Archive for October, 2009

October’s End

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
The sun goes down at the Fall Open House and Potluck at JBG

The sun goes down at the Fall Open House and Potluck at JBG

Contents:

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News

  • David Becker works at JBG during his 40 Days of Funemployment
  • Introducing new intern Krystin Bowcutt
  • Preserving the World’s Oceans – From a Land- to a Sea to an Earth-Ethic
  • Our Weekday-Only Pickup Schedule begins Tuesday November 3
  • New Workshare Schedule: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 8am to 1pm
  • JBG Returns to the Farmer’s Market on this Saturday, October 31

3) Events

  • Slow Food Austin shows you how to make your own Bacon
  • A conversation with Jill Richardson author of “Recipe for America: Why Our Food System is Broken &What We Can Do to Fix It”
  • Texas Book Festival: Woody Tasch talks about his new book ‘Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms and Fertility Mattered’ this Sunday, November 1 at 3:30pm

4) Quotable Food

5) Recipes

  • Fish with Green Bean and Tomato Stew
  • Spicy Parmesan Green Beans and Kale
  • Sweet Potato Gnocchi with Maple Syrup Cinnamon Brown Butter

6) Produce Storage Tips

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Brenton talks to visitors at the Fall Potluck and Open House

Brenton talks to visitors at the Fall Potluck and Open House

1) In Your Box this week:

Radishes
Kale
Green Beans
Tomatoes (green now, but let stay in paper bag on counter until red)
Sweet Potatoes
Bok Choy or Kohlrabi
Arugula
Basil
Butternut Squash
Sweet and Hot Peppers
Black Beauty and Dancer Eggplant
Okra (limited)

2) Farm News

  • David Becker’s Forty Days of Funemployment includes a day at JBG!
David harvests broccoli

David harvests broccoli

David Becker, who is about to start work at a big international law firm, decided to creatively use his free time prior to  full-time employment as a lawyer.
He describes the 40-day challenge he set for himself : ” I have forty days to do all the things I won’t have a chance to do when I start my upcoming job. I am challenging myself to do something new, something interesting, something I’ve always wanted to do, or something completely ridiculous every day for the next forty days.”

Here’s a link to an article in the Austin American Statesman about David’s 40-day challenge: http://www.statesman.com/life/content/life/stories/other/2009/10/06/1006becker.html

On day 29 of his 40 days of “funemployment”, David came to JBG to participate as a Workshare volunteer.   He writes,  “… these forty days are all about pushing myself to engage in new experiences, so I got ready to literally get my hands dirty and signed up as a workshare volunteer for Johnson’s Backyard Garden, who, according to a friend of a friend, will ‘work your ass off, if that’s what you want.’ ”

To read more about David’s experience at JBG, click on the following link: http://thefortydays.com/2009/10/15/day-29-home-grown/

Brenton and David relax after harvesting

Brenton and David relax after harvesting

  • Introducing New Intern Krystin Bowcutt

Hello to all! My name is Krystin, and I’m the new intern on the farm. I began on Monday this week and am quickly adjusting to the schedule and the work load. Wednesday, I was lucky enough to be able to tag along as Matt delivered the boxes to the drop off points. At our second stop, one member called out “hey, you’re the green bean girl!” Slightly confused, as I didn’t believe I had been on the farm long enough to have earned a reputation known to the members in Cedar Park, I responded with a question mark expression. That is, until he held up his hands beside his face imitating the picture from the last newsletter. I am indeed the very excited lady with the freshly picked green beans in the first photo!

Green Bean photo

"Green Bean Girl"

I have been a resident of New Hampshire for most of my life and moved to Austin about a month and half ago. I spent the last year waitressing at a glorious restaurant in Boston. While there, I learned a great deal about food and wine, and, as I watched local cheese makers bring their cheese to the kitchen and farmers drop of their produce, it became clear that I was on the wrong end of the path that food travels from ground to consumer. I no longer wanted to be serving the food, I wanted to be creating it, bringing it to life. And I wanted to be in a place where the food can be harvested all year long. How wonderful to not worry about three feet of snow over your crops! While I missed the apple picking and the foliage of the northeast this fall, I certainly am not going to miss the bitter cold that this winter is destined to bring. I look forward to a winter in this lovely city on this beautiful farm.

While I was already quite happy being here and truly believed that this opportunity will provide me with exactly the kind of experience I have been looking for, my day on Wednesday confirmed both of these notions. First, I participated  in the assembly line as all of the volunteers gathered together to make your boxes a reality. It was a group of people solidified by a common interest in organic farming and a curiosity about the connection between earth and food. Second, I saw the expressions of each member as they picked up their boxes, particularly the new members who happily sifted through their goody boxes, announcing the vegetables as they pulled them out. These two experiences strengthened my desire to be a part of this community and participate in the process of providing Austinites with beautiful vegetables!

