Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Once You Pop... er... Crunch, You'll... er... Just Try It.

CSA Share 8/28/2012
  • Red-leaf and Green-leaf lettuces
  • Garlic
  • Sungold cherry tomatoes
  • Zucchini and summer squash
  • Italian and Japanese eggplants
  • Cucumbers
  • Green bell and green Cubanelle-looking peppers
  • Carrots
  • Curly Kale
  • Musk melon and watermelon
You may have noticed a predominance of kale early in your CSA share season.  Regular curly kale, Red Russian and Cavolo Nero/Tuscan Black Kale/Dinosaur Kale along with their other leafy green cousins are abundant in the spring.  What all die-hard kale lovers (the few, anyway) know is that kale gets better in the fall, and is at its best after a frost.

Now that we're less than a month away from the Autumnal Equinox, expect lots of kale from here on out.  Sautees and soups are nice, but here's a recipe for a great (and mind-bogglingly healthy) snack that will let you use up bunch upon bunch of kale every week from now through November.

Kale Chips
  • One bunch of kale.  Any type works, but I like Cavolo Nero for these.
  • Olive oil
  • 1/2 tsp. salt, black pepper and what ever spices you like.  I usually use garlic powder or smoked paprika, but let your creativity wild (Lord knows you'll have enough kale to experiment with).  I've even tried nutritional yeast, which was... different.
Preheat the oven to bake 400.  Tear each of the kale leaves away from their central vein/stem/thing.  Wash, rinse and pat dry.  Toss with olive oil until they're all shiny, then toss with your salt and seasonings.  Working in batches if necessary, place your kale in a single layer on a cookie sheet and bake for 10-15 minutes, until just crispy (but still green, not brown).  Let them cool to room temperature in an open container, then seal and store for up to one week.  If you put them away hot, they won't be crisp.

Karma

In spite of my last post, we got 4-5 pounds of zucchini this week.  Looks like more bread and more blanching for me.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Back From A Break

I had a little two (okay, three) week hiatus from posting, in part due to a vacation I took to Iceland!  It was one of the best trips I've taken, and would highly recommend it to anyone and everyone.  There's not a lot of produce there, so my CSA share was the furthest thing from my mind while I was vacationing.

What did I do with it all, you ask?  I let a friend pick up up and keep it.  In the past, I've had a friend pick it up and save it for me, too, but with the timing of this vacation, that would not have been worth it.  Besides, who wants to come home to a house full of vegetables to pack into the freezer or pickling jars and luggage to unpack into drawers and laundry machines? 

If you're feeling particularly magnanimous, a number of CSA farms will happily donate your share to a local food bank for you.  Many of them do that anyway with any shares that don't get picked up on a given week.  You could also coordinate donation through your church or school for a single family in need.

In the mean time, for those of you who haven't taken vacation, here's a couple of rapid-fire ideas for your shares, things that I've been making in August:

Make a potato salad out of whole/halved baby potatoes (starting their season about now), diced onion, diced carrot and diced celery (all in season).  Dress it with equal parts fat free greek yogurt, mayo and a ton of chopped dill and finely minced garlic.  Word of caution - take the potatoes out of the boiling water before you think they're done cooking, because they keep cooking after you take them out, even if you rinse them with cold water.  You don't want to end up with dill mashed potatoes.

Make an "Israeli" salad out of diced heirloom tomatoes, diced cucumber, a can of drained and rinsed chick peas, a handful of chopped flat leaf parsley and a handful of chopped mint.  Dress with vinegar, oil and a little coarse salt.

Here's an amazing recipe for chocolate zucchini bread:  http://www.simplyrecipes.com/recipes/chocolate_zucchini_bread/  At least 1/2 of my zucchini goes into one of these every week.

I'll be better about posting for the rest of the season.  Hopefully, we'll start getting more fall veggies.  I'm almost all zucchini'd out.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

When Life Gives You Eggplant...

... make Baba Ghanouj!

CSA Share 7/31/2012
  • Sun-gold Cherry Tomatoes
  • Red Heirloom Slicing Tomatoes
  • Garlic
  • Red-leaf Lettuce
  • Carrots
  • Cucumbers
  • Zucchini
  • Yellow Summer Squash
  • Scallions
  • Green Beans
  • Purple Eggplant
I love eggplant.  My lovely soon-to-be wife does not.  No matter what I do it them, short of breading/frying/red sauce/cheese-ing them, she will not eat them.  I've tried chopping them finely and putting them in stuffings for stuffed tomatoes - she found them.  I tried mixing them in with other highly seasoned roasted summer vegetables - she picked them all out.  Won't go near the things.

