CSA Shares March 4 - 6

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Produce Shares

Lettuce / Spinach stir fry mix

Kale or swiss chard / Collard greens

Sunchokes / Carrots

Tomatoes / Basil

Popping corn, sweet potatoes, or red cabbage

Bakery Shares

White bread sandwich loaf

Cheddar Knisch

Biegnets

Bread pudding

Creste rigate or penne pasta

2x pizza kits

SUNCHOKES!!! High in fiber, antioxidants, and potassium. These are a source of inulin, great for those who are managing diabetes and /or blood sugar. These may cause a bit of minor indigestion; cook thoroughly.

Total 39 ways to use these things in the links below:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/jerusalem-artichoke-recipes-sunchokes_n_6532870

https://www.cookingchanneltv.com/devour/2013/12/25-ways-to-use-jerusalem-artichokes

Recipes & Meal Planning:

Smashed Sunchokes

https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2019/09/smashed-sunchokes-with-thyme-butter.html

Happy eating!

CSA Shares February 25-27

Bakery Shares

Buttermilk sandwich loaf

Apple butter

Pepperoni Roll

Chess bars

Loaded breakfast muffins

Penne or fettuccine pasta

2x pizza kit

Produce Shares

Turmeric / Beets / Carrots

Collards / Kale or swiss chard

Radish microgreens / Clover sprouts

Lettuce / Spring mix

Red cabbage



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The first year we moved the bulk of our vegetable production to the current plots was spring of 2018, that year ended a long dry run of springs (and a few dry summers) in the area and began a succession of wet, early onset springs that looks to be repeating again this year. In related news, it also just so happened to be the first year we had real irrigation. The longer I farm, the more I realize that things like this are par for the course, Mother Nature cares very little about your planning.

The soil here is much more composed of clay than down at the other plot, where it is all river bottom land and sandy. There it's Easy to work, but the weeds love it. Here in the clay, these wet springs make it extra tricky to find that window to till the first beds since turning over some for cover crop in November. If it is just the least bit too wet, it just turns the tines of your tiller into a perfect cylinder of smooth wet clay, and your just compact your soil as you go over it. Exactly what you don't want to do. Our seed is all here, the tractor, and mower have been serviced up, the propane tank is full at the greenhouse, and we are ready to roll.

However, today is one of those frustrating days farming when it is absolutely beautiful outside, and things are humming along, but we need just one more day of dry weather in order to be able to till, and we ain't gonna get it. In fact, its gonna rain for at least a week, then it takes almost that long a run of dry days in a row again to be able to till in an effective way. So, although these last two days have been a pleasure to work outside and feel like it's time to farm, we are gonna miss this window by just a day, and with it, the opportunity to get certain stuff out on the early side. Miss three times and get up in to March too far, and you can really screw up your planning. Fitting all theses crops and their timelines across beds and fields and seasons is a bit of four dimensional tetris as it is, and the less the early weather cooperates, the more you are doing on less. So she goes in farming, as they say, it's always something.

Instead we will work in the greenhouse next week, and hope another tilling window opens up soon. This one would have been a little too good, so hopefully if we get some ground chopped up in the next 3 weeks or so, we will catch up a bit. On the good side of things, all the fresh seed we got in the ground this week in some beds that were already ready will be getting a nice drink to get them started..

River Creek Farm Season VIII. Let's give this thing a go again, I can't remember being this glad to see spring coming in a long long time. Thank you all making this possible, and caring about local food, and the planet.


CSA Shares February 18-20

Hello RCF CSA subscribers! This week’s shares are getting the first full run of our high tunnel collard greens, and we’re excited to share these lion’s mane mushrooms with you from Asheville, see more below.

Bakery Shares

Wheat honey loaf

Pita bread and hummus

Pancake mix with blueberry compote

Rice pudding

Spaghetti or fettuccine / 2x Pizza kit

Produce Shares

Lion’s mane mushrooms

2x Carrots, beets, turnips or rutabaga

Sweet potato

Fuji or Pink Rose apples

Lettuce / Collard greens / Kale or swiss chard

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Lion’s Mane Mushroom

Lion’s mane is a traditional Chinese medicinal, containing antioxidants and beta-glucan, packed with health benefits including support for neuronal health. “Lion's mane may benefit older adults with mild cognitive impairment, according to a small study published in Phytotherapy Research in 2009. “ — https://www.verywellmind.com/the-benefits-of-lions-mane-89474 We found this one pictured above right in our back yard, on the other side of the creek, under a big rock wall, right on a cow’s trail—don’t worry, your’s are coming in clean from Asheville!

