Farmer’s Markets

Open for Business!

All my local Delawarean friends will be happy to know that Filasky’s is open for business!

Welcome to Filasky's

Welcome to Filasky’s

They’ve been open for a few weeks now but today marks the official opening for pick-your-own-strawberries.  Last year I had a blast taking two little friends to Filasky’s, watching them fill up their buckets with juicy berries.

Sophie and I filling up our bucket

Sophie and I filling up our bucket

Sweet Sophie

Sweet Sophie

Filasky’s isn’t JUST about strawberries. They sell local veggies, flowers, fruits, ice cream, jams, baked goods, and a brand new item – grass-feed beef hamburgers and hotdogs from Heritage Oak Farm. I’ve tried the burgers; they are delicious!

Filasky's Asparagus

Local Asparagus from Filasky’s

Last week I bought four locally grown tomatoes. Yes! Tomatoes. Grown hydroponically in Dover, they tasted of summer.

Tomatoes and farm fresh eggs - breakfast is served

Dover-grown tomatoes and farm fresh eggs – breakfast is served

Gerbera Daisies

These Gerbera Daisies now sit on my front stoop

Cindi Filasky is a wealth of knowledge - she knows A LOT about everything she sells and she's always available for a chat (and a smile!)

Cindi Filasky is a wealth of knowledge – she knows A LOT about everything she sells and she’s always available for a chat (and a smile!)

Gorgeous entrance to the produce stand

Spring flowers adorn the entrance to the produce stand

Picking strawberries at Filasky’s means summer is on the way, along with a bounty of seasonal vegetables and fruits.

So tell me – what marks the official beginning of summer for you?

Head over to Filasky's - maybe I'll see you there!

Head over to Filasky’s – maybe I’ll see you there!

Filasky’s Produce

1343 Bunker Hill Road

Middletown, DE 19709

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Categories: Delaware Farms, Farmer's Markets, Local Farms | Tags: , , , , , , | 40 Comments

Happy CSA Day! {Week One}

“It’s CSA Day!”

In my excitement about picking up my very first Lancaster Farm Fresh Cooperative winter CSA box, I uttered that phrase all day on Tuesday of last week. Who can blame me? A box of organic, locally grown root vegetables, carrots, sweet potatoes and the most beautiful stalk of brussels sprouts I’ve ever seen awaited me at my pick up spot – Home Grown Cafe.

I don’t even think nerds get this excited about Star Wars.

This week's CSA booty

CSA booty – Week One

The most interesting part about purchasing a CSA farm share is you never know what you’re going to get. I mean, I know it’s winter and most likely I’ll get a ton of root vegetables, but WHAT KINDS of root vegetables will be in my box? Last week the surprise item was Jerusalem artichokes. I’ve never seen them, cooked them, or tasted them.

Jerusalem artichokes - not the prettiest girl at the party but she makes up more it in practicality and common sense

Jerusalem artichokes – not the prettiest girl at the party but she makes up for it in practicality and common sense

Despite their misleading name, Jerusalem artichokes are part of the sunflower family and sometimes called sunchokes or sun roots. I don’t think they taste like artichokes at all, but French explorer Samuel de Champlain did. So that’s what he called them when he brought them back to Europe from the New World. Mr. de Champlain found them in a Native American garden in Cape Cod, Massachusetts where they became a diet staple of the Pilgrims settling in Plymouth (my former hometown).

After a little internet research, I discovered that Jerusalem artichokes are high in protein, low in starch and just like other root vegatables–good for mashing, roasting, or throwing in soups–but they also saute well and taste great raw. A versatile little tuber!

Using the mushrooms from my CSA box and a couple of sausages, I channeled the Pilgrims and made an easy one pot meal perfect for cold weather.

