Happy End of Harvest

The final week of harvest. Of course farmers typically welcome Halloween, the end of the harvest, the shorter, colder days. This year is no different. Since April 6th Seth and the four-member fabulous farm crew have been working 12-hour days throughout the week and half days on Saturdays. They are tired and welcome the well deserved restful winter and a change of the rigorous pace. By next April, if we do our winter job well (resting that is) we will be eager to start it all over again next spring. This is why we live in New England.

Thank you once again for being a member of our farm. Seth is not here to speak for himself, but I have heard him say more than once that this is the worst season he has experienced since he began farming over twelve years ago. We don’t need to re-hash the stories of the summer, but certainly the yields and quality of some of the crops were not what we expected or hoped for. Crushed as we may have felt, we were bolstered by your understanding and support in an off year. So please know we fully appreciate you.

Brussels sprouts make an appearance this week. Much awaited by many of you, I know. For those who may consider joining Griffin in turning the Brussels sprouts into a “lightsaber with funny spikes” read on for some cooking tips. The most important tip is to cook and enjoy your Brussels sprouts as soon as possible. Each year we hear from people who had never before eaten freshly picked Brussels sprouts and were amazed at the flavors and textures – a new experience all around! Trim them off the stalk and peel off any outer layers that may be wilted, and cut an X in the bottom of each or slice lengthwise in half. Steam until tender (or put in boiling water directly). Drain and toss with butter, salt, and pepper. Or trim and cut in half, stir fry with onions or shallots and toss in some walnuts and drizzle lightly with maple syrup.

Surveys! Attached to this email. Or pick up hard copy at distribution. As usual, we appreciate your feedback on your experience with us this year. Yes we had some crop disappointments, but we want your thoughts on other aspects as well. If we didn’t read and value your comments, we wouldn’t bother to ask the questions – so thank you in advance for your time and thoughts.

Need Childcare? We are fortunate to have farm apprentices Kate and Bethany staying on with us this winter to help care for our sheep and lambing. Bethany is available for childcare services. Griffin and Leila would be happy to provide excellent references (as would Seth and I). She can be reached at 508.789.2233 or bethanylallen@gmail.com

Order your Thanksgiving Turkey Milkweed Farm’s (off Woodside Road) pastured turkeys available for the holiday fresh $3.50 per pound, 10-20+ pound birds available for the holiday. Contact Michael or Lucretia at 725.4554 or milkweedfarm@gmail.com

Apples This week we have Macs, Northern Spys, and Cortlands from Willow Pond Farm.

CSA sign-up for 2010. Thank you for those of you who have signed up. If you haven’t done so yet, you may pay in full or leave a $100 deposit and get on the easy winter payment plan with $138.33 due in February, April and June 2010.

Crystal Spring whole and half lambs. We still have lamb available for a winter delivery date. See us at pick-up for all the details.

Crystal Spring Farm Honey from bees here at the farm now available – ½ lb and 1lb. and 2 lb.

Farmer Seth! Last but not least…so many of you asked about him last week at pick up, and I had no news. I spoke with our traveling farmer this weekend; I now know he is faring well, but hot! He will write a newsletter about the trip, so although this week is the last pick up, another newsletter to come soon with his stories!

Isn’t rutabaga a great word?

What’s in Upic?…… last week…

Thyme and chives, depending on frost

It’s Maura here at the newsletter helm as Seth is putting his head and hands to work in warmer climes of Harare, Zimbabwe. He packed two fifty-pound bags filled with a wide variety of seed for cover crop to promote fertility as well as some equipment to work on setting up an irrigation system – including graph paper and pencils to work the design. And lots of bubble gum for the children, as per their request.

The final harvest and farm clean up is in the hands of our competent interns who are heading towards the end of their tenure with us. It is almost as if Seth planned this time away from the farm. Our apprenticeship program promotes independent thinking and problem-solving by giving lots of responsibility from day one, all the way back in April. By October the interns can go for weeks without missing Seth at all (aside from his great company and funny jokes of course). We could never do this work without the dedication of our fabulous interns.