  • Preserving the World’s Oceans – From a Land- to a Sea- to an Earth-Ethic
by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG resident
Grit Ramuschkat

Grit Ramuschkat

I came across a very philosophical essay about ocean conservation and seafood and found its nicely phrased thoughts worthwhile sharing. The essay was written by Carl Safina, a prominent ecologist and marine conservationist, nature writer and president of the Blue Ocean Institute, an organization that uses science, art and literature to inspire a closer relationship with the sea. The source of the essay was the book Hungry Planet – What the World Eats by Peter Menzel & Faith d’Aluisio.

About 1/3 of humanity lives within 50 miles of a coast. However, when it comes to the topic of conservation, most of us don’t give the sea much thought. Even for many nature lovers, the ocean is the beach, not the realm that spreads in three dimensions for thousands of miles beyond the breaking surf. The ocean seems distant and vague. Why is this?, Sarafina ponders. Maybe this is because we are such visual creatures, generally oriented outwards to our environment. However, if we redirect our senses inward for a moment, a very intimate relationship with the ocean surfaces. Most of the oxygen we breathe is made by ocean plankton. All life arouse from the sea and when animals left the sea, they took saltwater with them, in their bodies – an internal environment crucial for cellular survival. We are, in a sense, soft vessels of seawater. We are reminded of this by the taste of our tears or our sweat after a long work day at the farm. Seventy percent of our bodies is water, the same percentage that covers the earth’s surface. We are wrapped around an ocean within.

The collective weight of humanity may rest on land, but we levy heavy pressure on the sea. Gravity takes the by-products of human enterprise to the water’s edge and beyond. Even air quality effects water quality, because what goes up alights elsewhere, as shown by the mercury from power plants, which comes back to your plate in your salmon. One distinct attribute of the ocean is fluidity. The same fluidity that generates so many beautiful metaphors about life and time also closes the ocean’s skin instantly behind our contaminants and trash leaving no scars where there should be open gashes.

In 1949, Aldo Leopold, a visionary forester and writer, advocated a “Land-Ethic” where he called for an extension of our sense of community beyond humanity to the whole living landscape. Leopold however, as Safina argues, made the mistake of land locking his vision by the choice of his title. In order to embrace all life on earth in our concept of community, we need to complement the Land-Ethic with a Sea-Ethic, Safina writes. Instead of maintaining two ethics side by side though, I say, we might as well create an all inclusive term, the Earth-Ethic.

To preserve oceanic life or what’s left of it – according to Sarafina, 90% of the population of big fish are already gone -  the Blue Ocean Institute as well as other marine life institutions have put together seafood pocket guides listing endangered and still abundant, hence okay to eat fish. They have one for Sushi, too. You can download the guides by following the links below.

Links:
http://www.blueocean.org/seafood/seafood-guide
http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/cr_seafoodwatch/download.aspx

Also, here’s an excellent article by Micheal Pollan from the NYT Magazine, August 2009 on why cooking keeps you thin and what the food network has made of us.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/02/magazine/02cooking-t.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=out%20of%20the%20kitchen,%20onto%20the%20couch&st=cse

  • Our Weekday-only Pickup Schedule Begins Tuesday November 3

After this Saturday, October 31, we will have successfully made the transition to week-day only pickups.  Thanks to everyone for their patience as we have made this change.  For the finalized schedule, please see the chart below.  If you have any questions about your specific pickup schedule, please email us at farm@jbgorganic.com or call Carrie in the office at 512-386-5273 from 7:30am to 3:30pm, Monday-Thursday and until 12:30pm on Friday.

New Schedule:

schedule

Please note that the Brodie/Slaughter location will remain on Fridays from 3:30pm-7:00pm

Workshare volunteers and staff

Workshare volunteers and staff

  • Workshare Opportunities on Tuesday, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 8am to 1pm

With our new weekday-only pickup schedule, we will have Workshare opportunities on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 8am to 1pm.  Saturday Workshare will be temporarily cancelled as we adjust to the new schedule. We are going to start attending the Austin Farmer’s Market on Saturdays and need to figure out the timing and employee coverage on this before we can start up the Saturday Workshare hours again.  As soon as we can, we will make Saturday Workshare available again.

All workshare volunteers get a share of freshly harvested vegetables in exchange for their help.  If you are interested in participating on a Tuesday, Wednesday, or Friday, please email us at farm@jbgorganic.com or call Carrie in the office at 512-386-5273.

