Week 28: December 9th

In This Week’s Beet Box:

  • The Last Week – Brrrrr!
  • A Mighty THANK YOU!
  • Please Share your Feedback with Us!
  • 2014 CSA Sign-ups
  • The Year in Review

 

In your share this week:

  • Leeks
  • Kale
  • Shallots
  • Parsnips
  • Potatoes – Red, Yellow Finn and/or Fingerling
  • Carrots
  • Sunshine squash

 

On Rotation:

  • Brussels sprouts
  • Romanesco cauliflower

 

The Last Week - Brrrrr!

This is it: your last installment from Valley Flora for the season. This week’s basket is a true testament to the possibility for local, wintertime eating. We’re halfway through December in the midst of a deep cold snap, but there’s no lack of food in your totes. We filled them with almost twenty pounds of veggies – most of it fresh-harvested from the field (all but the squash, shallots and potatoes, which have been in storage).

 

That said, the field is looking pretty bare. We’ve picked and dug and pulled and cut just about every stick of food out there (save for a good stash of parsnips). A week of hard cold has also brought an end to certain crops that might have persisted longer were it not for the 18 degree nights.

 

The cold has presented a few problems to this last harvest that you may notice. Each day we’ve had to wait for the field (and the veggies) to thaw before we can harvest. On Monday, that didn’t happen until late afternoon so the thaw window was very short. As it turns out, some of the Brussels sprouts – which were thawed when we picked them – re-froze in the harvest bins in transit to the cooler (which feels balmy at 38 degrees compared to the outside world). During packout yesterday, we discovered that some of the sprouts at the bottom of the bins (cold air sinks) were more like sweet Brussels sprouts popsicles. Hopefully they will hold up, but I encourage you to eat them immediately before they turn to mush.

 

Also, the kale was hard to rehydrate (it wilts in extreme cold), so some of it is not as perky as you are used to (but again, very sweet).

 

And finally, our last bed of romanesco, which some of you will receive this week, seems to have survived the cold but may have some frost damage. Hopefully the flavor will make up for any other quality shortcomings!

 

A Mighty Thank You!

Were it not for all of you making the choice to eat locally, our little farm could not exist. As many times as we have been on the receiving end of the gratitude, I want to return the sentiment a hundred-fold. Because of you and your commitment to Valley Flora, we are able to do what we love on the land that we treasure. There are three generations on the farm now, from Bets down to Cleo and Pippin, plus the invaluable help of Roberto, Roxy, Aro, Jake, Tom, and John. It’s a small and humble operation, but it fills our lives with purpose, meaning, and deep satisfaction. We love growing this food, and even more knowing that it’s directly feeding the local community. We wouldn’t be able to do it without you.

 

From all of us at the farm, a heartfelt THANK YOU for being part of it!

 

Please Share your Feedback with Us!

We're not putting out a formal survey to our members this year, but we would still love to hear from you if you have feedback of any kind about your CSA experience - positive or negative. Just send us an email with your thoughts. We are in the midst of planning for next season so this is the perfect window to share your input with us!

 

2014 CSA Sign-ups

This season is not even over yet and we are already knee-deep in planning for 2014: making next year’s field maps, teasing out the crop plan, and ordering seeds. (Believe it or not, we’ll be sowing next year’s onions, leeks and shallots in the greenhouse in less than 6 weeks)

 

Many of you have been asking about signing up for next season. We plan to do priority sign-ups in January. Anyone who was a member of the CSA this season – that being anyone who got a Harvest Basket, eggs, bread, salad share, and/or tamales this year - will be included in the priority sign-up process in January. If you are included in the priority sign-up process, you will be guaranteed a Harvest Basket if you want one. (Our Harvest Baskets are limited and always sell out so we give priority to returning members each year. There is usually no limit on eggs, bread, salad, or tamales).

 

We will send out a direct email to our entire 2013 membership in early January with specific sign-up instructions for 2014. Please be sure that we have your correct email address so you don’t miss out on your sign-up invitation.

 

Then, starting in March, we’ll move on to our waiting list and sign up wait-listed individuals until the Harvest Baskets are sold out.

 

The Year in Review

The chart below is a crop-by-crop recap of the season summarizing what we projected we would put in your Harvest Basket and what we actually put in it.

 

The thing I love about this chart is that every discrepancy in the projected versus actual quantities tells a story. For instance: we had a beautiful, warm spring this year, which made for a great crop of onions. It also meant that perennial crops like artichokes came on early – so early that they were almost over by the time the CSA started in June (hence the smaller share of artichokes). Major shortfalls in strawberries, celery and basil this year were due to disease pressure that wiped out all or portions of those crops. It was a warmer, more humid summer than we normally get, which created ideal conditions for diseases like Septoria and downy mildew. All told, the total value of food we put in your Harvest Basket this season was equal to $776.44, based on our farmstand pricing. You paid $765 for that food.