Don't get me wrong, I love eggplant parmaggiano as much as any other tomato-blooded Italian.  I have on good authority (mine) that my mom makes the best eggplant parm around.  I personally don't like making it, as we live in a small-ish two bedroom apartment, and the whole place smells like a fried dough stand for days afterwards.  It's just not my style.

So I climbed out on a limb this week and made hummus' cousin Baba Ghanouj with the 2 eggplants from our share.  With a healthy amount of gentle prodding, I got her to try some.  Success!  She liked it so much, she pushed aside last night's leftovers and brought the dip with CSA veggies and homemade pita chips for lunch today.  I will definitely be making this again when more of those purple beauties come our way.

Baba Ghanouj and Friends
  • 2 medium eggplants
  • 2/3 cups tahini paste
  • 2 garlic cloves, chopped as finely as possible.
  • 1 lemon, juiced.
  • 2-3 scallions, sliced into little circles
  • Smoked salt, smoked black pepper and smoked paprika, to taste.
  • Small handful flat-leaf Italian parsley, chopped.
  • Whatever raw CSA veggies you like, cut into dip-able sticks (e.g. carrots, cucumbers, zucchini, whole cherry tomatoes, etc).
[Note: While Baba Ghanouj is best made with eggplants roasted over an open flame to add a smoky element, I am tragically without a grill, and have a glass-top range where we live.  This recipe is designed for all of us yardless apartment dwellers.  I compensate for the lack of a grill by using smoked seasonings.  If you don't have any available, feel free to use regular salt, pepper and paprika, but do invest in a bottle of Liquid Smoke (available in most grocery stores), and add a few drops to your finished dip.

If using thin Japanese eggplant, I would cut roasting time by 2/3 but watch them closely, as I've never actually tried using them in this recipe...but it's a start.]

Preheat the oven to Bake 400.  Slice your eggplants in half lengthwise, then brush the cut side with olive oil.  Place on tin-foil lined cookie sheet and bake for 40 minutes.  Use this time to cut up your CSA veggies, dig out that chip-and-dip someone bought you off of your wedding registry but you've never used, that sort of thing.  Scoop the flesh into a strainer or cheesecloth over a collander, and let the water drain out for about 20 minutes. Transfer the drained eggplant to a cutting board and chop with a knife until it's pretty creamy in texture.  Transfer to a mixing bowl, and add your other ingredients.  Set out with your cut veggies and enjoy!

Bonus Technique:  Homemade Pita Chips

Take your old, stale pita breads that are knocking around in your fridge, and rip them into chip sized pieces.  I like to seperate the two halves of the bread for double the amount of chips, but they'll be crunchier if you leave them together.  Dry roast on a cookie sheet for about 10 minutes, or until they're crisp.  Let them cool, then store them in a Gladware, zip lock bag or something else air-tight.  If you don't let them cool before you put them away, they'll get sort of soggy and weird.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Bibimbap: Fun to Say, Easy to Make, Good to Eat.

CSA Share 7/24/2012
  • Sungold cherry tomatoes
  • Red heirloom slicing tomatoes
  • Rosemary
  • Genoan basil
  • Garlic
  • Lettuce
  • Kohlrabi
  • Beets with tops
  • Cucumbers
  • Zucchini and summer squash
  • Scallions

Bi-Bim-Bap.  I love saying that word.  Loosely translated from Korean, it means "mixed rice" and describes a classic Korean dish of raw and/or cooked vegetables, marinated cooked meat and a runny egg over rice in a bowl.  The contents are then all mixed together by the eater, along with some amazing korean hot sauce (gochujang) and consumed with kimchee on the side.

If you happen to find yourself in a Korean restaurant, order the "dolsat bibimbap" (a.k.a. "stone bowl" or "hot stone" bibimbap) and you'll get the above, but served in a broiling hot stone bowl such that the rice at the bottom develops a beautiful crispiness, like the best paellas.  If you're at home and don't happen to have a five-hundred-degree-Farenheit stone bowl handy, regular ol' bibimbap is a healthy, balanced dinner and a great way to use a variety of vegetables.  It requires some specialty ingredients, all of which are found pretty cheap at any asian grocery.  In case you don't have access to an asian grocery, some reasonable subsitutions are included.  Feel free to vary the veggies below - I try to use what ever's in season (translation: whatever I get in my share each week!)