Winter One Pot Meal with Sausages and Jerusalem Artichokes

Ingredients

4 sausages – any kind (I used Italian-style chicken sausages, because that’s what I had on hand from the farmers market. Skip the sausage if you’re a veggie)

1-2 tablespoons olive oil

1 large onion, largely diced

8 ounces white mushrooms, halved (Baby Bellas were in my CSA box)

10 Jerusalem artichokes, scrubbed (they are VERY dirty, so scrub them well!) and sliced into 1/4 inch pieces

2 cloves garlic, chopped

zest of one lemon

4 sprigs fresh thyme

1 cup water

1 teaspoon kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Brown the sausages all over in 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a deep skillet. Set aside. Add the onions to the skillet, adding more olive oil if necessary. Let the onions soften over medium heat, until they are VERY tender and melting. I let them hang out in the pan for about 20 minutes while I prepped the rest of the ingredients.

Lovely nitrate-free chicken sausages

Lovely nitrate-free chicken sausages

When the onions are brown and melting, add the garlic. Push the onions aside and add the mushrooms, allowing them to brown in the pan. Push the mushrooms and onions aside and add the Jerusalem artichokes. Let them brown a bit too.

Get some color on those sunchokes

Get some color on those sunchokes

Add the lemon zest, kosher salt, and pepper. Give everything a good stir. Add the sausages back into the pan, along with the thyme sprigs. Pour enough water in the skillet to just cover the veggies. Bring to a boil. Cover and turn the heat to low. Simmer for about 25 minutes, or until the Jerusalem artichokes are tender. If there’s too much liquid in the skillet, uncover, turn the heat up and allow to simmer and reduce. The broth is so flavorful and rich because of those melting onions and yummy mushrooms.

Ready for their water bath

Ready for their water bath

The Jerusalem artichokes add a sweet and nutty flavor to this dish - I hope I get more in my CSA box this week

The Jerusalem artichokes add a sweet and nutty flavor to this dish – I’m hoping for more in my CSA box this week

What’s your favorite winter vegetable? And can someone PLEASE tell me what to do with a very large rutabaga?!?

Categories: Farmer's Markets, Local Farms, Recipes, Winter Recipes | Tags: , , , , , , | 39 Comments

Amish-Inspired Sweet and Tangy Cabbage with Chicken Sausages

On Thursday of last week, the husband and I headed to the Amish Dutch Country Farmers Market. This is a trip I usually make by myself. I have it down to a science; the entire trip only takes about 50 minutes from start to finish (and it’s a full 15 minutes from my house). But when the husband comes with me, I always get sidetracked.

First, we taste every single peanut, almond and dehydrated green bean on display at the dry goods store. Moving on to the bakery, I mentally prepare myself to be the voice of reason when he wants to buy three kinds of cookies, a dozen jelly donuts, a package of pumpkin whoopie pies, and six apple dumplings (because we can freeze them for later).

At the poultry counter, I over buy per his suggestion, because he wants to try EVERY kind of chicken sausage they make (I’m not complaining). Steering him away from the barbecue-sauced chicken wings, I check out the prepared salads. Amish salads. We try a sweet broccoli and cauliflower chopped salad and eat a pint on the spot while looking at the produce stand for local offerings. I buy local cabbage, carrots, a few apples, and some brussel sprouts. I don’t have to convince him to stop putting things in the basket here, but when we get over to the cheese shop we both need restraining. With the toothpicks provided, we try every last cube of sample cheese–colby, soft farmer’s cheese, smoked gouda, smoked mozzarella, Amish Longhorn, sharp cheddar, even pepperoni cheddar. I buy some white cheddar for a recipe and load up on essentials like local half and half, eggs, and yogurt.

This is Joe at a recent Halloween Party. Just so you really know who I’m dealing with. Happy Halloween, by the way!

At the meat counter, we both stop to think. We contemplate how much double smoked bacon to buy. Amish bacon. Wanting to keep it healthy, I err on the side of caution and only buy half a pound. I’ll be back next week after all.

On the way out the door, the husband is distracted by a long line of shoppers. The line leads to steaming trays of pulled pork and barbecue sauce–his kryptonite. I see the accompanying sauerkraut and immediately think of college. The dining hall served kielbasa and sauerkraut a couple of times a month. I think I’m the only one that delighted in the briny cabbage and caramelized (burnt, really) sausages. Maybe it’s my Polish heritage coming to the surface.

