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Archive for the ‘farm’ Category

The dinner table is perhaps the most powerful and delicious place to plant the seeds of change; the return to simple truths, change, and wisdom all go hand in hand. Our first step toward change can be to pause when we take our first bite and think about our connections with food. Aha! Understanding this connection is the essence of the Earth Dinner.
– Theresa Marquez, founder of Earth Dinner

Earth Dinner is a new holiday tradition meant to celebrate Earth Day. It was started four seven years ago by Organic Valley and Chefs Collaborative as a way to gather friends and loved ones around the table for a fresh, seasonal meal made of local ingredients. The focus of the Dinner is to have a meaningful conversation about the food — where it came from, how it was grown or harvested, and who grew it. So it was only natural that farmer Margie Pikarsky and grower/chef Robert Barnum would organize their own Earth Dinner,  held the weekend after Earth Day.

Earth Dinner at Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery.

Call it extreme locavore. The challenge was to source all ingredients — except for flour and olive oil — from what was available locally. And so the hunting and foraging began. Chef Michael Schwartz  donated wild boar he had hunted himself together with local fisherman George Figueroa of Trigger Seafood, who donated cobia. Hani Khouri provided cheese and milk from his goats. Large beautiful heirloom tomatoes came from grower Teena Borek. Callaloo came from Three Sisters Farm, and a variety of herbs and vegetables from Bee Heaven Farm. Winemaker Peter Schnebly donated two kinds of local fruit wine. And a plethora of fruit came from Robert’s own grove.

At the wood smoker, Weber bastes wild boar and Sadie checks multi-color potatoes.

Margie and her crew volunteered to help clean and cook, and Robert’s friends pitched in. Preparations took days and went up to the last minute. When I arrived an hour before dinner, a plume of blue smoke chugged from the wood smoker outside the house, as wild boar and multi-color potatoes cooked inside. Both kitchens were humming with activity as helpers chopped, stirred, snipped and tossed. In the dining room, two long tables were covered with white linen and glittered with fine china, glassware and silver. Centerpieces of mixed flowers — food for local bees — from Bee Heaven Farm graced the tables. Glass goblets were stocked with braided breadsticks that had been baked in the wood oven and looked like branches plucked from the grove. Even the sea salt was local, produced by a small company in the Florida Keys.

Donna and James Patrick smell crushed bay rum leaves.

While there was still daylight before dinner, Robert offered guests a short tour of his 40 acre property. Everything he grows is useful in some way. He pointed out bay rum, lemon bay and citronella outside the house, and invited guests to crush leaves and smell different scents. Jaboticaba was nearby, with small, unripe berries growing on its trunk. It bears fruit three or four times a year. Robert harvests the berries for wine, of which we got a taste later in the dinner. Guests strolled through the grove and saw macadamia, mango, and lychee trees (to name just a few of the edibles that I recognized).

<< to be continued >>

Robert Barnum holds up a jaboticaba fruit.


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Easter Brunch in Paradise

Come celebrate Easter at Paradise Farms! Join Farmer Gabriele Marewski on her farm for a Healthy Easter Egg Hunt, a leisurely farm tour led by Gabriele, followed by a delicious brunch by Chef Kira Volz.

The brunch features: fresh mango and orange juices, mimosas, homemade organic yogurt with local berries, herb roasted potatoes, marinated heirloom tomatoes, Paradise Farms organic salad greens, malabar spinach and caramelized onion breakfast strada, and finishing with spiced coconut cake for dessert.

Farm tour begins at 11 am with brunch at 11:30.  Visit Paradise Farms to make your reservation. Price $43 plus tax and Google fee. Children under 12 for $15. Babies free.

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Season is ending

Pole beans are finished for the season.

It’s nearing the end of the CSA season, and next week will be the last share. And Bee Heaven Farm is looking like it. The rows of veggies are shaggy with weeds. Beans are done, they’re all dried up. Tomato plants are wilting and turning brown from heat and bugs, and there’s less fruit on the vines. There’s a few things left to pick — collards, hot peppers and berries.

Clusters of ripening Mysore raspberries dare you to pick them. Watch out for thorns!

Mysore raspberries are coming in fast and heavy. As the fruit ripen they turn from reddish to a dark purple. The ripest ones fall into your hand at the slightest tug. They grow in clusters along thin branches covered in sharp thorns, similar to rose bushes. It’s easy to get caught in those thorns if you reach too far. One would need to wear some kind of armor to wade deep into the brambles to pick all the ripe berries.

Baby avocados are about two inches long so far. They’ll grow to weigh two to three pounds.

Avocados are growing rapidly. Last week the fruit were a little bit bigger than an olive. This week they have doubled in size. The trees are loaded and so far it looks like it will be a good season. Look for an email from Farmer Margie this summer when the avocados are available.

A bed of kale taken over by weeds.

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Green hitchhiker

Mmmmmm yum parsley!

This morning the farm crew was breaking up large bunches of parsley into smaller bunches, so all shares would get an equal amount. Sadie found a green hitchhiker in one of the bunches, and set it aside for me to photograph. She was very excited to find it. There’s a lot of speculation whether this is a swallowtail or a monarch caterpillar. Any ideas?

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Earth Dinner Celebration
A Possum Trot Experience

Featuring local seasonal organic produce from Redland farms

Saturday, April 30th, 6 p.m.
at Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery

Guests will be treated to a brief farm tour followed by a 7-course farm dinner prepared by Possum Trot owner, the “Cantankerous Chef” Robert Barnum, using ingredients exclusively* grown or produced within the South Florida Greater Everglades Foodshed (Lake Okeechobee south to Key West).
*except flour & olive oil

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Okeechobee wild boar, Florida grass-fed beef, wild-caught local fish
Redland grown seasonal vegetables and fruit
Local tropical fruit wines
Goat cheese

Producers: Bee Heaven Farm, Hani’s Mediterranean Organics, Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery, Three Sisters Farm, Miguel Bode Honey, Florida Keys Sea Salt, Schnebly Redland’s Winery

Wild-caught fish and boar donated by Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink and Trigger Seafood

Part of a series of Earth Dinners sponsored by The Chefs Collaborative and Organic Valley

Get Tickets Now! $130 per person.
Attendance limited. Advance reservations required by April 25th.

Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery is located in the Redland farming area south of Miami, next door to the Monkey Jungle.

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