Archive for March, 2010

Sweet Potatoes and Red Tomatoes

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
Sweet Potatoes!

Once covered with dirt, these sweet potato slips will grow shoots in about 5 weeks

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective … Sweet Potatoes and Red Tomatoes
  • Of Chickens and Raccoons… by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Save the Date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10
  • Slow Money Austin 2010 Conference at Austin City Hall, April 21st
  • Interested in Becoming a CSA Site Host?
  • New Workshare Policy

4) Quotable Food

5) Recipes

  • Dandelion Greens
  • Carrot Coriander Soup

6) Produce Storage Tips

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

After that, we'll cut the shoots and plant those at River Road

After that, we'll cut the shoots and replant them at River Road

1) In Your Box this Week

Carrots
Beets
Bok Choy
Kale or Collards
Kohlrabi
Green Onions
Lettuce
Endive
Parsley or Dill
Baby Arugula
Grapefruit (G and S Groves)
Oranges (G and S Groves)

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective ….

You may have noticed that our web site was down for about a day and  a half there!  Some sort of internet blip with our web host.  But although our site stopped, we certainly didn’t!  We have been busily planting summer crops at the River Road property: tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers. The potatoes we planted back in February also are coming up nicely, and we expect a great harvest at the beginning of May. Last week, we also seeded green beans, and this week we are making headway on cukes and squash. Meanwhile, at the Hergotz farm, the heat is making all of our produce shoot up, and the harvest crew is busy keeping up. Soon, the crew will have to come in around 5 or 6am, in order to get everything harvested before it gets too hot!

Also last week, we planted several thousand sweet potato slips at the Hergotz Farm.  We laid them out one by one on a narrow bed, so they were very close but not touching.  Keeping the slips from touching is a way to prevent the spread of disease.  In about 5 weeks, the sweet potatoes will send up shoots.  We’ll cut those down, and then plant those at the River Road farm.  Those shoots are what will give us our sweet potato harvest this summer!

We are expecting all of our very productive summer crops to start appearing in May, so get ready for tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, melons, and corn. In the meantime, enjoy the fall and winter crops: kale, collards, kohlrabi, and turnips, while they are still around.

By the summer, we'll have sweet potatoes!

  • Of Chickens and Raccoons… By Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident
One of my evening chores is to “tuck the chickens in bed” after they settle onto their roosts for the night. The chore includes: walking to the henhouse, retrieving any laid eggs, doing a head-count, closing the coop door and then saying something nice to the chickens. Something like, “Good night ladies, thanks for laying all the eggs today and keep up the good work.” I believe in positive reinforcement for all beings… .
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Normally this is a pretty routine endeavor, but not this time. I counted only three chickens. One Araucana was missing. Not yet ready to assume to the worst (death), I took a spin through the yard to check all the good hiding spots. This wouldn’t have been the first time that one of the ladies got confused about the exact location of her sleeping quarters. I didn’t have any luck, however. Getting closer to concluding the worst now, I said to my husband: “Maybe a raccoon ate her.” “Oh, don’t get too sad”, said Steven. “Just imagine what a hero to her own family the raccoon will be tonight, bringing home a whole chicken for dinner.” Imagining the satisfied faces and round bellies of cute, little raccoon babies made me smile. After all, only our weakest chicken was taken and I can accept the loss considering the grander scheme of life: all living things need life to live on.
The chicken was still missing the next morning and the remaining three hens went on with their business as if nothing had happened.
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I woke up at 6 am the following night from loud, high-pitched screaming sounds coming from the direction of the hen house. “The chickens are in trouble,” I thought instantly, fumbling for my Crocks and a flashlight and running out into the yard. As I approached the hen house, I saw a big, grey, raccoon-shaped shadow silently make its exit. Only the squeaking sound coming from the gate as it jumped off it gave away its presence. The fate of our lost chicken became evident.
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In the panic of the attack, the ladies had fallen off their roosts and sat huddled together in one corner of the coop on the ground screaming. One chicken had a minor head injury either from the fall or the raccoon trying to get a hold of her through the coop’s wire mesh.
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As the chickens calmed down, I shuffled them back into the nesting boxes for the rest of the night, where they were protected by wooden walls rather than just wire mesh. As I crawled back into bed, Steven said, “Our raccoon is getting greedy now, considering it just brought home a free meal yesterday.” We agreed on increasing the security on the hen house the next day.
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The next morning we found the missing Araucana chicken dead on the floor behind Steven’s work bench in our little storage shed adjacent to the hen house. The raccoon had only eaten parts of it – the tastiest bits, I assume – and had left most of it behind. I was disappointed in the raccoon for seeming selfish, wasteful and non-appreciative of his free chikin’ nuggets. My happy raccoon family story was shattered. I was very determined now to get to work making our coop raccoon-secure, since, clearly, the beast didn’t deserve any more of our lovely chickens.
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We saw the raccoon sneaking around our property on the two following nights yet fortunately we didn’t have any more sad chicken incidents. We hadn’t had any for over a year since the chickens were more heavily preyed on when they were little. It took a loss to remind me what wonderful home and garden companions chickens are.
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For those of you chicken lovers check out the Austin’s own second annual Funky Chicken Coop Tour this April 3rd.
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See you there!
Drenched Chicken