Bibimbap
  • 1 to 1 1/2 cups cooked white rice per person. I like shortgrain, but use what you have around.  Brown is good too.
  • 1 serving of beef per person -or- 1 serving of chicken per person - or- 1 serving of pork loin per person.  These should be cubed, but uncooked (for now).
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic, chopped
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • Soy sauce
  • Mirin (sweet asian rice wine for cooking.  Sub in any sweet white wine, or dry white wine with 1/2 tsp of sugar added)
  • 1 tbsp sesame oil.
  • A squeeze of gochujang (you can sub in sriracha, or equal parts Tobasco and ketchup if you're really, really in a bind).
  • 1/2 medium cucumber, cut into matchsticks, per person
  • 1/2 medium carrot, cut into matchsticks, per person
  • 1/2 medicum zucchini or summer squash... you guessed it... cut into matchsticks, per person.
  • About 1/2 a cup of cooked spinach or beet tops per person.
  • 1 scallion per person, sliced into little rounds.
  • 1/4 of raw kohlrabi, matchstick'ed (preferably with a mandolin) per person.
  • 1 egg per person, sunny side up.
  • Gochujang (or sriracha) to serve.  Avoid the ketchup trick here, it won't work.
  • Kimchee to serve.
Caveat before starting this one:  As you may have noticed, I'm not a mise en place kind of guy - I like to get things done fairly efficiently via multi-tasking.  If you're the sort of person that needs to have everything set up in little prep bowls like your favorite celebrity chef before starting, by all means do so, just be realistic about the time it will take you to accomplish this dish - possibly take over an hour.  If you multi-task, it won't take you much longer than it takes for the rice to cook and to get everything arranged in the bowl - 30 to 40 minutes depending on skill and comfort in the kitchen - to make two of these.

Get your rice a'cooking according to package directions.  During the 20 minutes you have to wait (40 for brown rice - plenty of time there) add your meat, garlic and onions with a little oil or cooking spray to a pan, and stir-fry over medium-high heat until the contents are nice and golden brown.  There will be a brown residue on the bottom of the pan - don't panic, this is okay.  Your food is not burned.  While your meat is cooking and your rice is doing its thing, start slicing your veggies, setting them aside for later.  When your meat is golden brown, add the soy sauce, mirin, sesame oil and a squeeze of gochujang to the pan and stir furiously, scraping up said brown residue and making a great korean-style teryaki pan sauce.  Adding liquids to create a sauce is technique called "deglazing" a pan, and will be your best friend in the kitchen.  Set aside.

If you have time (like if you're using brown rice) and don't like raw zucchini, stir fry it quickly with a little olive or other cooking oil before using it in your dish.  The spinach or beet tops can be quickly steamed, stir fried, or you can even microwave steam it, like in this sad excuse for a recipe from the Food Network.

While or after your rice is cooked and your meat is done, fry one egg sunny side up per person.  Once  your eggs are done and your veggies are sliced, arrange them in serving bowls as such:  A layer of rice, with veggies (except scallions) arranged around the edge of the bowl by type, meat in the middle, egg on top of everything.  Scatter your scallions over the bowl and serve with extra gochujang and kimchee.   Be true to the name of the dish:  mix it all up and enjoy!

Thursday, July 19, 2012

(Almost) Weekend Bonus Recipe - Smooth Smoothie

This one was sent me to me by a friend who also works in healthcare and is fellow CSA subscriber.  Thanks, Monica!

Blueberry, Cucumber and Kale Breakfast Smoothie 
  • Handful of kale leaves, torn up (about 1/2 cup)
  • Handful of blueberries (about 1/2 cup)
  • One small cucumber (or 1/2 of a large one), cut into chunks
  • 1/4 of apple juice
  • 4-6 ice cubes
Blend until creamy. Consume. (Note: be sure to check teeth after delicious consumption as blueberries and kale are known to adhere to teeth in the most unflattering way!)

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Flavor Saver

CSA Share 7/17/2012
  • Green leaf lettuce
  • Swiss Chard
  • Carrots
  • Zucchini and summer squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Garlic
  • Onions
  • Broccoli
You may have noticed an abundance of zucchini in your shares lately.  It will likely keep on going, with the zucchini getting larger and larger until they become what the Brits refer to as "vegetable marrow."  What you will also notice is that you will run out of things to do with said zucchini - there are only so many sautees a person can eat.

