CSA member feature: Kelsey

Tell us about any new veggies you tried in 2016.

I had never seen a garlic scape before, so when I brought it home in my CSA I assumed it was a variety of scallion. I chopped it raw into my salad for lunch at work. Good thing I didn't have an important client meeting or I would have knocked them over with my garlic breath!

What was your favorite fruit, veggie, and/or herb from CSA this year?

The CSA helped me to try so many new and delicious foods I had never eaten before (i.e. ground cherries, watermelon radishes, the infamous garlic scapes, holy basil, and the often-sold-out "spicy salad mix"), but my absolute favorite was the tomatoes. Fresh, in-season tomatoes are so much crisper, juicier, and flavorful than the candy-red flavorless lumps for sale at Giant, and Liz often put out seconds for the taking. I used them in everything: my dad's famous spaghetti sauce (which takes multiple days to stew), tomato herb bread (a recipe from Kuhn Orchards that I laced with homemade pesto), caprese salads with thick-cut mozzarella, and on toasted country bread with avocado and soft scrambled eggs on a weekend morning with my roommate.

What tips do you have for folks who might be trying a CSA for the first time?

Make stock! When you're cooking for just one orΩ two, all that fresh produce can seem like a lot. I hate letting any of it go to waste, even the onion peels, carrot tops, or kale stems, so I throw all the cast-offs and wilty bits in a gallon ziploc bag in my freezer. Every two weeks I would accumulate enough to whip up a batch of vegetable stock, as described in this Food52 article. I'd use it in rice or other grains, risotto, savory oatmeals, soups, etc. It made everything taste better and it was unique every time. Pesto is another great way to use up leftover greens - instead of basil, substitute kale stems, carrot tops, beet leaves, or any other wilting greens.

And don't go to the supermarket until after you pick up your CSA each week - that way you can purchase items that will complement your share, like nuts to roast with your winter squash, or cheese to sprinkle on your salads, or curry spice to cook with your eggplants.

Finally, help out Liz at the weekly farmer's market! It's fun to introduce new veggies to shoppers and watch them eat a ground cherry for the first time. It's also a nice opportunity to meet some of the local chefs who source their produce from Owl's Nest.

What's your favorite CSA recipe?

Pesto: Toast a handful pine nuts or walnuts on a dry pan over medium heat until fragrant, watching that they don't burn. Transfer them to a food processor with two cloves of garlic and your choice of greens (basil, kale, beet leaves, etc.). Process until the greens are fully broken down. Add a pinch of salt and slowly add some glugs of olive oil, processing in between each addition of olive oil until the consistency begins to look like a thick paste. Add a handful of a hard cheese, like parmesan, and process until incorporated. Squeeze a lemon slice and taste, adding more lemon, salt, or cheese to as desired. Can be frozen if you make a big batch, to be used for a quick weeknight pasta dinner or baked into the swirl of an herbed savory bread.

CSA member feature: Courtney and Kaila

Why did you join the Owl's Nest Farm CSA? We decided to join Owl's Nest Farm because of the location of the Petworth Community Market and the flexibility of the market share over a traditional CSA box. We loved knowing that our weekends would start off together, visiting familiar faces, and loading up on tasty, healthy veggies for the rest of our week.

What did you like about the Market CSA model? The market model was ideal for being able to have a CSA without having to worry about missing some weeks. It was also nice knowing we'd have the flexibility of selecting the items we took home. We still had the opportunity to try new vegetables from the farm, but could also avoid the things we used less.

What was your favorite fruit, veggie, and/or herb from the market stand this year? Spicy salad mix and all the tomatoes! We eat a lot of big salads and the variety of all the greens for salads was great to change things up a bit.

Tell us about any new veggies you tried in 2016. Pea shoots and ground cherries - nicknamed the "sultry tomato".

What tips do you have for folks who might be trying a CSA for the first time? The full-share was probably too large for the two of us, but we used the excess to load up on things we could prep and freeze for later. We had cubed butternuts, tomatoes sauces, and pre-made soups in the freezer and some strawberry, blackberry, and peach jam in the pantry.

CSA member feature: ari and andrew

Why did you join the Owl's Nest Farm CSA?

We joined because we love to eat homemade, healthy, delicious food. Ari is a vegetarian who loves to cook and Andrew maintains a special diet because of a health condition. We have fairly packed weekends, making it difficult for us to regularly visit the farmers markets in our neighborhoods. The CSA was a great solution because it guaranteed access to local produce every other week. As an added bonus, Spencer is a childhood friend of one of Andrew's roommates, so we were excited to support friends and their new business.

What was your favorite fruit, veggie, and/or herb from the CSA this year?

We loved everything, so it's hard to narrow down. The abundant tomatoes, summer squash, cucumbers, ground cherries, garlic scapes, and pea shoots were always the first to go. The list of our favorites is very long!

Tell us about any new veggies you tried in 2016.

Ground cherries and garlic scapes. Both were a huge hit. Neither of us had tried them before. Andrew ate the ground cherries by the basketful. Ari loved putting garlic scapes in everything - eggs, pasta, and on pizza. A funny memory for us is trying to figure out how to eat the ground cherries. It took a few tries before we discovered that you had to peel off the paper outer shell first.

Please share your favorite recipe(s).

This is almost too hard to answer, because Ari loves to cook. Some of our favorites are Luisa Weiss's tomato basil pasta, Smitten Kitchen's zucchini and ricotta galette, pea shoot riscotto, Ina Garten's watermelon and tomato salad. But, our all-time favorite recipe, which is spectacular with fresh tomatoes, is this buttery tomato sauce.

What tips do you have for folks who might be trying a CSA for the first time?

The CSA took us out of our cooking comfort zone, which was awesome and daunting at the same time. Be open and flexible to trying new recipes. It was a lot of fun to experiment with greens we hadn't tried before (tatsoi being one). We turned to cookbooks, food blogs, and friends for advice about how to prepare things. We also figured out what items would last for a while (the greens) and which items we had to use right away (tomatoes). Having a strategy so food wouldn't go to waste was a learning curve for us, but really encouraged experimenting with new preparations and being creative with new recipes. Or, winging it, Andrew style.

Tell us about your unexpected CSA bonus!

The seedlings! Ari took several herbs and a tomato plant home. On her tiny front porch in Mt. Pleasant, she successfully kept everything alive. It was an unexpected treat to watch the seedlings bloom and produce fruit, and a success story for a decidedly not-green-thumb (what's the opposite of a green thumb?)!