  • JBG Returns to the Austin Farmer’s Market this Saturday, October 31

Come visit us at the Austin Farmer’s Market this Saturday at Republic Square Park at 4h and Guadalupe from 9am to 1pm.  Interns Keith and Krystin will be there selling JBG produce.  They’ll be in costume for Halloween so come by and see them.

The Johnson Familys first visit to the Farmers Market in June of 2005

The Johnson Familys first visit to the Farmers Market in June of 2005

3) Events

  • Austin Food Co-op presents a conversation with Jill Richardson

We are so excited to host Ms Richardson while she is here promoting her book!

Mark your calendars for Sunday November 8th at Cafe Caffeine (www.cafe-caffeine. com)
909 West Mary Street, Austin, Texas 78704
5:00 – 7:00pm

Here is the Amazon book description:  America’s food system is dominated by agribusiness and corporate farms, whose destructive practices pollute the environment, are cruel to animals, and offer us unhealthy food choices. Despite this dire situation, most people have little idea how to eat differently, or healthier.

In Recipe for America, food activist Jill Richardson shows how sustainable agriculture—where local farms raise food that is healthy for consumers and animals and does not damage the environment—offers the only solution to America’s food crisis. In addition to highlighting the harmful conditions at
factory farms, this timely and necessary book details the rising grassroots food movement, which is creating an agricultural system that allows people to eat sustainably, locally, and seasonally.

A call to action for those who are concerned about what they eat and the health of the planet, Recipe for America shows how sustainable eating nourishes our bodies, our economy, and our environment, and how it is the best hope for the future of food in America.

Jill Richardson blogs about food issues at Daily Kos and at her own blog, La Vida Locavore (www.lavidalocavore .org). She is also a member of the advisory board of the Organic Consumers Association.

  • Slow Food Austin shows you how to make your own Bacon

The smell evokes morning kitchens, sheer indulgence, someone who cares like Mom. Bacon. BACON. There’s just nothing like it. Want to make your own? Greg Bass of Preservation Bacon knows how, and, ably assisted by Marshall Wright of Slow Food Austin he’ll teach you too. Come to our monthly Slow Session on November 5 at 7 p.m. And learn how the smoky meaty indulgence can be handcrafted. Habitat Suites, 500 East Highland Mall Boulevard (near Highland Mall). The session, as always, is free, and light refreshments will be served. For more info email education@slowfoodaustin.org

  • Texas Book Festival, sent from Lisa Lawrence Gordon

Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, State Capitol building, Austin. This is a link to the schedule – http://www.texasbookfestival.org/Calendar.php one page for each day. If you scroll down you will see there is an entire tent devoted to Cooking. There are also some other panels you will find interesting in some of the other tents –the Lifestyle Tent for example has one on beekeeping adventures and another on gardening on Saturday. Be sure to stop by at 3:30pm on Sunday to hear Woody Tasch talk about his new book ‘Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms and Fertility Mattered’.

The Festival is free and open to the public, and there are a ton of fun things to do for families, children’s authors, entertainment, children’s activity tent, the Biscuit Brothers…the list goes on.

4) Quotable Food

“For the millions of us who live glued to computer keyboards at work and TV monitors at home, food may be more than entertainment. It may be the only sensual experience left.”
Barbara Ehrenreich

Workshare member & Bouldin pickup site host Julie Webb (right) and friend enjoy the food at the potluck.

Workshare member & Bouldin pickup site host Julie Webb (right) and friend enjoy the food at the potluck.

5) Recipies
  • Fish with Green Bean and Tomato Stew
adapted from Jamie at Home by Jamie Oliver
Ingredients:
Your Choice of Fish
a Bag of Green Beans
4 to 5 Tomatoes
6 Anchovie Fillets
Olive Oil
5 cloves of Garlic
1 Red Chilli
2 Sprigs of Fresh Rosemary, leaves only
Fresh Basil, chopped
Lemon
Salt, Pepper
Preparation:
Prep the beans, chop the garlic, chilli and tomatoes. Heat a large saucepan, add 2 TBSP of olive oil, plus the oil from the jar of anchovies. Fry the garlic with the anchovies and the chilli until the anchovies break down into a mush. Add the tomatoes, beans and rosemary, season and let simmer until the beans are cooked. If the pan gets dry, add a splash of water and give the beans a stir.
In the meantime cook your choice of fish in another pan. Season the fish with salt and pepper and rub it lightly with olive oil, then fry it for about 2 minutes on each side.
To serve, place a pile of your bean stew on a plate and top with a piece of fish. Squeeze some lemon juice over it. Sprinkle some chopped basil on top and finish with a drizzle of olive oil.
Happy Days!
  • Spicy Parmesan Green Beans and Kale (from foodnetwork.com)

