Archive for August, 2009

HOG Trough 15

Monday, August 31st, 2009

August 31, 2009 Share 15
Whats Happening At the Farm
Being a member of a local organic CSA farm means that, together, we have begun to reclaim a certain degree of responsibility which is severely lacking in modern society. No longer passive consumers (at least for part of the year) of commodified, transported food, our bodies now have a direct, tangible connection to the land. We are encouraged, through an awareness of this connection, to actively take part in a sustainable, mindful stewardship of our environment, our community, and ourselves. We are even motivated to be imaginative with the creation of our meals. In every respect, it is a matter of regaining a bit of control and conscientiousness in our lives, of becoming a bit more connected to the processes we sometimes take for granted and, ultimately, a matter of being more creative, more interactive… and yes, having more fun (a garlic festival with your neighbors will always trump the standard supermarket shopping experience). That’s what a CSA should provide…through an insight into the interconnectedness of the health of the environment, the social well-being of the community, the living vibrancy of the food we ingest, and the physical health of individuals.
In short, we are working towards an environmentally sustainable lifestyle while simultaneously improving our own health. Food just picked and in its natural state is what our bodies evolved to ingest. Take for example the fact that the mineral Silica is severely lacking in the diets of most people today, simply because it is almost non-existent in processed foods. Essential for healthy skin and nails, Silica is mainly found on the skins of certain foods (beets, cucumbers, etc). Eating food in its natural state, and freshly enough that it hasn’t lost the compounds that make it so healthy, is in itself, a fundamental system of wellness.  This food, raised on the energy and mindfulness of the farmers, really does act as a sort of medicine. In the end, the responsibility belongs only to us to cultivate our own well-being. As part of this endeavor, this year, we at the HOG have expanded our experiments with growing medicinal herbs, plants which serve little nutritional need, but which have active compounds which produce a specific physiological response. We have been harvesting these herbs, drying them, and making tinctures to sell at the pickups. For a complete list of what we’re making, feel free to email us, or stop by the farm and ask.In Season Now
lettuce
kale or chard
cabbage
carrot
soybeans-these are fresh green edamame-just pick the pods off the plant and steam for 10 minutes, sprinkle with salt and pop the tender beans in you mouth!
peppers or eggplant
onions
potatoes
scallions

On The Way
sweet potatoes
soybeans
cauliflower

Pick Your Own
Pick your own items are available for you to harvest at any time, as long as it’s not raining. Look for the signs marking the beds!

Cherry Tomatoes-1 pint
Cilantro- please be careful when picking cilantro not to trample the shorter, younger cilantro seedlings growing to the right of the larger plants.
Basil
Parsley
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Chives, Mint
Flowers-our zinnias, sunflowers, and other summer flowers are finally starting to bloom! No limit

Trough 15 Recipes

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Cabbage with Bacon Bread Crumbs
Braised Eggplant and Peppers (more…)

HOG Trough 14

Monday, August 24th, 2009

August 24, 2009 Share 14
Whats Happening At the Farm
Ups and downs are what farming is all about…things look great for a few weeks, then it seems as though the farm is a disaster that will never recover…then 2 days later it all seems ok again! We just have to sit back and have faith that it will all even out, and it usually does. We were able to finish digging all of our potatoes in 2 days, and return the digger to our friends in Amagansett. It looks like a great harvest, which is being stored under the Tractor Barn. Potatoes with imperfections were sorted out, and we will be giving those potatoes away first-these potatoes are delicious and safe to eat, but have marks on the skin that make the potato look bad. Cut these potato in half, and you’ll see they are fine inside.
We also harvested our winter squash crop, which looks pretty poor. The cool spring and heavy rains rotted many of the seeds and transplants. We replanted what died, but it was a little late in the season for them to really get big enough. Additionally, we are still battling a terrible squash bug infestation left over from last season. We will be them out this week.
Last week, Sean, Adam, Jill and Pete began marking out the new field by the barn, and Sean started plowing it in preparation for a early cover crop. This part of the farm hasn’t been planted in vegetable for many years, so we hope to use it to help break the pest cycles in the winter squash and potatoes.
On a brighter note, the tomatoes have been doing much better then we expected-the hot, dry weather has stopped the blight from completely killing the plants. The Cherry tomatoes have been producing beyond our expectations, and a few of the heirloom have started to regrow and set new tomatoes. They probably won’t have time to ripen, but we’ll keep an eye on them. Perhaps we’ll be able to give out green tomotoes to fry!
In Season Now
lettuce
carrots
green beans
cherry tomatoes
peppers and/or eggplants
hot peppers
broccoli and/or cabbage-the beginning of our fall crops!
onions
winter squash-our season was an improvement over last year, but still not nearly as great as past seasons. We have spaghetti squash, acorn, sweet dumplings, and a few butternuts
potatoes-after digging the potatoes, we are giving out everything that won’t store-the potatoes may look bad, but inside they are perfect-just peel! There are tons of cosmetically perfect potatoes for later on in the season
On The Way
soybeans
cauliflower