A gentle saute with subtle garlic, butter & white wine, will get you a “lobster-like” taste. I’ve included a recipe below with weekly meal planning suggestions.

This week on the farm….

The less glorious side of the operation includes a lot of decomposition and mud. We’ve been slow to flip some spent crops through these wetter cold months, including letting last summer’s okra patch die out enough to be manageable. This healthy crop grew to over 10 ft tall, with woody trunks 3” thick. Instead of waiting till drier days to get the bush hog to this patch, I went after it with my FAVORITE NEW TOOL ~ electric pruners ! An hour and a half later, one eighth acre piled and headed to the compost pile. This field is our wettest. It’s due for its first run of cover crop this spring. With our heavy clay soil, we’re adding organic matter back to the soil a season at a time to improve our crop production and support our soil ecosystem for the long term. Our cover crop blend includes alfalfa, hairy vetch, crimson clover, and oilseed radish, aka, those cold hardy daikons we’ve been enjoying all winter.

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Maybe the best part about a farming operation is the excitement of a big push each winter to plan out your year ahead. New summer seed is on its way, and we’re picking up pro mix to start those seedlings in the greenhouse. Early spring crops will be sown directly and covered with frost-blanket as soon as we can get a few drier days.

Meal Planning Suggestions

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Bulgogi beef lettuce wraps

with sesame slaw, kimchi & white rice

Prepare beef and rice. I’ve previously included specific instructions for a marinated London broil preparation and specific steps to nail your sticky rice even without a rice cooker (see previous blog posts below). This week’s full meal is in the style of another of Jamie’s favorites from the time he spent in Korea. Bulgolgi refers to a dark barbecue sauce made with tamarind and cane sugar. If this isn’t quite enough of a meal for you, a bowl of spicy ginger beef broth can take this meal over the top.

Sesame slaw banchan: Banchan refers to the varying accompaniments served with a Korean barbeque. Use a veggie peeler to get wide ribbons of carrot and cucumber. Hone your chefs’ knife or use a mandoline to cut daikon radish, onion and apple into thin long sticks 1/8” x 1/8”. Add sprouts or micro greens and toss together with sesame oil, rice wine vinegar, a splash of soy sauce, grated ginger & lemon zest, sesame seeds, salt & a touch of crushed red pepper if you like the heat.

Serve sliced beef, sticky rice, slaw with wide lettuce leaves, kimchi, gochujang (hot pepper paste) and red chili garlic sauce (like Huy Fong’s) for extra heat, and let each diner build their own wraps.

Dinner 2: Lion’s mane scampi with semolina pasta

A quick, easy meal if you’re getting our bakery shares! We’re stocking your freezer with fresh semolina pasta we extrude in our original restaurant location in Johnson City. This week’s options are spaghetti or fettuccine, both excellent options for this dish. See the recipe linked below, then finish this dish with some fresh fennel, serve with a simple side salad with roasted beets, or add some sauteed greens to your pasta.

https://veggieveggievici.com/lions-mane-mushroom-shrimp-scampi/

If you’re NOT getting our bakery subscriptions, 1—why not, you should :D, 2—try out this made from scratch fettuccine, that really requires no special equipment. First step missing from these instructions is to blanch your basil for 15 seconds (then shock with ice water), to preserve that brighter green color they’re getting. This is an egg based recipe, which is a great binder. Our extruded pasta has no egg. It can be cooked from refrigerator-thawed in boiling water within 4-5 minutes. You can also thaw it, lay it in a single layer on a sheet pan, and air dry it to store in the pantry instead of the freezer.

https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/12067/a-farewell-to-basil-fettuccine/

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Grain Bowl

Lunch/Brunch: Hemp heart grain bowl with sauteed lion’s mane, hearty greens, sesame slaw, fried egg, kimchi, chili garlic sauce, sprouts and/or microgreens

Like lettuce wraps, grain bowls are an easy loose framework to keep plenty variety in your routine without having to get too far from the original framework. We first tried out hemp hearts as a non-dairy ice cream option for a hemp store in Jonesborough. I’ve found they have a role much like chia seed—a quarter cup serving can suppress your appetite throughout the day. These an easily be exchanged for any other grain option. We did this first on our short-lived breakfast menu at Main Street Pizza with a mix of quinoa and arborio rice.

