Author Archive | Erin Darling

Week 36 – Spring Greens

jonquils daffodils spring WA

These little beauties are popping up outside my front door.

The days are getting longer. The food is getting greener. And my belly is getting bigger. All these things excite me to no end. They are promises of a full summer. They are promises of birth and renewal. They are foreshadowing of light and warmth.

Do you see how many greens are featured in the share this week? A whole row. It’s amazing to me, after a long winter of root veggies and a pesty pregnant appetite, that Spring comes so early and that fresh foods are available once again.

And, man, are those greens dirty!

dirty counter lettuce knife

The dirtiness slew me

I know: I shouldn’t be shocked. Plants grow in the earth, and the earth is soil, dirt and grime. Real food is dirty food. But, seriously, look at how much dirt got on my counter after cutting up one single head of romaine lettuce!

The truth is that all food is from the dirt, even the pre-washed, plastic bagged salads in the supermarket. We are made from dirt and dust. I think there’s a certain degree of mental healthiness that is sustained when we stop trying to sanitize ourselves from our own humanity with excessive anti-bacterial gels and plastic sanitary bubbles. I like going back to the soil. I like getting a little dirt under my fingernails. I like washing and sorting my own food. It’s slower, realer, more a part of me that way.

romaine lettuce

Freshly washed romaine lettuce

I’m looking forward to letting baby Wetzel romp in the dirt. Unsanitized.  Putting things in that little mouth and exploring the varied textures, colors and sounds of the natural world. Did you know that kids on farms and rural areas that experience their environments more tend to be healthier and have fewer allergies? That’s what I want for my little squirt. To be at peace with nature: mentally, emotionally and physically.

As for myself, I cherish the greens while they last. Salad, here I chomp!

By ekwetzel
2011-03-14

csa spring greens terry's berriesWEEK 36

(Top Row)
Carrots
Potatoes
Turnip
Parsnip
2 Onions

Apples in the middle

(Bottom Row)
Rainbow Chard
Romaine Lettuce
Parsley
2 (Huge) Leeks

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Week 35 – A Week in Pictures at Terry’s Berries

This week I’d like to take you on a picture tour of the Terry’s Berries CSA and farm store. Enjoy!

terry's berries river road puyallup tacoma

The Farm Store

In warm weather, there are many things for sale outdoors: plant starters, fruits, tables set up by local merchants and food makers (my favorite last year was the chevre lady). Year round, Terry stocks these fair trade baskets, and many of the share members pick one up for carrying produced home from the farm.

Beautiful handmade baskets

Beautiful Handmade Baskets

We have also had apples for sale all winter. This is Washington, after all! (My favorites are the Pink Lady and Honey Crisp apples.)

apples

Washington Apples

Upon enterring the store, you will undoubtedly be greeted by Kaitlyn, farm store maven and friend to all!

Kaitlyn Terry's berries Kaitlin

Kaitlin

The farm store stocks many tasty treats…Citrus from farms in California, fair trade coffee, gluten free baked goods from a local bakery, bread from the Essential Baking Company (in Seattle), local honey, nuts, and more.

Citrus From Farms in California

Citrus From Farms in California

raisens, nuts, fair trade coffee

Treats in the Farm Store

raw honey

Local, Raw Honey

When you are a member of the CSA share, you can get 5% off most items available in the farm store, which can be a nice perk.

In the CSA line, the food is in bins, and we weigh out our produce per the instructions on little yellow signs.

Root Veggies, Waiting to be Weighed

Root Veggies, Waiting to be Weighed

mrwetzel

Mr. Wetzel, Picking Out the CSA Share

Terry is often in and out of the farm store, and she’s always helpful for answering questions about her farm as well as where to buy things she doesn’t carry at other local farms and vendors.

Terry from Terry's Berries

We were at he farm during sunset last week, so I walked around and snapped some pictures of the things outside, near the farm store. Enjoy!

ducks

Ducks

Farm Cat

Farm Cat

farm toys

Evidence of Farmers-in-Making

Sun Sets Over the Fields

Sun Sets Over the Fields

csa terry's berriesWEEK 35 (Last week of Winter Share)

3 Onions
3 Pears
Romaine Lettuce
potatoes
Apples
3 Beets
Cabbage
Carrots
Bok Choi

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Week 34 – Ultrafood

ultrasound face profile

Baby Wetzel's profile. (What a cute baby nose!)

