Veggie List

We have been getting requests for a more complete list of vegetable offerings for this summer’s CSA. Here is a list of purchased seed. With farming there are always risks including pests and weather, but this is our projected list for the summer.

Beans
    
Provider Green
    Royal Burgundy 
    Dragon Langerie
Beets
    Guardsmark Chioggia
    Detroit Dark Red
    Touchstone Gold
Brussel Sprout
Broccoli

Carrot
    Naya
    Bolero storage
    Dragon
    White Satin
    Yellowstone
Cauliflower
Chard–rainbow mix
Cabbage
    
Famosa–savoy type
    Farao
    Kaboko–Chinese type
    Red Express
Corn–sugar pearl
Cucumber
    
National Pickling
    Marketmore Slicing
Collards
Eggplant

    Little Finger
    Calliope striped
    Nadia Italian
Fennel
Kale
Lettuce
    Salad Mix
    Romaine
    Optima–butterhead type’
Melon
    Athena–Cantaloupe
    Early Gala–Honeydew
Onion
    Bunching
    Walla Walla Sweet
    Copra–storage
    Redwing–red storage
    Leek
Pac Choy
Peas–Sugar Snap
Pepper

    Jalapeno
    Red Knight–sweet bell type
    Thai–hot pepper
Pumpkin 
    Howden
    Musque De Provence
Radish
Spinach
Squash winter

    Table Queen Acorn
    Honey nut butternut
    Sugar Dumpling
Squash summer
    Black Beauty–zucchini
    Tigress
Tomato
    Amish Paste
    Cherokee Purple
    Crimson Sprinter
     Yellow Perfection
    Striped German
    Red Grape
Turnip
Watermelon

    Sugar Baby
Herbs
    Italian Basil
    Thai Basil
    Cilantro
    Dill

Shoveling with children

Getting three children ready to go outside during the winter is not an easy task. It normally goes something like this, you start with one, get them dressed, catch the 2nd one, get them dressed then while you are catching child number 3 the first 2 are taking their coats off. I guess my children are hot blooded because Two tends to take off coat and shoes as soon as he gets in the car or wherever our destination is.

While I had good intentions to go outdoors more this winter it hasn’t happened, mainly for the above reason. But also because until just recently Mavis who will be 17 months old this month has been scooting on her butt and not walking. Now she is a proud walker. So yesterday with temps in the mid- 20s and a new layer of beautiful snow on the ground and a driveway to be shoveled I decided maybe it would be a good time to venture into the outdoors.

We had bought 2 children’s shovels at Fleet Farm this year but they hadn’t seen much action. However Two loves working with his father so when Proeun said he was going outside to shovel Two quickly asked to go too and then Avril. So we made a family outing of it.

So while Proeun snow blowed the driveway we worked on the sidewalk and front steps.

The concept was a little much for Avril who was shoveling snow from the snowbank on one side of the sidewalk to the other. But heh she felt helpful.

Even Mavis was enjoying being outside and the snow.

There was even time of a little fun, then it was inside for a hot bath and hot cocoa. Days like today I can hardly wait to live in the country and be tramping through the woods.

Composting is addicting!

I can’t remember when or why we started composting. I believe it was around the time we started gardening in our backyard. We actually started with vermicomposting, with worms. We bought tupper totes and drilled the appropriate holes in them, ordered a pound of red worms from a place in Texas, added a bunch of shredded paper and a few vegetable peelings and we were ready to go.

But with a growing family we were producing much more food waste then the worms could keep up with. We had been giving our meat scraps and spilled messes to the dog for a while already. However, once you wrap your mind around the idea of composting it is actually really hard the throw food scraps away. So we set up our own compost pile in the backyard.

I love grapefruit (and so do the kids). Each year we order several boxes from our local church school. These produce a lot of waste with the grapefruit peals. Last winter we successfully composted all those peelings and a host of other things and added them to our garden before starting the winter pile again.