Breakfast 1: Pancakes with blueberry compote and apple butter

If you’re receiving our bakery shares, you have it easy for breakfast this week!

Breakfast 2: Rice pudding with baked cinnamon apples

Snack: Roasted sweet potato wedges, pita & hummus

February's Appalachian Alchemy Herbal Wellness Shares

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The featured herb of the month is ROSE!

In the spirit of Valentine's Day, this CSA is deeply focused on self-love.  It's allllll about chocolate and roses baby!  I am not talking about your traditional store-bought, processed chocolate though.   This month we are tapping directly into the spirit of sacred cacao. 

When consumed in sufficient quantity and in the right setting, cacao is a powerful catalyst for all types of inner work. I have prepared a personal cacao ceremony for you where you will work with this plant medicine to support your healing & growth. When approached in ritual, cacao will offer opportunities to cultivate greater self-love, awareness, and expansion of your consciousness. In addition to this unique offering, I have packed this CSA with beautiful rose medicine and featured rose as the herb of the month.   On one of my hikes this summer, I came across three towering rose bushes at an abandoned home. I've never witnessed such beauty. The branches were weighed down with untouched full pink blossoms. I spent several days revisiting this bush and clipping her flowers for medicine. She gave so freely and it was truly an incredible and spiritual experience.  I invite you to take some time for yourself this month and nurture your body and spirit with all this CSA has to offer.   I wish you love and health. 

Sending love to you and yours, Lesley 

February’s Featured Herb is Rose!

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Cacao Ceremony - Please use the attached instructions to create a personal cacao ceremony for yourself to enjoy when you have an hour or so to dedicate to yourself uninterrupted.  The full ceremonial dose is both packets. If you have not had cacao before, I recommend starting with 1 ounce.  See how it feels and wait at least 30 minutes before consuming more. Please read cautions. 

Rose glycerine - An alcohol-free tincture made with sweet vegetable glycerine. Rose Glycerite acts as a mild nervine, calming anxiety and jitteriness. Many people find it an uplifting and gentle antidepressant.  Take 1-2 droppers as needed during times of emotional overwhelm.  

I Am Beautiful Facial Steam - Transform your skin into a glowing, younger version of itself by introducing herbal facial steam to your beauty routine. The warm steam enhances the blood flow, opens the pores, and helps eliminate the toxins. The botanicals will release all their healing properties through the moisture, and the skin will easily absorb them. Place 2-3 teaspoons of the blend in a bowl and add 3 cups of boiling water. Cover and let steep for 5 minutes. Drape a towel over your head, with eyes closed, lean over the steaming herbs about 10 inches from the edge of the pot. Relax and breathe deeply for 10 minutes. 

Inner Beauty Tea - Try a different approach to healthy skin from the inside out. These herbs assist the body's detox process and support healthy liver, digestive, lymphatic, and kidney function.  Use one teaspoon of tea per 8oz of freshly boiling water, cover, & steep for 10 minutes to maximize benefits. You can use a Keurig cup, french press, tea infuser ball, or boil in water & strain.  Add honey or monk fruit to sweeten and balance the taste. 


Sincerely, Lesley Vernon

CSA Shares February 11-13

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We’re noticing the longer days of sun as we’re starting to see substantial growth again on our winter crops! This season of preparation for warmer weather harvests will go flying by, with tender fruits and veggies returning in no time. For now, we’re enjoying the view of the mountains covered in snow, watching the baby greens come in, while the high tunnel of collards stays warm and humid all day. This year’s upcoming irrigation install project should eliminate the joy we’re having hand watering the high tunnel full of high clay content soil after some pipes have split. Excited over this extra sun, I’ve planted new seed this week! We’re testing a patch in the high tunnel of snow pea seed from last year to see how our germination rate looks, before we set out a larger patch in the next few weeks. Fingers crossed, we’ll be eating either pea shoots in just a few weeks, or we’ll be harvesting peas April and May. Now that we’re back over that ~10 hour of sunlight in a day mark in the year, we can start direct sowing cool crops again like radish, arugula, and pak choi, as long as we keep them covered up to insulate them against the frost.

