The Weblog

This weblog contains LocallyGrown.net news and the weblog entries from all the markets currently using the system.

To visit the authoring market’s website, click on the market name located in the entry’s title.



 
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Green Fork Farmers Market:  Weekly Product List


Dear Green Fork Farmers Market Customers,

Fall is here, and we have some great fall vegetables to add to our lineup this week.

New this week—Beyond Organics has arugula, lettuce, turnip greens, and cilantro. Green Fork Farm has radishes, cilantro, mint, green onions, and both Asian and Spring Mix microgreens.

Also available this week:

Vegetables—tomatoes, pumpkins, elephant garlic, butternut squash, bell peppers, Anaheims, sweet banana peppers, jalapenos, and serranos.

Mushrooms—fresh log-grown Shiitakes, dried Shiitakes, and mushroom powder.

Herbs—green basil, Thai basil, purple basil, sage, lemongrass, lovage, tarragon, and mixed Italian herbs.

Meat—pastured chicken, lamb, pork, organ meats, soup bones, and parts for stock.

Eggs—Chicken and duck eggs, grown on pasture and organic grains.

Specialty foods—fermented sauerkraut and jalapenos, salsa made from local and organic ingredients, and olive oil from organic California-grown olives.

Botanical bath and beauty products—soap, lip balm, mouthwash, scented oil, facial elixir, and muscle salve.

Plants—Figgieville still has fig trees ready to plant this fall.

Place your order from now until Tuesday at noon for pickup on Wednesday 4-7 pm. We will also have extras for sale on our tables.

Don’t forget that our farmers raise your food naturally without chemical fertilizers or pesticides, so you know you are getting the best possible food for yourself and your family and friends. Place your order now and we’ll see you on Wednesday.

Green Fork Farmers Market

Wednesdays 4-7 pm
Indoors, Year Round
At Nightbird Books
205 W. Dickson St.
Fayetteville, AR

To place your order, click on the link below to enter the website. Sign in as a customer, then click on the icon next to each product you wish to order. Proceed to checkout, review the list to make sure it’s correct, then scroll to the bottom and click on Place This Order. Make sure you receive a confirmation email—if you don’t, your order was not processed. Payment is at the market pickup with cash, check, debit/credit card, EBT, and Senior FMNP coupons. Ask about our doubling program for EBT and SFMNP!

South Cumberland Farmer's Market:  We Received an E-mail From Jennifer, but No Last Name


Jennifer — Please send us an e-mail directly to cumberlandfm@gmail.com regarding the account question you asked. We are unable to reply in the format you used, as it is a third party e-mail redirector, and we don’t have your last name in your e-mail.

Thanks!
Kir and Linda

Madison GA:  The Market is Open!!!!!!


See everyone Wed!

Heirloom Living Market Lawrenceville :  Milk is Available


Hey Ya’ll —

I messed up and didn’t update the quantity of milk available for Sam!

There is milk available; not to worry! I have fixed the issue!

Thanks to Esther for letting me know!

Newsletter is coming later today and you have until tomorrow at 6:00pm to order!

~Maryanne

The Wednesday Market:  The Market is Open


Good afternoon on this crisp fall day!

The Market is open for orders. Please place your order by 10 p.m. Monday and it will be ready for you to pick up on Wednesday between 3 and 6 p.m. See the website for this week’s product offerings. Here is the link: http://wednesdaymarket.locallygrown.net/market

Thank you for supporting locally grown agriculture and thank you for choosing to buy locally. We’ll see you Wednesday at the Market!

Thanks,

Beverly

Farm Where Life is Good:  Online Market is OPEN for Business (Week 41)


Hay Art by Rog.

Life on the Farm (Week 41)

Well, sniff, the season is coming to a close. This will be the last Online Market for the 2014 season at Farm Where Life is Good. Stock up on wheat berries, potatoes, onions and herbs while the local stuff is here! Think THANKSGIVING!

We are putting all of the outdoor fields to bed. Cover crops are all in. Field debris is being hauled to the compost piles. And garlic is being planted this week. Perennial herbs are likely going to be dug, divided and moved this week too, so they can settle in for the winter in their new locations. If you want some bare-root thyme, chive, garlic chive plants, let us know.

It has been a challenging season on the growing front, but quite the pleasure on the market front. We have enjoyed your business, your feedback and your excitement over the various products coming from Farm WLIG.

Preparing for Winter and the 2015 Maple Season…with room for Fall expansion.

The Market is now open for the last week of the season.

Ordering will be open from Sunday morning until Monday 8pm. Get your orders in now so harvesting can begin specific to your requests.

Deliveries will be made Wednesday per usual to your chosen Dropsite Location .

Recipes for your consideration

Simple, quick, protein-rich, phytonutrient rich, and warm! Just what is needed on a cold, Fall evening in the Great White North.

