Letter 76

January 27th, 2010 by Margie

Dear Vegetable Husband Customer,

For our new folks, I want to say we are changing and working hard each week to stay as local and healthy with our eating and our dollars.  This week we have done well for late January.  For my regulars, I want to tell you that the farms are coming back quickly after some tough winter weather.  We have lovely carrots from Roots Farm this week and for the first time; we will enjoy micro greens from Woodland Gardens.  As always, give me some feedback on this.   She is willing to grow more for us.

Each of you has some cooking greens, either a mixed bag of early kale or a bunch of red kale.  Either way, this is a wonderful dark leafy veggie for sautéing.  There are a few recipes on the website for kale and I have been chopping and adding my greens to soup stock lately.  It’s so easy and taste so great!  Serenbe Farms has harvested more sunchokes for us this week but I know these will be gone soon so enjoy them.  I know they look like a ginger root but you can easily eat them with the skins on.  I clean them and slice them for snacks.  Below is your list of goodies:

Sunchokes / Jerusalem artichokes

Carrots

Grape or cherry tomatoes

Green peppers

Red kale / Mixed greens

Butternut squash

Micro greens

Basil

The basil is a big surprise and coming from a Georgia farm, but the folks at Neva Farms are growing basil along with the arugula we enjoyed last week.  We are continuing to borrow tomatoes from our neighbors in Florida to round out our winter menu.  I see a tomato basil something in my near future!

On a very serious note, I will be arranging a drive to help the local organization ship supplies to Haiti in the coming weeks.  If you are interested in leaving items out for us to pick up, I will give more details next week.  Have a beautiful week and remember I am always happy to TALK FOOD!

Gratefully yours,

Margie Thorpe

Letter 75

January 20th, 2010 by Margie

Dear Vegetable Husband Customer,

I hope you had a wonderful MLK holiday.  This week, while the weather is beautiful, the food is going to be awhile to recover.  You will notice that the bunch of kale is hardly that!  Please eat these first and cherish the small amount we have.  These are from much further south and they still were damaged by the frost.  This is why you have some yellow spots on the leaves.

This week’s tomatoes are really bright in flavor.  I went for the grape tomatoes this time since last weeks romas were not consistent.  Some folks had fruit that was lacking in texture.  Hopefully these will please!  The carrots continue to please us all and Sara in Athens says we still have plenty to come – yeah!  You each have a small brown bag of bay leaves from the Scharko Farm in Fairburn this week.  For those of you that did not get a basket last week, the roots in the basket are sunchokes from Serenbe Farms. And they are tasty raw or cooked.   These do not have to be peeled for those of you that asked.  Either way is fine.

You all have a live bunch of hydroponic arugula for Neva Farms in Bowersville GA.  I loved their watercress so much that I wanted to try the arugula with roots.   These are young plants and should keep with a little water in your fridge while you enjoy them.   The leaf I tasted was like butter!  Woodland Gardens in Winterville is growing lettuce for us this way for next week.  Below is your list of goodies:

Green cabbage

Sunchokes / Jerusalem artichokes

Carrots

grape tomatoes

dinosaur kale

zucchini squash

hydroponic arugula

Bay leaves

As we navigate our way thru the winter season, we all try to be thankful for the food harvested for us and understand the hardships.   Please let me know any wonderful ways that you are using your veggies with grains or other cupboard items to make a savory winter meal.  I really love it when you share your experiences with your basket and remember, I am always happy to talk food!

Gratefully yours,

Margie Thorpe

It Really is a Wonderful Life!

January 13th, 2010 by Margie

I know I know - it has been AGES since I have added to our VH field notes.  I am hoping that 2010 will give me more clarity and strength to spend more time doing the things that mean the most to me.  Sharing the goings on at the farms each month here is definitely on that list!

First of all, I want to say that we have made it into the new year, but it has been no picnic.  I have been struggling everyday, trying to find food for us in 2010.  Many of the farmers cannot provide for us because they do not produce enough in the winter months.  They might have a handful of things to sell at a market here and there but nothing for all of us each week.  After losing sleep over where the food was going to come from and what would happen to our community if I had to close for the winter months, wondering where would you get your food and where would you place your dollars….I had to make a decision.  That’s when most of you got a note that went something like this….

VH Foraging for food

Hi everyone,

I’ve been hard at work trying to put together this week’s basket.  As I’m sure you’ve noticed, it is bitterly cold and there is no immediate end in sight.  As you might guess, this has consequences for our food and has forced me to make some hard decisions.  The local farms we usually get food from are at a standstill.  This has been a severe year starting with the fall floods and now with brutal temperatures in this winter season.  Much of the crops have been wiped out.  I am forced to stretch from local to regional searches to keep fresh, healthy food on our tables each week.   In order to continue to provide fresh, organic food for the next 8-10 weeks with such severe seasonal weather, we will be opening the doors to farms in southern Georgia and neighboring states.  We have gotten food from some of these farms in the past such as Walker Farms’ beautiful sugar snap peas or the avocados and grapefruit from friends in Florida.