3 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, sliced
1/4 pound cremini mushrooms, trimmed and quartered (about 14 mushrooms)
1 1/2 pounds green beans, trimmed and slice into 1-inch pieces
2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup white wine
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 bunch kale (1/2 pound), rinsed, stemmed, and roughly chopped
2 tablespoons lemon juice (about 1/2 a lemon)
3 tablespoons finely grated Parmesan

Directions:

Warm the olive oil in a large, heavy saute pan over medium-high heat. Add the onions and cook until translucent, about 4 minutes. Add the mushrooms, green beans, salt, and pepper and cook for 2 minutes. Add the wine and continue cooking until the green beans are almost tender, about 5 minutes. Add the red pepper flakes and the kale and continue cooking until the kale has wilted, about 4 to 5 minutes. Add the lemon juice and the Parmesan cheese. Toss to coat and serve immediately.

  • Sweet Potato Gnocchi with Maple Syrup Cinnamon Sage Brown Butter (from foodnetwork.com)
For the Gnocchi:2 pounds sweet potatoes
2/3 cup whole milk ricotta cheese
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus 1/3 cup for the work surface

For the Maple Cinnamon Sage Brown Butter:

1/2 cup unsalted butter (1 stick)
20 fresh sage leaves
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 tablespoons maple syrup
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Directions:
For the Gnocchi: Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.  Pierce the sweet potato with a fork. Bake the sweet potatoes until tender and fully cooked, between 40 to 55 minutes depending on size. Cool slightly. Cut in half and scoop the flesh into a large bowl. Mash the sweet potatoes and transfer to a large measuring cup to make sure the sweet potatoes measure about 2 cups. Transfer the mashed sweet potatoes back to the large bowl. Add the ricotta cheese, salt, cinnamon, and pepper and blend until well mixed. Add the flour, 1/2 cup at a time until a soft dough forms. Lightly flour a work surface and place the dough in a ball on the work surface. Divide the dough into 6 equal balls. Roll out each ball into a 1-inch wide rope. Cut each rope into 1-inch pieces. Roll the gnocchi over the tines of a fork. Transfer the formed gnocchi to a large baking sheet. Continue with the remaining gnocchi.Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Add the gnocchi in 3 batches and cook until tender but still firm to the bite, stirring occasionally, about 5 to 6 minutes. Drain the gnocchi using a slotted spoon onto a baking sheet. Tent with foil to keep warm and continue with the remaining gnocchi.For the Brown Butter sauce: While the gnocchi are cooking melt the butter in a large saute pan over medium heat. When the butter has melted add the sage leaves. Continue to cook, swirling the butter occasionally, until the foam subsides and the milk solids begin to brown. Remove the pan from the heat. Stir in the cinnamon, maple syrup, salt, and pepper. Careful, the mixture will bubble up. Gently stir the mixture. When the bubbles subside, toss the cooked gnocchi in the brown butter. Transfer the gnocchi to a serving dish and serve immediately.

Basil and Green Beans

Basil and Green Beans

6) Produce Storage Tips

We aim to grow and package our vegetables to maintain the highest taste and nutritional quality possible. However, once they’ve left the farm it’s up to you to keep them fresh and nutritious. There’s no refrigeration at the CSA drop points so it’s best to pick up your box as early as possible. Here are some additional tips on how to store this week’s share:

  • Peppers should be stored in the crisper, and washed before use.
  • Basil can be stored upright in a jar of water at room temperature, or in an open bag on the counter. These three all do well frozen also (they will loose texture but not taste).
  • Eggplants and Potatoes are best kept moderately cool, no lower than 50 degrees. A cool, dry dark place is best- on the counter, in a cupboard or basket. Don’t whole store onions in the refrigerator because the moisture is bad for them. Don’t store potatoes near onions. The onions will absorb moisture from the potatoes.
  • Summer Squash will last 4-7 days in plastic bags in the crisper.

Checkout our storage tips on our website for a more complete guide, and of course, feel free to contact us with any questions.

Gringo Sol plays at the Fall Potluck as the sun goes down

Gringo Sol plays at the Fall Potluck as the sun goes down

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Information

Johnson’s Backyard Garden

9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E

Austin, TX 78742

Office Phone: 512.386.5273

Office Hours: M-F 8am to 12:30pm

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com

Green Bean Harvest Tomorrow!

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Intern candidate Krystin Bowcut helps with the green bean harvest.

Intern candidate Krystin Bowcut helps with the green bean harvest.

