Monday, August 15, 2011

"Four fried chickens...and a bowl of tomatoes!"

Okay...so that is not exactly the line from The Blues Brothers, but it perfectly describes this week's CSA haul. Or rather "hauls" -- Friday was the first (and likely only) time that both the monthly meat pick-up and bi-weekly veggie pick-up aligned. Kind of like a major convergence of the planets: beautiful, amazing, and leaving you to question what the heck comes next in the universe!

We visited the farm on a beautiful summer afternoon...about 80 degrees, under a sky filled with puffy white clouds and sunshine. This is literally the first time that we didn't end up drenched in sweat just from our walk to the barn from the car. Perfect day for U-pick! We expected to have our choice between picking green beans or cherry tomatoes, and I will  admit that when we reached the field and saw that green beans had a big strike-through, I was bummed. After all, if my silly tomato plants in the backyard ever get to ripening, we'll have cherry tomatoes a plenty to pick...and fresh green beans are so yummy. But, we headed back to the rows to receive our small white paper bag and our instructions.

"You can pick twenty" the farmer said. (Only twenty??? That seemed so, well, not worth the effort.) "But, if you want to taste a variety or two that's okay." (Okay...so no one is going to count the bag if we want a few more...great!) "And...you might want to walk the whole row to see what kinds there are and pick on your way back. Some of my favorites are all the way at the end of the row, and hardly anyone is making it back there to pick them."

We learned long ago that if a person responsible for your food makes a recommendation from the heart, you should follow it. So, we set out through the two longest rows of cherry tomato plants that I have ever seen. I can tell you why no one made it to the end of the rows to pick...the mosquitoes were unbelievable (and, apparently very hungry from their lack of fresh food!) But. the trip to the end of the rows was well worth the bites and scratches: we sampled "black cherry" and "sungold" tomatoes - the best cherry tomatoes that I have ever had. All week we have been savoring those twenty(one) tomatoes

that we brought back - quartering them into salads so everyone can get their share. We just finished them today...I hope we can pick more next Friday (and I'll be prepared with bug spray, 'cause I'm headed to the end of the row.)

In addition to the bag of amazing cherry tomatoes, the barn sent us home with what I would call "typical" farm fare: kale, cukes, scallions, garlic, basil, carrots, eighteen more tomatoes (slicers, yellows, and oranges), with the two unique items being pattypan squash, fennel, and a crimson red watermelon. YUM!

No recipes needed this week, my friends: salads all around!

After dinner (including fresh tomato and cucumber salad) we headed back out to meet with Beth, the meat farmer. DH had read online that the farm sent many chickens to the butcher this week, so he was prepared for a bag full of mostly chickens. Again - these chickens taste amazing: see the picture of our yummy roasted chicken dinner (served with wonderful farm-fresh cabbage slaw with honey-vinaigrette) from earlier in the week...

but they are, admittedly, a bit lightweight. The three of us can devour one to the bones with no leftovers, which is not how we typically use a whole chicken. The bag seemed rather heavy, and when we got home we were pleasantly surprised to pull out of our share bag two pounds of ground beef (can you say wonderful burgers?), sausage patties, round steaks, stew meat, and one...two...three...four chickens, all cut into halves. That, my friends, will be a lot of chicken to eat! If only I could fry chicken...and serve it with coke. And some dry white toast. And some more tomatoes...

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