It’s week 34 of our CSA adventure, and week 34 of our pregnancy.  In pregnancy land, this was the week of the ultrasound, and a lot of my writing juices were absorbed in that preoccupation (blogging pre-ultrasound, blogging post-ultrasound).

But what about the CSA food? How did that factor into our week?

We are real people, after all. We have real life preoccupations. So, do we have time for “real food” or “slow food” or “local food” or whatever other food term you prefer to describe the CSA food that we’re eating? Isn’t it easier, in a stressful or busy week, to just stop at McDonald’s and eat off the dollar menu?

In addition to the busy schedule, our dishwasher has been out of order. Something about a tube. And a snowstorm delaying a repair guy. And getting a really inept repair guy…I’ve been complaining about it in detail to friends and to Mr. Wetzel and on twitter.

Wouldn’t life be easier if we just scrapped this “commitment to the farm” thing?

Meh. I don’t think so.

You see, I drive once a week to the farm and pick up all our veggies for the week. We do still go to the grocery store for non-produce items, but I save that excursion for Thursdays and shop off a list. So, technically, we’re only driving around twice to pick up our food. (Three times if you count our stop by the dairy farm for raw milk every Sunday after church). If we relied on fast food or pre-made meals, we’d be making many more runs and stops.

You can eat an amazing amount of farm food raw, and food that you have to cook tends to keep for a while. This week I relished the carrots from our share; I had a pregnancy craving for them two nights in a row, and they were such a terrific late-night snack. The apples are my no-brainer snack; I eat them with organic string cheese from Trader Joe’s. Leafy greens make great salads.

What don’t I eat? I’ve been meaning to make cole slaw out of the cabbage, but the idea of grating it just intimidates me. I will. One of these days. I will conquer the cabbage.

I stash the potatoes until I have a slew of them, then cook them all at once. Typically so I can do something with them that involves cheese. My “fast” potato meal is, of course, to wrap it in foil and bake it.

And the onions? This pregnancy isn’t letting me eat them, so I’m storing them. Come Spring and Summer, they’ll come in pretty handy. I remember always running out of onions last year during the warm weather.

When I don’t know what to eat for a meal, I take a look at what we have, and do something with it. We don’t have to choose what’s in our fridge. The seasons do that for us. Thankfully, the seasons change, as well, which keeps things interesting.

strawberries nutella cat

Scooter watched me eat the strawberries. I think she was jealous.

Do I only eat what’s in the CSA? Nope! Do I only eat locally? Nope! This week I had the BIGGEST pregnancy cravings for strawberries. It’s February, and we’re in Washington; there are NO  strawberries here. When I stopped by Costco, however, they had packages of strawberries, grown in the USA, and they looked and smelled great. I brought them home and polished them off within 36 hours. And I was delighted to!

We eat locally most of the time. It’s easy to eat locally, even during a busy or stressful week. In many ways, eating through our CSA is easier on meal planning because it’s a no-brainer: we eat and cook what’s available. We drive around less, and we eat at home more. All in all, we are healthier and spend less money, while maintaining a great appreciation for the food of our region and the food that’s in season…and that love spills over into other foods as well. Our CSA food is ultra-food: it is ultra-good and it is a sound choice. And we are real people.

By ekwetzel
2011-03-02

csa terry's berries tacomaWeek 34:
(Top Row)
Potatoes
Beets
Onions
(Middle Row)
Carrots
Apples
Pears
(Bottom Row)
Rainbow Chard
Cabbage
(more) Rainbow Chard

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Week 33 – For the Love of Cauliflower

mrwetzel42 eating cauliflowerWhen you are at the mercy of the seasons, each time one of your favorite foods comes into season, it seems like a miracle.  In the summer, I feel this way about raspberries. I can never eat enough of them: raw, in baked dishes, or fresh off the vine.  This week, the Wetzels celebrate cauliflower.

Mr. Wetzel doesn’t naturally like many vegetables, but one produce species he can never get enough of is cauliflower. As a wife, I try to encourage and support good eating habits in my former-bachelor, so I have always tried to get cauliflower for Mr. Wetzel whenever it is available.  When we started the CSA, we knew we’d be changing our eating habits to coincide with what produce was available each season, so that meant less cauliflower for us during most of the year.