My favorite way to compost though is through the chickens. They love veggies scraps but their favorite is apple cores. Luckily we eat a lot of apples. This now is a well known fact in our family that apple cores are shared with the chickens, no matter where we are. This weekend we attended a class on marketing for farmers. There were apples there as a snack. The kids and I each had one then I put the apple cores in my purse to take home  for the chickens. Not something I pictured myself doing when I was in high school I assure you.

Last summer we were going camping. My brother-in-law and his friend Henry were riding with us. Henry ate an apple then threw the core out the window before any of us could stop him. Avril looked at him with indignation in her eyes and said, “Hey our chickens like apple cores.” He quickly apologized and said he would save them next time and he did.

Never Seed Shop When Hungry

It is an odd thing to look at newly plowed field and get hungry imagining all the wonderful food that will soon grow there. This weekend our task was to purchase the seeds for our upcoming CSA. Wise advice is never to grocery shop when hungry and I would make the suggestion never to seed shop while hungry. But even if you are not hungry when you start chances are you will be when you are done.

Over the years first gardening in our backyard and now farming my tastes have “evolved” but into a more simple form. There is nothing like the pleasure of a thick slice of fresh from the field tomato (or grape tomatoes in the field for that matter). One of our farming friends introduced me to the taste sensation of thick cut zucchini baked until just tender and drizzled with olive oil and sprinkled with salt.

Two loves skinny, purple, Japanese eggplant battered and fried but for some reason not the Italian ones and don’t get me started on basil right from the garden. There I go again–oh and sweet boiled turnips in borscht with beets, carrots, and onion all from the garden. Yes evolved is a relative term. When eating from the grocery store it is much harder to enjoy the simple taste sensation of an ages old variety of vegetable.

It took us over 4 hours to select and purchase the varieties that will eventually make it to our table and that of our CSA members. I am really excited and can’t wait for some good eating again.

I thought I would share with you some of my favorites. These are either varieties I have tried before and love or ones I am really excited about. 

 

Musque de Provence Pumpkin

Musque de Provence Pumpkin  Cucurbita moschata
HEIRLOOM Gorgeous French variety also known as Fairytale. Richly colored with green and orange splashes and a deeply ribbed, flat shape. Fruit are large, often reaching 15-25 lbs. or more, with very high yields and uniformity. It is eaten cooked like all squash, but traditionally, also eaten fresh. Cut from the middle like a wedge of cheese or pie, and slice very thinly like salmon for sushi. The flavor is exceptionally complex and sweet with a nice light crunch. May sound strange, but it will surprise you!
Days to maturity: 125 days

Little Finger Eggplant

Little Finger Eggplant  Solanum melongena
More slender and petite than your standard eggplant. Dark purple skin is thin and tender. Flesh has a silky texture with few seeds and mildly sweet flavor needing very little cooking time. Little Finger is intended to be harvested young when 3-6″ long and glossy.
Days to maturity: 60 days

Walla Walla Onion

Walla Walla Onion  Allium cepa
Famous for its sweet flavor and fresh eating, Walla Walla is a medium to large mild onion with white flesh and light brown skin. Very cold hardy but not a keeper. Can be directly sown in mid-spring. Long day.
Days to maturity: 110 days
Sugar Baby Watermelon

Sugar Baby Watermlon  Citrullus lanatus
Also known as Icebox watermelon, this excellent northern, short-season variety produces reliable yields of 6-12 lb, perfectly round fruits, 7-8.5” in diameter. Flesh is deep red and very sweet; rind is solid dark green. Tough rind resists cracking. The standard for small watermelons. Our strain has been selected for cool growing conditions and high yields. Shows resistance to drought.
Days to maturity: 75 days

Dragon Langerie Bush Bean

Dragon Langerie Bush Bean  Phaseolus vulgaris
Also known as Dragon’s Tongue. Unique purple streaked pods are 6-8” long and flat, like a Romano bean. Commonly eaten fresh as a snap bean with superb flavor and crispness – a clear winner in our 2008 taste tests. Streaks fade when cooked. Can also be shelled when beans fill pods for tender, creamy shell beans, or used as a dry bean. Purple seeds.
Days to maturity: 55 days fresh, 95 shell