Pick Your Own
Pick your own items are available for you to harvest at any time, as long as it’s not raining. Look for the signs marking the beds!

Cilantro- please be careful when picking cilantro not to trample the shorter, younger cilantro seedlings growing to the right of the larger plants.
Basil
Parsley
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Chives, Mint
Flowers-our zinnias, sunflowers, and other summer flowers are finally starting to bloom! No limit

Trough 14 Recipes

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Potato Salad with Tomatoes and Capers

Spaghetti Squash with Tomatoes, Basil, and Parmesan (more…)

Trough 13

Monday, August 17th, 2009

August 17, 2009 Share 13
Whats Happening At the Farm
Mead Day was a lot of fun this weekend! We had a great time tasting the products of the past 3 years of mead day, as well as products Matt had made on his own. I know Im looking forward to next year to try that braggat!
We grow tons of different veggies on the farm-in fact, its one of the things that allows us to be organic. If one crop fails in a bad year, we probably have 3 things that do really well. For instance, though we haven’t had many tomatoes, our peas and green beans we great this year (with more beans to come soon!). We frequently reference the diversity of produce grown on the farm as a strength. There are times, especially during the heat, humidity, and mosquitoes of August, that the idea of growing less seems very appealing.
Because we don’t grow, by industry standards, a lot of potatoes, we have gotten by over the years digging potatoes with a very very old potato digger, pulled behind the tractor. Well, you can mark the gravestone for that potato digger with the date August 14, 2009. It has officially ceased to work and is, for our intents and purposes, scrap metal.
The challenge for the coming week is to borrow one of these machines from one of our friendly fellow Long Island farmers. So we will have two days of intensive, and extensive, potato digging in order to get what looks to be a decent haul of potatoes out of the ground before we must return the digger so it can dig the potatoes of its rightful owners. Wish us luck and stay tuned for a last minute e-mail, if and when we do get the digger, to come help bag potatoes!
In Season Now
Lettuce
Chard
Sweet Corn
Carrots
Sweet Onions
Cherry Tomatoes
Eggplant or Peppers
Garlic
Red Onions

On The Way
green beans
soybeans
winter squash
broccoli
cauliflower

Pick Your Own
Pick your own items are available for you to harvest at any time, as long as it’s not raining. Look for the signs marking the beds!

Cilantro- please be careful when picking cilantro not to trample the shorter, younger cilantro seedlings growing to the right of the larger plants.
Basil
Parsley
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Chives, Mint
Flowers-our zinnias, sunflowers, and other summer flowers are finally starting to bloom! No limit

Trough 13 Recipes

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Swiss Chard with Raisins and Almonds

(more…)

Mead Day this Saturday August 15th

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Mead Day is this Saturday at 11am at the HOG! Bring your own lunch!
We’ll have a quick tour of the hives from bee-lady Judy, then come back and break for lunch while Matt and Matt talk about and demonstrate mead making, including an all-grain braggot, traditional mead, and some flavor experiments. There will also be some meads from last year to taste!

Admission is $5, this event is limited to members or guests of members!
Please remember to bring your own lunch! See you there!

