Margie’s crew has been picking tomatoes as they ripen, and it looks like there will be some at market this Sunday. Don’t know how much the poor little beat up plants will bear or for how long. Some heirloom tomatoes are hanging on by a thread, but other varieties still look fairly healthy. If you want to get your tomato fix, now is your chance. Also, a lot of green tomatoes that dropped off the plants will be available. I hear there’s all kinds of ways to prepare green tomatoes — dipped in batter and fried, baked in a pie, or made into jam or relish.
Archive for the ‘photo’ Category
Heirloom tomatoes at market
Posted in fruits, market, photo, vegetables, tagged farmers market on January 23, 2010| 2 Comments »
CSA share: week 8
Posted in csa, fruits, photo, vegetables, tagged csa on January 22, 2010|
Surviving the freeze
Posted in farm, photo, weather, tagged Bee Heaven Farm, Cliff Middleton, Dan Howard, Gabriele Marewski, Homestead Organics, Margie Pikarsky, Paradise Farms, Possum Trot Nursery, Robert Barnum, Three Sisters Farm on January 19, 2010|
Have you thawed out yet? We had two weeks of record-breaking cold temperatures this month. It seemed each night a new low was recorded, and the cold went on for the longest stretch anyone could remember. “I’ve been down here for 40 years and I’ve never seen a cold snap like this,” marveled Cliff Middleton of Three Sisters Farm. And this long cold spell did break yet another record. Beginning January 2nd, we had 12 days in a row of temps dropping below 50 degrees, and came one day short of breaking the record of 13 days straight, set in Miami in Jan/Feb 1940, according to the National Weather Service.
The weekend of Saturday January 9th brought historic lows that were well below freezing. And by the wee hours of Monday January 11, hopes of any chance of crops escaping harm died as the temperature dropped into the high to mid 20s and stayed there for several hours. That was long enough to destroy cold-sensitive plants.
The growers of Redland Organics got hit hard by the freeze this past week. Dan Howard of Homestead Organics had five fields planted with green beans. He watered the crops for days to protect them from the cold. But early Monday Jan. 11th, the temperature fell as low as 28 degrees on his front porch, with the coldest temps around 4 – 5 a.m., and it stayed below freezing until dawn.There was no fighting it. All 22 acres of green beans were damaged.
“Farmers gamble with the weather and are risk takers,” Dan said. Sometimes they gamble and lose. Because of the freeze, Dan says he lost $100K in sales. He has crop insurance, but since beans are not a specialty crop, insurance will only pay for seed and fertilizer and not much more. He’s all ready to replant, though. “Don’t have much of a choice otherwise,” he laughed. The Friday before the last freeze, he cultivated one field, preparing the soil for planting. And just the other day he loaded his truck with bean seeds and was ready to start over again.
Cliff Middleton lost all of his above ground crops, but not as many root crops. He fought the cold by “basically saturating the land with water,” he explained. “But that many hours of cold will kill plants. Callaloo has a very low tolerance for cold and is all burned. The results of the damage will last for a year. All the fruit trees will react to this.”
Robert Barnum of Possum Trot got patchy frost in his grove, and is concerned about long-term damage to his sensitive tropical trees. He grows 300 types, and caimito, anona and guanabana are the most cold sensitive. “The cold will kill cambium, the growing layer between the bark and the wood,” Robert explained. Branches or a trunk less than four inches in diameter will die more easily, depending on how cold the temperature falls and for how long. “A tree looks OK for a while, and then the damage shows up later. Some damage takes months to show up. Lots of things can show up. Buds might not form, or form small, or not set fruit and drop off,” he said. Sounds like there might not be as much fruit this summer, but time will tell.
It was simply too cold for too long, and pole beans and heirloom tomatoes at Bee Heaven Farm didn’t make it. Margie Pikarsky and her crew covered them up with Reemay (floating row cover) for two weeks. The plants made it though the first freeze right after New Year’s, and at first it seemed like they would survive the cold. But Reemay wasn’t effective on that fateful Monday morning. Pole beans, including the dappled Dragons Tongue beans blogged about on Mango & Lime are pretty much all dead. Leaves are burned and withered, and it’s uncertain if the plants will have enough energy to grow new leaves and blooms. The heirloom tomatoes are also pretty much destroyed. Don’t expect too many heirloom tomatoes this season at the farmers market. Read more about the freeze at the Bee Heaven Farm blog. Not all was lost, though. I saw carrots, radishes, kohlrabi and dill looking no worse for the wear.