Touchstone Gold Beet

Touchstone Gold Beet  Beta vulgaris
From the breeders of Red Ace F1 and Guardsmark Chioggia comes another improved open-pollinated beet. Touchstone Gold offers higher germination rates, more uniform round roots and less zoning than standard golden types. Solid green tops are long and attractive, and quickly shade out weeds. Vibrant golden yellow flesh retains its color when cooked and is sweeter and more mild than red beets. Best germination occurs in warm temperatures.
Days to maturity: 55 days

Amish Paste Tomato

Amish Paste Tomato  Lycopersicon esculentum
HEIRLOOM One of the sweetest paste tomatoes. Amish is flavorful and juicy enough for slicing, but still meaty enough for timely cooking down. Best of all, it has few seeds, which can make sauces and pastes bitter. Heart-shaped fruits are 8-12 oz and bright red. Ripens to a sweeter taste than many other paste tomatoes. Indeterminate.
Days to maturity: 80 days

All these varieties are from High Mowing Certified Organic seeds. We also chose seeds from Wood Prarie Farm, Johnnies and Territorial Seeds.

Premio Dardos Award

My next door neighbor Angela has always been an inspiration. She is a professional writer with 2 young children. She has a passion for social justice, history and German. She has a great sense of humor and in a world where stay at home moms are no longer the norm it helped to have another one right next door–Playdates, and sharing extra food, and helping out with each others dogs.

Angela also has a great blog at Blue Collar Daughter. Anyway yesterday I got this email from her

Amy, I would like to award you with the Premio Dardos bloggers award.  I have sent two formats of the award in a jpeg attachments, and you can display it on your blog if you like, or not.  I think your work is great and deserves it.  Below is a link explaining the award.  Have a great week!

Angela

http://brainbasedbiz.blogspot.com/2009/03/premio-dardos-awards.html

Getting awards from people in your own field who understand and know what you are going through and what you are trying to accomplish is always so meaningful. Thanks Angela and I hope you all get better soon!

The Box

Over one week after our computer crashed the simple cardboard box it came in continues to be a big hit. While I am still trying to learn all the ins and out of updated technology the children prefer to enjoy one the simplest toys around. This phenomena is far from new. However for parents who worry that their children are becoming too dependent on electronic media seeing the pleasure of a box can really relieve a lot of worries.

Here all three of them get into the act. The box alternated between a boat, car and plane. Here it is a place, notice the “wings” folded up on the side. Even baby Mavis wanted to come along for the ride.

Here we have a good old fashioned jungle gym, another favorite was trying it upside down and just practicing getting on top of it for Mavis.

Avril outside her little closet. The only problem with this one was the older children liked being closed inside and Mavis definitely did not.

Even the cat Carrie gets in one it. Yes the box is still in our living room. Sure it makes it look a little cluttered but it does wonders for me pysche.

Cure for Mastisis–Charcoal Poultices

This baby I have been struggling with mastisis and a host of other nipple problems including bleeding and cracking. Before Mavis I didn’t really understand people who would complain that the pain was so bad they couldn’t nurse until last December it happened to me. For 2 months now I have been trying a host of remedies including focusing on latch and getting a new bra that fit properly.

Finally I called Le Leche League and they suggested I consult a doctor to make sure there wasn’t something else going on. The word “cancer” kept popping into my head. So even though I felt it was more of a surface problem that could be solved as Le Leche League suggested by trying to stretch the time between the feedings to give the tissue time to heal I made an appointment.

It has been a long time since I went to the doctor and I do not have a relationship with any doctor currently so I was forced to try a new one. She seemed very nice and after the exam said I was really low risk for breast cancer and said she suspected mastisis and prescribed antibiotics and Ibuprofen.