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Produce shares

Purple, red, or Covington orange sweet potatoes

Rutabagas / Beets / Turnips / Carrots

Fuji, Black Arkansas, or Granny Smith Apples / Bronze fennel or basil

Collards, Kale or Swiss chard / Lettuce / Alfalfa sprouts

Bakery shares

potato bread sandwich loaf with sesame seed

roasted chickpeas with fajita seasoning

blueberry scones / apple pie cupcakes

semolina spaghetti noodles

2x pizza kit with dough, sauce, and cheese.

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High tunnel collard greens coming on strong!

See our southern sour greens recipe below.

Meal Planning Suggestions

Dinner1 : Sirloin cap roast with stewed sour collard greens & sweet potatoes

Traditional meat and potatoes! Trim and dry brine your sirloin cap, aka culotte, with a salt/pepper/herb rub, uncovered in the refrigerator overnight. Set out 2 hours before cooking to start to bring up to room temp. Set the oven to 275F. Tie the roast so any thinner sides don’t dry out while the center fully cooks. Set it up on a rack over a drip pan in the oven, temp to 115F. Heat a heavy bottomed skillet, iron preferred. Melt butter, add aromatics garlic/onion/herbs. Sear off the outside of the tied roast, and bring to 120F, let rest to 125F for med-rare. We cook the whole roast to slice thin and minimize our portions for a meal, allowing for easy reheat by pan frying the thin slices. These leftovers never make it as far as we intend! The thin slices are great for lunch sandwiches, or chopped up for pizza topping.

Stewed sour greens: These can of course be prepared vegetarian or not. Our recipe usually has a few slices of bacon, or a chunk of ham, to get the base started. If you don’t have the meat to start, heat 1 Tbsp bacon grease or veggie oil in a deep pot, add aromatics onion/garlic and diced apples, deglaze with a splash of lager/stock/water. Add chopped collard greens, enough water or stock to cover, and season to taste with salt, molasses, hot sauce or chili flakes for heat, liquid smoke/Worcestershire. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, cover. Wait till the greens are tender after ~30 minutes, and add vinegar to taste.

Good news on those sweet potatoes—we even skip the aluminum foil. Preheat 375F. Rinse clean, poke a few holes, place in a lidded oven safe pot. Check for doneness around an hour—finish interior temp 200F, but you’ll be able to tell when they’re soft. Time will vary on size. Cut open and finish with a drizzle of oil and salt in and out, un-lidded, for the final 15 minutes of cooking.

Dinner 2: Home made pizza with kale, onion, feta, capers, smoked trout, fennel

Proof the frozen dough ball minimum 24 hours in the refrigerator. Use a stovetop smoker with your hood on high to quickly smoke-flavor your fish, or you can do this on a grill outside. No indoor smoker? Consider this set up the same as a steamer basket, and put your wood chips in foil in a lidded pot. It doesn’t take long to infuse the flavor for a “cold smoke”; you don’t need to preserve or even cook the fish here. Tear the kale by hand, removing any tough stems. Add salt and quickly “massage” to tenderize. Brown garlic in olive oil to infuse it with garlic flavor. Preheat oven to 450F. Stretch the pizza dough with a rolling pin and/or the backs of your hands, on a floured (we use semolina) or cornmealed surface. Transfer stretched dough to an iron skillet, cookie sheet, pizza screen, or pizza stone. Brush the dough with the garlic infused olive oil. Layer: Kale, mozzarella, onion, capers, trout, feta, and more mozzarella to hold it all together. Bake ~20 minutes, using top and bottom heating elements to brown the top and crisp the bottom. Let it cool before slicing, and finish with fresh fennel. Serve with side salad with roasted beets & lettuce.

Lunch: Leftover pizza!

Breakfast: Roasted sweet potatoes & scrambled eggs.