Contents:

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News

  • We need volunteers TOMORROW, Wed, Oct. 14, to help us harvest GREEN BEANS and CORN!
  • Open House and Potluck this Saturday, Oct. 17th at JBG
  • At the Hergotz Hill Farm
  • At the River Road Farm
  • Close Encounter With James McWilliams, the Author of ‘Just Food’
  • New Monday and/or Thursday Pickup in the Works
  • New Pickup Locations for Bouldin and Steiner Ranch
  • Our New Schedule has Begun

3) Events

  • Michael Pollan’s The Botany of Desire on PBS
  • Slow Food Austin presents Raw Talk & Tasting: Raw-Milk Cheese Meets Local Hops and Honey
  • Austin Film Festival presents 7th Annual Film & Food
  • Texas Book Festival

4) Quotable Food

5) Recipes

  • Creamed Bok Choy
  • Barley and Bok Choy Egg Rolls
  • Eggplant in Garlic Sauce (version III)
  • Autumn Pumpkin (or Squash, or Sweet Potato ) Pie

6) Produce Storage Tips

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info


1) In Your Box This Week

Our best guess for fresh produce that will be popping out of your share box for Wednesday, October 14th, Friday, October 16h and Saturday, October 17th.

Green Garlic
Beauregard Sweet Potatoes
Bok Choy
Pickling and Slicing Cucumbers
Vegetable Amaranth Greens
Arugula
Okra
Basil
Butternut Squash
Sweet and Hot Pepper Mix
Black Beauty and Dancer Eggplant
Sweet Corn- we hope!
Broccoli for some boxes
Coming soon–Tomatoes……we just need a few days of warm weather to help them ripen.
2) Farm News

Green beans are ready to be harvested at JBG!

Green beans are ready to be harvested!

  • Volunteers needed for GREEN BEAN and CORN harvest tomorrow, Wednesday, October 14th:
The green beans are ready for harvesting! Without your help, we won’t be able to harvest all of them in time.  Give us a hand and ensure these delicious beans make it into the CSA shares.  Also, we have sweet corn that needs harvesting, too.
Volunteers should arrive at the farm tomorrow at 8am and plan on helping out until 1pm.  Please bring water to drink and wear long sleeves and pants for protection and sturdy shoes.  Also consider bringing a large brimmed hat, work gloves and snacks.   Also, please bring a large tote bag to take your vegetables home with you.
If you can’t make it out tomorrow, we have Workshare opportunities every Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 8am to 1pm.  Please give Carrie a call in the office at 512-386-5273 if you’re interested in participating.  If you want to join us tomorrow, directions on what to bring, what to where, and how to get here are listed below.

Johnson’s Backyard Garden is located 5 miles east of Downtown Austin near Austin Bergstrom Airport.

From Airport Road, 7th Street or 183 South: Merge onto 183 South and get in left-hand lane.  Turn left onto Thompson Lane at the 2nd traffic light
after you cross the Colorado River Bridge. Callahan’s General Store and a Shell gas station will also be on the left. Take Thompson Lane until it dead ends
into Hergotz Lane. Turn right onto Hergotz Lane and continue for a couple of miles until the road makes a sharp left hand turn.  After going around the
curve, continue for about ¼ mile and turn right to stay on Hergotz Lane (there is a dump truck parking lot on the left, and you will see a small, hand-painted
sign for Johnson’s Backyard Garden on the right).  Turn right into the last driveway before Hergotz dead ends.  Follow this driveway past the first field on
your right.  Once you reach the Pecan Orchard (grassy section w/pecan trees) turn and park just off of the road on the grass.

Directions from Ben White/Hwy 71: Heading towards the Airport on Hwy 71, turn north on 183. Go about 1 mile to the first traffic light. Turn right onto Thompson Lane. Callahan’s and a Shell gas station will also be on your right. Take Thompson Lane until it dead ends into Hergotz Lane. Turn right onto  Hergotz Lane and continue for a couple of miles until the road makes a sharp left hand turn.  After going around the curve, continue for about 1/4 mile, then turn right to stay on Hergotz Lane (there is a dump truck parking lot on the left, and you will see a small, hand-painted sign for  JBG on the right).  Turn right into the last driveway before Hergotz dead ends.  Follow this driveway past the first field on your right.

Come help harvest green beans before Matt, JBGs newest employee, eats them all.

Come help harvest green beans before Matt, JBGs newest employee, eats them all!

  • Johnson’s Backyard Garden Open House this Saturday, October 17th

Our fall open house potluck is almost here. Please join us for this yearly event open to both members and public. In the past, our potluck has showcased tantalizing edibles from family kitchens throughout Austin. We will meet, eat, and dance to live music in the pecan orchard on Saturday October 17th from 3pm until dark. Acoustic local  music will be performed by Gringo Sol with members of  La Tampiquena. Please bring a dish, along with your recipes to share, plus your own place settings and silver. If you are interested, please feel free to BYOB. We will have picnic tables available but don’t hesitate to bring your own chairs or blankets to sit. Please leave your dogs at home. We love critters but Frankie, Johnson’s family dog, is not so keen on canine visitors. Join us, on October 17th, for what promises to be a fun filled, delicious adventure in Johnson’s actual backyard.

