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Posts Tagged ‘Paradise Farms’

Brunch in Paradise

Dinner, Lunch and now Brunch! Paradise Farms will be starting a beautiful Brunch In Paradise on Sunday, February 6th with renowned Chef Kira Volz. Farm tour is at 10:30 am and brunch at 11:00 am.

Chef Kira is an artist in the kitchen, and expresses her talent with cuisine in the most beautiful and delicious ways. Enjoy fresh greens, and other local organic goods along with mimosas and fresh eggs! Have fun creating your own parfait at the parfait bar with fresh seasonal fruit and homemade organic yogurt.

Visit Paradise Farms to purchase tickets online.  Price $43 plus tax and Google fee.  Children under 12 for $15.  Children under 2 are free.

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The new season of the legendary Dinner in Paradise series opens Sunday, Dec 12th.  Each dinner features hors d’oeuvres, a sunset tour of Paradise Farm, and a five-course menu prepared by an all-star line up of some of the best chefs in town.

The first dinner features the talents of four chefs — Chef Timon Balloo from Sugarcane, Chef David Bracha from The River Seafood and Oyster Bar, Chef Jason Prevatt from the Loews Hotel, and Chef Frederic Delaire from several Michelin rated French restaurants. World class wines will be paired by Sommelier Shari Gherman.

A portion of the proceeds this season will be donated to the non-profit organization Urban Oasis Project. Members and volunteers plant food gardens in underprivileged neighborhoods, and operate the brand new Liberty City Farmers Market.

To purchase Dinner tickets online, go to the Paradise Farms site.

To make donations to the Urban Oasis Project, click here.

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A lot was going on at the Fairchild Farm & Garden Festival. Here’s another post from the Festival, about growing your own oyster mushrooms.

On Saturday April 24th, Gabriele Marewski and Drake Kurlander of Paradise Farms were set up for a talk on her oyster mushroom operation. “Growing mushrooms is an art and a science,” Gabriele said as she introduced Drake, an FIU student with a passion for mushrooms. He works closely with Benjamin Masope, the mushroom expert from Ghana who is responsible for successfully starting Gabriele’s mushroom production. (You can read more about his story in the April issue of edible South Florida.) Here are my notes from Drake’s presentation.

Drake Kurlander

“Anyone can grow mushrooms once the process is understood,” Drake said. He went on to explain the life cycle of mushrooms. You start with spores, which germinate, grow in substrate and result in the fruit body, or edible part of the mushroom. Spores are in the air everywhere. Spores are both male and female, and once they germinate, they make a simple structure called hypha that replicates itself, combines, and creates a network called mycelium. This network colonizes, and two and a half to three months later, produces pin or baby mushrooms. From that stage, it takes only two to three days for a pin mushroom to grow to full size. A full grown fruit body (as the edible part of the mushroom is called) has a hollow structure full of spores, and it can reach out and put spores in the atmosphere. A fruit body will also grow by cloning. You can sever it and put it in substrate (special growing medium) and it will expand.

The production process on the farm follows a specific process. The growers start the spore culture in a petri dish. Next, they sterilize grain (they use organic chicken feed at Paradise) under high heat and crush it. The grain, or primary substrate, is inoculated with spores and incubated in jars. While it’s growing, Drake and Benjamin mix up the secondary substrate — a top secret formula! — and put it into bags. Those go in the pasteurizer which cooks the substrate at a high heat to kill any wild spores which might dominate the mushroom spores. The spawn is then inoculated into the sterilized substrate and left to grow in a chamber which circulates humidified air. “The challenge is to maintain sterility in the grow room,” Drake explained. “Air has fungi and contaminants floating in it.” Currently they are harvesting 200 to 300 pounds a week, and want to increase production to 800 pounds a week.

Oyster mushroom starter kits. Each bag of substrate is inoculated with mycelium. Just add water and light, and wait for signs of growth!

If you’re adventurous and want to grow your own oyster mushrooms, Gabriele has starter kits available. The kits consist of a large bag of secondary substrate inoculated with mycelium, and a larger bag with perlite. Drake explained the home growing process with the starter kits. Soak the perlite with water, strain, then set the bag of colonized material in it. The water provides humidity that the mycelium needs to grow and set fruit. “Open it up and air it out every day and mist with water. After a week or two, you will see the mushrooms start growing.” The best place to grow is on a windowsill or near a source of light. “The mycelium need light to trigger pin set,” Drake explained. He recommended that you harvest all the mushrooms at one time, or it will shut down growth and start to rot. Once picked, the fruit body growth will start again, and you can re-harvest several times. Click here for a copy of Paradise Farms’ mushroom growing instructions. (If you want to learn more, Drake recommended this book — The Mushroom Cultivator: A Practical Guide to Growing Mushrooms At Home by Paul Stamets.)

