Waltham Fields Community Farm
CSA NEWSLETTER
     Week 10:  August 12, 2013                                    Like us on Facebook  Visit our blog 
 
In This Issue

 Events & Info

  

NEW T-shirts and cookbooks are in!  Stop by the merch shelves in the back corner of the CSA barn.  Proceeds support our food access and education work.

 

Summer Programs in the Learning Garden: Farmer for a Week, Farm Visits and more... 

Click here

 

Drop-In Volunteers welcome on Mondays (high school and older) and Saturdays (all ages), arrive at 9am sharp. 

Welcome Volunteers!

Tomato & Basil Risotto 


From Saul -- and the New York Times.

 

7 cups well seasoned vegetable stock, garlic stock or chicken stock

2 T extra virgin olive oil

1/2 cup minced onion

Salt to taste

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 lb. tomatoes, grated

Pinch of sugar

1 t fresh thyme leaves

1 1/2 cups Arborio rice

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

1/2 cup dry white or rosé wine, such as Pinot Grigio or Sauvignon Blanc

1/2 pound additional sweet ripe tomatoes, finely diced (about ¾ cup)

1/4 cup slivered fresh basil

1/4 to 1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese 

1. Put stock or broth into a saucepan and bring it to a simmer over low heat, with a ladle nearby or in the pot. Make sure that it is well seasoned.

2. Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a wide, heavy skillet or a wide, heavy saucepan. Add the onion and a generous pinch of salt, and cook gently until tender, about 5 minutes. Add the rice and garlic and cook, stirring, until the grains of rice are separate and beginning to crackle. Stir in the grated tomatoes, sugar, thyme, and salt to taste and cook, stirring often, until the tomatoes have cooked down slightly and coat the rice, 5 to 10 minutes.

3. Add the wine and stir until it has evaporated and been absorbed by the rice. Begin adding the simmering stock, a couple of ladlefuls (about 1/2 cup) at a time. The stock should just cover the rice, and should be bubbling, not too slowly but not too quickly. Cook, stirring often, until it is just about absorbed. Add another ladleful or two of the stock and continue to cook in this fashion, adding more stock and stirring when the rice is almost dry. You do not have to stir constantly, but stir often and when you do, stir vigorously. When the rice is just tender all the way through but still chewy (al dente), in 20 to 25 minutes, it is done. Taste now and adjust seasoning.

4. Add another ladleful of stock to the rice. Stir in the additional finely diced tomatoes, basil and Parmesan and remove from the heat. The mixture should be creamy (add more stock if it isn't). Serve right away in wide soup bowls or on plates, spreading the risotto in a thin layer rather than a mound.

Yield: Serves 4 to 6

 

Click here for advance preparation tips. 

 

Do you have a recipe you'd like to share? We love to include shareholder recipes in the newsletter! Please send it in to Susan Cassidy.

What's In the Share This Week
Each week, we do our best to predict what will be available in the CSA barn and in the fields.  The CSA newsletter is prepared before we start harvesting for the week, so sometimes you'll see vegetables in the barn that weren't on the list, and sometimes vegetables will be on the list but won't make it to the barn.


Cucumbers

Eggplant: Our eggplant harvest is in full swing, including the beautiful bell type, the long, grillable 'Asian' style, and the petite and tasty 'Fairy Tale' variety.  Zannah grew these at our Gateways field in Weston, and apparently they're very happy there!



Beets with Greens

Kale:  it's back!  Our fall planting is tender, beautiful and available in limited quantities this week. 

Celery:  Our celery is smaller and stronger-flavored than grocery store celery.  Use it in potato salads, soups, or just slather with nut butter or cream cheese for a snack!

Fresh Onions: We grow some beautiful varieties of fresh-eating onions on the farm that are perfect for salads, sandwiches, or anything else you can imagine. We'll be harvesting them over the next few weeks. They keep best in the refrigerator; you can keep their tops on or cut them off, but keep them in a bag for best results.

Bell PeppersBig green bell peppers, beautiful purple peppers and delicate white 'Chablis" peppers are pouring in from the fields at Gateways.  They are truly beautiful this year -- enjoy them in gazpacho, ratatouille, or on the grill!
Hopefully some more Tomatoes from the fields at the Lyman Estate. Unfortunately, we found late blight (aka, the tomato destroyer) in our PYO tomatoes fields alte last week. Cool nights and wet weather promote disease development and spread. We are continuing to spray the tomatoes at the Lyman Estate field with copper and some plant and bacteria extracts (yum!) to protect them against this devastating disease, which can take down a crop in a week. We'll enjoy the tomato harvest as long as it lasts! 

Sweet Corn from Verrill Farm in Concord
, weather permitting.

And a few surprises from Picadilly Farm, the great New Hampshire family farmers who provide us with 100 shares each week! 

Pick-Your-Own Crops This Week 
Pick-your-own fields are open to all shareholders any day of the week during daylight hours. Please check the pick-your-own stand for maps and a list of available crops, along with amounts to pick. Please harvest only in labelled rows, and pay close attention to the amounts you harvest in order to ensure that there will be enough for all shareholders. 

Cilantro, Dill, Parsley, Basil
Cherry and Plum Tomatoes availability will be weather dependent.  We had to remove five beds of plum and cherry tomatoes on Friday because we discovered late blight in the crop just as it was beginning to look beautiful.  Stay tuned for more developments this week and thanks for your patience with our "wet weather alerts". 
 
Husk Cherries
Tomatilloes
mint
Green Beans 
Perennial Garden
Herbs & Flowers: Please pick carefully (use scissors), pay attention to signs, and watch your step in the perennial garden. There are many great herbs that are going to be ready later in the season!   

