Archive for March, 2011

March 27, 2011

Dandy Deal for Egg Customers

 

wildly nutritious dandelion greens

Dandelions are leafing out so it’s time once again to urge you to eat your weeds! Rather than use chemicals to kill those vigorous plants of phenomenal nutrition, why not make pesto?

 

We have greenhouse grown organic garlic chives and parsley in good quantity, which brings me to make this Special Offer!

 

The Dandy Pesto Bundle $2.75

4 oz bundle includes organic Italian flat-leaf parsley, organic garlic chives and one 7-9 inch organic yellow dock leaf

Use our handy dandy bundle of parsley, garlic chives and a yellow dock leaf, plus and the dandelion greens in your yard to make a batch of this nutrition-packed pesto:

 

dandelion and parsley pesto

Dandelion & Parsley Pesto

Ingredients

1 1/2 cups tender spring dandelion leaves, chopped

1 1/2 cups chopped parsley

1/3 cup chopped garlic chives

1 cup walnut pieces or pine nuts

4-7 minced cloves garlic, depending on taste

black pepper and salt to taste

1/2 cup olive oil (or enough to create your preferred consistency)

1 cup grated hard cheese such as pecorino romano, asiago or brick parmesan

 

Directions: Put ingredients into a food processor and chop until creamy. Makes about 3 cups.

Options: Add 1/2 cup of chopped arugula, a dash of ginger and cumin.

Freezer Tip: Mix without cheese or olive oil, place in air tight container and use within 4 months for best results. To use, thaw, add cheese and oil, serve.

March 26, 2011

Fresh Local Fish Without a License? Yes!

 UPDATE: All 2011 fish shares have been sold. 2012 fish shares go on sale in April. Please check back then.

We’re raising tilapia so your family can enjoy the health benefits of fresh fish without owning a pole. That’s right, even if you’ve never fished a day, you can benefit from sustainable seafood raised in clear mountain water, a stone’s throw from your dinner table!

An affordable green meal!

These hormone-free and responsibly farmed fish have never tried to pull oxygen out of an oily ocean. No coral reef damage occurs during harvest, and the only shipping involved to deliver them to your table is the gas you use in transport, yet our prices are the same as you’d pay for factory farmed tilapia at the butcher counter. We could charge more, but we chaff at the thought of elitist food. Good quality food is for everyone. Get the details here.

Read our tilapia shares Frequently Asked Questions page here.

March 17, 2011

Greens Day

 

fresh greens for St. Patrick's Day dinner

The sun has not yet crested the hogback, but I’m working on dinner.

These greens are straight from the greenhouse, and will be part of our evening meal. The greenhouse allows us to harvest a wild array of greens in the middle of March, before trees have budded and while the outside gardens remain dormant. Fresh as of ten minutes ago, are yellow dock leaves, parsley, garlic chives, fennel, arugula and turnip greens for tonight’s frittata.

 

here they are again, in water and with sunlight

March 13, 2011

Hello Peppers!

 

70% of this season’s peppers have sprouted in the past four days.

We’re growing Anaheims, red habaneros, jalapenos, three varieties of bells (including sweet chocolate), two varieties of banana peppers, an ornamental purple pepper, orange Thai, Greek pepperoncini, Chimayos and Serranos. And those wee round leaves you see in the foreground? Stinging nettle.

In about ten days I’ll start tomatoes. This year I’m doing my usual heirlooms, plus a few new-to-me Italian heirlooms.

So much to look forward to!

 

March 11, 2011

UNT Exterminating Two Bee Colonies

By Sara Story

The University of North Texas says it is time to exterminate some buzzing residents who have called the university home for more than 18 years.

School leaders say they must get rid of two enormous bee hives in one of the walls of the Radio, Television, Film building.

Read the whole story: UNT Exterminating Two Bee Colonies – Local News – Dallas/Fort Worth, TX – Dallas/Fort Worth, TX – msnbc.com.

March 6, 2011

Fish Farm Progress

We are happy to state that we have placed an order for 150 White Brook Nile tilapia fry and that they should be here before the 24th of this month. Should all go well, we will have our first harvest around the end of October.

 

3/7 UPDATE: All is not starting well. I received notice that our order will not be here for at least four weeks and more probably six. We are currently checking fry/fingerling availability through other breeders. Stay tuned.

3/19 UPDATE: I canceled the previous order and am working through a bit of red tape before reordering. When I do reorder, it will be with  another company, as I chatted with the previously mentioned company a few days ago and was told it would still be 6 weeks before they could ship. Meanwhile, a Colorado company can get fish to me within a week.

So.

We are engineering an ammonia spike, adding beneficial bacteria and bringing the growout tank back up to temperature. This process is known as cycling the system. And yes, there is that bit of red tape with which to contend. I expect that burble to consume a couple days next week.

All systems go! Here fishy, fishy!

 

March 3, 2011

A Well-rounded Flatbread

Kulcha and chole

Perhaps it’s just the way I’m wired, but for me, recipe adaptation and experimentation is a way of life. Take a recent afternoon in the kitchen whipping up kulcha, an Indian flatbread.