HOG Trough 12

Monday, August 10th, 2009

August 10, 2009 Share 12
Whats Happening At the Farm
Though the heat of summer is full on, August for us farmers is a time to harvest some of the fall crops, and start thinking about next season. Throughout the month we will be harvesting and curing our onions, as well as digging the rest of the potatoes to bag and store in the barn.
We will also begin plans to fence the new field. After mowing, we will pace out the future fields and begin placing the posts, plowing the sod and planting a cover crop. The field will be ready for next spring, and just in time-we will want to move the tomatoes as far from the late blight area as we can, so they will probably be in the new field.
August is also the last month to complete your work hours-we are available every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 9am-5pm.

Last but not least, Mead Day is this Saturday at 11am.  Bring your own lunch.

In Season Now
Kale
Chard
Sweet Corn
Carrots
Sweet Onions
Cherry Tomatoes
Eggplant
Peppers
Potatoes
Garlic
On The Way
green beans
soybeans
winter squash
broccoli
cauliflower

Pick Your Own
Pick your own items are available for you to harvest at any time, as long as it’s not raining. Look for the signs marking the beds!

Basil-only pick the tops, and don’t pick too much off one plant! Please go down the beds to find big, healthy, unpicked plants!
Parsley- flat or curly–don’t pick too much off one plant! Please go down the beds to find big, healthy, unpicked plants!
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Chives, Mint
Flowers-our zinnias, sunflowers, and other summer flowers are finally starting to bloom! No limit

Recipes
Carrot Soup with Ginger and Lemon
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter
1 1/2 cups chopped onion
1 tablespoon finely chopped peeled fresh ginger
1 1/2 teaspoons minced garlic
1 1/4 pounds medium carrots, peeled, chopped (about 3 cups)
2 tomatoes, seeded, chopped (about 1 1/3 cups)
1 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon peel
3 cups (or more) chicken stock or canned low-salt broth
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
4 tablespoons sour cream
1 small carrot, peeled, grated
Melt butter in heavy large pot over medium-high heat. Add onion; sauté 4 minutes. Add ginger and garlic; sauté 2 minutes. Add chopped carrots, tomatoes and lemon peel; saute 1 minute. Add 3 cups stock and bring to boil. Reduce heat, cover partially and simmer until carrots are very tender, about 20 minutes. Cool slightly. Puree soup in batches in blender. Return soup to pot. Mix in lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Cover and chill.) Bring soup to simmer, thinning with more stock, if desired. Ladle into bowls. Top each with sour cream and grated carrot

Trough 12 Recipes

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Carrot Ginger Soup (more…)

Trough 11

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

lateblight09August 3, 2009 Share 11
Whats Happening At the Farm
It is official: late blight has more or less wiped out our tomato crop for this year. A few weeks back we noticed the indicative brown lesions on the stem and leaves of a dozen plants. We pulled those plants out along with a buffer of surrounding plants, leaving 50 foot gaps in three out of our five 400 foot beds. As we waited for the shipment of the copper-based fungicide which might have helped suppress the spread of the disease, we had a week of two downpours: 2.5 inches of rain on Tuesday, and 3.5 inches of rain on Thursday! Unprecedented! Those wet conditions were perfect for the spread of the spores throughout our entire planting of tomatoes.
The paste tomatoes were the hardest hit and we are cancelling both canning days. The cherry tomatoes have the least damage and we will attempt to pick some for the shares in the next weeks. This crop failure is especially disappointing to us for several reasons. We put a disproportionate amount of work into our tomato field. Starting in the spring of 2008 we left the area that would be this years tomato field fallow to flush out weeds and leave no crop residue for disease or pests to survive on. In late summer ‘08 we planted a thick stand of rye and vetch to enrich and protect the soil over the fall winter and spring. This spring we mowed the rye and vetch with a special mower and raked the hay by hand over the 12,000 square foot area. Over 650 tomato plants were planted by hand and fertilized individually with a custom blend of compost, fertilizer, and minerals. The young plants were growing beautifully and every week we would add a new level of twine to the trellis to keep up with the fast growing plants. This was the first year we timed the trellising perfectly and didn’t have to lift up overhanging tomato plants that had grown feet in height since the previous trellising!
Many of you remember last years tomatoes. The plants were so healthy and the fruits so delicious, we collected seeds from all of our 42 heirloom varieties. These seeds had a fullness and sheen you don’t see in ordered seed, and they grew beautiful strong seedlings that were the offspring off those wonderful 2008 tomatoes. Not only have we lost the 2009 tomato crop, but we lost the opportunity to continue saving our own seed and selecting those plants and fruits which perform best in our unique location.
Late blight, Phytophtera infestans, spreads fast but occurs rarely. It seems that a perfect storm of unprecedented
rainfall and the unwise practice of shipping large quantities of unhealthy tomato plants from southern states to be sold cheaply at big box stores conspired to create a tomato crisis in the Northeast. Luckily late blight doesn’t survive over the winter this far north, so we would have to experience a fresh importation of spores from the south.
Can this crazy weather be blamed on global warming? Perhaps being denied the unparalleled flavor of fresh local heirloom tomatoes will be the wake up call we all need to drive less, use less electricity, recycle, and only buy tomato plants in the spring from local growers, like at the H.O.G. during our Mother’s Day plant Sale!