Rutabaga is coming in this week. To some this is a welcome treat, and you know exactly what to do. Others may wonder…. Believed to be a cross between a turnip and a cabbage, rutabaga is high in vitamins A, C, and calcium. You can store it in your fridge for up to a month. Here are a few cooking ideas for you. Peel the outer skin and grate into a salad or slaw with your other root vegetables. You can also steam one-inch chunks and serve with butter, salt, pepper, or mash with potatoes. Rutabaga is also yummy roasted along with your other root veggies, squashes. There are a few recipes on the farm website, including rutabaga fries – serve with ketchup and let the kids have at it.

Think Soups Now that the days are colder and we don’t have the burden of watching or listening to the Red Sox late into the night (or reading the articles in the morning) we might have extra time for cooking to warm our house and bodies. We’ve been enjoying warm cider, apple crisps, and yummy soups. I just roasted some pears along with the winter squash to puree together into soup, along with onions and ginger. Yum….

Next week is final harvest The last pick up will be October 27th and 30th. You can look forward to Brussels sprouts, and pumpkins, both pie and carving next week. Depending on the frost, we may have thyme and chives this week and then we’ll be putting the upic to beds for the winter.

Surveys I don’t have the end of season surveys ready for you yet, but they are important to us, so I hope to have them next week.

Order your Thanksgiving Turkey Milkweed Farm’s (off Woodside Road) pastured turkeys available for the holiday fresh $3.50 per pound, 10-20+ pound birds available for the holiday. Contact Michael or Lucretia at 725.4554 or milkweedfarm@gmail.com

Fall cooking CSA cooking class. Still spaces available in cooking class this Saturday the 24th at 10:30 am with Katiya Gettys and Bob Lezer. Sounds like a fun, educational and yummy day! Produce, all supplies and copies of the recipes will be provided. Look for more info at CSA pick-up and make reservation by calling 865.0655.

Apples This week we have Macs and Northern Spys from Willow Pond.

CSA sign-up for 2010. Thank you for those of you who have given your deposits and full payments. If you haven’t done so yet, sign up now with a deposit and get on the easy winter payment plan. A $100 deposit will hold your share with payments of $138.33 due in February, April and June 2010.

Crystal Spring whole and half lambs. We still have lamb available for a winter delivery date. See us at pick-up for all the details.

Crystal Spring Farm Honey from bees here at the farm now available – ½ lb and 1lb. and 2 lb.

Keeping Up with the Machine

What’s in Upic?……

Thyme Chives Flowers

Frost has been tickling us with more regularity this week and pretty soon a night without it will be rare. The positive of this time of year in between kind of cold and really cold is that the quality of the greens rival what we see during our first harvests in June. The leaves are tender and delicate and the flavor tends towards sweet as the cold brings the sugars out. We hope to have some sort of greens for the share all the way through the end of the month along with some of the heavier stuff like turnips, squash, parsnips, Brussels sprouts, etc.

In contrast to the difficulty of the beginning of the summer, the late season has been relatively mild. We have had good amounts of time to get tender crops in and fields put down without the usual dodging of hurricanes and two-day gales often seen this time of year.

In addition to good vegetable growing, the sheep have been enjoying a good fall for grass and we have been able to move them around well during the breeding season, which has just come to an end. We had two separate breeding groups paired with different rams that have come back together into one big group of ewes. This flock numbers a little over eighty, which is not small, especially when you are trying to keep them on fresh patches of grass. This time of year the ewes are particularly hungry (like us) they can feel the coming cold and are trying to bulk up a bit. I like to refer to them as the grazing machine because they can move through a 300 by 50 foot area of calf high grass in a day, making it look like a mower has been through during the night. In trying to keep this group fed we moved them from one end of the farm to the other this last Sunday, running them down the middle of Pleasant Hill Road before the traffic got going. This was a blast as the ewes pranced down the yellow line waiting to see where we would guide them, and trying to make their own roads into the wrong fields a few times as well. There are a couple photos of he run in the online version of the newsletter.

