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I can remember back to a time that I just didn’t get the appeal of fennel. This course, stringy, strongly scented vegetable didn’t seem worth the trouble to cook. But now I can honestly say that it is among my very favorite vegetables. I fully realize that there are many of our CSA members who still don’t “get” fennel, and if you are among these, you simply must try Jeanne’s recipe for roast fennel and onions.

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kale-lacinato

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Kale is a type of cabbage that does not form a head from the central leaves.We grow three varieties of kale, green curly leaf or Scotch kale, Lacinato or Dinosaur kale, and Red Russian kale.  Kale is high in beta carotene, vitamin K and vitamin C and calcium.

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kohlrabiKohlrabi is an odd vegetable that I think is often bought more for appearance than for the desire to eat it. Looking like something from a science-fiction movie, they come in lovely deep purple or jade green, and the leaves come up from all over what seems to be the root.

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Lettuce Rows

Lettuce Rows

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Lettuces grow exceptionally well here at our home farm near the coast. They love the cool foggy summer weather. We grow Red Leaf, Green Leaf, Butter Lettuces, Little Gem, and Romaine varieties and offer a mix of baby salad greens in our early spring boxes.

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Think of how often a dish starts with a sauté of onions, carrots, and celery. In Italy this combination is called soffritto. In France it is cooked with butter and called mirepoix, but for general purposes I like it cooked with a light flavored olive oil or even grapeseed oil, which is neutrally flavored, so I call it by the Italian name. I like to make this in larger batches, removing some when it is still pale, or blond, then cooking the remaining amount until it is a darker shade of amber, giving it a caramelized flavor. I sometimes even let some go until it is quite dark, like tobacco, for a very deep flavor. I then freeze it in batches. I use large zip bags and flatten out the soffritto in the bags, making it easier to stack and easier to simply break off the amount I wish to use. Some people freeze it in ice trays as you might pesto. However you store it, having this in the freezer is like having a time machine. It can make having good tasting food on the table much quicker, or if you have several pans going at once it is quite helpful as well as it is easy to burn smaller amounts of onions.

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Vinaigrettes are usually thought of as oil and vinegar dressing. In actuality, vinaigrettes can be used as a sauce, especially for fish and poultry, on sandwiches, as a marinade, or even as a pasta sauce. Vinaigrettes are great poured over roasted vegetables such as potatoes, parsnips, and beets, while still warm so the flavors are absorbed. This makes an excellent salad, and is, in fact, how German potato salad is made.

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INGREDIENTS:

1 bunch of beets
1 teaspoon olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
2 tablespoons of water
1-2 tablespoons vinegar such as white balsamic or sherry

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One of the things I like to do over my morning coffee on rainy days is to look at the 24hr rainfall totals on the National Weather Service website.

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We have been a CSA farm since we planted our first 3-acre plot in 1997. The support we got from our early CSA members (some of you are still with us!) helped our farm get off the ground and beat the odds to survive for over two decades.

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When we first started doing the Sunday farmer’s market in Mountain View, Jeanne was pregnant with our daughter Amelia who will be 19 in three weeks.

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In our backyard we have a black mission fig tree which was probably an ill-advised choice this close to the coast.

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You will notice that the leaves on your Mei Quin Choi this week are flecked with small, pin-pricked holes. This is the work of the flea beetle.

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This week we are planting out the last of our vegetable transplants and the first blocks of overwintering cover crops.

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One of the things that drew me into farming in the first place was the fact that I could wrap my feeble brain around the basic transactional level of it.

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Every three or four years we replenish the mulch beneath the plants in our blueberry patch. It’s important for several reasons.

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Egret in the FieldNo matter how conscientiously you go about it, there is no getting away from the fact that farming is inherently a disruptive activity.

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In the Ag History Museum at the County Fairgrounds here in Watsonville there is a picture of our home ranch back in its heyday as a grade-A milk dairy, probably from sometime in the 1940’s. 

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As the weeks seem to fly by, summer’s progression for me is marked by a series of milestones–the hillsides turning from green to golden-brown, the harsh call of Caspian Terns returning to our area and the appearance

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I’ve long believed that one of the main distinguishing characteristics between city and county folks is their tolerance level for spiders. I have a vague memory of being squeamish about them when I first came to spend summers

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When we first started using our packing shed, which used to be the milking parlor for the dairy that preceded us here, we had to deal with the problem of what to do with the vegetable wash water once we were through with it.