In Season Now
Lettuce
Raddicchio
Sweet Corn
Green Beans-if you have too many, just trim, boil in water for 1 minute, dunk in ice water and freeze! You’ll be able to enjoy green beans all winter!
Beets
Cucumbers
Zucchini and Summer Squash-to save this, shred in the food processor and freeze-great to add to soups, muffins, or to make zucchini appetizers.
Onions

On The Way
Peppers
Eggplants
Tomatoes?

Pick Your Own
Pick your own items are available for you to harvest at any time, as long as it’s not raining. Look for the signs marking the beds!
Green Beans
Basil-only pick the tops, and don’t pick too much off one plant! Please go down the beds to find big, healthy, unpicked plants!
Parsley- flat or curly–don’t pick too much off one plant! Please go down the beds to find big, healthy, unpicked plants!
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Chives, Mint
Flowers-our zinnias, sunflowers, and other summer flowers are finally starting to bloom! No limit

Recipes
Brine Fermenting is an ancient and wonderful tool for adding flavor and shelf life to many vegetables. Cucumbers and cabbage can each be transformed into pickles and sauerkraut with a little patience and a few simple ingredients. The brine solution creates an environment for lactobacillus and other bacteria to proliferate and outcompete other harmful bacteria that cause with food spoiling. The bacteria create lactic acid which gives pickles and sauerkraut their distinctive tang, without using vinegar. These bacteria are naturally found in the human digetive tract where they help break down what you eat and keep you healthy!
For pickles:
-Any amount of fresh, cleaned cucumbers
-Garlic cloves, as much as you want
-Dill
-brine solution: 1 shy tablespoon kosher salt per cup filtered water (chlorine kills the development of the beneficial bacteria)

Start with fresh, scrubbed cukes and dishsoap clean utensils to minimize contamination. Put the cukes and garlic in a ceramic or food grade plastic bucket. If you can get fresh sprigs of dill add them to the bottom, whole. Chopped or dried dill will float at the top and be problematic in contributing to mold growing on the surface of the brine. Add brine solution until cukes are covered. Fill a plastic ziploc bag with brine solution and use it to weigh down the cukes so they stay submerged. Or if you can find a plate that fits just inside the bucket you can use that weighted down with a lidded jar of water. It it VERY IMPORTANT that the cukes stay under the brine, it is contact with air that will cause them to rot, as long as they are in the brine, the lacto-bacteria can work their magic. Cover the container with a dishrag and in about a week you can pull out a pickle and taste test! A scum may form on the surface of the water and should be scraped off as soon as you notice it.

For sauerkraut:
Clean and chop cabbage, then add cabbage to ceramic or food grade plastic container in layers about an inch thick, sprinkling with kosher salt between each layer and pounding cabbage gently to pack it down and bruise the leaves. The salt should pull some moisture from the cabbage. When you are done, add water until the cabbage is just covered. Taste the brine, it should be distinctly salty but not unpalatably so. Weigh down the cabbage like you do with the cucmbers, removing any stray floaties of cabbage leaf at the surface.

Both of these fermentations work better at slightly cooler temperatures than we are currently experiencing. Put them in a cool, clean basement or garage where it is more like 65 degrees than 75 or 80 degrees. The warmer it is the faster everything happens. Good Luck!