Week 3 Group A & Camas pickup

Hey everyone, Hope your ready for a week of greens to keep you living that good life.

Here is whats in your share this week

All the captions are links to a recipe for the items in your share this week!

Oakleaf Galisse Lettuce
Pink Beauty Radish
Rainbow blend Chard
Asian grerens Tatsoi
Snap Peas
Dazzling Blue Lacinato Kale
Broccoli Greens
Garlic Scapes

See you at your pickup at Hopworks Or the Camas Farmers Market.

Please note: We have found that leaving the Salmon Creek Market and getting to Hopworks on Tuesdays we are there at about 4:15 pm.. Late for the previously set time of 4-6 pm

Or see you at the Camas Market is Wednesday 3-7pm

How to Make Pesto Anything

The Formula:

Herbs/greens + cheese + nuts + garlic + oil + salt = pesto

Sound simple? It is!  The hardest part of making pesto will be choosing and gathering your ingredients.  If you are keen on experimenting in the kitchen, try inventing your own signature pesto by:

1. Something green: There is a lot of flexibility here, but choose at least one green with an aggressive flavor.  Basil is a traditional favorite, but there are also wonderful pesto’s to be made from parsley, mint, arugula, kale, even blanched broccoli. Mix and match greens at will.

2. Cheese: Parmesan is traditional, but as long as it’s a hard cheese you’ve got a lot of flexibility.  Asiago, pecorino, and romano are all good choices as well.  Use what you’ve got in the fridge, or try something new.

3. Nuts/ Seeds: Pine nuts, walnuts, almonds and Sunflower seeds are good choices.  Toast them a little in a dry skillet before making your pesto to enhance their flavor and make them break down more quickly in the blender.

4. Garlic: You can use fresh uncured garlic, garlic scapes, garlic chives, or garlic cloves from a cured, dried bulb.

5. Oil: Extra-virgin olive oil is a good choice to start with, try blending in some almond or walnut oil to complement the flavor of the nuts you’ve used in your pesto.

6. Salt: kosher, table, Himalayan, sea.  Use what you’ve got!

7. Very optional: Acid of some kind.  Fresh lemon juice, apple cider vinegar, lemon zest are good options.

Blending method: It’s definitely easiest to use a blender or food processor, but if you don’t have one of those appliances, all is not lost.  You can make great pesto with just your knife and cutting board—simply chop all your ingredients to the desired level of fineness, stir in oil and season with salt to taste.  A mortar and pestle can be used to make great pesto, but it can take a lot of time and elbow grease.

Uses of Pesto: The most traditional use of pesto is as a sauce for pasta, but it can be used as a condiment for meat—I especially like it on grilled steak.  Mix a spoonful or two of pesto into some mayonnaise or cream cheese, or with mashed avocado to make a wonderful sandwich spread.  Thin pesto with more vinegar and olive oil to make a salad dressing.  Pesto will keep in the refrigerator, stored in a glass jar and covered with a thin layer of olive oil, for several weeks.  It also freezes very well.  Consider freezing some pesto in an ice cube tray, then storing the frozen cubes in a bag in the freezer to pull out and add flavor whenever you need it.

Published by Dilish Farm

We are a small urban farm, working towards teaching our members the core of eating seasonally. Eating whats really fresh and changing the way we think about the foods we eat. We use a regenerative method of farming with sustainability built into our core.

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