Gabriele Marewski of Paradise Farms covered her raised vegetable beds with Reemay and her vegetables survived, along with the microgreens. But the edible flowers that she is known for did not. “They were vining too much and it was almost impossible to cover them all,” she explained. “The flowers are a total loss.” Crop insurance doesn’t cover edible flowers or microgreens, and considers them “experimental,” and the quantities she grows are too small to get coverage. Oyster mushrooms slowed down because of the lower humidity, but Gabriele expects a big flush of growth as it warms up, and plenty of mushrooms in time for market this Saturday.
[Note: Heard that Worden Farm had major losses and is replanting fast and furious. They had much colder temps for much longer up in Punta Gorda. Hope to get an interview with them soon.]
So, for the next month or two, pickings might be slim when it comes to local produce. You just may not find some things (like beans) that you got earlier in the season, at least not for a while; and other things (like heirloom tomatoes) may not be available at all or in very limited quantities. Despite that, do make it a point to support your local growers when you shop at farmers markets and grocery stores. They need your help to bounce back from their losses.
Pick a peck of piper betel
Posted in farm, photo, tagged Possum Trot Nursery, Robert Barnum on January 18, 2010| 9 Comments »
Fans of piper betel, rejoice! It survived the freeze somewhat well. Robert Barnum told me that the lower leaves got burned by the cold, but the ones higher up survived. Piper betel is a shrubby, branching, leafy vine that climbs as high as the treetops. Robert has to climb up a tall ladder to harvest it from the higher levels. The piper also spreads from tree to tree like ground cover. It appears not to damage the tree it’s on at all, just uses it as a support.
Piper betel is a member of the black pepper family, and is used usually as an outer wrapper, or cooked or steamed. Frodnesor at Food For Thought used it successfully as a wrapper for a Vietnamese dish a few weeks ago. Bill at Tinkering With Dinner combined it in a stir fry with lemongrass and sugar, and got a taste of root beer. Fascinating! But don’t try it raw. La Diva Cucina discovered that the hard way when she put it in a salad a few weeks ago. Cooked is so much better, darling! Robert advises to use piper where you want a smoky, sausagey flavor. He uses it in various ways — as a layer in lasagna, cooked with greens, or blanched first to use as a wrap for sushi rolls. He also created a recipe where he dips the piper betel leaf into tempura batter and fries it.

Robert Barnum stands in front of a tree covered by piper betel. Picture taken before the last freeze.
Medicinal uses of piper betel:
The betel leaf is used in a number of traditional remedies for the treatment of stomach ailments, infections, and as a general tonic. It is often chewed in combination with the betel nut (Areca catechu), as a stimulatory. Some evidence suggests that betel leaves have immune boosting properties as well as anti-cancer properties. [Note: this is NOT the areca that you can get at Home Dept. If you do want to grow it, Robert has it.]
……….
Broad Spectrum Antibacterial Activity of Betel
One such medicinal plant studied was Piper betle L. Results showed that among the 300 plant species screened, P. betle maintained a broad spectrum antibacterial activity against all the test pathogens, such as Ralstonia, Xanthomonas, and Erwinia. It was also revealed that the P. betle solvent extract had more superior action than streptomycin
Juicing clementines
Posted in farm, fruits, photo, tagged Muriel on January 17, 2010| 3 Comments »
Friday afternoon, the barn was flooded with clementines from Green Groves. CSA members got fruit with pretty skin, but there was still plenty that had blotches from the cold that didn’t look as nice. The fruit inside was still good to eat — but it was way more than everyone could or would want to eat.
So, time to pull out the very useful antique juicer (farm manager Muriel blogged about using it here on the Bee Heaven Farm blog).
The sections were squeezed and drained and squeezed some more to get every drop of juice, which was poured into ice cube trays for freezing. It can be used as an ingredient or reconstituted into juice.
The peels weren’t wasted either. Intern Michael trimmed the bad spots and then sliced the peels carefully into thin strips. Those went on dryer racks to get dehydrated. The dried peels can be used in stir fries, soups and other dishes where you might want a bit of citrus zing.
Not sure what happened to the squeezed fruit pulp. Perhaps its destiny was the compost heap, but I’m sure that with a little imagination, one could find a delicious use for it also!

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