I haven’t been able to get that sauerkraut out of my mind. Until I saw this recipe on RantingChef.com. I used it as a starting point for my own Amish-Inspired Sweet and Tangy Cabbage with Chicken Sausages, the perfect counterpart to a chilly fall night.

Amish-Inspired Sweet and Tangy Cabbage with Chicken Sausages

[Disclaimer: I didn't decide to add the sausages until the cabbage was already in the braising stage. I submerged them in the liquid during the last 20 minutes of cooking, and they were still delicious; however, the recipe is written with the sausages cooking first, which will give them a nice brown and add more flavor to the cabbage.]

Ingredients:

Olive oil

4 chicken sausages, whole or sliced, whatever you prefer (I kept mine whole and used local white wine chicken sausages. Amish made.)

1 Vidalia onion, thinly sliced

1 cinnamon stick

1 bay leaf

2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste

1 small to medium green cabbage, cored and thinly sliced

1 apple, cored and diced

1 cup chicken broth/stock

1/2 cup white wine

1/4 cup white wine vinegar

2 tablespoons sugar

1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika

1/2 teaspoon black pepper

Cabbage and apples, ready for a close up

Drizzle the olive oil in a medium-sized pot or dutch oven over medium-high heat, add the sausages and cook, just until browned. Add the onions, cinnamon , bay leaves and 1 teaspoon salt and cook until the onions are tender, about 8 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Add the cabbage and cook until wilted about 8 minutes. Add the apple, broth, white wine, vinegar, sugar, remaining salt, smoked paprika, and pepper.

Cabbage braising

Cook, covered, stirring occasionally, until the cabbage is tender, about 45 minutes. Uncover, remove the sausages and cook until the liquid has reduced to desired sauce consistency, about 5 minutes. Serve in bowls with sausage nestled under a pile of tangy cabbage. Add some boiled white potatoes or a hearty slice of honey wheat bread (Amish-made, of course) if you want to sop up the sauce. Serves 4.

This was the perfect combination of savory and sweet, with a tiny bite from the paprika and pepper. (I tried to make it look more beautiful, but come on, it’s cabbage and sausage. I didn’t have a lot to work with.)

Categories: Fall Recipes, Farmer's Markets, Recipes | Tags: , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Fall Photo Montage

In my northeast neck of the woods, everyone’s talking about fall. I noticed fellow bloggers are all abuzz regarding this most glorious of seasons as well. I’m jumping on the fall bandwagon, with hot apple cider in hand, to share a host of photos taken at Filasky’s farm on the first afternoon of autumn.

As with all good montages, music is of the utmost importance. So either hum your favorite tune, or play this suggested fall photo montage song (really just the chorus).

Baskets o’ Pumpkins

Fall Planting

Tiny White Pumpkins

Pumpkin Patch

Soy Maze – way healthier than a corn maze

Gourds Galore!

Speckled Swan Gourd

My brother posing with his favorite of all gourds – the Mexican Hat

Cinderella Pumpkins

Spooky Gray Gourds

The Great (White) Pumpkin

No montage is complete without a silly pose

Scarecrow Family

Welcome to Filasky’s!

Apples! Including Honeycrisp, the King of All Apples

Filasky’s sells Woodside Farm Creamery’s ice cream. Fall flavors include Pumpkin and Pumpkin Pecan. You need to try it!

Giant Corn Stalk

Thank you, Filasky’s, for embodying the best season of the year, Fall!

Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns. ~George Eliot

Categories: Delaware Farms, Farmer's Markets, Local Farms | Tags: , , , , , , , | 24 Comments

An Open Apology to New Jersey

Dear New Jersey,

You are known for a lot of things. Mostly bad things like pollution and high property taxes. And even worse things like Jersey Shore, The Situation and Snooki.

Snooki Sandwich

So you can imagine my very low expectations when I visited the Jersey shore this weekend. Not THAT Jersey Shore–Wildwood Crest. While I was packing for your beaches a montage of spray tans, fist pumping, and purple running board lights crashed through my head. I wondered if I should buy extra hair products and some brass knuckles.

As my friend and I headed south, I was struck by the farm land and produce stands dotting the road. I even saw a sheep farm. I started to regret packing four pairs of bedazzled sunglasses.

