Apple Salsa

From Cooking Light October 2010. Great with corn chips or fresh corn tortillas. Serve with pork or roast chicken if you eat meat, or a bean taco if you don’t.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups diced, peeled apples
  • ½ cup diced red pepper
  • 1/3 cup fresh lime juice
  • ¼ cup diced red onion (try substituting some green onion from the bag, too)
  • ¼ cup minced fresh cilantro
  • 1 Tbsp honey
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp freshly ground pepper
  • 1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and minced
Method:
  1. Combine all ingredients, stirring well.

Tomato Update – the saga continues!

Tomato boxes fortified with makeshift critter barrier (masking tape and heating duct material)...

Earlier this fall I wrote about the challenges of backyard farming amidst a rampant rodent invasion.

For the story, click here:  Gophers, Tomatoes and Peaceful Coexistence

Since that installment, friends have asked for a status update and I must sheepishly admit, the saga continues…

A little background – we live in a lovely area, just on the edge of development, rolling hills on one side, secluded creek on the other.  Devoted nature lovers, we’re fortunate to catch glimpses of wild creatures every day – quail broods running across the yard, lizards climbing stucco walls, hawks, rabbits, deer and when we’re really lucky the occasional bobcat sighting at dusk.  Unfortunately, there’s also a couple of critter varieties we’re less excited about – the toothy, subterranean pocket gopher, at work devouring unprotected roots.  Perhaps even more notorious is the Norwegian roof rat, not just a household pest, an unseemly intruder in the kitchen garden as well.

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Moroccan Sweet Potato Salad

  • 2 garnet yams (1 lb), peeled, cut into large chunks
  • 1 onion, cut into wedges (similar to yam size)
  • Salt (to taste)
  • ½ tsp grated fresh ginger
  • 1 pinch ground cumin
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 2 Tbsp lemon juice
  • 3 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil (plus extra for roasting)
  • 2 Tbsp chopped cilantro (last week’s leftovers?)
  • 1 Tbsp chopped parsley leaves
Method:
  1. Toss yams and onion in olive oil to coat and roast in preheated 375 degree oven. When tender, remove from oven and cool. Prepare marinade by whisking together remaining ingredients. Spoon marinade over the lukewarm potatoes and let sit for 30 minutes, stirring now and then. Taste for salt and adjust as needed.

For variation try adding some chopped olives or lemon zest. Some roughly chopped arugula and/or fresh spinach from this week’s farm bounty would be fantastic too!

Falling for Fennel

“What’s that bulbous vegetable that looks like pregnant celery with giant feather stalks?”

– Anonymous CSA member

Perhaps you’ve also been wondering about the funny looking bulb that came in last week’s bag.  If you happened to break off a wispy leaf and take a whiff you’d have been treated to the delicate, refreshing licorice like scent of the fennel plant.  Native to the Mediterranean coast, fennel figures prominently in both raw and cooked dishes of the region.  The bulb, delicate leaves, celery-like stalks and seeds are widely used.  Fennel popularity extends as far eastward as India, where it is appreciated primarily for its seeds – for their medicinal properties as well as in cooking.  In Hindi, the seeds are called sanf and they are consumed after meals as a breath freshener and digestive aid.

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Easy Sautéed Greens

This basic recipe works with all kinds of leafy greens (and thinking slightly outside the box, even chopped broccoli). Add some toasted pine nuts for serving if you like or a squeeze of fresh lemon juice. Fold into cooked grains like nutty Italian farro or earthy brown rice. Serve on top of pasta with shaved Parmesan or stir into a pot of cooked lentils such as soupy, Indian mung dal or chewy, French lentilles du Puy.

Ingredients:

  • Greens of choice, thoroughly rinsed, stems removed and roughly chopped into large pieces
  • Minced garlic to taste
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper
  • Crushed red pepper flakes (optional)

Method:

  1. Heat a skillet on medium and add olive oil to lightly coat the bottom. Add minced garlic and red pepper, if using, and sauté lightly for a few seconds.
  2. Add greens (it’s good if they have a bit of water on them from rinsing) and sauté until tender, stirring occasionally. Greens will cook down in volume – add uncooked leaves to pan in batches if they don’t fit all at once.
  3. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
  4. Serve as is (see headnote for serving ideas), or toss in some rinsed and drained, canned cannellini beans during the last few minutes of cooking and another drizzle of olive oil before serving. Add a splash of high quality wine vinegar or lemon juice if you like.
  5. For an Asian inspired twist substitute bok choy stems and leaves, or other Asian greens. Sauté with some minced fresh ginger (along with garlic) in olive oil with a bit of toasted sesame oil. Add a dash of rice wine vinegar and soy sauce at the end of cooking.