But that also means that – when cauliflower is in season – we pig out.

You’ll notice that this week we have a ton of cauliflower in our share, but not much else. Our CSA has a wonderful grab box where you can switch out something you don’t like with something you do…and whenever other share members use the box, the available foods in it change according to what people do/don’t want that week. This week we struck white gold: there were several heads of cauliflower in the trade box, and we gleefully swapped them for our onions, parsnips and chard.

I like it that eating seasonally has created a greater appreciation within us for the foods we eat, and even for the foods we love.  We don’t take our fruits and veggies for granted, but we are voracious for them each moment they grace us with their presence. CSA eating is eating in the moment. Seize the veggies by their stalks, and indulge! Some of them only come this way once a year. If you’re too busy wandering the polished and changeless grocery aisles, you might miss the opportunity to find true culinary excitement.

By ekwetzel
2011-02-21

csa terry's berriesWEEK 33
Cauliflower ;o)
Apples
Pears
Carrots
Fingerling Potatoes

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Week 32 – Not All CSAs are Created Equally

justin higgins snow

Photo courtesy of Justin Higgins

Each week, we receive an email newsletter from our CSA, Terry’s Berries, letting us know where the week’s produce hails from.  Washington State has less severe winters than the rest of the country, as does the west coast in general; so much of our produce is either grown in state or stored through the winter. Here’s an example of a note on the origins of our produce:

“Right now, cabbages and kales are coming from California because they got frozen in Washington.  Other years we have been able to harvest beautiful cauliflower in January, cabbage and kales too. Apples and pears are from Washington state as well as potatoes, leeks, onions, shallots, parsnips, carrots, and some other root veggies.”

It is common for CSAs to source produce from other farms, but beware if the CSA you are considering regularly contains out-of-season produce. For instance, a CSA share for February in the Pacific Northwest should never contain green beans. They are so far out of season, the only place they are likely to come from is Mexico. And that kind of defeats the purpose of “local food.”

Summertime is the easiest time to sponsor local CSAs and local produce, because the harvest is so plentiful and vibrant. If you do buy from a CSA in the winter, simply take a moment to put on your thinking cap and ask yourself how likely it is that each item in your grab bag of food was either grown nearby or stored for these winter months. When in doubt, ask the CSA where the produce comes from. Transparency is key.

The most local food of all, of course, comes from your own backyard or container gardening, and this is the season to start planning for the planting season to come. Check out seed catalogues. Plan out your garden.  Pre-order your seeds. Get prepped for doing veggie starts in the next month or so. And, in the meantime, keep eating locally and enjoying the produce of the season: root veggies, cabbages, and apples!

By ekwetzel
2011-02-11

CSA terry's berriesWEEK 32
Potatoes
Shallot
Carrots
Pears
Apples
Rainbow Chard
Cauliflower
(We traded our parsnips and onions with other CSA members for extra apples and pears)

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Week 31 – True Farmers

terry's berries farmers market

Terry's Berries at the local Farmer's Market

Local food is all the rage. It’s the edgy thing in the food world right now. So I guess I shouldn’t be surprised when I see McDonald’s trying to promote itself as a localvore or Walmart setting up pretend “farmer’s markets” (i.e. ones that avoid local farmers). I’ve come to expect a brilliant marketing façade from the big corporations, in lieu of any meaningful change to their food systems.

What is more difficult to figure out is which of the smaller farmers are, in fact, small farmers…and which are just fantastic marketers.

In Tacoma, there are many farmer’s markets in the summer, and it is amazing how far away some of the vendors travel in order to hawk their wares. It’s amazing how not-local and not-fresh some of the produce can be. Market season is just around the corner again, and what can we do as naïve spenders approaching the tables of different fruits and veggies?

Rely on community to find those farmers that are the diamonds in the ruff. Talk to the farmers, get to know them, and ask them questions. Where do they come from? How big is the farm? What is their philosophy for food production? If a farmer is not open about his farming practices, he likely has something to hide; however, a farmer who is excited to share information about his food is probably also a farmer with food that is worth getting excited about.

