Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘fruits’ Category

mike-digs-holes

Mike digging holes spaced two feet apart

So, what’s getting planted at Bee Heaven? Radishes, pole beans and lots and lots of heirloom tomatoes. Stopped by last Friday and saw that most of the prep work had been completed. Irrigation drip lines have been run, connected and leaks mended. Rebar stakes were driven into the ground, and rolls of wire mesh trellising stretched across as a support for the tomatoes. As the plants grow, they will get tied to or weaved into the mesh. When I arrived, Mike and Cassidy were digging holes spaced two feet apart for the tomato transplants.

planning

Jade, Devin and Muriel decide which tomato plants go where

Muriel and her crew Jade and Devin planned which varieties would get planted where. At least 30 varieties of heirloom tomatoes are grown on the farm. Chalk’s, Red Fig, Aunt Ruby’s, and Cherokee varieties are from Slow Food’s Ark of Taste list. Muriel explained that first she groups by types — cherry with cherry, or roma with roma. Then the colors are alternated — yellow, orange, green, red, pink, brown and black (actually very dark red) — instead of grouped together. This tomato rainbow, as Jade described, is carefully mapped out. When it’s time to pick, you know what you’re picking. Last season, several varieties of same-colored tomatoes had been planted next to each other, and it was difficult to tell them apart, especially when the fruit wasn’t completely ripe.

cassidy-plants

Cassidy plants a tomato start

Margie watered the starts (seedlings or baby plants) while they were still in their little plastic pots. Once it was decided which varieties went where, Mike brought over flats of starts, and Cassidy set each plant into its hole and tamped the soil down. Jade followed with watering cans and gave each transplant a good drink. When transplanting tomatoes, remove the bottom leaf or two, and set the plant deeply into the ground, up to the cluster of of leaves. The stem will produce more roots, which results in a stronger plant.

Over in another bed, shunjiku radishes had put up their first leaves, and pole beans were sprouting. Drip irrigation lines bring measured amounts of water directly to the plants. Otherwise, not much is growing yet. Margie explained that she started planting late because rain delayed the bedding process. The CSA season is starting in a couple of weeks and I’m wondering what I’ll find in my box. Rumor has it the first share might have green beans from Homestead Organics and lemongrass from Bee Heaven, among other things. Maybe. Whatever is available, Margie said.

jade-watering

Jade watering tomato transplants

When you get local food from a farmer’s CSA, you get what’s growing at that time, during that part of the season. Each fruit, vegetable and herb takes a certain amount of time to grow and mature. Greens and radishes take a few weeks to grow, so you’ll see a lot of those at the beginning. Carrots, potatoes, beets and onions take longer, so you’ll see those toward the end of the season. The heirloom tomatoes will start appearing in December and January. That’s the experience of eating in season.

Read Full Post »

If you have only one avocado tree in your yard, or a grove full, come get the latest information on the laurel wilt disease. It was spotted in Northern Florida earlier this year, and this summer in a grove in Redland. If the disease spreads, it could wipe out not only commercial groves but also backyard trees. I’ve blogged earlier about this in more detail the post titled Avocados are threatened.

Dr. Jonathan Crane of UF IFAS/TREC will lead the Laurel Wilt Disease and Redbay Ambrosia Beetle Research Symposium on Tuesday, November 3, 2009 from 8:30 AM to 3:00 PM. Download the agenda here (PDF 60 KB).

Location:
Miami-Dade County Cooperative Extension Service Auditorium
18710 SW 288th Street, Homestead, FL 33030-2309.
(305)248-3311

Driving Directions:
Traveling south on the Florida Turnpike (Homestead Extenstion), take Exit #5 (Biscayne Drive / SW 288th Street), and go west for about 5 miles. The Extension Office is at the corner of SW 288th Street and SW 187th Avenue (Redland Road), on the left. It is a one-story, beige, block building.

Read Full Post »

Arazá! What a wonderful name! Too bad the fruit is so tart…. But Farmer Margie told me that Hani Khouri of Redland Mediterranean Organics was going to make ice cream with it. Robert Barnum confirmed he had sold some fruit. Hot on the trail, I spoke with Hani and he promised that arazá ice cream would be available at the Edible Garden Festival at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.

Arazá ice cream

Arazá ice cream

So I braved sporadic rain showers on Saturday, sidled up to Hani’s tent and asked, “Got arazá?” Yes, he said, and his son Jad handed me a container from the cooler. The only ingredients are arazá, agave nectar, and fresh goat milk. The ice cream is pale yellow in color, sweet and tart at the same time, with a “yogurt-like flavor in the back as a finish,” as Hani described. From the first spoonful I was in a swoon, lost in the blend of sweet-tart-tangy flavors and the smooth, creamy texture. Almost forgot to photograph it, that’s why there’s some missing in the picture. It’s now my new favorite flavor. Sorry, mango-orchid. Sorry, papaya.