Guests relax in the pecan grove at the Fall Open House & Potluck last year.

Guests relax in the pecan grove at the Fall Open House & Potluck last year.

  • At the Hergotz Hill Farm
The glorious rains continue to slow us down in the field, however, we did have a wonderful break from the precipitation for Outstanding in the Field. In case you missed the story and photos in the Statesman last week, you can still catch them here.
A call to action for all Plumbers and Sheetrock Installers. We need your help (or your recommendations for a great handyman) to finish our barn remodel.  Plumbing: we have two small bathrooms that  need to be topped out.  Sheetrock: needed in both the bathrooms and the office.  These are two small jobs that would make a huge difference to the staff, interns, and volunteers that put in time at the farm.  Please let us know if you  ( or someone you know) can help. And thanks in advance!
  • At the River Road Farm
Today the farm crew is working at the River Road farm. We are starting to install the irrigation pipes, so all hands are needed to get the fittings right and the line placed in the trenches.  All the transplants for the new farm are currently growing in the greenhouse. We should be planting in the new fields within the next three weeks
  • Close Encounter With James McWilliams, the Author of ‘Just Food’, by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG resident
Grit Ramuschkat

Grit Ramuschkat

When I randomly staggered into Bookpeople the other day, a book titled “Just Food – Where Locavores Get It Wrong and How We Can Truly Eat Responsible” displayed in the entry area caught my eye. Since I am a strong believer in the many benefits of eating locally, I was simultaneously curious and offended by the title. Curiosity won and I decided to take a closer look. The date of the talk accompanying the new release hadn’t passed yet, so I was determined to go.

The author James McWilliams is an associate professor of history at Texas State in San Marcos. He has written articles for the New York Times & Slate Magazine and this is his second book.

The “food miles” argument, meaning how far food has traveled before you buy it, has become a popular slogan for the go-local movement (we have all seen phrases such as “Local food tastes miles better”, “Eat local…a thousand miles fresher” on bumper stickers). “By carefully counting food miles, we miss the big picture,” McWilliams says. According to his research, resources spent on transportation account for 11% of the total energy cost of food. To just look at food miles might not necessarily mean much. For example, the tomato might be grown locally, but the fertilizer might have come from far away. McWilliams quoted a study where grass-fed lamb grown in New Zealand and shipped to Great Britain turned out to emit less CO2 than feedlot lamb grown and sold directly in Britain. This was because the British lamb was fed grain, which required fossil fuel to produce. However, as audience member Micheal Tobis pointed out, the study didn’t include the greenhouse gas methane.

“The locavore philosophy is flawed by its own simplicity,” says McWilliams. Yet, by addressing only one point of the go-local movement, McWilliams falls victim to oversimplicity himself. There is more to the locavore philosophy than food miles. Local food tastes better, because it’s harvested when fully ripe. Local food producers often subscribe to organic practices, which improve nutrition and soil health. By spending food dollars locally money remains in the community, strengthening it. What I take from McWilliams’ argument is a reminder to continue learning about where food comes from and how it’s produced. Buying local food makes it easier because there is a face — the farmer’s.

McWilliams believes that causes require sacrifice, yet he sees none in locavorism. He himself sacrificed meat after his research indicated that a meat-free diet reduces the impact on the environment more than buying all food locally. While I respect McWilliams for becoming a vegetarian, I don’t think that the go-local movement needs a sacrifice in order to be taken seriously. With regard to meat, as a nation we definitely need to reduce meat consumption in order to achieve a healthier, more sustainable food system. If we think locavorism needs a sacrifice, how about the sacrifice of giving up “cheap” food, which is often subsidized, and instead paying the true price upfront.

While it took some courage to face his critique of the go-local movement, I found my beliefs not cracked but strengthened. His message reminds me to stay critical of the movement, not to see it as an all-inclusive truth, look behind the scenes, request regulations and governmental changes, and to keep on engaging in the local food scene. After all, it’s a good thing!

Please direct your comments to Grit Ramuschkat at email@gritramuschkat.com and we will post them on the blog for you.

Articles by and about James McWilliams:

http://www.slate.com/id/2198756/

New York Times: Food That Travels Well, Free-Range Trichinosis

see also Austin American Statesman, Food Matters on 08/26/09

  • New Monday and/or Thursday Pickup in the Works

Besides the upcoming changes to the delivery schedule posted below, we are considering adding Monday and/or Thursdays as an additional option for veggie pickups. One thing we’d like to hear from all our CSA members are suggestions for a new neighborhood location for Monday and/or Thursday deliveries.