We wanted to let you know about this because we realize that bringing in food from farther may not meet everyone’s expectations.  As always, I will tell you all about the farms and give you any links available to their websites because I think you should know where your food comes from.

As each local farm sees new harvesting opportunities, we will bring our money closer to home.  Remember that my two goals with vegetable husband are to support our local organic growing economy and to nourish our bellies with wonderful healthy food.

I agonized over how to tell you that I could not get food quite as close for the next several weeks, as if it should come as any great surprise!  Most of you are probably surprised that there IS food coming each week even in the winter.  After hours of writing and rewriting, the note went out and I went and laid down. It was the hours that followed that made a difference in my life.  Some of you responded right away.  I assumed the worst and hoped for the best, but I never dreamed that I would receive such a response!  Some of your notes, made everything I do worthwhile regardless of money!  I FELT LIKE JIMMY STEWART!!  It really IS a wonderful life!  (grins)  You may think I am joking but you gave me such warm feedback and solid encouragement that all I could think about was that moment when George is in the living room and the whole town is spilling in to give him money to save the business.

wl2

My currency was your emails, and they did spill in.  I want you to know that you have not only made me realize that while I cant always deliver the best vegetable I have ever seen or tasted.  I can always deliver the best veggies that I can access from the closest organic farms available at the time.  Thats all I can ask of myself.  I really do like the idea of being super human, though…maybe in my next life!

This week over half of our basket is still from local farms around us, but we are reaching out to our neighbors in Florida and South Carolina for a little help, too.  After all, that is what community is all about!  Thank you for being mine!

Letter 74

January 13th, 2010 by Margie

Dear Vegetable Husband Customer,

I survived the harsh ice and temperatures and I hope you did, too.  Atlanta could not have picked a better day to warm up for us.  The farmers were all in great spirits and we have quite a bit of food from our farms right here.  I can’t believe we have beautiful local carrots again this week after all the grounds have been through, but we do!!   Sara at Roots Farm in Winterville grows some of the best carrots I have ever tasted.  Think about how wonderful she is to dig in the ground for us this week.  I am cold just thinking about it!  Let me know how you are using them.

You also have several ’sunchokes’ or Jerusalem artichokes from Serenbe Farms. Try the delicious Scalloped Ginger Sunchokes recipe or just slice them and eat them (as I am doing now!). If you are vegan, you can certainly substitute non-dairy for the cream in the recipe.  Look for a small bundle of herbs in your basket as well.  These might be the last pickings of winter from Rashid at Truly Living Well Farms.

Remember that your sweet potatoes will keep thru the season if you store them in a cool dry space.  I even put mine in small paper bags so if one goes bad, it does not take down my entire stock.  Andy at Whippoorwill Hollow Farm said he could provide these for us for a few more weeks.  Below is your list of goodies:

Sweet potatoes
Sunchokes / Jerusalem artichokes
Carrots
Roma tomatoes
Collards
Green peppers
Kale
thyme

Of course in these trying months we are borrowing food from some southern neighbors once again.  You have tomatoes and green peppers from a farm in Florida.  I hope you enjoy these treat for us this time of year and remember, I am always happy to talk food!

Gratefully yours,
Margie Thorpe

Letter 73

January 6th, 2010 by Margie

Dear Vegetable Husband Customer,

We have arrived in a new year and I can’t wait to thaw out!  Unfortunately, it looks like we are really stuck in winter mode for a while.  Think of it this way.  We need these harsh temperatures to kill off some of the bugs that are so problematic in the south during the warmer weather.  It also makes for an excuse to stay cozy and make up some nice tasty soup.  That’s the tip for this week, along with a tasty recipe for Moroccan Sweet Potato Salad.  Yum!

As many of you know, I am searching a little beyond our own backyard for organic edibles in this weather.  Thank you for all your loving, supportive notes in response to my email yesterday.  Please know that I am getting the best food available to us in this area.  We have lovely spinach and swiss chard this week from Walker Farms in Southern GA.   We also have really delicious hydroponic watercress with roots from Neva Farms in Bowersville, GA.  This is truly live food!  I thought as long as we had to stretch to Florida, we might as well eat TOMATOES!  Yes, I had to get nature’s candy for us. Below is your list of goodies:

Sweet potatoes
Green cabbage
Baby butternut squash
Swiss chard
Hydroponic watercress w/ roots
Baby spinach
Cherry tomatoes
tarragon

Please feel free to give me feedback, good and bad, as we move thru the winter weeks, borrowing food from our southern neighboring farms.  The only way I can know how much you like or did not enjoy one item over another is if you tell me.  Each fruit of a plant is different.  While my swiss chard was super tasty, your experience could be different.  I need your input – this is our nourishment and as usual, I am always happy to talk food.

Gratefully yours,
Margie Thorpe

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