Much to my surprise, the Jersey shore was delightful, picturesque even.

My Jersey Shore

After a pleasant weekend on the sand and an evening on the boardwalk, I drove home, anticipating a produce stand stop. My anticipation was not in vain; I never knew that only a mere 20 miles from my house, a wonderland of locally grown goodness existed.

So, New Jersey, I would like to apologize for my low expectations and negative thinking (I blame it on MTV a little though). You are much more than Snooki’s bangs.

In fact, I would like to propose a new montage–one that replaces bikinis and trash talk with finer things like Sicilian eggplant and fresh-picked corn.

Jersey Farm Market

Local Bounty

Long Hots – I wonder if Peppermeister grows these?

Pretty Sicilian Eggplant

Jersey Fresh Potatoes

Lima Beans, one of my favorites

Some of the best tomatoes I ate all summer. Thanks, Jersey!

Cabbage heads as big as Snooki’s hair!

Jersey even knows how to do honey right

Jersey nectarines

Who knew, Jersey? Forgive me for misunderstanding the complexities of your diverse culture.

Yours in mutual fresh-picked produce love,

Rachel

P.S. – The final season of Jersey Shore airs in October. I’m sure you’re relieved, just like the rest of us.

Categories: Farmer's Markets, Local Farms | Tags: , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Tomato Sunshine

On our way back from a few days at the beach over the long weekend, the husband and I decided to do some shopping. Due to limited time, I had a choice to make: clothes shopping at the beach outlets (Coach, Michael Kors, and J. Crew to name a few) or food shopping at produce stands. What do you think this locavore chose? Produce stands obviously!

Heading toward Route 1, we stopped at Tomato Sunshine, a Garden Center and Farmers Market in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware.

Tomato Sunshine

Since Labor Day is the “offiicial” end of summer, I was excited to see the bounty of summer produce on display, still in its full glory! I went crazy buying up EVERYTHING, including tomatoes, corn, green beans, peaches, cantaloupe, and even a yellow watermelon.

Summer Corn

Honeydew Melons

Late Summer Green Beans

Local Yellow Watermelons

Peaches

Summer Squash and Zucchini

Summer Tomatoes – the BEST!

The local Roma tomatoes looked so good, I bought way too much so I could save some for winter–in the form of sun-dried tomatoes. I don’t have the patience to wait days on end for my tomatoes to dry out in the sun. (And it doesn’t seem sanitary either.) So instead of doing it the old fashioned way, I put my oven to good use and slowly roasted the tomatoes until they were sweet and concentrated. A perfect activity to take on while tackling post vacation laundry.

Make these for a little summer tomato sunshine in the dead of winter.

Summer Beauties

Tomato Sunshine (or Sun-dried Tomatoes in the Oven)

Ingredients:

15 Roma tomatoes, cut length-wise

Couple pinches of kosher salt

1 teaspoon sugar

Drizzle of olive oil

Preheat oven to 225 degrees. While the oven is preheating, sprinkle the tomatoes (cut side up) with the kosher salt. Allow to sit on a cutting board for 15 minutes to release some moisture. Transfer to a baking sheet. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with sugar. Toss to coat and arrange tomatoes (cut side up again) on the baking sheet one inch apart. Bake for about six hours or until tomatoes are dark and dried out, but still pliable.

To save for winter, freeze in zip lock bags and take out as needed for pastas and risotto.

Ready for the oven

Tomato Sunshine

{This post part of Fight Back Fridays on Food Renegade}

Categories: Fall Recipes, Farmer's Markets, Local Stores, Recipes, Summer Recipes | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Breakfast with Steinbeck

Seeing as I have been a traveler (of sorts) as of late and just returned from vacation, I thought this email I received from my brother was fitting:

Ra, 

Attached is a passage from John Steinbeck’s book Travels with Charley: In Search of America. In 1960, Steinbeck took a 3-month long road trip to discover what it is to be American, get a feel for the essence of the country–something like that. The part attached is pertinent to your current endeavors, and I think you’ll get a kick out of his assessment.

