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Archive for the ‘food’ Category

Why people join or leave the CSA

People sign up because:

  • They want to get really fresh food straight from the farms, not food that’s been in warehouses, distribution centers and back storage (like buying clubs and co-ops get).
  • They want organic/pesticide-free food.
  • They want to support local farmers.
  • They eat a lot of veggies.
  • Their doctor told them to.
  • They want a ‘greener’ footprint.
  • They’ve been in CSAs in other parts of the country (this category increasing).
  • They were in a buying club or a co-op and realized all they’re getting there is the same exact stuff they can get at the grocery store.

People leave because:

  • They find out they really DON’T eat as many veggies as they thought.
  • They move away.
  • They are uncomfortable with surprises, because they don’t know in advance what they are going to get.
  • They want more of what they call ‘traditional veggies’ — meaning the basic 10 things they buy at the grocery store, some of which don’t grow here, or only during a limited time (in season), and they can’t understand why they can’t get, for example, onions or tomatoes or potatoes at the start of the season (and all season long!).
  • They’re stuck in the grocery store ‘pretty food’ paradigm (ooh, it has a bad spot, throw it out!) and can’t accept ‘real food’ complete with buggies (extra protein, anyone?), and soil (vegetables grow in dirt? can’t we get rid of it?).

Thanks to Farmer Margie for sending me her rant!

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Thyme for tilapia and lime

Sleeps wit' da fishes

Sleeps wit' da fishes

The other Saturday I rambled down to Bee Heaven to pick up a tilapia and some callaloo for dinner. If you’ve never done that, you’re missing out on some good eating. The fish are ridiculously fresh. They were swimming early that same morning just before getting put on ice. You won’t eat anything fresher unless you catch it yourself. When you order a tilapia, you get the whole fish. It’s your job to scale, gut and clean it before cooking, but that isn’t too difficult to do. The average weight per fish is about 1.5 pounds, maybe a bit more.

The tilapia is farm raised by Wayne and Carmen of American Viking Aqua Farms, a mom-n-pop operation right around the corner from Bee Heaven. Although the fish is a bit more expensive than what you can get at at the grocery store, it has been raised without chemicals. Technically they are not organic because the fish food isn’t, though Wayne and Carmen want to move in that direction. They also use a biofilter to clean their water, and have a natural filtration system which lets them use the nutrients to grow native mangroves for use in bioremediation projects.

Plans for Mr. Fish were to roast it whole. It was scaled, gutted and cleaned, then its cavity stuffed with slices of lime and branches of fresh thyme, and more lime slices on top. Was baked it in the oven at 350 for about 20 minutes (more or less), until the flesh flaked when stuck with a knife.

Mr. Fish meets his demise

Mr. Fish meets his demise

Mmmmmm good eating! The flesh was tender, moist and delicate. Limes on top kept it moist, and the flavors of lime and thyme permeated. Well, maybe a bit too much lime… will try with lemon next time, and use a bit less, and add garlic or onion. I don’t pretend to be a chef, or even a halfway good cook, but I have my moments and this was one of them. Your meal is only as good as the ingredients!

If you got a tilapia how did you prepare it? Feel free to share your recipe in the comments section below!

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If you attended the End of Summer Brunch, you most certainly encountered Ladybird, a friend of Robert’s who was assisting in the serving line and wherever else needed. Her bubbly personality and helpfulness were hard to miss. She had such a wonderful time that she wrote a poem about the brunch and sent it in (see below).

What did you like about brunch? What do you think could have been improved? Farmer Margie and Robert would like to know, so the next event at Possum Trot is an even better experience. Please post your thoughts in the comments below. If you prefer, you can send them to me at redlandrambles(at)gmail.com and I will forward them.

Brunch centerpiece

Basil, ginger and starfruit centerpiece

END OF SUMMER BRUNCH POEM
by ROBBIN “LADYBIRD” HINEZ

Under a hammock of exotic tropical fruit trees
Partners with Margie of the heaven of bees
An organic summer brunch fit for a king.
The humble chef is Robert of Possum Trot Nursery
Everyone is greeted with lemongrass tea and passion fruit punch drunk pleasantly.
Then they were seated at a long table set for ninety.
The centerpiece of basil and red ginger arranged beautifully,
The buffet was set so tastefully, smoked eggs and a scramble with pesto from the pepper tree
A goat cheese topping torched and assorted fruit salad of many varieties.
The muffins were freshly baked with yogurt sauce
Accompanying boiled jackfruit seed salted lightly
Everything was incredibly tasty. Taste the bignay antedesma wine if you please
Robert, we so appreciate your outstanding cretivity.
The flavors you introduced inspired under the hammock of tropical fruit trees.

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Robert Barnum, the owner of Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery, was testing and fine-tuning his recipes for weeks before The End of Summer Brunch. He’s a self-taught chef who has developed a long list of interesting dishes with unique tastes and texture combinations, using tropical fruits that grow in his nursery. He’s also created The Possum Experience, which includes dinner and tour of the grove. The Brunch was similar to the Experience, in case you were wondering.

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert was up at 3:30 in the morning the day of the brunch, making last minute preparations along with his assistants. Farmer Margie and her crew came over at 7:30 to help. The oven in the main kitchen gave out, so roasting mixed root vegetables was moved to the wood burning oven and smoker outside. It was puffing merrily when I arrived at 9:30. Cheesemaker Hani Khouri also came by, and that was his goat cheese and labneh that you ate. A long table with chairs was placed under the trees, set with centerpieces of basil, carambola and red ginger aka shampoo ginger. Nearby was the tent with beverages — a blend of cas, passion and carambola juices, lemongrass tea, a pitcher of honey-water to sweeten the tea, and water for the timid.

On the porch, a buffet was set up with all the dishes, and guests lined up to be served. The menu has been blogged elsewhere. The guests enjoyed themselves, and the scene under the trees looked like something from a French film. My favorite dishes were the broiled avocado with scrambled eggs, allspice muffins with honeyed labneh, and the fruit salad. That salad had a happy jumble of ingredients — carambola, longan, banana, red grapefruit, mango and jakfruit. (Have been getting the smoked eggs all summer, and they are great for egg salad with celery and sweet onion.) For nibbles, there were boiled jakfruit seeds that tasted like chestnut. Robert simmered them four times at 45 minutes each time, which made them quite edible, the result of another happy accident in the kitchen.

Halfway through the meal, Robert realized he needed to set out his homemade wine. He dusted off several jugs of bignay (or antidesma) fruit wine he made himself. It tasted like a fruity merlot, and later I combined it with cass juice for and incredible taste of deep sweet and bright tart. The bignay tree is native to Africa (according to Robert) and grows well here. The wine was made from its berries, which grow in clusters and is one of the few fruits that starts green, turns white, then bright red to purple-black as they ripen.

Tour of Possum Trot

Tour of Possum Trot

After the meal came the tour of Possum Trot. Most of the guests took a lap around the 40 acre property with Robert pointing out various kinds of trees growing there, and other interesting things. (I couldn’t help but notice that he was walking around in bare feet!) He has several macadamia nut trees (a favorite of squirrels), carambola, canistel, mango, avocado, citrus (now dying from greening disease) and plenty others. When I walk through his grove I think this is what the Garden of Eden might have been like… maybe. A tropical vine has infested a section of the grove and covered trees. Robert sure could use volunteers to pull the vines out. If you want to come and help — and most likely get fed a fabulous lunch– let him know!

So I waddled home with a full belly and a sack full of basil recycled from the centerpieces. There was plenty left, and I’m surprised that people didn’t ask to take it with them. Whipped up a big batch of pesto, and it’s going on the smoked eggs and other things I’m eating this week.

Reservations for The Possum Experience:

Robert Barnum
The Cantankerous Chef
Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery
14955 S.W. 214 St.
Miami FL 33187-4602
305-235-1768

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Margie, Dan, Robert, Muriel, Meghan

Margie, Dan, Robert, Muriel, Meghan

Last week Robert Barnum of Possum Trot Nursery invited several people over for a test tasting of several dishes on the brunch menu. Farmer Margie brought along intern Muriel; and Meghan the forager, along with Farmer Dan Howard and myself, gathered at the table.

Broiled avocados stuffed with scrambled eggs and goat cheese

Broiled avocados stuffed with scrambled eggs and goat cheese

The avocado half stuffed with scrambled eggs was unique, to say the least. The eggs were speckled with minced betel leaf that gave a sort-of peppery flavor. It was topped with Hani Khouri’s goat cheese, that browned slightly. This concoction is Robert’s own recipe. The betel leaf came from a tree on his property.

Smoked eggs

Smoked eggs

Speaking of eggs, don’t miss out on the smoked eggs. Robert puts the eggs in his open-air smoker and lets them cook for several hours. The egg shell gets a rich brown color, and the inside is hard cooked, with a mild smoky flavor.

The allspice muffins tasted like spice cake. Be sure to spread honeyed labneh (also from Hani) over the muffins as a sweet-tangy topping. The passion fruit sorbet sweetened with agave is a delightful finish to the meal. The taste of the fruit comes through clearly, and the agave takes the edge off its tartness. The passion fruit and allspice were also grown at Possum Trot.

After eating, we took a stroll to where the tables will be set up under trees off to the side of the house. It’s a shady and breezy spot, and should be a delightful place to dine.

WARNING! Do not eat the fruit of this tree!

WARNING! Do not eat the fruit of this tree!

Not too far off is the African bushman poison tree. Its fruit looks enticing, like plump olives waiting to be gobbled down. But Robert explained that the tiniest nibble can actually kill an elephant. This tree will have a fence around it on the day of the brunch, but I thought I’d give warning.

I’ll be at the brunch taking photos and video of the event. Will post a link where you can view and download pictures.

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