Fruit & Winter Shares for Sale!

Autumn Hills Orchard is a working orchard located in historic Groton, Massachusetts about 35 miles northeast of Waltham. The farm produces over 25 varieties of apples, plus peaches, pears, plums, grapes and raspberries. For over 10 years, Autumn HIlls has partnered with Waltham Fields Community Farm to provide weekly shares in the late summer and fall. Share contents vary by week over the season but are primarily apples with other fruit varieties based on availability including: Concord grapes, Italian plums, Bartlett pears and Bosc pears. Shares may also include the following apple varieties:  Paula Red, Ginger Gold, Macintosh, Cortland, Red Cort, Empire, Golden Delicious, Mutsu, Cox' Orange Pippin, Spencer, Rhode Island Greening, Macoun, Kendall, SpiGold, Northern Spy, Sun Crisp, Red Delicious, Fuji, or Braeburn. Autumn Hills' employs Integrated Pest Management (IPM) techniques, growing high quality fruit and takes pride in producing fruit for customers and CSA subscribers. The farm is open September through October for "pick your own."  WFCF CSA customers who visit during that time will receive a special welcome and tour!  
 
Deliveries are scheduled to start in early September with 7 deliveries planned. Depending on the availability of early fruit, the start date will be announced shortly but we anticipate start-up just after Labor Day. Ann Harris, of Autumn HIlls, will be here in Waltham in early August to answer your questions, etc. Later in the season, she will also be on hand during selected pick up times to share recipes, tips, and more. 
 
The 2013 Fruit share is priced at $56. The sign up deadline is September 1. To sign up, just bring payment to your CSA pickup. Please make sure that the name of the primary shareholder is on all payments. 

We also have a few WFCF winter shares for sale!  Winter shares are the perfect way to extend your CSA experience through the late fall and eat local (and delicious) for the holidays!  Winter shares are $200 and include three pickups at the farm on Saturday afternoons, November 9, November 23 and December 7. We plan for winter shares to represent the tasty bounty of the season, including carrots, beets, sweet potatoes, turnips, radishes, cabbages, lettuces, spinach, arugula, bok choy and kohlrabi, onions and garlic, and winter squash and potatoes from Picadilly Farm. Sign up at any CSA pickup! Availability is limited, and we'll sell winter shares on a first-come, first-served basis until they are gone! 
 
Notes from the Field

onionsThis weekend was a tremendously mixed one for me and our farm. Friday's intense rain and the cool nighttime temperatures, which reached 48 degrees last Tuesday night, brought late blight to our pick-your-own tomatoes. This disease, which destroyed our tomato crop in 2009, can spread incredibly fast, taking down a whole field in less than a week if it is ignored. In the pouring rain, we cut twine, pulled stakes, and mowed down and rototilled five beds of plants that we grew from seeds, potted on in the greenhouse, transplanted into the field, fertilized, weeded, staked and tied up. The disease can only survive on living tissue, so we need to kill the plants in order to diminish its opportunity to spread. In the meantime, our youth crew salvaged the cherry tomatoes from the doomed beds, adding them to the beautiful collection of vegetables they took to the Waltham Farmers' Market in our very first appearance there selling our produce. 

My fa
eggplantmily and I left the area Friday night to head out to the Northeast Organic Farmers' Association Conference at the University of Massachusetts. We mingled with other farmers and consumers, learned about farm profitability, cucurbits, tomatoes, food safety, equipment and weed control. My ten-year-old son found his tribe and made the conference his own, returning with arms full of clay pots, friendship bracelets, hot pads and a zombie movie that he made there with his new friends.  My three-year-old daughter, after one trip to the kids' conference, decided that she'd rather attend the adult workshops with one of us. This definitely made it more complicated, but still wonderful. We all learned, laughed, relaxed, and enjoyed the beautiful skies over the campground. No one mentioned late blight.
 
Summer squash mixToday it's back to the farm, and back to check on the tomatoes. I'm not sure what the future of the PYO patch will be, and I'm hoping that we won't find any late blight in the big field of tomatoes we've been harvesting at the Lyman Estate. Dan and Erinn are on vacation in the Sierras this week, so I will be even more grateful than usual for the skilled and committed work of Sutton (fresh back from her own vacation), Zannah (next up for a break), Andy, the field crew, Amber, Lauren, Hector and Maricela, and the weed crew, Alice, Eli, Lizzie and Sage. Thank you so much to all of you, and to Mary Beth Krafcik, the crop steward who has kept our chile peppers so clean and easy to pick this season. Thank you to everyone who has come to weed, to harvest, to plant and to help so far this season. We'll keep the harvest coming.   
   
Enjoy the harvest, 
Amanda, for the farm staff
Quick Links

 

www.communityfarms.org

240 Beaver Street
Waltham, MA 02452 
Marla Rhodes, Development Coordinator
Amanda Cather, Farm Manager
Erinn Roberts, Greenhouse and Field Manager
Dan Roberts, Field Manager

Sutton Kiplinger, Assistant Grower
Zannah Porter, Assistant Grower
Andy Scherer, Farmer

Hector Cruz, Maricela Escobar, Amber Carmer Sandager and Lauren Trotogott: Field Crew

Lizzie Callaghan, Sage Dumont, Alice Fristrom, and Eli Shanks: Weed Crew

Mikaela Burns, Andrea Coughlan and Matthew Crawford: Farm Educators
  
Ashley Kemembin, Forest Foundation Summer Intern