However I had no tissue samples taken or anything to confirm infection except the suspicions of the doctor and I was uncomfortable taking antibiotics under these circumstances. Especially since following the advice of Le Leche League seemed to be helping.

I called my aunt Patty in southern Minnesota. She said her 2nd baby had been very hard on her and she had mastisis 3 times which she cured with charcoal poultices. First her husband used hot and cold compresses to begin the treatment. Then she made a compress like this,

Charcoal Poultice

2 Tbsps activated charcoal powder
2 Tbsps ground flax seed
water to make a runny paste.

Put the paste on a paper towel or rag and fold over (this really helps with the clean up). Place over the breast and wrap tightly in plastic. Tape if necessary.

Charcoal is great for absorbing impurities. For more on this look at Agatha Thrash’s book Charcoal available from Country Life. This is best done over night. When I went to bed with the poultice on I was itchy and pretty uncomfortable. It is still too early to tell the complete results but the itching is gone. Now we just need to heal the cracks.

Family Meal Time–Yeh Hanh

Families eating together is very important. Numerous studies have been conducted that talk about just how important to growing children. But for our family, meals don’t always happen around a table.

The first time I met Proeun’s family they didn’t even have a table in their house. Instead the family would eat gathered around mats on the floor. I was prepped ahead of time saying that I must never sit higher then his parents and that it was polite to sit on the floor to eat. About halfway through the meal my legs hurt so bad I could hardly stand it. I was still hungry but I knew the only polite way to sit in a chair was to finish eating. So I did. I have come a long way since then and a couple times a month we will have traditional Cambodian meals on the floor. Our mats are former rice sacks cut open to lie flat.

This dish is one of my favorites–Yeh Hanh. We aren’t really sure how to spell it in English but are doing our best to write it  phonetically. The dish consists of a seasoned coconut broth which is put in a hot pot and various greens and meats added to the broth to cook to taste. It can be as elaborate or simple as you want. One time last year we took a bunch of greens from our CSA and went up north camping. We did pretty much the same thing over the fire. We had chard and spinach and bok choy it was wonderful.

For last night’s meal we went simple with pea tips, cilantro and green onion. We had a little eggplant left over from another meal so we added small dices of that. For meat we used sliced beef and beef meatball. Veggie options include mock duck (I like soy curls from Country Life) diced tofu or just eat the veggies. My in-laws love shrimp in it.

I like to top it with peanuts. Here is Avril using our mortar and pestle to grind them right before the meal.

To make the Broth

8-10 cups broth. I like to use water and add my chicken style seasoning at a rate of 1 tsp. per cup
Tom Yum paste–can find this at a local Asian store or Asian section at your market. I normally look for vegetarian. Each brand is different so follow the directions for adding to the water. I think it is normally 1 Tbsp for 3 cups.
1 can coconut milk
3 Tbsps sugar, more if you like it sweeter.
1 tsp salt
2 Tbsps fish sauce, also from the Asian storee.

Combine all this in a pot on the stove and heat. When hot you can add it to the hot pot. Meanwhile cut the meat or meat substitute and wash the veggies. Add greens and meat to the pot and cook until done. Use a hand held strainer to ge them out and a ladle to spoon the broth. Eat over rice or rice stick noodle. Top with peanuts.This is one of the children’s favorites. They love having a picnic. But be careful because they will want to help themselves to the pot. It is a good rite of passage for them though.

My New Favorite Restaurant–The Rice Palace

Going to a restaurant with 3 children is always an adventure. Couple that with a wide range of tastes and a limited budget and we don’t end up going out to restaurants very much. It is actually pretty hard for me to get myself siked up to go out. It has to be a restaurant with food that I can’t cook at home and portions that will fill us up and a price that doesn’t break the bank. It has to have food that I would like with my veggie tastes and that Proeun would like and that each of the kids with their individual tastes would. Well you get the picture, not very much fits the bill.

