chamomile, Parsley, Onion Chives, Garlic Chives, Tarragon, Thyme, Oregano, Marjoram, Culinary Sage, Lemon Balm, Lemon Verbena, Vietnamese Coriander, Shiso (Perilla), Catnip, Pineapple, Sorrel, Assorted Mints & Husk Cherries!

  • Flowers!

HARVEST NOTES

  • Sweet Peppers: These year we’re growing two types of sweet peppers.

    • Cornitos: We have three colors of these delicious Italian peppers whose name means “little horns” after the Italian Corno di Toro “bull’s horn” peppers. They make excellent snacks eaten out of hand, sliced into salads, fried, and roasted.

    • Jimmy Nardello: As Baker Creek seeds tells it “this fine Italian pepper was grown each year by Giuseppe and Angella Nardello at their garden in the village of Ruoti, in Southern Italy. In 1887 they set sail with their one-year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the U.S. When they reached these shores, they settled and gardened in Naugatuck, Connecticut, and grew this same pepper that was named for their fourth son, Jimmy.” These peppers have thin walls and super-sweet flesh that makes them incredible for frying and roasting.

PRESERVING THE HARVEST

We have reached peak tomato season! Bulk tomatoes will be available for projects, canning and preserving from now until the end of tomato season, but we recommend taking advantage as soon as you’re able to ensure you don’t miss the best of the season. Check out previous newsletter for easy ways to put them up.

FLOWER DYEING WORKSHOP TOMORROW!

Saturday, September 7th
1:00 - 3:00 pm

Come learn the art of dyeing fabric with flowers! Bring a hammer and a notebook and join CSA member Hanna on the farm while she teaches you which flowers can create beautiful lasting color on fabric! We will hammer flowers and herbs onto 2 mordanted organic cotton napkins and then dip them into two different dye pots. You will leave feeling confident in doing this at home! Register for the event here.

MUSIC TOGETHER ON THE FARM!

Music Together is a world wide children's' music program for 0-5 year olds and the people who love them! Come join CSA member Hanna and her children for 10 weeks of making music together under the oak trees.  They will meet Thursday mornings starting September 12th at 9:30 and 10:45 am.  To sign up for the Fall session go to https://mtofwestsonomacounty.com

WINTER SISTER FARM CSA SIGN-UPS OPEN!

Going to miss us this winter? Well you’re in luck! Our dear friends next door at Winter Sister Farm have got you covered for veggies all winter and spring. All memberships include diverse winter-hardy veggies such as broccoli, carrots, potatoes, onions, winter squash, lettuce, kale, chard, as well as access to a small u-pick garden with cold hardy herbs and spring flowers. Click here to get all the details on this wonderful CSA program and to reserve your spot today!

FARMER’S LOG

MYSTERY

Over the last couple centuries humanity has put a lot of effort into getting rid of mystery in the field.

Plants need this or that NPK; this disease can be remedied by this or that; moisture levels should be kept around this or that field capacity. Etc., etc.

But mystery still abounds on the farm.

We started harvesting our bulk onion crop this week and it is the best looking onion crop we’ve ever grown. Our Red Cabernets, usually our smallest variety, are bigger than last year’s Walla Wallas. There are Elsye onions out there bigger than a softball.

These onions didn’t always look good. In fact, there was a long period in their young life when they looked pretty bad.

The hardship started at planting when, in our haste to get them in the ground, we skipped using our Forigo implement to shape beds, a step we usually take get optimal tilth in the top few inches. We shaped those beds with a mulch layer, so once the transplanter got rolling, it was too late to correct. Planting in the more clayey areas of those beds was like planting into 1” drain rock… 15,000 times. It was probably one of the more miserable couple days of work this year. But our amazing crew powered through with customary good humor and got them in the ground.

My fears about the soil in that field were exacerbated when the onions didn’t bounce back from the normal transplant shock like they should. They seemed to languish — not growing, slowly losing their verdant color, tips browning — for an awful long time.

Kayta weekend checking Asa's immaculate onion starts in April and harvested onions today back on the same tables from whence they came to cure. 

I irrigated heavily in an attempt to help their roots set, but it didn’t seem to help. The cherry on top was when a full 45 ft section of Cipollini’s started flat-out dying, the result (in hindsight) of a hungry localized population of wire worms.

During those weeks I would watch the sprinklers rotating over the onions field and look at pictures on my phone of our beautiful onion transplants last year: Upright, deep blue-green, virtually no browning.

“We’re toast,” I thought, and turned my attention to other things.

I kept up with the discipline of irrigating and moisture checks on the onions but I subconsciously started to avoid them — afraid of what I would see, their fate largely out of my hands at that point.

That’s when the mystery crept in.

At some point in late July, on a reluctant onion moisture check, I was startled by the thickness of greens on the Calibras — they looked like shovel handles. On another walk a couple weeks later, I was surprised by an awful lot of baseball sized Eslye bulbs, still with verdant greens and a lot of growing left to do.

I started walking through the onions more at that point. 

Baseballs became softballs, and here we are today, hauling out macro bin after macro bin of perfect onions.

We do have some theories on why these onions did so well. They had a near perfect start in the greenhouse: Asa grew the healthiest onion starts we’ve ever seen. It was breathtaking to walk along the tables, running your hands through them. It was also our first year growing onions under mulch, which onions love because it traps moisture and onions love even moisture like the swamp plants they are.

But I don’t know if those two things add up to this level of uniform giganticness. Or perhaps they do and I’m deluding myself for want of belief in the mystery.

In this case, I’m betting on the mystery and that on some misty morning in June these onions were blessed and we will never come close to dissecting the wonder of growing plants in living soils on this living planet. 

Thank goodness.

See you in the fields,
David


TURNIPS GLAZED IN MISO & BUTTER

Recipe by Claire Saffitz

Have you tried the Hakurei Salad Turnips yet? While we love crunching on them raw as a snack, and slicing them onto our salads, it’s hard to beat the richly satisfying flavor of glazing them with miso and butter. Their greens are also delicious, added at the end so that they cook down a little.

  • 1 pound turnips, cut into 1” wedges

  • 2 tablespoons white miso

  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter

  • 1 teaspoon sugar

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 2tablespoons fresh lemon juice

STEP 1

Combine turnips, miso, butter, and sugar in a medium skillet, then add water just to cover vegetables. Season with salt and pepper.

STEP 2

Bring to a boil over medium-high heat and cook turnips, turning occasionally, until they are tender and liquid is evaporated, 15–20 minutes.

STEP 3

Once all the liquid has cooked off, keep cooking turnips, tossing occasionally, until they are golden brown and caramelized and the sauce thickens and glazes the vegetables, about 5 minutes longer.

STEP 4

Add lemon juice and a splash of water to pan and swirl to coat turnips. Season with salt and pepper.


CSA BASICS

Drive slow! Please drive slow on Cooper Rd. and in our driveway / parking lot area. Kids at play!

No dogs: Unfortunately, dogs are not allowed on the farm.

What time is harvest pick-up?:

  • Saturday harvest pick-ups run from 9:00 am - 2:00 pm

  • Tuesday harvest pick-ups will run from 1:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Oriented members can come to the farm any time, 7 days a week, sunrise to sunset, to u-pick and enjoy the farm.

Where is the farm? The member parking lot is located at 1720 Cooper Rd., Sebastopol, CA 95472.

Where is the food? The produce pick-up barn is just to the right of the solar panels and above our big greenhouse. You can’t miss it!

2024 CSA program dates: Our harvest season will run from Saturday, June 15th through Tuesday, December 10th this year.