Drenched Chicken

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Save the Date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10

Saturday, April 10th, Johnson’s Backyard Garden will host its Annual Spring Potluck from 4 p.m. ’til dark. Join us for live music, great food, tractor rides around the farm, and lots of fun activities for the kids. Our CSA members are some of the best cooks in Austin, so come hungry to this locavore heaven, with tons of locally-raised and prepared dishes. We’re ready for this year’s potluck to be the best one yet!

  • Slow Money Austin 2010 Conference at Austin City Hall, April 21st
Slow Money Austin brings a conversation about financing our regional food system to the front steps of City Hall with an educational conference featuring leaders of this emerging industry.  Register for this half-day conference to mingle with leaders in the slow money movement, attend panel discussions about slow money initiatives in Austin, and hear a keynote speech from Woody Tasch, author of Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money.
Read more about the Slow Money Conference and Showcase and register to attend here.
Mariss is quite the carrot artist
  • Interested in Becoming a CSA Site Host?

JBG is always looking for new delivery locations that are convenient for our members. If you’re interested in becoming a CSA host, there are a few things you should consider: What you need:

  • A shady, covered carport or porch, preferably that’s air-conditioned.
  • Space for at least 10 CSA boxes.
  • Convenient parking for other members to drop by and pick up their boxes.
  • A pickup site that’s accessible every week from mid-afternoon (around 3 p.m.) until 7 p.m.

What you do:

  • Hosts store empty boxes until our delivery driver picks them up the following week. JBG asks that you put away the boxes that day or the next.
  • After the delivery period ends, you distribute unclaimed veggies to charity or a needy family.
  • You do not have to be present during pickup hours. Pickups are self-serve and on the honor system.

Perks:

  • Hosts receive a complimentary CSA box every quarter.

JBG will work with you to determine which weekday fits best with the delivery route and schedule. If you’re interested in becoming a CSA host, please email farm@jbgorganic.com.

  • New Workshare Policy

We always appreciate when workshares come out to help us on boxing days.  Recently, we’ve been getting such a great turnout that we don’t always know what to do with everyone!  So it’s probably time we got organized.  If you’d like to come workshare, please email us on Mondays.  We will send you a confirmation if we have space for you to come, and we’ll have a list for you to sign off on when you get here.  Please don’t come until you get a confirmation, and thanks so much for all your hard work!

4) Quotable Food

“Treat the Earth well. It was not given to you by your parents. It was loaned to you by your children”
- Kenyan Proverb

5) Recipes

  • Dandelion Greens

Ingredients:

* 1 pound dandelion greens
* 1/2 cup chopped onion
* 1 clove garlic, minced
* 1 whole small dried hot chile pepper, seeds removed, crushed
* 1/4 cup cooking oil
* salt and pepper
* Parmesan cheesePreparation:
Discard dandelion green roots; wash greens well in salted water. Cut leaves into 2-inch pieces. Cook greens uncovered in small amount of salted water until tender, about 10 minutes. Sauté onion, garlic, and chile pepper in oil. Drain greens; add to onion garlic mixture. Taste dandelion greens and season with salt and pepper. Serve dandelion greens with grated Parmesan cheese.
Recipe for dandelion greens serves 4.

  • Carrot Corriander Soup

Ingredients:

1 lb of chopped carrots, chopped.
1 small onion, finely chopped.
1 garlic clove, crushed.
3 ½ cups of vegetable stock.
1 tablespoon of freshly chopped coriander.
6 teaspoons of olive oil.
1 teaspoon of coriander seeds, crushed.
1 teaspoon of ground coriander.
¼ cup of chopped sultanas (optional).
Salt and pepper, to taste.

Preparation:
Heat the olive oil in large saucepan. Add the chopped onion, garlic and carrots; cook gently for 10 minutes. Stir in the crushed and ground coriander, then cook for one minute. Add three quarters of the vegetable stock, then cover and simmer for 15 minutes or until carrots are tender. Purée the soup in a blender or food processor. Add the remaining vegetable stock. Add the salt and pepper, and if your including them the chopped sultanas. Garnish with chopped coriander and serve.

6) Produce Storage Tips

To store kohlrabi for several weeks, remove the leaf stems and place, unwashed, in sealed plastic bags in the refrigerator.  Save the greens to eat!