On Friday I got an assignment for Hmong Times–a new restaurant opening. It was at a time when no baby sitters were available so the children went with. The owners are a Hmong couple who have a successful restaurant in Milwaukee. They left their daughter in charge of that restaurant, also called the Rice Palace.
 
Their new venture in the Hillcrest shopping mall on White Bear Ave caters more to Southeast Asian tastes. It focuses on home style cooking from Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. It is an all you can eat buffet. I was so impressed at the opening that I decided I had to bring Proeun back. So yesterday we went back for a second time and he was really impressed as well. The dishes include Pad Thai, Larb, spring rolls, Southeast Asian style egg rolls, papaya salad, grilled ribs and tilapia, tri-color dessert, rolls with sweet bean filling, pho (beef noodle soup) and kao poon (curry soup). My favorite was the pho. Not only is it my favorite of the buffet but it is my favorite Pho.

Proeun’s favorite was the crayfish.

The hardest part was that the children don’t really get the concept of a buffet, i.e. to stuff yourself. They eat until they are comfortable then loose interest and we spend the rest of the time trying to get them to stay still while we continue to sample our favorites.

But anyway we now have a restaurant that makes all the family happy.

How to get your kids to eat their veggies

In the Hmong Cookbook Cooking from the Heart authors Sami Scripter and Sheng Vang share that in Hmong culture parents mostly let children eat whatever they want assuming that when they get older their taste buds will expand. It worked that way for me, and my sister but I have also seen enough obese children to question this course. I am not sure our children can survive until their tastes change. For me it was around 12 for my sister closer for 20 and as I think about it the change came when we started cooking for ourselves.

Anyway I rotate what stores I grocery shop at. I have 4 that I shop at regularly, each have something special I need. This week it was a local Asian store, what the kids call the “Crab store” for the boxes of live crabs and other fish they enjoy looking for whenever they go. For me it is the wide selection of fresh veggies. I didn’t buy anything too unusual this trip except for pea tip for a hot pot dish later this weekend. I also bought collards and squash.

One evening this week I was at a loss what to do for dinner, then I saw the collards. So I steamed the collards in a little seasoned water, and baked the squash and warmed up some black beans. I was in heaven. Everything tasted so good and fresh. I thought back to my pregnancy days counting protein and “green leafy vegetables” and “orange” vegetables. Yes I think I am finally there, I could do this now.

But my children not so much. I guess the course of action I have taken is make good fresh food available to them at all times and hope they eat it. Another course that works sometimes is putting out the veggies first when they are really hungry then after they have eaten for awhile bring out the meat. Two is really adament about having meat at every meal it if is not there he asks for it, “where’s the meat?” Honestly from a former vegetarian it really bothers me, why can’t he ask “where’s the veggies.”

One thing to consider is that appetite while a gift is an important step in gaining self control. I am far from an aesthetic. But I know for myself self control makes parenting so much easier and so much more successful. I have to strive for it moment by moment. If I can teach it to my children when they are young they will be a step ahead. So in my opinion food is much more then simply feeding the body it is helping you grow as a person if done properly. My family still has a lot of growing to do but sometimes they surprise me like in their love for grapefruit (without sugar), brown bread and fried eggplant (the long skinny purple kind we grew last year and now buy at the Asian store). If I hadn’t had this food available for them I would have never known they like it.

As much as I bemoan the meat eating for Proeun it is important they know how to eat Cambodian food which often means meat, including chicken feet and pig’s ears. He for the most part is happy with their diet.

So I would say to get your kids to eat veggies (or whatever you want them to eat) really examine what your family’s food values are. I am pretty sure you have some whether you know this or not. Then make the food you want them to eat available to them and model eating it. Not everyone likes the same thing. For example Two likes black beans and Avril white beans (great northern), Mavis pretty much eats whatever I give her. But above all don’t stress. Just make sure you are modeling what you believe. The night after the collard greens and squash we ate Kung Fu noodles. We can’t be perfect all the time.