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The popular perception is that organic farmers are at a disadvantage most when it comes to dealing with insect pests. But in reality it is weeds that can bring an organic farmer to ruin in short order. 

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The heat wave has passed and now we have our old comfortable friend the fog back again – drizzly mornings that keep temperatures in the cool 50s and 60s — the type of weather that makes this such a good climate for growing lettuces, greens, and strawberries. 

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Heat waves around here usually follow a predictable pattern. When a zone of high pressure camps out over our part of the state, the first few days are typically windless or there can even be a slight off-shore breeze

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The blueberry bushes are kicking into gear! Each year we go back and forth on one of our perennial farm questions – to net or not to net. This year the ayes have it and the crew spent a couple days this week covering the blueberry patch with bird netting. That means there should be more fruit for you, so we’ve put blueberry flats on the webstore and set some dates for Blueberry U-Picks.

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I’ve always liked sweet alyssum flowers. We planted them back in our San Francisco community garden plot before we moved out of the city to start farming, and they made a lovely delicate ground cover that attracted the most beautiful little crab spiders.

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From about February on, the greenhouse is always filled with colorful starts. Seeds of lettuces, greens (chard, kale, mustard, collards, escarole), brassicas (cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, romanesco), and herbs are planted on regular schedules into the greenhouse to be planted out for the many successions we will harvest during the year. 

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ArugulaFor the first ten years or so of my working life I was employed in kitchens of one sort or another—first as a dishwasher and later as a cook. And while this may seem like an odd preamble to becoming a farmer, in many ways it prepared me well for what was to come.

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Awhile back I attended a workshop at Moss Landing Marine Labs concerning water quality issues in Elkhorn Slough. Elkhorn Slough is a large brackish wetland whose main channel starts at Moss Landing Harbor (about 10 minutes south of us on Highway 1) and winds its way inland and to the North over six miles.

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It’s about as busy as it can get around here. The ground finally dried out enough to get into most areas of the farm and we’ve been planting like crazy. You’ll notice we are depending a lot on our friends at other local farms these past few weeks. The heavy prolonged rains definitely put us quite a bit behind schedule.

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Dandelion, or “tooth of the lion” (from the French “dent de lion”) is sure not to be a glamour item on everyone’s table–it is too good for you, can be bitter, and can take a little work. Although it is said the name derives from its tooth-like shape, I sometimes wonder if it derived from the bite of bitterness these leaves can sometimes pack.

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Our new crates have arrived and this week all pick-up sites will receive their vegetables in crates!

Why is this a more environmentally sound choice? The waxed cardboard boxes that we have used in the past are reusable for about 4 or 5 deliveries,

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The barn swallows are back, which means spring is right around the corner! The greenhouse has a new roof and is filling with starts. There is still some rain in the forecast, but with enough days like today the ground will be dried out enough to get the tractors in soon (using the new 72 inch spacing), so these little lettuces and other greens can get out there in the real world.

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As yet another storm system overtakes the area and our already saturated fields become wetter still, it’s hard not to fall into discussions about the weather. But I’ve had enough of weather talk for now so I’ll fall back on the subject that comes next most readily to mind—nerdy farm equipment talk.

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We are having a real winter this year, and it’s been quite windy during some of these storms. The farm is doing fine, but the cover did blow off of one of our greenhouses in the latest series of storms last week.

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All is right with the world again—Aquileo, who oversees the packing and greenhouse side of things around here, is back. It was touch and go in his absence. At one point we had both Jeanne and Amelia, our daughter, helping to pack CSA boxes before school in the morning. We got through it, but it wasn’t easy.

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Despite its intensity, the storm did little harm here. The cover crops and grasses all have a pronounced lean to the North, as though somebody passed a comb through them.

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The World Ag Expo will be held down in Tulare in a couple of weeks. My Uncle, Cousins and I usually attend once every two or three years. At 80 acres of show-space (essentially 80 football fields), it is the largest farm show in the world.

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