Fall cooking CSA cooking class. Come join Katiya Gettys and Bob Lezer for a fall cooking class geared toward making the most of your fall share. They have been members of the farm since this CSA program began. Bob has also been volunteering with us for years –from helping raise the greenhouse in 2004 to managing the Upic field this past year. As vegetarians for over 30 years make their meals between June and November completely from farm produce; they use it all. The class will focus on creating fun and interesting dishes that are easy to prepare. This will be an interactive class where everyone gets hands on experience preparing and then eating the recipes. Produce, all supplies and copies of the recipes will be provided as well as a demo on knife use and sharpening. The class will be held in Saturday October 24 at 10:30 am in Freeport just 4 miles from the farm. Cost is $39 to $55 on a sliding scale. Look for more info at CSA pick-up and make reservation by calling 865.0655.

CSA sign-up for 2010 underway. Sign up now with a deposit and get on the easy winter payment plan. A $100 deposit will hold your share with payments not due until February, April and June of next year.

Crystal Spring whole and half lambs. We still have lamb available for a winter delivery date. See us at pick-up for all the details.

Crystal Spring Farm Honey from bees here at the farm now available in ½ lb and 1lb. and 2 lb. sizes. Allergies? Repertory issues? Local honey can help ease problems with local pollens, molds and other airborne troublemakers. If fall is your time to suffer, try some local honey.

Organic Pastured Turkeys Available Now! Call Kena at Little Ridge Farm 353.7126.

Falling

What’s in Upic?……

Thyme Chives All Flowers

Parsley

Sorry we were not able to throw the potluck this past Sunday –ah the weather.

Change of seasons is underway at the farm. Leaves are brilliant the wind has a nip but the clearest sign autumn is here are the clothing habits of the farm crew. We all layer on the clothes for the cold mornings, peel most of them off for midday and try to remember which truck, field or barn we left them in come the afternoon. Nothing beats the clear air this time of year. All the colors pop (even the grays in the clouds) and I find myself forgetting what I’m doing, watching the sky roll by again and again.

The seasonal transition will be apparent in your share this week as well. You’ll find the first dose of fall roots with turnips and celeriac leading up the charge (get your cookbooks ready). Leeks return this week as we move into our fall planting and peppers continue for one last week; a final reminder of the warm weather that has gone by.

This week is the week to throw yourself wholeheartedly into fall vegetables. If you can get creative with turnips and celeriac now you’ll be able to carry that gusto right into winter, when these crops re about all we have for local produce! The easiest way to start with these vegetables is to cube them (peel the celeriac first) with potatoes and toss them with olive oil. Then roast them with salt, pepper, and maybe some cumin or paprika in a 425 degree oven for 30-40 minutes (turning after 20) or until they are tender and starting to brown. Look for more recipes on our website www.crystalspringcsa.com.

Fall, while beautiful, can be a tiring season for our bodies. The changes in light and temperature can wear us down. In addition to fresh produce and slowing down our pace a bit, our family uses herbal extracts to stay healthy and strong as we prepare for winter. Maura has been making herbal tinctures for the family from plants grown here on the farm and this year has made some extra to offer to all of you. We will have tinctures of oats and sacred basil for sale at pick-up beginning this week through the end of the year. Oats are a nerve tonic and help relieve stress and exhaustion. Sacred Basil is also regenerative and can help relieve anxious insomnia, sharpen the mind and boost immune systems.

Thanks to all of you for your well wishes on my coming trip to Africa. I will be leaving a week from today and returning October 30. I’m really looking forward to applying some of my soils and plant skills where they will make a big impact. We’ll be sure and send an update on the trip when I return. In the meantime Maura and the farm crew will keep the place spinning like a top.

Potato Alert Continues! More potatoes. Keep eating them! Please refrigerate the spuds if you are not going to eat them in the first day or two. Please don’t compost these potatoes! They will grow next year and spread the disease.

CSA sign-up for 2010 underway. Sign up now with a deposit and get on the easy winter payment plan. A $100 deposit will hold your share with payments not due until February, April and June of next year. Many thanks to all of you who have signed up again already.

Organic/low spray apples, pears and cider for sale this week from our friends at Willow Pond Farm in Sabattus.

Crystal Spring whole and half lambs. We still have lamb available for a winter delivery date. See us at pick-up for all the details.

Crystal Spring Farm Honey from bees here at the farm now available in ½ lb and 1lb. sizes. Allergies? Repertory issues? Local honey can help ease problems with local pollens, molds and other airborne troublemakers. If fall is your time to suffer, try some local honey.