If you are like myself and my fiancee, you will miss the taste of freshly picked organic farm produce in the winter months, when you're picking up insipid produce (trucked over from the West Coast or flown up from South America) at your local grocery store.  The answer to this dilemma is right in your kitchen - your freezer!  Now, you can't just stick the zucchini whole into the freezer and hope for the best.  Here's a method on how to freeze your zucchini and enjoy it come the shorter, colder days of the year.

How to Freeze Zucchini, Summer Squash & Pattypan Squash
  • As much of the above soft-shelled squashes as you could conceivably (and conveniently) fit into your freezer, cut into 1/4 inch slices or half-moons
This proccess is called "blanching."  Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil.  [Note: Some people advocate for salting your blanching water, as it will improve flavor and possibly shelf-life.  I do not, since we all already get too much salt in our normal diets, and hypertension is rampant in our nation.]  While your water is getting there, set up a large salad bowl filled with equal parts water and ice cubes, and set it next to the pot.  Next to that, set a salad spinner or a bunch of paper towels, and next to that, some freezer bags. 

Working in batches, dump the veggies into your boiling water and leave them for under 3 minutes.  You want them just barely soft.  Fish them out with a slotted spoon and plunge into your ice water.  This halts the cooking process.  Once your veggies are chilly, dry them off in the spinner or with paper towels. This step is essential, as it will prevent a good deal of freezer burn.  When they're chilly but dry, put them in your freezer bags, push all the air out and seal them.

These will stay good up to 6-7 months in your freezer.

Kohlslaw

CSA Delivery 7/10/2012
  • Baby cabbage
  • Purple kohlrabi
  • Broccoli
  • Garlic
  • Green-leaf lettuce
  • Red-leaf lettuce
  • Carrots
  • Scallions
  • Baby zucchini and summer squash
  • Cucumbers
Kohlrabi is a vegetable that you'll see regularly in your CSA box or at your local farmer's market, but is largely absent at the grocery store.  Maybe it has to do with its almost alien appearance, with slender stalks topped with leaves coming off at nearly right angles from a central green or purple orb.  Despite its weird looks, I would encourage everyone to give kohlrabi a try (especially if it comes in your CSA share, since you already paid for it).  Raw kohlrabi tastes like a cross between broccoli and a granny smith apple.  Cooked, it acts like any of your root vegetables (e.g. turnips, parsnips, carrots). 

Here's a good entry level kohlrabi recipe, which makes enough to bring to a cookout - you will look like a culinary wizard, and you'll use up a bunch of veggies which otherwise may sit in your crisper for days/weeks on end.

Kohl-slaw
  • 2-3 heads of purple and/or green kohlrabi
  • 2-3 heads of baby cabbage (or 1 head regular size or napa cabbage)
  • 5-6 carrots
  • 1/2 bunch (maybe 6 individual) scallions
  • 1/2 cup mayonaisse (light is fine)
  • 1/2 cup plain fat free greek yogurt
  • 2 tablespoons of white wine vinegar
  • 1 teaspoons of white sugar
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • salt and black pepper to taste
  • [shortcut - buy a jar of premade coleslaw dressing from the cooler section of the grocery store and dump it over the salad, rather than making your own]
This recipe is incredibly easy if you have a piece of kitchen equipment known as a mandolin.  It's basically a home deli slicer for veggies, and comes with piece that converts it to julienne (matchstick-size pieces).  You can also try slicing the veggies yourself with a knife, but try to keep your pieces as small and consistent as possible (especially with the kohlrabi).

Julienne all the veggies and toss them together.  In a seperate bowl, whisk together all the dressing ingredients, then add them to the veggies.  You may need to make another 1/2 batch of dressing, depending on how nuts you go with the sliced veggies.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Salads Are Inevitable, But Are Not All Made Equal

Delivery 7/3/2012
  • 2 Zucchini
  • 2 Yellow Summer Squash
  • 2 Bulbs of Garlic
  • 4 Cucumbers
  • 2 Heads of Romaine Lettuce
  • 1 Head of Curly Kale
  • 1 Bunch of Swiss Chard
  • 1 Bunch of Beets, With Greens
  • 1 Bunch of Scallions
  • 1 Bunch of Thai Basil
  • 1 Bunch of Carrots
As the title says, if you have a CSA share you will most definitely be eating multiple salads for multiple meals, multiple times per week.  Your basic green salad is probably the easiest, most versatile way to use a number of vegetables - slice them up, throw them over lettuce and serve. 
But why limit yourself to basic garden salads?  Here's an idea for a quick, fresh salad which uses a familiar vegetable in an unsual way.

