Farm Happenings at Broadfork Farm
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Special Notes about Eggplant!

Posted on July 22nd, 2021 by Janet Aardema

Options are fantastic this week! Watermelons, Green Beans, Onions (red and yellow), Potatoes (purple and gold), Carrots, Golden Beets, delicious tomatoes and even Salad greens!

But first...please read: We forgot to tell you all about how to store Eggplant! With apologies for not pointing it out until now, Eggplant is damaged by refrigerator temps. Keep it on your kitchen counter! It also should be used fairly quickly. It doesn't have as long as a life after harvest as most of our veggies. 

We have searched for years for a simple and compact "Guide to Storing Vegetables" handout that we agree with and could print and give to all Farm Share members. We haven't found it yet, nor found the time to create one ourselves! Stay tuned. But in the most simple form, keep Tomatoes and Eggplants OUT of the fridge. All GREENS and ROOTS need to be refrigerated in an AIR TIGHT bag or container to prevent going limp/wilty. 

If you're short on fridge space, you can also keep Peppers, Onions, Potatoes, Garlic, and Cucumbers (for a brief time) out of the fridge. 

EGGPLANT Recipe suggestion: Our daughter prepared our Italian Eggplant last night and our entire family said it was the best Eggplant dish EVER. As is typical for her, she didn't follow a recipe or write down what she did, but with our pleading she put together the following description: 

"I combined garlic, Sandwich Sprinkle [a Penzey's Spices blend], olive oil, and red wine vinegar and blended it. I tossed the eggplant in the sauce and let it sit. I then roasted it at 400 degrees for 30 ish minutes. To make the dressing I combined balsamic vinegar with honey and simmered it for about 5 minutes. I plated the eggplant and put the glaze over top. I added feta cheese and pecans on top."


                   

She also made a fantastic Carrot-Cucumber Salad with some yummy dressing (middle photo), and a Potato-Green Pepper-Pork Sausage dish (third photo) that was delicious. Maybe we'll coax a description of those out of her! She loves to inspire people's kitchen time. 

 

And for our every-other-week members who didn't get to see this bit of farm education last week, read on to learn more about how we farm: 

We get so busy in our work with soil and plants and the business end of planning and selling what we grow that we often forget to tell you important things about how we grow food (and flowers) for you! We are a small scale, diversified, regenerative, soil-building, human-powered (as opposed to tractor) family farm using only organic methods and inputs. This puts us in a category with less than 1% of farms in the U.S. Thank you for choosing us!

Pictured above is a sticker from a new educational campaign here in Virginia, 4theSoil.org, aiming to increase awareness of and discussion about soil health, especially amongst consumers. We're so excited to help this process!

Specifically, here are some of our practices:

- We cover up the soil! This allows for the microbiology in the soil to have a protective layer over it and also suppresses weeds and conserves moisture. We do this through mulching and cover cropping. 

- We use only organic inputs. Most simply, this means inputs (to fertilize and to fight bugs and disease) that come only from plant, animal, or mineral sources. To fertilize we use food-waste compost, mushroom compost, alfalfa, sea vegetables, basalt dust, a blend of more than 100 macro and micro nutrients, and more! These feed the biology in the soil that plants need in order to be able to uptake nutrients and capture carbon. (We don't use any synthetic/petroleum based fertilizers because they do the opposite to soil biology. We don't use any chemical pesticides because they destroy soil biology and most are toxic to humans - many are neuro toxins and carcinogens. We don't want those compounds in humans or soil or waterways.) 

- We don't till! Farmers till because it kills surface weeds and makes the soil a workable texture for planting. We kill surface weeds with hand tools (or our actual hands!) and make our soil a workable texture through tending soil biology as described above. 

- We mulch with straw, leaf mulch, re-usable landscape fabric, and bio-telo (a film that seems like plastic but is made from corn). 

- We use a tractor only to move compost and other heavy things. We shovel the compost by hand out of the tractor bucket onto our growing areas, we plant by hand, we weed by hand, we harvest by hand. We use a walk-behind tractor to mow down plant debris before re-feeding the soil biology in any given area and planting the next crop. 

Questions about how we farm for you are always welcome! Feel free to email, call, or collect questions to ask us in person at the Farm Share Social this fall. Date TBA soon!

Remember to collect Tomatoes in paper bags with your name on them! - (We don't put them in cold storage with the other vegetables that we keep in our walk in cooler for the night before your pick up day.) They are in a crate right beside the green boxes/cold vegetables. (Same for breads, flowers, and a cooler for fermented vegetables, and eggs...) 

 

This month's HERB BOXES from Gathered Threads have arrived! The options look delicious and sumptuous! Choose from...

- Herbs for Body & Soul: Sleep Balm | Clary Sage Body Powder | Keep Calm Herbal Extract Kit | Lemon Lavender Truffles Kit |  Orange Basil Sugar Scrub

- Herbs for the Kitchen: Herbs for Cream Cheese Spread | Butterfly Vinegar Kit | Mexican Pinto Beans Seasoning Kit | Thai Basil Lemongrass Simple Syrup Kit | Mexican Tarragon

- Herbs for Tea & Wellness: The Shade Sipper Tea | Majestic Mountain Tea Blend | Cal-c-ommm… (Calcium) Tea | Head to Toe Massage Oil Kit | Yucca Flower Essence 

The delicious fermented vegetables listed here are also from Katherine at Gathered Threads. We've been making our own fermented/cultured vegetables for years, and hers are the most delicious we've ever tasted! Give them a try. Your taste buds and your gut flora will thank you. This month's options include: Caraway, Simply Sauer, Russian, Chinese Fisherman, Spicy Napa kimchi, Kimchi, White Kimchi, The Green & Black, Beet Kraut, Beet n Fennel, Beet & Onion Pickle, Gingered Carrots, Sauerrubenkraut, By the Bay, Red head, Apple Juniper, Rosemary'd Turnips  

 

And - There are EGGS available today!

Blessings on your meals ~

Janet, Dan and the whole Broadfork Crew (Julie, Karen, Rachel, Maya, Nick, Parker, Ramsi, and the farm kids)
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