Hani started heating organic safflower oil in the big fry pan to make falafel, and I realized that a) I hadn’t had lunch and b) I hadn’t eaten his falafel in ages. Time to remedy that.

First came the flatbread, smeared with a dab of tahini sauce green with mint. Then three golden nuggets of falafel were topped with amba, fermented pickled green mango flavored with fenugreek and mustard seeds. “It’s spicy,” Hani warned, adding a small amount. (He claims that Farmers Margie and Gabriele are addicted to his amba.) I like how it added an exotic bite. Then came pickled turnips (bright pink from beets), thinly sliced cucumber and chopped tomato. Uniquely flavorful, this style of falafel is lighter than what I’ve tried elsewhere, and was told those particular toppings are quite popular in Israel.

Making falafel

Assembling falafel with pickled turnips

Redland Mediterranean Organics has teamed up with Sous Chef 2 Go and is sharing a tent at the Jackson Memorial Hospital farmers market. It happens on Thursdays in front of the Alamo building. Go look for their tent at lunchtime. The arazá ice cream is waiting to meet your taste buds. Also new on the menu is chicken roll — chicken seasoned with sumac (which gives it a cinnamon-like taste), rolled in dough and baked. And don’t forget the goat cheese!

[Note: Hani Khouri called me on Nov. 11 to tell me that he’s no longer selling at this market due to a sharp increase in vendor fees. He and Sous Chef 2 Go are partnering in a new lunch menu at the shop in Kendall. Look for my review coming soon.]

The Jackson Memorial Foundation Green Market @ Alamo Park
1611 NW 12th Ave., Miami
Inside the JMH Campus
Open Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Read Full Post »

Arazá the "Amazonian pear"

Arazá the "Amazonian pear"

A box of arazá (eugenia spititouta stipitata) showed up in Farmer Margie’s barn last week. Robert Barnum had dropped it off. The fruit is round and yellow, with soft velvety skin like a peach but smoother — “smooth as a baby’s behind,” as Robert described. Arazá is very soft when ripe, smells sweet and perfumey but tastes incredibly tart.

Farmer Gabriele stopped by and tried to eat a whole fruit but failed at the attempt. “It got me in the glands in my neck,” she said as she pointed to the sides of her throat. Each fruit has twice as much vitamin C as one orange, so it is said on the Internet.

Because of the fruit’s tartness, you don’t eat it fresh out of hand, Robert cautioned, and suggested that it might be better used to make a bebida (drink), daiquiris or ice cream. Here’s a recipe from The Cantankerous Chef himself:

Arazá Bebida

Cut up fruit, removing seeds and calyx. The skin is thin and can remain. Put fruit in blender and puree. You can freeze some in ice cube trays if you aren’t going to use it all at once. Add banana (to thicken it), sugar (or honey or agave) to taste, ice, and water and blend thoroughly.

For sorbet, leave out the banana and freeze the mixture. For daiquiris, add rum. For ice cream, add heavy cream and freeze.

Robert has been growing arazá at Possum Trot Nursery for the last 30-40 years. He learned about it on a trip to Costa Rica visiting friends who have a grove and run the Tiskita Lodge. (The fruit originally comes from the Ecuadorean rainforest.) Robert brought back seeds and planted them among the avocados in his grove, where the shrubby understory trees tolerate partial shade. They bear three or four crops a year. The trees are blooming now and will bear fruit again in about four months. If you want to buy arazá fruit, you can give Robert a call at 305-235-1768.

Read Full Post »

Heirloom tomato starts

Heirloom tomato starts

The Edible Garden Festival is coming up this weekend Oct. 24-25 at Fairchild Garden. Farmer Margie and her crew will be there, selling starts of heirloom tomatoes, basil, arugula, garlic chives, lemongrass and chard so you can plant them in your garden. (She promises to have an even bigger selection at Ramble next month.)

Heirloom varieties available for this month’s event are mostly small and plum-fruited types. The larger, beefsteak types won’t be ready for another three weeks. I’ve met heirloom tomato fans who explain they buy starts year after year from Redland Organics because there are certain varieties (like black tomatoes, such a deep dark red it looks almost black) that only Margie sells.

You can also get fruits that are in season now: avocados, carambolas, perhaps bananas, cas guava, and antidesma (bignay). Also available are the usual offerings of organic eggs in lovely shades of browns — and even light green ones from auracana hens — and wildflower honey from hives kept on the farm.

====================================

Events presented by growers or members of Redland Organics CSA:

LECTURES
Saturday, October 24
12:00 p.m. Growing Organic Heirloom Tomatoes, Margie Pikarsky
1:00 p.m. Edible Landscaping in Paradise, Gabriele Marewski

Sunday, October 25
4:00 p.m. Extreme Edible Landscaping: Urban Homesteading!, Melissa Contreras

GARDENING DEMONSTRATIONS

Sunday, October 25
10:00 a.m. Slow Food School Gardens, Hunter Reno
1:30 p.m. Square Foot Gardening with Kids, Hunter Reno

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »