Posts Tagged ‘farmers’ markets

26
Sep
09

September Greenmarket

The seasons might have changed this past Monday but there was precious little evidence of that judging by what was on offer at the Greenmarket today.


Seckel pearsDeveloped in the early part of the 19th century, seckel pears are a variety of heirloom pear with a dull green cast and red highlights. The fruit is very sweet with a somewhat grainy texture since it is a hybrid of European and Asian pear. Seckel pears are the variety most often found in home orchards.


White peachesWhite peaches were known in Europe as early as the mid-17th century, although they were so delicate compared to yellow peaches that they nearly disappeared from commercial orchards. Since the 1980’s, white peaches have enjoyed a resurgence in popularity, and newly developed later-ripening varieties have extended the white peach season to nearly match that of yellow varieties.


Indian corn

Continue reading ‘September Greenmarket’

19
Sep
09

Saturday Market

You can definitely tell that autumn is on the threshold.

There’s a chill in the air; carpe diem while you can.


Yellow plum tomatoes


Golden nugget potatoes


Apples

Continue reading ‘Saturday Market’

13
Jun
09

Midsummer Bounty

Some pix from this morning at Union Square Greenmarket. Some of what you see in this post will appear in meals throughout this week’s menu.


StrawberriesSimple is best when it comes to in-season strawberries. I like them with cream and a bit of sugar, or with a touch of balsamic vinegar and a sprinkle of black pepper. Breakfast tip: try a bowl of fromage blanc with strawberries macerated in vanilla sugar and chopped mint.


SucrineRooted in the French word for “sugar,” sucrine (sugar lettuce sounds better) is a smaller variety of romaine with soft, silky leaves, buttery texture, and, as the name suggests, a sweet-ish flavor. You can take the elongated core of the lettuce, peel it, and steam it — it is as delicate as asparagus and just as delicious.


Green garlicGreen garlic is young garlic which is harvested before the cloves have begun to mature. The resulting vegetable resembles a scallion, with a deep green stalk and a pale white bulb. It can often be found for sale at a farmers’ market in the spring, and can also be grown at home relatively easily. Many large grocery stores do not stock green garlic, although growing consumer demand may change this. It can also usually be special ordered through a greengrocer.

Continue reading ‘Midsummer Bounty’

24
May
09

Four Pictures


Japanese turnips


Radishes


Mutsu apples
Mutsu apples, also called Crispins, are a variety of heirloom apple first developed in Japan and now increasing in popularity in the United States. An excellent dessert apple, Mutsus are extremely juicy and their flavor strikes a perfect balance between sweet and tart.


Fettucine with sheep’s milk ricotta, wilted spinach, wild mushrooms and nasturtium flowers

13
May
09

Postcards from the Shire

This blog will have its three year anniversary in a little over six weeks so I thought I’d pull some of my favorite food photography in the intervening period. You can browse all of these pictures and many more on my Flickr account on right-hand side of your screen.

Dinner tonight is a surprise. Talk to y’all later.


Fried clam bellies and oysters, tartar sauce (Tides)


Seared hamachi, black radish, celery, Granny Smith apple (Hearth)


Heirloom tomatoes


Roast scallops, grapefruit and asparagus salad (Little Owl)


Gnocchi con sugo di pomodoro


‘Deconstructed’ German potato salad


Chiaogga beets


Seared scallop, parsnip puree, hen of the woods mushrooms, caviar viniagrette (Hearth)


Trio of gelati (Otto)


Asparagus, coconut, black mustard seeds, kokum (Tabla)


Grilled lambchops (Tabla)


Frying hushpuppies (2008 BABBQBP)


Spareribs closeup (2008 BABBQBP)


Pastrami closeup (Katz’s)

11
May
09

Seafood 1

Dinner Saturday night –


Fettucine with fresh clams, wild arugula, green garlic and herbs

I should add that the clams were likely caught either Friday afternoon or Saturday morning, courtesy of Blue Moon Fish in eastern Long Island.

I picked up some mussels as well during my sojourn at USGM. I’m not sure yet what to do with them. I’d like to use them in something other than pasta or paella. Any suggestions? I know this blog has readers ;) so if you’re lurking, now’s your chance to contribute something to the Fellowship.

09
May
09

Menage a Trois

Only three pix today from the market today. My weekly haul: fresh pasta, clams, mussels, herbs, wild asparagus, fiddlehead ferns, potatoes (various kinds), butter and cheese.

Have a lovely Saturday, everyone!


Stinging nettles


Dandelion greens


Radishes

02
May
09

Saturday Market

My weekly market run at Union Square — potatoes (mixed), ricotta, asparagus, greens, mushrooms, herbs, onions and some sausage and bacon from Flying Pigs Farm. I’ve got quite a menu coming up for the week and I can’t wait to get to it.

In the meantime, here are some pix to whet your appetite. You can view them on my Flickr account by clicking on the sidebar at the right-hand side of your screen.

Have a lovely Saturday, everyone.


Ramps


Mint

30
Apr
09

Interview With Alice Waters

Alice Waters is an American chef and co-owner of Chez Panisse, the original “California Cuisine” restaurant in Berkeley, California, as well as the informal Café Fanny in West Berkeley. A champion of locally-grown and fresh ingredients, she has been credited with creating and developing California Cuisine and has written or co-written several books on the subject, including the influential Chez Panisse Cooking (written with then-chef Paul Bertolli). She has also promoted organic and small farm products heavily in her restaurants, in her books, and in her Edible Schoolyard program at the King Middle School in Berkeley. Her ideas for “edible education” have been introduced into the entire Berkeley school system, and with the current crisis in childhood obesity, have attracted the attention of the national media. She is a head advocate of a multi-billion dollar stimulus package that works to give every child in the public school system free breakfast, lunch, and an afternoon snack. She states that taxpayers should endorse this package because we are already paying for it in terms of our health.

Waters advocates eating locally produced foods that are in season, because she believes that the international shipment of mass-produced food is both harmful to the environment and produces an inferior product for the consumer.

Here is a long excerpt from an interview with Salon that was done in 2007:

I’ve been cooking from this book for about a month now.

You have? Tell me, did the recipes work?

Yeah, they were wonderful. But as you say, it’s less about the recipes than your ideas of where to get the food. And I’ve been following those ideas too. I went to the farmers’ market several times.

You know this would be any old book of recipes if it weren’t for the philosophy of food at the beginning. If you’re just going into the store and buying those ingredients, if you’re really a good cook you could probably make something. But what is beautiful is that this changes your life. It brings you into the whole community of people and hopefully brings you back to the dinner table.

I agree. But, some things I’ve noticed. First of all, it’s not easy to do this. I’m a writer so I have a lot of free time. I can take Tuesday afternoon off and go to the farmers’ market. So it was relatively easy for me to do it compared to someone who has to punch a clock. What do those people do?

I think there are lots of ways, actually. I think you have to decide you’re going to work at this a little bit. To begin with, you set aside a day that you might want to eat with your family. It doesn’t have to be a dinner or a complicated thing — it could be an afternoon tea. It could be a Saturday lunch. It could be a breakfast. But hopefully you will decide the following week you can do it twice a week. That’s the beginning.

I think you have to plan ahead. When I go to the market on a Saturday and I’m buying for family and friends I’m thinking about what I’m going to eat on the weekend but also about what I’m going to make for the following week. You know those tomatoes, I’m not getting them dead ripe unless I’m eating them for lunch — I might get them a little firm so that by Wednesday I can have them in a salad. I’ve always got something in the pantry — I talk a lot about what you can cook when you just have a closet full of pasta and grains.

So how often would you go to the farmers’ market in a week?

Twice. I mean, if I could I’d go every day, but I go on Saturday when I can buy a lot of things, and on Tuesday. And then I’ll go get other things in the regular market as a sort of backup.

You recognize, though, that it takes more time to do it this way than going to the store.

I do absolutely recognize it takes more time. But this is all part of fast food values. Let’s do it quickly. Let’s get it over with. Let’s let the machines do it for us, because kitchen work is drudgery and so is garden work. Let somebody else do that.

Get out of that mind-set and tell yourself cooking is a meditation. I like to do it. It’s relaxing for me to come home — it truly is! — and wash the salad. I love to see the salad in the sink. To spin the salad. I like to dry it. I like to pound to make a vinaigrette with my mortar and pestle. I enjoy grinding coffee and putting it in the filter and warming up the milk. It’s part of a ritual that gives my life meaning and beauty.

I feel particularly like this on my book tour, that this is a crazy kind of life. It’s over before you know it. And so you have to find ways of slowing it down. And this is an everyday delightful way to slow it down. Take time. Take a moment. The most important value of this book aside from nourishment is that there’s pleasure in the doing. It’s pleasure in work. It’s something that we don’t understand in this country. Work is over there and pleasure’s over here, and we work our whole lives so that we can go on a cruise ship. It’s just insanity, and some people don’t even make it to the cruise ship.

So we have to figure out about everyday pleasure. It’s trying to bring people back to their senses. Put the smells in the house. Make the chicken stock so it makes people hungry. Burn the rosemary, make the farro, make the bread. These are all aromatic ways to bring people back to the table.

In addition to time, it’s costlier to do it this way. One of the reasons that people eat fast food is because that’s all they can afford.

For some people that is true. But I would say that you have to decide — it’s not going to be cheap but it can be affordable. And that’s where this book comes in. When polenta costs $6 for a hundred portions, I’m pretty certain that I can make something tasty for less money than a fast food dinner for my family.

So you’re saying it’s more but it’s not prohibitive?

That’s right. You just decide, OK, well, maybe I won’t rent that DVD.

* * *

I think this goes directly to what my foodblogging is all about. It really sums up what I want in life — to be healthy and have a positive outlook. Now I’m not naive. I wouldn’t be able to shop at the farmer’s market regularly if I were laid off all of a sudden [and for that I'm grateful].

That said, I think the principle would still be the same. Okay, so the produce wouldn’t have that stunning freshness. I’d have to settle for regular $2 supermarket eggs. That’s okay. If anything, the lesson Alice teaches us is that cooking is a luxury that any of us can afford even in the worst possible situation. It’s something we should take time to savor. We only have one life and it’s up to us to make the most of it while we can. What better way to do it than to start with food?

* * *

You can read the entire interview here. The audio version is here (which I recommend over the print version).
Related discussion on eGullet can be viewed here.




Food Photography

Roast poussin with cumin-lime-cilantro butter, pan-fried potatoes

Chicken, celery and tofu with spicy Szechuan sauce

Dan-dan noodles

Ox tongue and tripe with chili viniagrette

Hacked shredded chicken with spicy peanut sauce, scallions and Szechuan peppercorn

"Eggs and things"

Tomato risotto

Spaghetti with lamb's quarters, shrimp, breadcrumbs and garlic

Thin spaghetti with roasted heirloom tomatoes and fresh sheep's milk ricotta

Flounder and chicken congee

More Photos

 

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