A CSA is Community Supported Agriculture. You start with relationships: between the farmer and the land, between the buyer and the merchant, between the owner and the farmhands. A wholesome and holistic relationship on all these levels is vital. Someone who is willing to cut corners in one area of their business is willing to cut corners in other areas as well.

A farmer that is open, gracious and a good steward of the earth is often like the food he or she grows. There may not be flashy signs or stickers to attract you. Their quality Is often understated. They don’t have much polish or finesse. But they are good to the core. Trust your gut. And once you’ve had a taste, you won’t want anything less than to return, time and again, to cultivate a lasting relationship of deep and golden worth.

By ekwetzel
2011-02-08

terry's berries csa winterWEEK 31:
Carrots
Shallot
Potatoes
Onions
Apples – We traded out some root veggies (not pictured) for extra apples
Frozen Raspberries
Romaine Lettuce

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Week 30 – Community: Putting the C in CSA

aesop fable horse ass donkeyThis had been a rough week in Wetzelville.  Mr. Wetzel was home last week recuperating from a long overdue surgery on his ingrown toenail.  I still am having trouble eating starchy or fibrous foods (i.e. CSA fruits and veggies). Plus, baby has been growing swiftly, pushing around my body and making the bones and joints ache.

It’s been a rough week, but it has not been a sad week. We have had a community to support us, help us and encourage us along the way, and in our weakness, those bonds were shown to be strong. Friends brought us soup; others prayed and offered words of encouragement; others shouldered responsibilities in order to lighten our workload for the week. Community is a blessing, and we consider ourselves truly blessed by those around us.

I am reminded of Aesop’s Fable, A Laden Ass and a Horse:

A Horse and an Ass were travelling together on a long journey with their master. The Horse’s back was bare, while the Ass carried innumerable bundles. Stumbling under his heavy load, the poor Ass cried out to his proud companion, “Please, good Sir, I beg of you to help me carry my burdens, otherwise I fear I shall die.” But the Horse was unmoved by this desperate plea, and refused to share his load.

Soon the little Ass was completely worn out and, stumbling pathetically, finally fell. No matter how valiantly he struggled, he could not get to his feet. Seeing this, their master lifted the many packages from the Ass and flung them across the back of the Horse, who immediately began to groan and wail in self-pity. “Woe is me!” he cried. “What suffering have I brought upon myself! I would not share a lighter load, and look  at what has become of me: I must now carry everything alone.”

The strong should help the weak, so that the lives of both shall be made easier. (Excerpt & Illustration from Aesop’s Fables, illustrated by Heidi Holder; The Viking Press, 1981.)

Likewise, it is vital for us to remain in community with our farmers and food providers, that we both might be stronger for it in the long run. We are meant to shoulder responsibility for each other. We are meant to be accountable to each other and in relationship. We are meant to care.

By ekwetzel
2011-02-02

winter csa terry's berriesWEEK 30
(Top Row)
Carrots
Shallot
2 Onions
Potatoes
(Middle Row)
Apples
Pears
Wheat Berries
(Bottom Row)
Leeks
Bok Choi

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Week 29 – Uneaten Food

CSA grey tabby apples

Scooter insisted on being in the photo shoot this week.

On Sunday, my mother-in-law was over for a bit. She loves real food, but isn’t a member of a CSA, like we are. I remembered a delicata squash that had been sitting on our counter, and asked her, “Sherri…do you want a squash?” She lit up, excited at the prospect, recipes already brewing in her mind’s eye. I retrieved the squash from the window sill, and – alas – it had already started to mold. We waited too long. The food was lost.

To be perfectly honest, these days it’s hard for me to eat the food that we’re getting from the farm. To be more precise, it’s hard for me to eat any fruit or veggies. Period. My pregnancy is giving me terrible acid reflux, and it’s worst when I eat produce.

Mr. Wetzel and I went out to eat tonight, and I got salmon. Mmmm…great brain food for the baby! On the plate were some potato wedges and grilled asparagus, and despite myself, I picked them off the plate and set them aside, of of site. Even the site churned my belly.