And obviously those blueberry scones, warmed, with coffee.

Happy eating! Elise, Jamie & the crew at River Creek Farm

CSA shares February 4 - 6, 2021

Hello RCF CSA members!

On our fourth week of distribution, we’re delivering to predominantly weekly customers. You all are consuming some serious veggie poundage week to week, and we commend you for your dedication! See what’s in this week’s shares and check out our menu planning suggestions below:

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Produce Shares Feb 4 - 6

LETTUCE / KALE / SWISS CHARD

CARROT / SEA BEANS / TOMATOES / APPLES

GREEN & PURPLE DAIKON / BASIL / BEETS

Notes on Produce Shares this week

*some shares received double tomatoes instead of daikons

*sea beans from Charleston SC. What's a sea bean? Tastes like the ocean! A great addition to a salad, or easy as a quick stir fry. Be sure to blanch first to balance out their salty flavor. Check this out for more info,--> https://honest-food.net/sea-beans-salicornia-samphire-saltwort/ and review the preparation method in the suggested recipe below.

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Carrot Cake Cupcakes

with coconut, pineapple & pecans

Bakery Shares this week also include

Rye loaf / parmesan herb croutons / sesame peanut butter bars

Penne or creste rigate pasta / 2 x build your own pizza kit with sauce & cheese

Herbal wellness shares

Specially crafted this month for a celebration of love with cacao and rose. Lesley's including a personal cacao ceremony for each subscription holder along with rose glycerine, a rose and wild flower facial steam, and a rose and herb skin detox tea. This share is all about self love <3<3<3 You’ll see a full post on this soon!

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Hydroponic tomatoes

from Greener Pasture Farm and Hatchery here in Limestone are a sweet surprise, sandwich worthy!

Protein Shares

Your shares are regularly including two rainbow trout fillets from Sunburst Trout Farm in Weaverville, North Carolina. Pork, chicken, and other poultry have been limited access throughout the year, and we’ve found this trout to be a consistent, dependable supply. This is a generational working farm, long ago established on natural mountain trout streams. We generally pan fry for quick preparation, and one filet is easily multiple servings.

Meal Planning Suggestions

Dinner Pan Fried Sunburst Rainbow Trout with walnut pesto butter, rutabaga rice, sauteed sea bean

Make an effort to dry the skin side for best crisp, heat a skillet over medium and add oil. Start skin side down, over medium heat, approx 4-6 minutes, flip and finish 1-2 minutes. Times and temps are estimates based on your range and fish thickness, finish at interior temp 140F and rest to 145F. I started with a sunflower oil and finished with a few tablespoons of ramp butter. Correctly prepared, the fish will loosen from the pan easily when it is ready to flip. Your pesto is prepared standard with basil, olive oil, garlic, parmesan, and walnuts in place of pine nuts. Whip this into unsalted butter and refrigerate to set. Scoop or dollop over hot trout for plating. Rice your rutabagas by following the recipe linked below, and top with a quickly blanched then sauteed sea bean.

https://mealplanaddict.com/2019/03/how-to-make-rutabaga-rice/

Dinner Hoodley Creek Lamb shank bolognese with semolina pasta & WhyNot Farm kale caesar salad

Lamb shanks are best in a braise till the meat falls off the bone. Season shanks overnight with salt, oil & herbs. Brown the meat in a dutch oven & remove, saute aromatics onion/garlic/herbs, deglaze with wine and tomatoes, bring to a boil. The fresh pasta will only take about 4-5 minutes to boil from the refrigerator, or boil from frozen. Pro tip: toss pasta & sauce with a splash of starchy pasta water in a saute pan to bring the pasta & sauce together = more sauce stick! If you're eating kale fresh, give it a quick "massage" with a pinch of salt to start breaking down the fibers. You'll release some deeper flavors in the process. A traditional caeasar dressing can be pulled together with anchovy, lemon & egg, worscestershire, garlic & quality olive oil, s & p, touch of dijon. Finish this with salad with a shaved hard cheese and parmesan herb croutons. Serve with roasted root veggies for a gluten free option.

https://www.taste.com.au/recipes/lamb-shank-ragu-pappardelle-recipe/46u55h3w

https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1013104-classic-caesar-salad