Zucchini & Carrot "Pasta" Salad
  • 2 relatively small, tender zucchini (the larger they are, the tougher.  Grate the large ones for zucchini bread but not for salads or sautees).
  • 2-3 carrots
  • 1 or 2 cloves of garlic, halved
  • Which ever fresh herbs came in your share (scallions, thai basil were in mine this week), chopped finely
  • 1/4 cup of good olive oil
  • The juice from one lemon
  • A handful of pine nuts, toasted until golden and fragrant in a dry pan
  • 1/2-1/3 cup of goat cheese, crumbled (not everybody cares for goat cheese.  If you want to omit this ingredient, that's fine, but add salt - the cheese provides the bulk of saltiness for this salad).
Take the cut side of the clove(s) of garlic and rub the inside of your salad serving bowl with them, until the bowl smells very garlicky.  Take a vegetable peeler as if you're going to take the skin off the zucchini and carrots in long strips, but keep going:  Use the peeler to basically make long noodle-like strips of both raw vegetables.  Peel/strip them directly into your waiting garlicked-up bowl.  Toss the strips gently with your chopped herbs, then dress with the oil and lemon.  Lastly, toss with pine nuts and goat cheese, and serve.

Friday, June 29, 2012

Friday Night's for Pizza

Delivery 6/26/2012
  • 1 head of broccoli
  • 1 bunch of cavolo nero (tuscan black kale)
  • 1 bunch flat leaf  Italian parsley
  • 1 head napa cabbage
  • 1 bunch baby/salad turnips
  • 1 bunch scallions
  • 1 bunch basil
  • 2 bunches of garlic scapes
  • 3 kohlrabis
  • 1 head romaine lettuce
  • 1 head red leaf lettuce
  • 1 bunch rosemary
Garlic & Herb Pizza Crust
  • 3 teaspoons of active dry yeast
  • 1 1/2 cups of warm water
  • 3 tablespoons of olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon of salt
  • 2 1/2 cups of all purpose flour
  • 2 cups of bread flour
  • one whole bunch of parsley
  • one whole bunch of basil
  • 4-5 garlic scapes
  • one whole bunch rosemary
  • 4-5 scallions
Mix together the yeast and water and whisk together until opaque and kind of foamy.  Add in the oil and salt.  Set aside.  Finely chop any and all herbs.  Mix together the two types of flour and the chopped herbs, then pour in the wet ingredients and stir until you have a sticky dough.  Let the dough rise with a piece of stretch wrap and a dish towel over it for 30 minutes.

In the meantime, preheat your oven to 500.  Prepare any toppings you want to put on the pizza while the oven is heating up.  After the oven reaches 500, put a cookie sheet in for 5-10 minutes. You want everything prepared ahead of time, so that you work quickly when you assemble the pizza.  The faster it gets into the oven, the crispier your crust will be (and everyone loves a crispy pizza crust). 

It's a two person job from here on out.  One of you should start stretching the dough in your hands.  Once it's close to your desired thiness, the other person should take the hot pan out of the oven.  Finish stretching the dough on the hot pan.  You should hear it sizzle a little bit when it hits the metal.  Add your toppings and put back in the oven for about 5 minutes, until any cheese you use is melty and golden brown.

Here are a few topping combinations we like:
  1. Classic tomato, mozzerella with fresh basil added after it comes out of the oven.
  2. Carmelized onions, fig jam and pancetta
  3. Carmelized onions and fontina cheese with fresh arugala added after it comes out of the oven.
  4. Pesto, parmaggiano-reggiano and halved cherry tomatos.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Weekend Bonus Recipe - Popovers Love Strawberries

CSA Share 6/19/2012
  • 2 pints of Strawberries
Strawberries that you get from your CSA share or farmer's market aren't at all like the conventionally grown grocery store behemoths.  Where conventional strawberries were bred/developed specifically for their ability to withstand long-distance transportation, your friendly neighborhood farmer probably has chosen to grow strawberries with the most intense flavor.  Of course, this means they usually fall short in the shelf-life department, and before your next delivery arrives, they may already gone soft, developed spots, or even started to grow mold.  Like sweet corn, fresh local strawberries are meant to be eaten almost immediately.  While perfect on their own, here's a nice way to use up whatever is left in the little green pint on a lazy weekend between share deliveries.