Freshly picked dill leaves have the best flavor.  However, they keep for several days in the refrigerator, their stems in a jar of water and covered with a plastic bag.

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Johnson’s Backyard Garden
9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E
Austin, TX 78742
Office Phone: 512.386.5273
Office Hours: M-Th 8am to 5pm, Friday 8am to 12pm

The farm office is closed 12 pm to 1 pm for lunch.

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com

Hot Weather Crops

Monday, March 22nd, 2010
Marissa is about to start on a row of broccoli

Marissa is about to start on a row of broccoli

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective ….
  • How Brent Became a Farmer (and what has happened since…)

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Save the Date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10
  • Fundraiser for Texas Organic Farmers!  Barr Mansion’s Spring Fling Organicfest, Sunday, March 28th
  • Interested in Becoming a CSA Site Host?
  • Intern Donations Requested
  • New Workshare Policy

4) Quotable Food

5) Recipes

  • Turnips and Onions
  • Greens with Cannellini Beans and Pancetta

6) Produce Storage Tips

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Washing turnips after harvesting in last week's rain

Washing turnips after harvesting in last week's rain

1) In Your Box this Week

Carrots
Kale or Collards
Lettuce
Green Onions
Dill
Bok Choy
Kohlrabi
Turnips or Beets
Dandelion Greens or Endive
Oranges
Grapefruit

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Summertime Classics

This week we are planting some summertime classics: tomatoes and basil.  The timing has to be just right when we plant these crops, because they are extremely sensitive to frost.  We took the tomatoes out of the greenhouse last week because we wanted to harden them off–that is, get them used to the open air instead of the protection of the greenhouse.  But we had to hustle them all back in late last week because of the cold snap we experienced this weekend.  Good thing, too, because when I walked around the field early this morning, frost had coated the tips of the lettuce and kale.  We’re hoping to begin getting tomatoes in the ground on Wednesday, and that the basil we already planted will pull through.  Today was spent planting another spring favorite: green beans.

Warm days and cold nights, that’s how it goes in spring.  It means we stay on our toes before summer moves into full swing.  Then all we have to worry about is how to harvest it all!

The vacuum seeder heads over to the new farm

The vacuum seeder heads over to the River Road Farm

  • How Brent Became a Farmer (and what has happened since…) by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident

I have written about how Brent became a farmer before, but when I attended the first Slow Food farm tour a couple of weekends ago (where Brent gave a review of his story), I realized that many things have happened since. So many new customers have joined the CSA, I decided it’s time to tell Brent’s story again. After all, it’s a pretty good story!

The Past:
Brent grew up in South East Alabama in a farming community where his dad worked for the USDA Farm Service Agency making loans to farmers and his sandbox-companions were farm kids. He didn’t choose a farming career for himself at first, instead he chose to study mechanical engineering. Brent was just a couple semesters away from graduation, when he experienced a change of heart during a class in thermodynamics. He started to wonder whether there was a better way to make a difference in real world problems than working as a mechanical engineer. After some thought, he decided to switch to agricultural engineering and reunited with the farm kids he grew up with. “They were smarter than I thought”, Brent said with a smile.
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Brent gained farming experience during college by working on the college organic gardens and taking some vegetable production and other horticultural classes as special study. He also experimented with closet gardens and hydroponics. Upon graduation, his grandma urged him not to become a farmer, but to find a “real” job instead. Since Brent feels very close to his grandmother, he followed her advice and accepted a job working for a Federal Agency like his father, but instead doing water conservation work. Following a job trip to Austin, he fell in love with the city, and a few month later when the opportunity came up to transfer to Austin, he jumped on it.
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Even though Brent worked full-time, his heart was still in farming. So, he farmed… all weekend long… and every other free minute he could find, converting his backyard at Holly Street in East Austin into a big vegetable garden and fruit orchard. Soon he grew more veggies than his family could possibly eat. So he started selling his surplus produce at the Austin Farmer’s Market. Brent remembers that he grossed 80 dollars that first week at the market. Pretty soon the front yard was converted too and veggies started spilling over the property fence. There was no place for Brent’s kids to play anymore and the need to expand became apparent.
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At that time, the river front property adjacent to Brent’s Hergotz Hill farm was on the market for 2.2 million dollars. Even though this property was way beyond Brent’s means, he drove out to Hergotz Lane to check on the land and soil. He ended up talking to an elderly neighbor lady next door to the farm and told her he was looking for a place to start a farm. She proposed to sell him her 20 acre piece of land for $275,000. Brent was thrilled and went home to tell the good news to his family. The next hurdle was financing. Brent remembered that his dad made loans to farmers and worked for the USDA Farm Service Agency. In order to be eligible for a farm loan, he had to prove that he had three years actual farming experience and (somehow) the Farm Service Agency in Texas believed in him enough that his backyard gardening venture counted and he got the loan to buy the farm.
Brent started with a  30′x50′ garden plot behind his house and was now the proud new owner of what we know today as Johnson’s Backyard Garden. He went from a start-up CSA in 2006 to now over 1000 members.
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The Present:
The next opportunity came when one of Brent’s CSA members financed the purchase of an additional 40 acres of land. Last year irrigation wells were drilled and Brenton and the farm crew installed over a mile of under ground piping to ready the River Road Farm for crops this year.  The new land is a short way outside of Austin on fertile, riverbed soil.  The farm crew was a little freighted when they saw that the new rows had grown from 300 feet at the Hergotz farm to over 850 feet at the River Rd. Farm.  Potatoes were the first crop to go in the ground this spring and beans were just planted today 3-22-10!
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The Future:
Brent’s goals for his farm are to operate sustainably with as little outside input as possible and to feed as many people in Austin as he can, given his time and resources. His vision is to fill 1200 CSA boxes per week and to sell surplus at the farmer’s markets and to restaurants. He doesn’t want to get rich but instead to provide a decent living for his family. After having lived in a trailer home now for several years, they are ready to build a house. Brent is full of good and ambitious ideas for the future. He is currently working on acquiring 150 acres of prime farmland adjacent to River Road Farm. With it, he would have enough land to do crop rotation, to always have 40 acres under production and another 40 under cover crops. He is also currently founding the establishment of a non-profit charity, farming research and education center on that land too.
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In the end, things worked out for everyone. Brent is finally doing what he loves and his now four kids have a dedicated space for a swing and the tomatoes don’t fall into their sand box anymore.
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First Slow Food Austin Farm Tour
Photos by Steven Mattern (stevenmattern.com)
Brenton leads a discussion at the Slow Food Farm Tour last weekend

