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Week 21 of 28!

Beet Box -

Week 21 of 28! Pie Pumpkins! Acorn Squash! Hakurei Turnips!
What's Fresh from Valley Flora this Week...
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In This Week's Beet Box Newsletter:
  • The Scurry Before the Rain
  • Pie Pumpkins and Acorn Squash
  • New October Farmstand Hours
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Your Share This Week:
  • Carrots
  • Yellow Onions
  • Sweet Peppers
  • Acorn Squash
  • Pie Pumpkins
  • Savoy Cabbage
  • Hakurei Turnips
  • Head Lettuce
On Rotation:*
*This means that some pickup sites will receive it this week; others in a future week.
  • Cauliflower
Please Note: All of our produce is field-rinsed, not washed. We recommend you wash all of your produce before eating it.

The Valley Flora Crystal Ball
What might be in your share next week (no promises!):
  • Red Onions
  • Head Lettuce
  • Carrots
  • Beets
  • Brussels Sprouts?
  • Peppers
  • Festival Squash
  • Radishes
For recipes and ideas, check out these links:
 
Valley Flora Recipe Wizard
Our own collection of recipes gathered over the years.
 
Epicurious
A vast collection of recipes, searchable by one or multiple ingredients
 
Full Belly Farm
Recipes from one of my favorite farms in California, pioneers of the organic movement since the 80s.

Farm Fresh to You
A storehouse of recipes, searchable by ingredient.
 
Helsing Junction Farm
A Washington farm that has a good collection of seasonal recipes geared toward CSA members.

 
The Scurry Before the Rain...
October is reminiscent of spring in many ways: green shoots of grass popping up; Hakurei turnips in your CSA share; the compulsive need to check the weather forecast three times a day. Not unlike springtime, there is so much to do that depends on good weather - and on good rain - that we live and plan by the 10-day forecast. This week we have been scurrying ahead of today's storm to get orchard fruit picked before the south winds knock it all down, to prep ground for cover cropping (tearing out spent cash crops like zucchini, eggplant, strawberries and salad greens to make space for winter cover crops), rolling up drip tape, bringing in sprinkler pipes, digging potatoes, and perhaps most importantly - seeding our winter cover crops on every bare corner of the farm and rolling them in with our antique horsedrawn cultipacker. The transition from the farm's summer appearance to its fall-winter look is abrupt at this time of year. The space we are harvesting from gets smaller every week and the bare ground expands. With this perfectly timed rain, we should see acres of cover crop greening up the farm by next week.

The one significant difference about fall and spring is that the scurrying takes place with the full, luxurious knowledge that these urgent bursts of activity are some of the last big to-do's before we wind down into a slower time of year on the farm: winter! Every farmer's favorite season!  And every farmer's husband's favorite season, right Danny :) ?

My husband really does put up with a lot: a wife who barely fits the definition of one; who stays out late almost every night from May through October (at least I'm in the field not at the bar); who comes home grubby and doesn't wear perfume (although I personally LOVE the eau de parfum of horse sweat); and who leaves most of the cooking to him during the busiest months (albeit he gets to use some pretty nice produce that I had a thing or two to do with....). He's not a farmer so it's probably a longshot that he'll ever fully understand this life that I am so in love with, and will probably continue to chafe at the fact that we will never eat dinner by six pm, and feel frustration at the fact that the weather forecast trumps everything in our lives. Given all that, thank you, Danny, for all the waiting you have done over the years, and for bending to the seasons that have me so fully in their grip. I hope you will continue to put up with me.
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Pie Pumpkins and Acorn Squash
There are some big roundish things in the tote this week, in addition to the huge cauliflowers and big savoy cabbages we packed for you. The sugar pumpkin is a variety we grow especially for pie-making, but always feel compelled to give it out before Halloween in honor of the spooky pumpkin season upon us. You could carve your little pumpkin, but I'd recommend going the distance to make a real, homemade pumpkin pie.

The dark green, lobed squash are Acorn. They're often cut in half, seeds removed, and then baked face down. You can turn them into soup bowls!
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New October Farmstand Hours
We are slowly easing into Fall Farmstand hours. For the month of October we will be open every Wednesday and Saturday from 10 am to 2 pm (instead of 9 am to 3 pm). The farmstand abundance is beautiful right now, as summer and fall food collide in a crash of color.
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Farmstand & U-Pick October Hours:
Wednesdays & Saturdays from 10 am to 2 pm, rain or shine!

Fresh Produce
U-Pick Strawberries and Flowers
Homemade Jam & Hot Sauce

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