Lunch Honey & red pepper glazed Sunburst Rainbow trout, with sea bean, daikon & cucumber salad

https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/sea-bean-salad-with-daikon-and-cucumber-51199610
https://thefeedfeed.com/thedaleyplate/honey-and-gochujang-glazed-trout


Snack Easy lacto-fermented daikon & carrot

A detailed explanation of the fermentation process

https://www.tyrantfarms.com/how-to-make-pickled-daikon-radishes-lacto-fermented/

And another approach that uses whey to feed the fermentation

https://mouthsofmums.com.au/recipe/carrot-and-daikon-lacto-fermented-pickle/


Breakfast Hemp heart savory porridge with kale, poached egg & kimchi

I started this with browning garlic & onion aromatics in a basic beef broth, stewed the hemp hearts & kale till tender with garlic/onion/ginger/hot pepper sauce/soy/rice wine vinegar/sesame oil, flavoring to taste. I poached the egg in the same pot, one pot wonder! This was a quick prep time, and hemp hearts provide a heavy dose of protein that acts as an appetite suppressant throughout the day. Try with quinoa, chia or rice for congee in place of hemp hearts if you like. You’d be surprised what all kimchi will accent. I add a little for some probiotics instead of a sugary yogurt for breakfast.

We’d love to see what you’re creating….Show us on Facebook or Instagram!

Happy eating!

Elise, Jamie & the crew at River Creek Farm


CSA Shares Jan 28 - 30, 2021

Hello RCF CSA members! Contents for this week's shares:

Produce Shares
hydroponic greens--kale or swiss chard / hydroponic lettuce

mung bean sprouts / apples--Black Arkansas or Granny Smith

carrots / rutabaga / sweet potato purple or Covington / turnip / beet (as pictured left to right below)

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The turnips and rutabagas look very similar, but the turnips are whiter and fatter/shorter round, rutabagas more yellow and elongated some, and are denser.

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Mung bean sprouts

freshest within 5-7 days; best for saute/stir fry

By now you've seen the variety in different sprout textures. Mung bean sprouts are great in stir fries or brothy soups like with ramen. These and all sprouts will have a short shelf life and should be consumed probably within 5-7 days. Again, recipe suggestions below. Most of Friday and all of Saturday deliveries are getting carrots instead of the sprouts. The late harvest means these will be super sweet.

Protein Shares

With a full variety of different proteins these days, there isn't much fluctuation from share to share other than the beef cuts. Currently most shares are going out with higher end beef cuts, including bone in ribeyes, New York Strips, filets, and big poundage roasts. A few years back, I demonstrated a reverse sear method on WJHL's Daytime TriCities cooking segment to promote our annual farm to table dinner, Grown & Gathered. I'll include those steps below.

Bakery Shares

This week's shares include a sourdough sandwich loaf, peanut butter cookies, bachelor's buttons with blackberries, apple stromboli, and a garden foccacia. Pasta this week is creste rigate or spaghetti, and 2x pizza kit is included as usual.

Happy eating!
Elise, Jamie & the crew at
River Creek Farm

Meal Planning Suggestions
CSA subscriber Liz B. has shared this beautiful butternut curry recipe with us, to take on her pile of accumulated butternut! The winter squash is done for the season, but this recipe also makes great use of any root veggies you'll have on hand. While this shot is a beautiful presentation, I probably wouldn't cook this curry in an iron skillet, as some of that metallic taste can end up in your dish. It's best to avoid all acids in an iron skillet.

https://littlespicejar.com/thai-butternut-squash-red-curry/

Lunch 1: Salad with lettuce, crunchy sprouts, roasted beet, apple & pickled onion. Balsamic vinaigrette or dressing of choice. Feta or other cheese if preferred.

Top with brined & roasted split chicken breast. Split chicken breast recipe: brine your poultry overnight by submerging in salt water. Add any other preferred seasonings at this time, and of course plenty of garlic. Next day, pat chicken skin dry, rub with oil and dry seasonings, roast at 425F approximately 45 minutes till interior temp hits 155F, it should come to 165F while resting. Lid on makes for a moister breast, less skin browning, remove the lid for the final 10-15 minutes and use the broiler if preferred to brown the skin.