The midwife says it’s hormonal, and things should calm down a bit after the 30 week marker. Hopefully, in the meantime, the extra honeycrisps I picked up at the farm won’t rot on the kitchen counter, as well. They are so tasty, it would break my heart to toss them. However, at this juncture, it would break my esophagus to eat them prematurely.

csa winter root veggies PNWWEEK 29
(Top Row)
Beets
Onion
Shallot
Potatoes
(Middle Row)
Arugula
Pears
Apples
Carrots
(Bottom Row)
Cabbage
Delicata Squash
Turnip
Parsnip

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Week 28 – In Season This Winter

good transparency wa seasonal produce PNWIt’s cool and damp outside. The grass here is green and lanky. We should have mowed our lawn more in the fall, but it’s matted down by the morning frost now. It rarely snows in Washington, and when it does the magic only lasts for a day or so until the temperature rises back to the 40s or 50s, and we go back to dodging puddles on the way to the car.

What amazes me about the winter is not how monotonous the CSA palate can seem at Terry’s Berries; rather I am amazed that fresh food can even be produced in the wintertime.

In the summer, I intentionally kept myself from apples, knowing that the winter would hold months of fresh apples that I could partake in. I love apples, and golly am I thankful that the apple, of all fruits, is the staple that grows here in the winter.

good transparency seasonal produce

Click on picture for a larger image. For original posting, visit: http://www.good.is/post/a-guide-to-when-fruits-and-vegetables-are-in-season/

Depending on climate, different areas of the country are able to grow different produce from season to season. I really appreciate this infographic (pictured to the left) from Good Magazine (http://www.good.is). It depicts when fruits and veggies are in season in six different areas of the country. California is of course magical in its ability to produce a cornucopia of American staples year round. (Of course, there are tradeoffs: what Californian is ever lucky enough to experience the occasional snow day?)

January is almost over, and spring is only a few months away. Garden plans are brewing in kitchens across America, and signs of spring are already peeking through the soils of our imaginations. Before we know it, April will be here with the cherry blossoms, the tulips, and the sweet greens of spring.

And, since our due date is in April, our baby will be arriving too. A little, local fruit of the womb.

csa washington PNW veggies bok choiWEEK 28
(Top Row)
Parsnips
Shallots
Head of Garlic
Onion
Potatoes
(Middle Row)
Delicata Squash
Apples
Pears
Carrots
(Bottom Row)
Leeks
Beets
Turnips
Bok Choi

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Week 27 – Laying Off

26 weeks pregnant belly bump

What have I been doing with myself now that I don’t have a job? I’ve had time to do a little more reading, for one. As long as my pregnant belly doesn’t interfere!

I know, I know. The blogs have been posted pretty inconsistent lately. At the end of the year last year, I was laid off due to lack of hours at my job, and with that my access to the internet diminished significantly. No, I wouldn’t blog-on-the-job. My bosses were really cool, down-to-Earth guys, however, and they wouldn’t mind it if I did personal stuff on my lunch break, or if I stayed late to work on a personal project (on my own dime).

I don’t have a computer at home until my husband comes home from work (he uses his on the job). Our days have been so busy, especially with preparations for our baby on the way, that taking a few hours to write in the evening hasn’t always been a top priority. Sometimes you have to let things slide. Sometimes slacking off is good for the home. I am happy to say I have not sacrificed quality family time for you, dear readership, no matter how inconsistent that has made my blogging.

I do enjoy writing for you, though. I do enjoy thinking about our food and being honest and open about the way eating locally has affected us.

In light of our decreased finances, many things have shifted in our budget (one of which is my plans to buy my own computer). One thing that has remained rooted is our commitment to our local CSA. It is still cheaper to buy food from the farm than it is from the store. It is still cheaper and healthier to buy raw ingredients than processed foods, packaged dinners or fast food. We feel stronger and healthier eating veggies, milk and eggs from our local community. And we are confident that we will be raising our baby up on the right nutrients and values, from as early as the womb.

It’s not a hard decision for us to stick with the farm. We feel blessed to have it available, and we refuse to lay them off. Their presence on our plate is too irreplaceable.

By ekwetzel
2011-01-10

csa tacoma farm foodWEEK 27 – This week a new thing was started at our CSA: a community box. If you have something in your basket that you don’t like, you can add it to the community box, and replace it with something else that another share member didn’t want. Brilliant! I got extra potatoes and an extra pear!
(Top Row)
Garlic
Shallots
Purple Onion
Beets
Turnips
(Middle row)
Potatoes
Apples

Pears
Carrots
(Bottom row)
Mustard greens
Leeks

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