Cabbage and White Bean Soup

2 Tbsp olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
6 fresh or frozen plum tomatoes, chopped
1/2 head cabbage cut into 1-inch squares (about 5 cups)
1 quart water
2 cups vegetable broth or homemade stock
1 tsp rosemary or thyme, crumbled
1 1/4 tsp salt
2 cups drained and rinsed canned or dry/soaked/cooked white beans, preferably cannellini beans
¼ cup coconut bay-con (recipe below)

In a large pot, heat the oil over moderately low heat. Add the garlic and tomatoes and cook, stirring frequently, for 5 minutes.

Add the cabbage, water, broth, rosemary/thyme, and salt. Bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer, partially covered, until the cabbage is tender, about 20 minutes.

Stir in the beans and simmer until just warmed through, about 3 minutes. Ladle the soup into bowls and sprinkle the coconut bay-con over the top.


This is a unique con that can be undertaken by any food con-artist, even you! The coconut gives you some awesome fiber and healthful oils. The other ingredients just give you some tastebud “wows”! And with all of the potent seasoning, it will satisfy hunger pangs until the next mealtime, so snack away..

Coconut Bay-con

2 Tbsps tamari, Bragg’s aminos or soy sauce
1 Tbsp liquid smoke
1 Tbsp pure maple syrup
1/2 tsp smoked paprika
3 1/2 cups large flaked coconut (about a 7 oz.)
mineral salt for sprinkling, optional
coconut oil, for greasing

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Mix the first four ingredients in a small bowl making sure to break up any clumps of paprika. In a large bowl add coconut flakes, drizzle the wet mixture over top and gently toss making sure to coat each flake well, about 45 seconds or so.

Using a slotted spoon, scoop seasoned coconut flakes and place onto a lightly greased, or parchment paper lined, cookie sheet/s. I used two sheets so they could be laid out in a single layer as much as possible but you can also use a single cookie sheet or a large 9 × 13 baking dish and have good results (the key is to stir during baking). Sprinkle coconut flakes lightly with a bit of mineral salt if desired.

Place in oven and bake for 20-25 minutes. Set the timer for intervals of 5 minutes and stir each time making sure to rearrange all pieces by bringing the center to the outside and the outside to the center for even cooking. You may even like to change the position of the sheets in the oven after the second interval, moving the top sheet to the bottom rack and vice versa. After the first 15 minutes, keep close and keep watch as the coconut bacon can burn very quickly at this point. I really babied my coconut bacon towards the end, it’ll be worth your while if you do too!

Remove when coconut has a nice browned and caramelized color. Let cool, it will get crispy as it cools.

Once completely cooled you can store leftovers in an air tight container and keep in the pantry for up to a week or two. If it softens a bit, re-crisp in the toaster oven on medium for a few minutes, or under the broiler for a few seconds, keeping an eye that it doesn’t burn.

Notes:
Use more or less maple syrup to suit your taste. I like the maple flavor and usually add a heaping Tbsp. Omit it if you don’t want any maple flavor at all.

Keep in mind there are different flavors of liquid smoke…ie, hickory, mesquite, etc., use your favorite.
For a more intense smoke flavor, add up to 1 Tbsp more of the liquid smoke of choice.

Some recipes call for an addition of 1 Tbsp water or oil in the seasoning mixture. I found that I didn’t need it and do not call for it in my recipe. Use your discretion as to whether you want/need to add this ingredient. Oil is used to help coat and bind the seasoning to the coconut flakes. Water is used to ensure there is enough liquids to coat flakes evenly.

From— http://thesimpleveganista.blogspot.com/2013/05/coconut-bacon.html


This is good. Breakfast or dinner. Good. And making a bunch of cooked/shredded potatoes, then freezing them in recipe-sized batches gets you a head-start on winter breakfast hashbrowns. Bonus!

Kale & Potato Hash

8 cups torn kale leaves
2 tablespoons horseradish
1 medium shallot, minced
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups cooked shredded potatoes
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

When preparing kale, remove the tough ribs (grasp around stem lightly and strip toward tip), chop or tear the kale as directed, then wash it—allowing some water to cling to the leaves. The moisture helps steam the kale during the first stages of cooking.

Boil potatoes until they can just be pierced with a fork but are not completely tender. Let cool slightly, then shred.

Place kale in a large microwave-safe bowl, cover and microwave until wilted, about 3 minutes. Drain, cool slightly, and finely chop.

Meanwhile, mix horseradish, shallot, pepper and salt in a large bowl. Add the chopped kale and potatoes; stir to combine.

Heat oil in a large nonstick/cast iron skillet over medium heat. Add the kale mixture, spread into an even layer and cook, stirring every 3 to 4 minutes and returning the mixture to an even layer, until the potatoes begin to turn golden brown and crisp, 12 to 15 minutes total.