Regards,

[Fake name/inside joke which would be lost on you, so I omitted it, but trust me, it was funny]

My brother knows me well, because I did get a kick out of Steinbeck’s assessment. I also got a kick out of the fact that Steinbeck traversed the countryside with his poodle (hence the name Travels with Charley). I have an affinity for poodles. The favorite dog of my life was a black toy poodle named Pepper. If he was still with us, I would take him on an epic road trip and most definitely devote many blog posts to his curly cuteness. But back to Steinbeck.

Travels with Charley book cover. (Photo credit: penguin.com)

Steinbeck managing to look dapper and surly at the same time. (Photo credit: indulgy.com)

After traveling and eating in various roadside joints, Steinbeck wasn’t impressed. His honest and thought-provoking assessment is as follows:

In the eating places along the roads the food has been clean, tasteless, colorless, and of a complete sameness. It is almost as though the customers had no interest in what they ate as long as it had no character to embarrass them. This is true of all but the breakfasts, which are uniformly wonderful if you stick to bacon and eggs and pan-fried potatoes. At the roadsides I never had a really good dinner or a really bad breakfast. The bacon or sausage was good and packaged at the factory, the eggs fresh or kept fresh by refrigeration, and refrigeration was universal. I might even say roadside America is the paradise of breakfast except for one thing. Now and then I would see a sign that said “home-made sausage” or “home-smoked bacon and hams” or “new-laid eggs” and I would stop and lay in supplies. Then, cooking my own breakfast and making my own coffee, I found that the difference was instantly apparent. A freshly laid egg does not taste remotely like the pale, battery-produced refrigerated egg. The sausage would be sweet and sharp and pungent with spices, and my coffee a wine-dark happiness. Can I then say that the America I saw put cleanliness first, at the expense of taste? And–since all our preceptive nerve trunks including that of taste are not only perfectible but also capable of trauma–that the sense of taste tends to disappear and that strong, pungent, or exotic flavors arouse suspicion and dislike and so are eliminated?

…If this people has so atrophied its taste buds as to find tasteless food not only acceptable but desirable, what of the emotional life of the nation?

I need to mention that although Steinbeck was a brilliant and thoughtful man, he was by no means an environmentalist.  In the book, he boasts about cooking with aluminum pans and then tossing them off his boat into the water (easier than cleaning up, I guess). So while Steinbeck is only making an observation based on his own taste buds, he foreshadows a bigger problem–the industrialization of food.

It’s like the time my mother said, “Wow. This organic chicken is what chicken used to taste like when I was a kid.” So what happened to our taste buds? And like Steinbeck asks, do our nation’s food choices have anything to do with our emotional state?  When questions like these are asked, the usual next step is finding someone to blame.

I’m taking a different approach. While I do have more questions than answers, I know one thing for sure: local food tastes better than any packaged or transported item I can get at the grocery store (remember my “eggsperiment”?).  So I plan to search for answers by taking a page from Steinbeck’s book and finding, eating, and enjoying (without embarrassment) local, non-industrialized food.

Who’s with me?

{This post part of Fight Back Fridays on Food Renegade}

Categories: Farmer's Markets, Random | Tags: , , , , , , , | 19 Comments

The Downsides to Coming Home from Vacation

1. A temperature of 102 degrees with humidity. No more 80 degree weather with cool ocean breezes. When I got out of the car at a New Jersey rest stop my sunglasses fogged up and I felt like I needed an inhaler (I don’t even have asthma).

Serene views and no humidity!

2.  The social repercussions of drinking alcoholic beverages (even if they are local) in the middle of the day. If I had a cooler filled with blueberry wine at my work desk, everyone would plan a coffee break intervention; but when on vacation, no one blinks an eye if you’re enjoying a glass with lunch. Or if you mix red wine with Fresca as an afternoon treat (don’t turn up your nose until you try it).

3. Making my own breakfast. You mean I can’t get up at the crack of 9 am and take a leisurely walk down the blue hydrangea-laden sidewalk to my favorite breakfast spot? Instead I have to slurp down coffee while cooking my own eggs and simultaneously packing lunch/drying my hair/driving to work. Bummer.

This photo has not been retouched at all. The colors of vacation hydrangea are unbelievably vivid.

