What’s in your Share This Week?
Red Onions
Storage Kohlrabi
Cabbage (green or savoy)
Carrots
Potatoes
Broccoli
Rainbow Chard
BonBon Buttercup Squash
Turnips – Scarlet Queen or Hakurei
Head Lettuce
 
The New Stuff: How to chop it, cook it and keep it…
 
Storage Kohlrabi
This is the first year I’ve grown this variety, a behemoth called “Kossack”  that can get up to 8” in diameter. Some – not all – reached that size, so  hopefully the kohlrabi lovers amongst you received the lunkers this week.
 
Kossack is intended specifically as a storage kohlrabi (said to last up to 4  months in cold storage), but can be eaten fresh as well. We harvested these before  we left for Italy, so they have been in our cooler almost a month already. I  am always curious to experiment with veggies like this, in the interest of  season extension. Given that we have the cold storage infrastructure now (in  the form of our 12’x12’ walk-in cooler), I’m constantly on the lookout for  varieties that we can harvest in the fall and hold in our cooler for distribution  at a later date – in hopes of keeping the CSA share diverse, interesting and abundant – even in the darkest, wettest, coldest time of the year.
 
To enjoy your kohlrabi, remember that you need to peel it first to reveal  the tender flesh inside. Most people liken the flavor and texture to that of  peeled broccoli stems. Raw or sautéed, there are recipes to found via the  Recipe Wizard in case you need a nudge of inspiration to put your kohlrabi to  use – as something other than a softball or a doorstopper.
 
BonBon Squash
Your winter squash this week is a Buttercup variety with thick, dry, sweet,  orange flesh. It’s probably most similar to Sunshine, the scarlet-orange squash  you received a couple weeks ago. It’s hard to go wrong - no matter how you  prepare any of the winter squash varieties - but BonBon’s drier flesh makes it especially well-suited for pie (sweet or savory), ravioli filling, or  any other “stuffing” application. Or if you need a quick fix, just cut it in half,  bake it face-down on a cookie sheet in the oven, and then slather it with  butter and maple syrup. Ooooo, I’m getting hungry.
 
On the Farm: This Week’s Cabbage Lesson, Recordkeeping, Strawberry  Planting, and a sneak peak at your Thanksgiving Share…
One of the things I love most about farming is that I learn something new  almost every day – and get to apply that learning to the next season. This  week’s lesson was that we should plant Storage #4 green cabbage for the last  cabbage distribution of the year (this week), instead of savoy cabbage. There’s  nothing wrong with the Savoy, but it was very clear as I sat in the cooler  cleaning cabbages this Monday that the Storage #4’s (a tight, green,  smooth-leaved cabbage) had held up far better in storage while we were away. I had to  strip many layers of leaves off of the Savoy type to clean them up, whereas  the Storage #4’s only needed one or two outer leaves peeled away. We  harvested both types in the middle of October and have held them in storage for the  past few weeks.
 
So how does a farmer remember all these little details as the season  progresses, especially when she’s keeping track of over 100 different varieties  throughout the year? The answer is good record-keeping. Every grower has his or her  own system – or lack thereof – from the hi-tech iTouch approach to scrawling  notes on the back of the hand.
 
My system in the field is a simple write-in-the-rain notebook that I always  have on hand in the pick-up. Every week or two – or whenever I learn/observe something that could improve the farm in the following season – I sit  down on the tailgate and jot down some notes. I usually start a new entry with  the date and the crop written in all-caps, underlined – so it’s easy to find it  when I flip through my notebook down the road. I also star things to indicate  “take action on this item next year!” It works pretty well.
 
Along with that notebook, I have a binder full of field maps, planting  calendars, and harvest records that gets updated throughout the year. Come December and January, I sift back through it all and start formulating the master  crop plan for the next season. It’s a month-long planning process that always  begins with decisions about our market – what markets (CSA, restaurants, farmstand,  u-pick, etc.) are we going to grow for and how much are we going to grow. From  there, I get into the details of timing, successions and varieties – fine tuning  the previous year’s plan with all of the nuggets of info I jotted down  during the season. The crop planning process culminates in a big seed order  (usually on the order of $1000-$1500 in seed each season).
 
By February, the entire farm for the upcoming season is in my hands, in the  form of hundreds of seed packets – all of which fit into a single Rubbermaid  tote! It never ceases to amaze me that that single tote of seeds will  transform into acres of vegetables and full-time employment for me, Roberto, my sister,  my mom, and the handful of folks that help us part-time. I am reminded  every year to never underestimate the power of seeds.
 
Or, for that matter, strawberry crowns – 5000 of which will be arriving at  the farm today via UPS from a nursery in northern California. Sadly, I wasn’t  able to source organic crowns this year, due to the fact that my usual supplier –  and the ONLY organic strawberry crown nursery in the country, Prather Ranch - halted its organic strawberry crown production for lack of demand (as I explained in a frustrated summer newsletter a few months ago). Even  though the crowns aren’t organic, their fruit will still be considered  “organic”…funny how the organic rules are crafted.
 
The arrival of the crowns ushers in a flurry of activity for us as we try to  get all of them in the ground as quickly as possible. We’ve spent the past  few days prepping the new beds (laying drip lines and stapling down landscape  fabric to prevent weeds) and are almost ready to dig in. This will be the largest strawberry planting we’ve ever put in (9 beds instead of the usual 6),  so we’re anticipating a big and bodacious harvest next summer.
 
It’s always odd to me to be so immersed in strawberries (or strawberry  potential at least) at same time that we’re gearing up for Thanksgiving. I imagine  many of you are starting to make plans for your feast, so I’m including a quick  preview list of what (and how much) to expect in your TWO totes next week – so  that you can incorporate your farm ingredients into your holiday food  extravaganza. Also, keep in mind there are many Thanksgiving-inspired recipes on the  Recipe Exchange – some that are traditional and some that add a new twist on  old favorites. And, if you have a favorite crowd-pleasing dish that’s part  of your Thanksgiving tradition, post it on the Recipe Exchange! Happy  menu-planning!
 
In your TWO totes next week!...
2 leeks
2 yellow onions
1.5 lb red shallots
1+ lb beets (mixed red, gold, chioggia)
1+ lb rainbow carrots
1+ lb orange carrots
4-6 stalks celery
1 head escarole
1 lb Winterbor kale
2 lb parsnips
4-5 lbs yellow potatoes (Yellow Finn, German Butterball & Bintje)
1 stalk Brussels sprouts
2 celeriac
4 Delicata squash
1 Sunshine squash