The starter kits are available for $40. Each bag or inoculated substrate will last for about four to six months of growing, and you can harvest six to twelve pounds of mushrooms from it. Gabriele pointed out this is a pretty good deal, since mushrooms retail for $10-12 per pound. You can order a mushroom growing kit from Paradise Farms, and pick it up from Benjamin where he works at the Crackerman booth at the Coconut Grove Farmers Market on Saturdays.

Paradise Farms
305.248.4181
Info(at)paradisefarms.net

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Paradise Farms introduces the first interactive “Learning Luncheon” featuring Private Chef Mary Siragusa.

Saturday, April 17th
11:00 am Arrival with sparkling organic juices, followed by farm tour
11:30 am – 12:30 pm Interactive food prep
12:30 pm – 2:00 pm Luncheon

3 courses with dessert @ $45 per person. Sign up at www.paradisefarms.net

Learn how to prepare delicious and healthy meals effortlessly while having a great time. Guests will have the opportunity to partake in the preparation of the meal. Chef Mary will explain the benefits of organic foods and show you how easy it is to incorporate organic juices and food into your lifestyle. You will be inspired by her fresh, wholesome approach!

Gabriele Marewski, owner of Paradise Farms, will lead a farm tour to collect the herbs and edible flowers for lunch with a discussion on how you can grow your own food.

Featured will be Carico International, a manufacturer of healthy lifestyle products including cookware which uses low heat and no oil.

MENU:

First course: Creamy cucumber soup
Second course: Baby Brassica greens with fennel, carrot and orange
Third course:
Grilled shrimp on top of orrecciette primavera
Dessert: vanilla coconut cake with a hint of lime accompanied with lime sorbet
Coffee and tea service.

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The two best farmers markets on the weekend — and you can feel free to debate this with me — are the Pinecrest Gardens Green Market on Sundays from 9 am to 2 pm, and the Coral Gables Farmers Market on Saturdays from 8 am to 1 pm.

Coral Gables Farmers Market
405 Biltmore Way
(in front of City Hall, at Biltmore Way and LeJeune Ave.)

Hurry over to the Gables Market because this Saturday March 27 is the last day. Several members of Redland Organics are selling their wares there.

Jad, Jessie, Leah and Mary Lee at Hani's Mediterranean Organics

One recent weekend I stopped by to chat with the crew at Hani’s Mediterranean Organics. Everybody who walked up to the tent asked if cheese was available. “The goat cheese is in limited production and sells out fast. You got to get here early,” Hani’s wife Mary Lee patiently explained. She offered mussels cooked in white wine sauce with garlic, or maybe some lupini beans to snack on. Their son Jad was making falafel, and volunteers Jessie and Leah from Ohio State University helped out. (Hani is also at the Pinecrest Market.)

Paradise Farms, the only certified organic farmer at Gables market.

Across the street you’ll find Paradise Farms selling various fruits, vegetables and herbs. Paradise is certified organic, unlike other growers at the market. You have to get there early for their famous oyster mushrooms. The recent cool, dry weather slowed down mushroom growth, so there have been some weeks where they have been in short supply. (Paradise is not at Pinecrest Market, but you might find the mushrooms at Redland Organics.)

You’ll find Miguel Bode selling honey and pollen at his tent set up at the end of Biltmore Way right by LeJeune. Miguel’s wife was there last Saturday while Miguel was down in Redland checking his hives. He keeps bees at Bee Heaven Farm and at Paradise Farms. His wildflower honey is my favorite, and is a real taste of the local area.

Miguel Bode's local honey and bee pollen

Pinecrest Gardens Green Market
5855 S.W. 111th Street
(in parking lot in front of Pinecrest Gardens)

If you want Miguel’s honey but missed the Gables Market, you can also find it here, sold by Redland Organics. Everything is local, either grown on Bee Heaven Farm or sourced from organic growers within 150 miles of Miami. No telling what interesting things you’ll discover under the sprawling tent. In addition to honey, you can find certified organic fruits, vegetables and herbs, along with bunches of flowers and dried fruits, and Paradise Farms oyster mushrooms (subject to availability).

Word up to CSA members — the produce in your Saturday box is also available at market, so if you want more of something but didn’t find it in the extras box, go to Pinecrest. You can also find things at market which never make it into your CSA box, particularly fruit and herbs. On one recent Sunday, I saw rangpur limes, which look like small oranges but are not quite as tart as the familiar green limes.

The Pinecrest Market will run through April.

An assortment of familiar and unusual fruit at Redland Organics.

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