Two eggs over easy with sausage and home fries. Breakfast of vacation champions.

4. Wearing clothes. I had to put on REAL clothes today. Not just a bathing suit and a comfy cover-up. Or yoga pants and a tank top. Clothes that involved buttons and zippers and (gasp!) shoes.

No shoes!

5. Lack of fresh, local seafood on the cheap. I ate the best lobster roll I’ve ever had for only $13. Yes, $13!! Panera sells one that I’m sure is sub-par for $18. Who wants to eat a lobster roll at Panera?

THE Lobster Roll

Where you can find THE lobster roll–PJ’s in Wellfleet, MA

6. No more farmer’s market hopping in cute, new towns. I experienced the best in farm stands and farmer’s markets while away. They were all over the place, offering  just-picked produce and artisan food items.

Found this farm stand in Carver, MA

All in all these “downsides” are really just affirmation that I need to continue my local experiment in Delaware with gusto.  While I’ve already discovered many places to eat and buy locally delicious foods, I’m excited to see what else is out there. So here’s to local summer discoveries and day trips that feel like vacation!

Categories: Farmer's Markets, Restaurant | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Blueberry Wine

Posting while on the beach drinking local blueberry wine? Yes please! Thank you, Vacation, thank you.

20120705-142838.jpg

Categories: Farmer's Markets, Wineries | Tags: , , , , | 6 Comments

Greg and Ann’s CSA Supper

I spent last Saturday evening in the company of good friends. My CSA partners, Greg and Ann, invited the husband and I over for dinner, along with our mutual friends Mike and Linda. The menu preparation began on Wednesday when Greg and I picked up our CSA share from Toby of Bayberry Farm.

How awesome is Toby’s truck? That’s Greg talking to Toby.

What started as bags of mustard greens, kale, lettuce, garlic scapes and cucumbers ended in a feast fit for a spoiled locavore. I took the scapes and cucumbers so I could contribute a cucumber salad to the meal. The scapes ended up in a very delicious wrap and rap (which I’m not ashamed to admit I didn’t share with anyone).  Greg headed over to Herman’s Meat Shop in Newark to see what was good and local. He decided on rock fish, which came from Rhode Island, not completely local but definitely regional. And delicious!

Asian inspired rock fish and greens.

This rock fish needed a close up

Accompanied by sautéed mustard greens, kale and jasmine rice, the rock fish was the star of the show. Firm but flakey, meaty and moist.

My contribution to the meal was a light cucumber salad. I used local Pequea Valley Farm plain yogurt to make the dressing. This is the same dressing I use on everything, even chicken salad.

Cucumber salad looking pretty in its fancy bowl

To top it all off, Greg and Ann even served local wine with dinner. Smartly packaged in a box, both the red and white wine from Terrapin Station Winery in Elkton, MD were balanced and smooth. In all my local travels, I never crossed paths with this very local winery. It’s on my list of places to visit now.

For dessert what could be more simple and refreshing than mixed berries, especially if those berries include mulberries from our CSA? The miniscule berries remind me of dwarfed blackberries; they are sweet and surprisingly juicy. Thanks to the brilliant Ann, freshly whipped cinnamon cream topped each delectable bite (recipe to follow, which you must make).

As always when I’m enjoying myself I forget about taking pictures. I wish I had photos of the beautiful berries, Ann’s beautiful place settings (complete with napkin rings!), and the relaxing fire pit we enjoyed until late in the night.

Ann’s Brilliant Cinnamon Whipped Cream

2 cups heavy cream

1/4 cup confectioner’s sugar

1 teaspoon cinnamon

I’m not exactly sure how Ann made hers, but I would pour the cream into a chilled glass bowl and whip with a hand mixer on high until stiff peeks form. Then add the sugar and cinnamon slowly. Voila! A delectable treat to serve with fruit. Or to eat straight from the bowl.

Thanks, Greg and Ann, for a lovely, local evening!

Categories: Fall Recipes, Farmer's Markets, Local Farms, Recipes, Spring Recipes, Summer Recipes, Winter Recipes | Tags: , , , , | 2 Comments

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