Thursday, June 20, 2013

June 20, 2013 - Downingtown Farmers Market Dinner: Canter Hill Pork Chops

Tonight's Farmers Market Dinner:
Grilled Canter Hill Farm Pork Chop with Cherry-Balsamic Reduction, Roasted Rosemary Potatoes and Grilled Summer Squash.


Last week was a bust: severe thunderstorms and preparing for a trip to upstate New York made me miss the market for the first time.   This week however,  I was fortunate enough to get to the market nice and early to get the first pickings.  Today, I decided to splurge on some pork chops from Canter Hill Farm.  They were pretty pricey at $13 a pound, but the meat was superior and the results were very delicious.

This week's bag: cherries, potatoes, a zucchini, a small onion, and the chops.

1.  The chops came sealed and frozen, so as soon as I got home I tossed them into a bowl of cool water to begin defrosting.  I don't know if this method is approved by the Health Inspector, but it allowed me to quickly defrost the chops in a (reasonably) safe manner.

2. Chopped up the potatoes.  Drizzled them with some olive oil.  And tossed them in rosemary from the garden, and salt & pepper.  Roasted them at 400 for about 45 minutes.

3. While the potatoes were cooking, I began the reduction:
a.) Minced half of the onion and sauteed it in some butter, salt & pepper. over medium heat.
b.) I cranked up the heat a bit and added some sherry.  Let that sit for a few minutes
c) Added a little stock, balsamic vinegar, and pitted,quartered cherries.
d.) Let that reduce for about 30 minutes (I think) while stirring it every few minutes.


Here's what the cherry balsamic reduction looked like when it was all finished.

4. The squash were cut about 0.25 inches thick and lengthwise.  Tossed in a little oil and S&P.

5. The thawed pork chops got dusted with a little S&P and some chopped sage.

 6.  I let the squash cook for a few minutes before I dropped the chops.

7. About 6 minutes one one side then 5 on the other and it was done.  I let it rest about 10 minutes while I plated the squash and potatoes.  I garnished it was a cherry that was sliced to allow the sage/parsley bundle sit in.




Monday, June 17, 2013

June 17, 2013 - Flea Beetles vs. the Eggplant


This is a flea beetle.  I know next to nothing about them other than they love eggplant!

Every year I try and grow eggplant, and every year this is what happens.  About ten days ago they started swarming.  This year it wasn't as bad as in the past where they were thick on the leaves, but twice a day I go out and squash every one I can find.  There are typically somewhere between 10-20 of them putting holes in the leaves.  I hope my efforts are enough to give the eggplants enough breathing room to get through the invasion.


 Notice the aphid on the upper left of the tomato curl?

 And here's another one on the stem.  I'm keeping a close eye to make sure they don't get out of hand.


Not a pest, but I liked this picture of the ant on a pepper flower.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

June 6, 2013 - Downingtown Farmers Market Dinner: Turkey & Scape Meatballs with Linguini and Peasant Bread

Tonight's Farmers Market Dinner:
Turkey & Scape Meatballs with Linguini and Peasant Bread with Scape Butter

Today, I decided to be good and use up the ground turkey we had in the fridge rather than buy the fresh  pork chops (next week?). I also wanted to try the marinara and linguini from Vera Pasta. I had no onions at home for the meatballs so I purchased the spring onions to filled that gap.  

But the highlight of the market this week were the scapes.  I've seen scapes, I've eaten scapes, but I've never cooked with them before.  Fantastic flavor and I can think of a bunch of uses - too bad, like the ramps,  they're only here for a few short weeks.


Turkey & Scape Meatballs:
1.Chopped up some herbs from the garden for use in the meatballs and sauce.  I used some parsley, thyme, oregano, rosemary, and sage.

2. Combined an egg, a pound of ground turkey, the herbs, a few diced spring onions, shredded parmesan, diced scapes, and bread crumbs in a bowl using a fork.

3. Formed into 1 inch balls then baked at 400 degrees for about 30-30 minutes.

 
4. While they were baking I defrosted the marinara sauce from the market.

5. Once the meatballs were cooked, I added them to the sauce to stew for a few minutes.

 Peasant Bread with scape butter:
I used the last of the bread dough from the other night.  It's based on the Artisan Bread in Five Minutes recipe.  Flour, water, salt, and yeast - thats it.  If you've never tried it then give it a shot - you'll be amazed how simple it really is.

6. Since it was refrigerated I let it sit out and come to room temp while the meatballs cooked.  Once they were out of the oven I through in the pizza stone and cranked up the oven to 480 degrees.  

 
7. I drizzled some olive oil on top and spread parmesan cheese and dried herbs.

8. Once out of the oven I let it cool down.

9. While cooling, I combined a stick of butter (I wanted leftovers) and a fistfull of diced ramps along with the a spring onion or two, and pepper.