  • Two New Pickup Sites to begin in November: Bouldin Creek and Steiner Ranch

We have now confirmed two new pickup sites for members to choose from in November.  We will be delivering to Bouldin Creek on Fridays.  Julie Webb and her family will host JBG’s CSA at their home on Annie Street.  We will deliver to Steiner Ranch on Tuesdays.  Since we didn’t receive offers to host in Lakeway, the Steiner Ranch location will replace this option.  Many thanks to Lindsay Surdell for offering to host the new Steiner Ranch site.

  • Our New Schedule has Begun

October is off and running and for us it’s been a bit of a challenge to shift into the new delivery day, fun but challenging. We hope the added delivery sites and days will help make your local food adventures with Johnson’s Backyard Garden an enjoyable experience. Please let us know if you have any questions or concerns with the delivery day changes.

schedule

3) Events

  • Michael Pollan’s The Botany of Desire on PBS

October 28, 2009 8:00pm I’ve been seeing this advertised on PBS recently and had no idea that it existed, but boy am I excited. One of my favorite books and authors, Michael Pollan’s The Botany of Desire, will be aired on KLRU on October 28th at 8pm. Get the details and see a preview on KLRU’s web site .

  • Slow Food Austin presents Raw Talk & Tasting: Raw-Milk Cheese Meets Local Hops and Honey

October 21, 2009 6:30-8:30 pm Barr Mansion Tickets: $50 ($40 Slow Food members) In the United States, the sale of raw milk cheeses that are aged less than 60 days is illegal. Fortunately, Slow Food’s Presidia program is working to protect this delectable artisan food. Cathy Strange, Global Cheese Buyer for Whole Foods Market, will lead an educational presentation and tasting of raw-milk cheeses complemented by Texas-crafted beer and pairing notes from Kevin Brand of (512) Brewing Company, along with local honey from Round Rock Honey. At this first annual fundraiser for Slow Food Austin you will enjoy an evening of unique flavors, meet some of their producers and mingle with other Austinites who share a passion for slow food. Get your tickets in advance to ensure a seat at the table in the beautiful Barr Mansion setting.

  • Austin Film Festival presents 7th Annual Film & Food

October 21, 2009 Driskill Hotel – 604 Brazos 7:00pm to 10:00pm Tickets: $85/ $70 for AFF Members. Austin Film Festival presents the 7th annual Film & Food, one of the most talked about food-centric events in the city. Held at the beautiful and historic Driskill Hotel, Film & Food is an evening of cocktails and incredible cuisine created by talented chefs who represent some of Central Texas’ most notable restaurants. Attendees will have the opportunity to bid on unique, exciting items and experiences during silent and live auctions.

All proceeds from the ticket sales and event auctions benefit AFF’s Young Filmmakers Program. The Young Filmmakers Program was founded to encourage students, ages 9 – 18, to explore their creativity and improve their literacy skills through the arts of screenwriting and filmmaking. Programs are offered free through AISD schools and partner organizations.

For more information and to order tickets, go to http://www.austinfilmfestival.com/new/film_food

  • Texas Book Festival, sent from Lisa Lawrence Gordon

Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, State Capitol building, Austin. This is a link to the schedule – http://www.texasbookfestival.org/Calendar.php one page for each day. If you scroll down you will see there is an entire tent devoted to Cooking. There are also some other panels you will find interesting in some of the other tents –the Lifestyle Tent for example has one on beekeeping adventures and another on gardening on Saturday. Be sure to stop by at 3:30pm on Sunday to hear Woody Tasch talk about his new book ‘Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms and Fertility Mattered’.

The Festival is free and open to the public, and there are a ton of fun things to do for families, children’s authors, entertainment, children’s activity tent, the Biscuit Brothers…the list goes on.

4) Quotable Food

“Your descendants shall gather your fruits.”— Virgil

5) Recipes

Bok Choy

Bok Choy

  • Creamed Bok Choy, cooks.com

1/2 c. water

1 tbsp. soy sauce

1/2 tsp. instant chicken bouillon granules

Several dashes pepper

Dash garlic powder

6 c. chopped bok choy

1/4 c. light cream or milk

4 tsp. cornstarch

In large saucepan combine water, soy sauce, bouillon granules, pepper and garlic powder. Bring to boiling. Add bok choy. Reduce heat; cover and simmer about 5 minutes or until crisp-tender. Blend light cream into cornstarch; stir into bok choy. Cook and stir until thickened and bubbly. 6 servings.