From: Eating Well magazine


If anyone has some good recipes for this week’s ingredients, pop on over to the website and enter them there for everyone’s benefit!

Did You Know…

Vegetable Stock is a pre-compost treatment that will speed up your composting BUT, more importantly, will give you a load of fabulous soup stock for all your winter eats. This website description of making your own stock is about the best I have found. The slow-cooker is the best idea, because I agree, hot-hot cooking of the stock will make it bitter. Ugh. (But you can simmer on the stove too…so don’t let that dissuade you.)

And if you are averse to the thought of using “scraps” to make your stock, just start thinking of the process of saving your vegetable cuttings as advanced prep of ingredients for another recipe…not as saving scraps.

Every fall I can a ton of stock while I am making soups to can. Celery is one of the best flavorings, along with onions and garlic. Those go in just about ever soup I make for canning. So, insto-presto, I have the ingredients for a batch of stock!

And if you keep earthworms for composting, they love the advanced treatment of the veggies prior to their feeding. Just a little perk…for the red-wiggler-philes out there.

Whip up a batch or two, save it in different sizes/forms, and thoroughly enjoy it over the winter.

Subscription Box Highlights

Anticipated for the last week of 2014 CSA/Subscription Boxes:

Tomatoes
Sweet peppers
Potatoes
Winter squash
Kohlrabi
Spicy mesclun
Boc choi
Onions
Celery
Shallots
Garlic chives
Leeks
And a few bulb fennel if they are worth the picking (tiny little slow pokes!)

Start your meal planning now!

We hope to feed you soon!

Roger and Lara



**If you’d like to stop receiving emails, just jump into your account on the website (farmwlig.locallygrown.net, My Account) and scroll to bottom; check appropriate box.

Dawson Local Harvest:  FALL VEGETABLES AND FRESH BREADS NOW AVAILABLE!


DAWSON LOCAL HARVEST for October 10th, 2014

FALL VEGETABLES AND FRESH BREADS NOW AVAILABLE!

HI EVERYONE!

Fall is with us in all its glory and that includes the first availability of Fall Vegetables. LEILANI’S has a good quantity of “Red Russian” Kale ready for you, and the first “Georgia” Collards of the season, and some warm-season Veggies like Okra and Green Beans. FIVE HENS FARMS has very nice Beets, and BRADLEY’S still has Butternut Squash and Cooking Pumpkins.

Of course there is great excitement with MY DAILY BREAD’s offerings. They have a lot available, so take a good look at all they have.

On the Live Plant front, LEILANI’S has 4-packs of 5 new organic Lettuce varieties joining 4-packs of Kale, Broccoli, Cauliflower, and Georgia Collards.

I hope you’ll take a good look at everything new at The Market for this week.

THE MARKET IS NOW OPEN!

REMEMBER! You can order until Tuesday night at 8pm. Pick up your order at Leilani’s Gardens Friday afternoons from 4 to 7pm.

You’ll find the DAWSON LOCAL HARVEST at http://dawsonville.locallygrown.net

We thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible! We guarantee your satisfaction with all products in the DAWSON LOCAL HARVEST.

Have a happy and healthy week!

Alan Vining
Market Manager

South Cumberland Farmer's Market:  Farmer Browns and Dogwood Valley Greenhouse Announcements


Two additional announcements — check these out!

A new evolution of Space Violets has happened. In a sensational effort that launched African Violets into a new frontier, the Optimara Space Violet program put more than 25,000 seeds into orbit for nearly SIX YEARS! This unusual step in the annals of potted and flowering plants, turned out to be one giant leap that has produced significant and exciting characteristics for African violets. Now for the first time, these characteristics are available in a series dedicated exclusively to Space violets. The EverFloris series is comprised entirely of African violets that have been developed from the Space violet program. They are bigger and easier to grow, with larger, fuller blooms that flower continuously. Unless they’re Space violets, there’s no place on earth you will find African Violets like these. Farmer Brown will have all of the different variants in this series. Plants will be in a self-watering Hydroponic unit, comprising of a beautiful Cobalt Blue Glass or Emerald Green Bordeaux Wine Bottle, cut especially for these plants
They will Be displayed at the fall Craft Fair, Nov 21st at the McMinnville Civic Center. Of course, they are for sale. We will take advanced reservation orders as supplies are very limited. Photos are provided courtesy of the grower and represent full-grown plants. Check us out on Facebook at: Farmer Brown’s Hydroponic Gardens for pictures.

Dogwood Valley Greenhouse has some beautiful fall-flowering anemone and aster plants just budding up nicely. Several varieties of the ferns, lots of herbs, colorful coral bells, and the gauras are beautiful in the fall. Now is the ideal time to plant perennials: cooler evening temperatures (and daytime too!) will develop good strong root systems for good winter survival and spring bloom. Build up your perennial garden now!