10. After a few minutes on low heat I poured the butter into a small bowl.  I threw the butter into the freezer to solidify.

11. Once the bread had cooled some, I sliced the bread and coated one side with the scape butter.  The slices went back into the oven to give it a little crunch.

12. Nothing too crazy with the plating: it's pasta on a plate with bread.  I topped it with more cheese and fresh basil.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

June 2, 2013 - First Days of Summer

 The squash are looking good.  There are several yellow squash fruits already.

One of the eggplants lost its top due to some dog related activity during Memorial Day.  It seems to be doing OK otherwise but it is now half the height of the other.  Cucumbers are climbing and flowering.  And the two tomatoes in this section are both growing fast.

 The broccoli are now mostly gone.  The Cauliflower are starting to form some decent crowns.  I don't want to make the same mistake as I did with the broccoli and wait too long.  I may give them another week before I pull the whole section.  The tomatoes behind the broccoli/cauliflower section are getting shaded some, so the sooner I harvest them the better it will be for the tomatoes.


Peppers and tomatoes in this section are doing great.

June 2, 2013 - Broccoli Harvest

 I decided today was the day to take out the broccoli.  I wanted to wait until I had large packed heads, but it was not to be this year.  The heads that were the largest have now started to pull apart and the packed heads are a good size but not the giant crowns I've had in the pat.  So I harvested them all and will use the crowns that are still tight for dinner tonight.

This crown was smaller but still had a tight crown.

This crown has gone too long - some of the outer flowers are beginning to open.

All the crowns I cut had secondary shoots.  I may leave one or two to see if I can get any additional crowns but I'm going to take them all out to improve airflow and get more sun to the tomatoes behind them.  They definitely grew bigger than I planned for.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

May 30, 2013 - Downingtown Farmers Market Dinner: Sage Lamb Sausage with Grilled Spring Onions and Couscous

Tonight's Farmers Market Dinner:
Sage Lamb Sausage with Grilled Spring Onions and Couscous

We got a grill last week for Memorial Day and I've used it every day since - so I think more things in the future are going to come off the grill for Thursday's Market Dinners.  The sage lamb sausage came from Lindenhof Farm and was excellent.  My initial idea was to grill the asparagus and use the spring onions in a 'sausage and onion sandwich' sort of thing. But Stacey gave me the idea to incorporate couscous, which took the meal in a whole different, more delicious direction.  

 
Here's today's spread. (I'm not sure why Blogger autorotates some pictures)

1. Grilled the lamb sausage first.  Then added some lightly oiled spring onions to the grill.  The sausages flared up pretty bad while I was starting the couscous so there was a bit of a char when I came back to the grill - lesson learned.  It turned out to be just fine as I let them cook the rest of the way through over some very low heat for a while.  

2. Diced up a tomato and some herbs from the garden.  The parsley and tomato was held until plating, but the sage and the thyme when in with the couscous. 

3. Toasted the couscous in some olive oil, and then added chicken stock, thyme, and tri-colored sage with a small amount of salt and pepper.  Let that cook down for a few minutes.

4. The onions cooked until they had some nice grill marks and were soft. The sausage doesn't look so great here, but trust me it was delicious.

 5. Plating with two types of mustard, onion greens, and thinly sliced radishes.  Piled the couscous in the center and surrounded it with diagonally sliced sausages.  Topped that with the diced tomatoes and parsley and laid the sliced grilled onions over the whole mess.  It turned out amazing!

6. Finished off tonight's dinner with salted caramel and brown sugar cookie dough cupcakes - both excellent.

Friday, May 24, 2013

May 23, 2013 - Downingtown Farmers Market Dinner

Tonight's Farmers Market Dinner:
Tomato and Basil Pasta with Chicken Sausage, Peppers, and Tomato served with a Multi-grain Baguette


The pasta and the baguette were the only ingredients in this dish from the market this week.  I had planned on adding the peppercorn chevre as a spread on the baguette but after a test slice it didn't work.  It wasn't bad really, and both the bread and cheese were great separate. I felt that the multigrain baguette was too strong a flavor to go well with the cheese, so it was served with a little butter.

This was a simple pasta dish with no sauce that Stacey found - it was super easy to make, and had a ton of flavor.  

1. Diced the peppers tomatoes. I used one of each  red, orange, and yellow bell peppers, and about 4 medium sized tomatoes
2. Diced the chicken sausage.

 3. Brown the sausage.

4. Add the diced peppers.  I cooked them until they softened.

 5. Add the tomatoes and the pasta back to the pan.  Stirred it all together and added some shredded parmesan cheese.

6.  Topped with basil and more parmesan cheese.