According to Wiki, kulcha is particularly popular in north India and is usually eaten with chole. According to me, this is a versatile quick bread, a recipe no from-scratch cook should be without. Indeed, in a few hours of kulcha making I prepared Tandoori Chicken and Black Bean Pizza; Pear, Gorgonzola and Walnut Pizza; Apple Brie Kulcha and Salmon and Onion Stuffed Kulcha.

This Chef in You entry contains the recipe that presented my jumping off place. If you’ve never prepared kulcha, you may benefit from reviewing the numerous photographs included with their recipe.

Kulcha Dough

(makes enough for four pizzas or one of each of the following recipes)

6 cups all purpose flour (I tossed in ½ cup home ground yellow dock seed flour which is completely optional and, I suppose, to a purist, also means I didn’t make real kulcha.)

1 tsp baking powder

1/4 tsp baking soda

1/4 cup honey

1/2 cup olive oil

1 cup plain yogurt

2 tbsp better butter

 

Kulcha dough makes a fantastic pizza crust

Kulcha Pizza Crust

To make a kulcha pizza crust, take one fourth the dough from the above recipe, work into a flat 12 inch round. I prefer to use my hands, but a rolling pin certainly works. Lay crust on pizza stone or pizza pan, pierce all over with fork. Cook at 400 F for 12-15 minutes (you want it browned, but not crisp). Remove from oven and let cool slightly.

Variation: press rosemary and garlic into the dough before cooking.

 

 

Tandoori Chicken and Black Bean Pizza

If you like spicy food, you'll love this pizza!

I used two cups of chopped meat plus a cup of sauce leftover from homemade tandoori chicken (tandoori sauce recipe). I added 1 ½ cups of fresh cooked black beans, ½ cup chopped onion, ¼ cup garden picked garlic chives snipped with kitchen scissors, ½ cup crumbled goat cheese, a teaspoon each of cumin seed and olive oil, dashes of tarragon, ginger, ground  pepper and ground red pepper to make this spicy can’t-stop-eating-it pizza.

The process: Heat oil; sauté cumin seeds for 1-2 minutes; add chopped onion. When onion is translucent, reduce heat; add chicken, tandoori sauce, ginger and tarragon; stir. Simmer 5 minutes; add black beans and red pepper. Cook another minute or until sauce thickens. Spread over cooked pizza crust; add goat cheese, snipped chives; add ground pepper. Cook in 350 F oven for 10-12 minutes. Serves 2 or 3.

 

 

Pear, Gorgonzola and Walnut Pizza

Cook this pretty pizza in 15 minutes

This alluring dish requires two pears, about 3 ounces of gorgonzola, a generous handful of walnut pieces, ½ cup finely chopped onion, ground pepper and ½ cup of grated cheddar cheese. And is it easy to prepare!

Creamy gorgonzola, crunchy walnuts and sweet pears make a beautifully delicious meal

Here’s how: on a precooked pizza crust, scatter crumbled gorgonzola cheese. Spread the chopped onion over the gorgonzola then arrange ¼ inch slices of Bosc pears atop that. Add walnuts, shredded cheddar cheese and fresh ground pepper; bake at 350 F for 12-15 minutes. Serves 2 or 3.

 

 

 

Apple Brie Kulcha

Tart Granny Smith apples, honey and brie lend texture and flavor to this dessert

Make a 12 inch round, about 1/3 inch thick with kulcha dough. Sprinkle with cinnamon and cardamom. Mound apple slices (I used Granny Smith) in center of round, leaving 2-3 inches of dough around the edges uncovered. Drizzle apples with honey. Place a layer of brie slices on top of the apple mound. Bring the edges of the kulcha dough to the center and pinch closed then flatten with your hand or a rolling pin until it is about an inch and a half thick.

I tried cooking this stove-top, but found baking worked better

It is OK if a couple of the seams open, this will allow steam to vent. Press sliced almonds into the top, sprinkle with a little more cinnamon and bake on a jelly roll pan in a 325 F oven for 30-35 minutes or until dough browns. This makes a nice dessert and a lovely brunch addition. Serves 6-8.

 

 

Salmon and Onion Stuffed Kulcha

Try this with a wasabi tartar sauce and a leafy salad

I had a bit of leftover canned salmon, which normally inspires an omelet, however this time I decided to stuff a kulcha instead. Am I glad I did.

To create the filling drain the salmon, add a pinch of cumin plus a dash of powdered Chinese mustard, along with ½ cup of minced onion and mix well. Make a 12 inch round with kulcha dough, then dust it with dill and garlic. In the same manner as with the apple brie kulcha, mound the filling in the center of the dough, then fold the edges over, pinching seams until you’ve created a closed pocket, save for a couple steam vents. Flatten the kulcha to about an 1 inch with your hand or a rolling pin, bake in a 350 F oven for 25-30 minutes or until dough browns. Serves 4-6.

I hope these simple recipes encourage you to discover a dozen new ways to prepare this satisfying flatbread.

 

This article was published by The Rambling Epicure and Colorado Local Sustainability.
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