Popovers Love Strawberries
  • 1 &1/2 cups of all purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon of salt
  • 3 eggs (the fresher and more local, the better - you want a good eggy flavor), well beaten.
  • 1 1/2 cups of milk.
  • Fresh, local strawberries, hulled but not sliced.
  • 1-3 teaspoons of sugar.  If you have vanilla sugar or lavender sugar or some other special sugar, here is the place to use it.  Otherwise, regular granulated or Sugar in the Raw (TM) is fine.
Preheat your oven to bake 450.  Grease up a muffin tin.  Mix together the flour and salt in one mixing bowl; the eggs and milk in another.  Add both mixtures together and whisk until smooth.  Fill each well of the muffin tin 2/3 of the way.  Bake at 450 for 15 minutes, then lower the heat to 350 and bake for another 20 minutes.  While your popovers are baking, sort of mash the strawberries with a fork, and sprinkle with the sugar.  Let them sit while the popovers are baking.

To serve, open up a popover and spoon in some strawberry goodness, and eat just like that.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

First Share, New Blog

This is our third year participating in a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program with a local farm.  I've been getting a lot of questions from friends starting their first CSA about what to do with what they get.  We're children of the 90's who grew up with Captain Planet's environmental message, and are trying to live it out using our disposable income, but don't have a clue what a "kohlrabi" is.

I decided to write this blog to help share my experiences with CSA produce with anybody who loves fresh, organic, local produce, but just doesn't know what to do with any of it.  My blog posts will have two parts:  The first will list what produce I get each week, the second half will be a recipe.  Common items between the list and recipe will be bolded, so people get an idea of how much (or how little) of a share gets be used in a single dish.

CSA Share 6/19/2012
  • 1 bunch of Cilantro
  • 1 bunch of Rosemary
  • 2 bunches of Garlic Scapes
  • 1 lb. Sugar-snap Peas
  • 2 lbs. Kohlrabi
  • 2 lbs. Young Turnips
  • 1 bunch Scallions
  • 1 head of Redleaf Lettuce
  • 1 head of Bibb Lettuce
  • 1 head of Curly Kale
  • 1 Head of Red Russian Kale
  • 2 pints of Strawberries.
Vegetarian Pad Thai - This is by no means an authentic recipe.  While it looks complicated, this is a great way to use up a whole bunch of different produce at once.  Don't limit yourself to the produce listed below (heck, you don't even have to keep it vegetarian if you don't want to), use whatever is fresh and in season.  You just want to keep a balance between soft and crunch, leaves and roots/bulbs/etc in your dish.  Some substitutions are included for the weirder ingredients.

The Sauce
  • Three limes, juiced.
  • Three heaping tablespoons of peanutbutter (creamy or chunky)
  • Two tablespoons Fish Sauce (sub in soy sauce)
  • One teaspoon sesame oil
  • Two tablespoons of coconut oil (sub in olive or canola oil)
  • One good squeeze of Sriracha (sub other hot sauces, or leave out)
  • One good squeeze of honey
  • One bunch of Cilantro, chopped fine
  • Half a bunch of scallions, sliced on a bias into little rings
The Noodles
  • 1/2 box of wide Thai rice noodles
  • One large onion, chopped.
  • One bunch of garlic scapes, cut in half (approx. noodle length)
  • Two heads of kohlrabi, leaves chopped and bulbs cut into matchsticks
  • Leaves from the young turnips, chopped.  Leave the actual roots for something else.
  • 1/2 lb of sugar snap peas, leafy tips and veins removed
  • Handfull of peanuts, chopped.
Start soaking the noodles according to package directions.   Add the onions in a large skillet over medium heat.  While onions are browning, assemble your sauce, stirring together all of the liquid ingredients until smooth, then adding the herbs.  Set the sauce aside.  When the onions are a light golden color, add the garlic scapes, stirring occasionally.  Next add the kohlrabi and stir more.  Once the kohlrabi sticks are just a little bit soft, add in your leaves, and keep stirring (this is essentially a stir fry, something that CSA subscribers come to love).  Cover the pan and let all the veggies steam for about 10 minutes, or until their the desired softness.  Add your snap-peas and peanuts last, you want them to stay crunchy. 

Once snap peas are warmed through, add in your noodles and 1/2 of your sauce.  Stir all the ingredients together.  The noodles will absorb quite a bit of sauce and become a big, sticky mess.  When this happens, add the rest of your sauce and they'll loosen up.  Serve hot, with a slice of lime and some leftover cilantro sprigs for garnish (if you're trying to impress someone).