  • Barley and Bok Choy Egg Rolls, cooks.com

1 1/2 teaspoons salt

1 cup medium barley

2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger or 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger

3 tablespoons sesame or vegetable oil

4 scallions, sliced

1 red pepper, chopped

1/2 pound bok choy, shredded

1 tablespoon rice wine or white wine vinegar

1 (16 oz.) package prepared egg roll wrappers

oil for frying

In a saucepan bring 4 cups water and 1/2 teaspoon salt to boiling. Add barley; reduce heat, cover and simmer 45 minutes until barley is tender and water is absorbed. In skillet cook ginger in oil one minute. Add scallions and red pepper. Cook, stirring until vegetables are crisp-tender. Add shredded bok choy; cook one minute until wilted.

Remove from heat. Stir in rice vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt and barley. For each roll, brush egg roll wrapper with 1 teaspoon water. Place scant 1/2 cup barley mixture horizontally across center of wrapper, leaving 2 inch border on all sides. Fold corner tightly over fillings, then overlap right and left corners. Roll up tightly to enclose filling. Repeat with remaining barley mixture and wrappers.

In deep skillet heat 1 inch oil to 375 degrees F. Fry rolls in batches until golden and crisp, turning once. Drain on paper towels. Serve with soy sauce, if desired. Makes 12 egg rolls.

  • Eggplant in Garlic Sauce (version III), aubergines.org

4 cups chopped eggplant (use cylinder shaped; should be chopped in about 1 inch cylinder shape segments)

8 cloves garlic minced

1/3 cup ketchup (approximation)

1 tablespoon ginger, minced

1/4 – 1/3 cup white sugar

2 tablespoons white vinegar

1 1/2 tablespoons white soy sauce

1 tablespoon regular soy sauce

1 tablespoon Chinese chili sauce

3 tablespoons dry white wine

1/2 cup chopped green onions (green part only)

about 1 tablespoon cornstarch dissolved in water

2 tablespoons hot oil (add to finished sauce)

Fry eggplant in oil over medium heat, for about 8 min. When frying cycle was completed, the eggplant is dark yellow in color. After frying drain well and set aside.

Fry ginger and garlic in a little oil for about 30 sec. When you smell strong aroma, add ketchup and stir for a minute or so. Add Chinese chile sauce and stir well. Next, add white wine and simmer for a minute or two. After this, add all other ingredients except green onions and cornstarch. Stir and allow mixture to simmer for a couple of minutes before adding cornstarch. Just as mixture starts to thicken, add chopped green onions and hot oil, stir for a minute or so and add eggplant to sauce. Once eggplant is coated with sauce, turn off fire, remove from wok/skillet and serve over white rice.

  • Autumn Pumpkin (or Squash, or Sweet Potato ) Pie, adapted from southernfood.about.com

1 1/4 cups pumpkin puree, (or try any winter squash or sweet potatoes)

3/4 cup sugar

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon all-purpose flour

2 eggs, lightly beaten

1 cup evaporated milk, undiluted

2 tablespoons water

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 unbaked pastry shell (9-inch)

Combine pumpkin, sugar, salt, spices, and flour in a medium mixing bowl. Add eggs; mix well. Add evaporated milk, water, and vanilla; mix well. Pour into pastry-lined pie pan. Bake at 400° for 15 minutes; reduce heat to 350° and bake about 35 minutes longer, or until center is set.

6) Produce Storage Tips

We aim to grow and package our vegetables to maintain the highest taste and nutritional quality possible. However, once they’ve left the farm it’s up to you to keep them fresh and nutritious. There’s no refrigeration at the CSA drop points so it’s best to pick up your box as early as possible. Here are some additional tips on how to store this week’s share:

Peppers should be stored in the crisper, and washed before use.

Basil can be stored upright in a jar of water at room temperature, or in an open bag on the counter. These three all do well frozen also (they will loose texture but not taste).

Eggplants and Potatoes are best kept moderately cool, no lower than 50 degrees. A cool, dry dark place is best- on the counter, in a cupboard or basket. Don’t whole store onions in the refrigerator because the moisture is bad for them. Don’t store potatoes near onions. The onions will absorb moisture from the potatoes.

Summer Squash will last 4-7 days in plastic bags in the crisper.

Checkout our storage tips on our website for a more complete guide, and of course, feel free to contact us with any questions.

Rain-soaked rows of arugula

Rain-soaked rows of arugula

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Information

Johnson’s Backyard Garden

9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E

Austin, TX 78742

Office Phone: 512.386.5273

Office Hours: M-F 8am to 12:30pm

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com

Filed: Newsletters | No Comments »