Russellville Community Market:  RCM is Open!


Welcome to another RCM Market Week!

Be sure to check out the newly listed items this week! Lots of great, local products to be had!

Happy shopping! Eat Local!

Check out the “Featured Items” section as well as the “What’s New” section at the top of the market page for all the latest products available.

Be sure to “Like” our Facebook page for updates and food-related events in your community!

To ensure your order is placed, make sure you click the “Place My Order” button once you have completed your shopping. Remember, you have until 10:00pm Tuesday evening to place your orders.

Happy Shopping! See you on Thursday!

Russellville Community Market

FRESH.LOCAL.ONLINE.

Stones River Market:  The Market is Back Open


Stones River Market

How to contact us:
Our Website: stonesriver.locallygrown.net
On Facebook: www.facebook.com/StonesRiverMarket
On Wednesdays: Here’s a map.

Market News

Welcome back to another week of locally grown and made products. Did all of you get the frost this morning like we did at the farm? I will update my inventory later this morning after inspecting the fields for damage. Flying S Farms received a pretty heavy frost as well as evidenced by the picture Catherine sent me.

Other news sent from our vendors:

Dogwood Valley Greenhouse has some beautiful fall-flowering anemone and aster plants just budding up nicely. Several varieties of the ferns, lots of herbs, colorful coral bells, and the gauras are beautiful in the fall. Now is the ideal time to plant perennials: cooler evening temperatures (and daytime too!) will develop good strong root systems for good winter survival and spring bloom. Build up your perennial garden now!

Nuance Coffee & Tea has added a new coffee and a new fruit (tea) this week. The coffee is from East Timor and has notes of cocoa, Granny Smith apple, and hops with balanced acidity. The fruit (tea), called Cascara, is very unique and made from the outer husk of coffee beans known as the Coffee Cherry. It has notes of baked apple, dark rum, mulling spice, brown sugar and raisin. Perfect for Autumn. Enjoy!

Rocky Glade Farm has fresh baby ginger. From Julie – "_This is our first year to grow that, but looks interesting! I have put a good description I think, but you can store in refrigerator for a few weeks, but for long term you can candy it, make it into syrup, or freeze it and grate or cut off what is needed and return unused portion to the freezer.

Ginger is great for making fresh ginger cookies, cakes, adding to tea and smoothies, or adding to stir fries and cooked greens dishes like kale.

We also have Covington Sweet potatoes a nice orange skin/orange flesh sweet potato that are good baking size.

Red Gold potatoes are also new for us this week. they are medium in size and suitable for all potato cooking purposes especially roasting._"

White City Produce and Greenhouse has added her mums to the Market.

There are plenty of other products available this week. Browse the categories to see what your will find.

Thanks so much for your support of Stones River Market, all of our growers, local food, and our rights to eat it. We’ll see you on Wednesday at Southern Stained Glass at 310 West Main Street from 5:00 to 6: 30 pm!

Recipes

Please, share your recipes with us on the Recipes tab. We’d all love to know how you use your Stones River Market products, so we can try it too! If you have created a dish and want to share with everyone, please send it to me.

With sweet potatoes finally appearing on the Market, our recipe today comes from Chef Jenny

Shake & Bake Sweet Potatoes

16 oz sweet potatoes, sliced in half (lengthwise), then cut in lengthwise wedges, like large steak fries (Cut in half if they are very long potatoes.)
2 tbsp olive oil, plus a bit more for the baking sheet
1 tbsp paprika, or more to your taste
salt and pepper, to taste
2 bags of Seeds of Success

Procedure
1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
2. Put the potatoes in a bowl. Pour the olive oil on top of the potatoes. Shake the bowl to coat the sweet potatoes.
3. Place the potatoes, skins down, on a lightly oiled baking sheet.
4. Sprinkle paprika, salt, and pepper on the potatoes.
5. Bake and check after 15 minutes for tenderness. They may need 5 more minutes, depending on the thickness.
6. If you want the sweet potatoes crispy, broil them for 3 – 4 minutes. Set a timer, so they do not burn.
7. Top the sweet potatoes with Seeds of Success: Pumpkin Spice flavor or Sweet & Salty.

Recipe Tips
1. You can dip these sweet potatoes in a mixture of Ranch dressing and chipotle Tabasco seasoning.
2. You can enjoy these potatoes for lunch with a kale salad or a sandwich.
3. You can serve Shake & Bake Sweet Potatoes hot or at room temperature.

Source
Author: JENuineHealth by Jenny Drake
Web Page: http://www.jenuinehealth.com
Copyright: Copyright © 2013 JENuineHealth

I thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible!

John

See the complete list of products at http://stonesriver.locallygrown.net/