Lunch 2: Creamy rutabaga, kale & chicken soup with sourdough toast

I followed the above steps to set up my chicken roast, and surrounded the chicken breasts in the pan with garlic cloves, onions, and diced rutabaga. I poured the brine water over the veggies for the roast. When the chicken is finished, the rutabagas should be tender. Remove from the cooking liquid and reserve. Pull the chicken into shreds, mash the rutabaga, and add the liquid back with an immersion blender if on hand. Rutabagas are a great potato substitute, as they contain less starchy sugars. I saved the rest of the mashed rutabaga for dinner.

Dinner 1: Reverse sear ribeye, mashed rutabaga and garlicky sauteed kale.

The goal is to bring the entire steak to nearly finished temperature before introducing the high heat at the end to sear off a golden brown crisp. You should see you'll manage to keep more of the interior temperature true to your desired finish temperature once it's sliced. The best thing you can do for your steak is to open it from its package, salt and season it and leave it uncovered in the refrigerator for minimum 24 hours. You're setting up the first steps of evaporation from the surface of the steak, to improve the browning you'll get in sear, and you're allowing time for the salt to season the steak throughout, instead of only applying to the surface. A thorough explanation and detailed steps here: https://www.seriouseats.com/2017/03/how-to-reverse-sear-best-way-to-cook-steak.html


Dinner 2: Hot and sour soup with cabbage, tofu, straw mushroom & mung bean sprouts. House lo mein

Stir fry lo mein with flank steak, cabbage, carrots, and mung bean sprouts. Rice noodles, buckwheat noodles, or even our semolina spaghetti or fecttucine will work fine in a lo mein stir fry. Thick soy sauce goes far to flavor a dish without adding extra moisture.

Breakfast: Apple beet muffins.

Follow your favorite banana bread recipe, and update it with really ANY preferred fruit or vegetable. Be mindful of how much moisture you are or aren't adding. Beets should be grated and quickly roasted before mixing in to the batter.

Snacks: Beet pickled deviled eggs.

You'll get both the glory of the pickled beet and a beautiful stained egg in the end. Hard boil eggs and peel OR lightly crack the shell for a textured crackle stain. Add beets to a standard refrigerated pickle recipe, and soak your eggs. The longer the soak, the deeper the stain. Finish prepping for standard deviled egg recipe, top with fennel and candied bacon chip.

RCF Shares January 21-23, 2021

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Hello RCF CSA members!

This week's produce shares include:

Red or green cabbage / Sweet potatoes or red potatoes--the very last of the potatoes!

Beets / Rutabagas

Black Arkansas & Granny Smith apples / Crunchy sprouts

Lettuce / Two bunches of greens: Kale, collard greens, or swiss chard

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For those that have been with us through the changing seasons, we're sure you're seeing what we've come to know about winter veggies--the variety is slim with a heavy presence of root veggies and greens while we wait for the return of enough sunlight to grow again. If you weren't getting enough greens this summer, here they are! Are you longing yet for the return of endless summer corn, tomatoes and zucchini? Or have you found your favorite root veggie, hearty green, or winter squash among the variety? We reach out a bit further in our network to other reliable producers for some specialty products to keep a variety that makes sense in the kitchen--the holiday mandarin oranges from Georgia were a nice break from only apples for local fruit, and these sprouts from Tyron NC add great texture to any salad, sandwich or stir fry.

Protein shares--We're pleased to have found a few new suppliers recently to add to the variety. Our last round of pork came from Cave Ridge Farm in Blountville, and the bison is coming from Ararat Farm in Sugar Grove, Virginia. Whole chickens are currently unavailable, but we do still have these split breasts and quarters coming in, at the added cost of extra processing. We've just received our most recent whole beef from Laurel Springs Farm in Marion, so protein shares will soon be getting a fresh round of those higher end beef cuts--big poundage in roasts and thick steaks are coming your way. We've recently prepared a London broil for easy meal prep for quick lunches throughout the week--minimal prep for maximum output, see more detailed meal planning steps for reference below.