 

Whether it’s pests or weather or any number of other factors, your CSA share is largely defined by the forces of Mother Nature – and our varying ability to work with and around her. It's a constant dance.

CROP

PROJECTED

ACTUAL

DIFF.

NOTES

Scallions

1 bu

1 bu

 

 

Leeks

8 ct

11 ct

+3 ct

 

Purplette Onions

4.5 lbs

7 lbs

+2.5 lbs

Great onion year

Red Onions

6 ct

10 ct

+4 ct

“ “

Walla Wallas

4 ct

6 ct

+6 ct

“ “

Yellow Onion

8 ct

9 ct

+1 ct

“ “

Shallots

3.5 lb

3.5 lb

 

 

Artichokes

2 lb

1 lb

-1 lb

Early spring; artichokes were ending before CSA season began

Asparagus

1 lb

1 lb

 

 

Beans

0.5 lb

0.5 lb

 

 

Beets

12 lb

10.5 lb

-1.5 lb

Mice ate last bed of beets

Broccoli

16.5 lb

20 lb

+3.5 lb

Good spring crop

Brussels sprouts

3 stalks

2 to 3 stalks

 

 

Cabbage

6 heads

6 heads

 

 

Carrots

20 lbs

21 lbs

+1 lb

 

Cauliflower

2 heads

1 head

-1 head

Lost a planting due to cabbage maggot

Romanesco

1 head

1-2 heads

 

 

Celeriac

3 ct

3 ct

 

 

Celery

14 stalks

0

-14 stalks

Total crop failure due to Septoria disease pressure

Corn

18 ears

20 ears

+2 ears

 

Cucumbers

No projection

3 ct

 

 

Escarole/Radicchio

2 heads

2 heads

 

 

Fennel

6 bulbs

8 bulbs

 

 

Arugula

1 lb

1.5 lb

+0.5 lb

Sunny fall weather = late bonus greens

Braising Mix

0.5 lb

1 lb

 

“ “

Chard

5 bu

5 bu

 

 

Kale

7 bu

9 bu

+2 bu

 

Mizuna

None

0.5 lb

+0.5 lb

“ ”

Pac Choi

7 heads

6 heads

-1 head

 

Spinach

2 lbs

2 lbs

 

 

Collards

None

2 bu

+2 bu

 

Perennial Herbs

6 bu

7 bu

+1 bu

 

Cilantro

3 bu

3 bu

 

 

Dill

3 bu

3 bu

 

 

Basil

5 oz

1 oz

-4 oz

Crop failure in greenhouse

Parsely

4 bu

3 bu

-1 bu

 

Kohlrabi

5 ct

4 ct

-1 ct

 

Lettuce

33 heads

26 heads

-7 hds

Crop losses due to downy mildew pressure all summer (weather-related)

Parsnips

6 lbs

6 lbs

 

 

Peas

3 lbs

2.5 lbs

-0.5 lbs

 

Hot Peppers

10 ct

9 ct

-1 ct

 

Sweet Peppers

20 ct

23 ct

+3 ct

 

Potatoes

28 lb

38 lbs

+10 lbs

Bumper crop

Radishes

5 bu

6 bu

+1 bu

 

Rhubarb

½ lb

1 lb

+0.5 lb

 

Strawberries

24 pt

15 pt

-9 pt

Crop failure in July

Summer Squash

16 ct

24 ct

+8 ct

 

Apples

No projection

2 lbs

+2 lbs

Great orchard fruit year!

Plums

No projection

2.5 lbs

+2.5 lb

“ “

Turnips

6 bu

6 bu

 

 

Tomato plant

1

2

 

 

Cherry tomatoes

5 pts

2 pt

-3 pt

Late blight wiped out crop after Labor Day rain

Heirloom tomatoes

3 lbs

3 lbs

 

 

Red tomatoes

13 lbs

13.5 lbs

+0.5 lb

 

Acorn squash

2

3

+1

 

Butternut squash

2

2

 

 

Delicata squash

8

12

+4

 

Sunshine squash

2

2

 

 

Spaghetti squash

1

1

 

 

Winter sweet

1

1

 

 

Pie pumpkin

1

1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recipes Galore

Please note: all of our produce is field-rinsed, not washed. We recommend you wash all of your produce before eating it.

 

For recipes and ideas, check out these links:

 

http://www.valleyflorafarm.com/forum/4

Our own collection of recipes, where you can contribute and share your favorites

 

http://www.valleyflorafarm.com/content/recipe-searcher

Our website’s recipe “search engine,” where you can hunt down recipes by ingredient

 

www.epicurious.com

A vast collection of recipes, searchable by one or multiple ingredients

 

http://info2.farmfreshtoyou.com/index.php?cmd=RE

A storehouse of recipes, searchable by ingredient

 

http://helsingfarmcsa.com/recipes.php

A Washington farm that has a good collection of seasonal recipes

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