Bakery shares include beautiful brioche loaves this week. Cream cheese cookies are ridiculous--these freeze well for a quick thaw/reheat so you don't have to eat all at once. Also....cinnamon rolls, cheesy bread sticks, 6 servings of creste rigate (macaroni) pasta or spaghetti, and pizza kit for 2 home pizzas.

Herbal wellness shares feature lavender this month, perfect timing for the deep of winter. Lesley's included a migraine tincture, magnesium sleep aid, lavender eye pillow, and a calming lavender sage smudge spray, and of course these smell amazing! I'm stocking my cabinet each month and have been glad to have these tools. You can find her on Facebook at Appalachian Alchemy.

Keep an eye on our Facebook page at River Creek Farm if you aren't yet; I'm preparing some posts on how we're making good use of our shares in the kitchen, including our recommendations for pantry staples that make for easy cooking, and other share members are contributing their ideas too!

Happy eating!

Elise, Jamie & the crew at

River Creek Farm



Meal Planning Suggestions:

London Broil: *Marinate minimum 2 hours overnight. Choose your flavor profile, and season at will! Key ingredients: salt to facilitate the transfer of flavor into the meat, and an acid (like vinegar or citrus) to tenderize the lean meat. I always add oil, garlic, onion, vinegar, and a splash of wine or beer and hot chili sauce to brighten it all. Ginger, soy, and sesame for an Asian flavor. Herbs and olive oil for a Mediterranean flavor. Citrus, cilantro and peppers for a Latin flavor. Sorghum molasses and liquid smoke for a Southern meal. Follow by an all over sear and ~ 30 minutes (for a 3 lb roast) under broil at 450F, flipping halfway through, finish interior temperature to 125F for medium rare, slice thin. Refrigerate whole or pre sliced. Slice & quick high heat reheat in a lightly oiled skillet for lettuce wrap, steak sandwiches or breakfast burritos.You can cut these through the thickness into flank steaks for fajitas if that's too much to manage at once--but DO marinade and don't overcook!



Dinner1: Roasted veggie hash, sauteed kale, white rice, kimchi & beef broth.

This broth came from a frozen portion of the remnant of a short rib braise, now seasoned with heavy ginger/garlic/onion. Saute aromatics, add water to frozen fatty braising liquids, bring to a boil, season to taste. I use sesame oil + neutral veggie oil (sunflower preferred) for Asian flavors, and it pairs well with more traditional Southern American flavors. Thoroughly clean, dice root veggies, and roast in a single layer in a heavy pan 475F, approximately 40 minutes, till golden brown, stirring regularly. Last 5 minutes, add oil and season with salt, soy sauce, crushed red pepper, chives. Turn off the oven to hold hot for plating. Tear & destem kale for quick high heat saute with garlic, sesame oil, veggie oil. Convection roast at 450F to crisp the kale to brown, stirring, add salt & sesame seed to finish. White rice--short grain, soak 10-20 minutes, rinse well. One cup rice to one cup water. Bring to boil over medium-high (watch to not boil over), reduce to low, cover/vented, do not stir, lidded 20 minutes till tender. Each of these components can be batched ahead and are easy reheat, or will pair nicely in other meals. We always keep a jar of kimchi on hand--Shin from Korean Taco sells hers downtown Johnson City at the Kimchi Market on West Market St. Asian Market on Fort Henry Drive in Kingsport also carries an excellent product.


Dinner2: Pizza with marinated London broil, caramelized onions, collard green pesto & mozzarella.

Thanks Amy for the pesto recipe suggestion!

Breakfast1: French toast sticks.

Slice brioche into sticks. Beat eggs with half & half or milk, vanilla, salt, brown sugar, cinnamon, splash of brandy, for custard. Soak each stick in custard, pan fry to golden brown in butter. Let cool and refrigerate or freeze for future use--rewarm in the oven at 350F. Serve with baked apples or apple butter.

Breakfast2: Scramble with last night's root veggies & kale.

The last of last week's Everything Seed Bread loaf for toast.


Lunch 1: toasted brioche with sliced London broil, smoked gouda, crunchy sprouts, Greener Pasture's hydroponic lettuce and creamy horseradish vinaigrette.

Lunch 2: lettuce wrap, sliced London broil, white rice, kimchi, crunchy sprouts. Hot & sour beef broth.