Brenton leads a discussion at the Slow Food Farm Tour last weekend

farmtour2

The farm visitors received a tray of "Arc of Taste" heirloom vegetable plants for their ticket price.

The farm visitors received a tray of "Arc of Taste" heirloom vegetable plants for their ticket price.

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Save the Date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10

Saturday, April 10th, Johnson’s Backyard Garden will host its Annual Spring Potluck from 4 p.m. ’til dark. Join us for live music, great food, tractor rides around the farm, and lots of fun activities for the kids. Our CSA members are some of the best cooks in Austin, so come hungry to this locavore heaven, with tons of locally-raised and prepared dishes. We’re ready for this year’s potluck to be the best one yet!

  • Fundraiser for Texas Organic Farmers! Barr Mansion’s Spring Fling Organicfest, Sunday, March 28th
A certified organic brunch prepared by the Barr Mansion.  Proceeds will benefit Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association (TOFGA)!  $50 per ticket.  Get them now!
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a
  • Interested in Becoming a CSA Site Host?

JBG is always looking for new delivery locations that are convenient for our members. If you’re interested in becoming a CSA host, there are a few things you should consider: What you need:

  • A shady, covered carport or porch, preferably that’s air-conditioned.
  • Space for at least 10 CSA boxes.
  • Convenient parking for other members to drop by and pick up their boxes.
  • A pickup site that’s accessible every week from mid-afternoon (around 3 p.m.) until 7 p.m.

What you do:

  • Hosts store empty boxes until our delivery driver picks them up the following week. JBG asks that you put away the boxes that day or the next.
  • After the delivery period ends, you distribute unclaimed veggies to charity or a needy family.
  • You do not have to be present during pickup hours. Pickups are self-serve and on the honor system.

Perks:

  • Hosts receive a complimentary CSA box every quarter.

JBG will work with you to determine which weekday fits best with the delivery route and schedule. If you’re interested in becoming a CSA host, please email farm@jbgorganic.com.

  • Intern Donations Requested

The interns are always on the lookout for kitchen and bedroom supplies for their humble trailers.   If you have any gently used home goods you’d like to donate for our intern housing, please call us at 386-5273 or email Carrie at farm@jbgorganic.com.

  • New Workshare Policy

We always appreciate when workshares come out to help us on boxing days.  Recently, we’ve been getting such a great turnout that we don’t always know what to do with everyone!  So it’s probably time we got organized.  If you’d like to come workshare, please email us on Mondays.  We will send you a confirmation if we have space for you to come, and we’ll have a list for you to sign off on when you get here.  Please don’t come until you get a confirmation, and thanks so much for all your hard work!

4) Quotable Food

“I had rather be on my farm than be emperor of the world”

- George Washington

Look forward to Kohlrabi this week!

Look forward to kohlrabi this week!

5) Recipes

  • Turnips and Onions

Ingredients

2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 medium turnips, peeled and grated
1 large onion, sliced into rings
1 pinch salt and pepper to taste
Melt butter with olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add the onions, and cook until caramelized, 10 to 15 minutes. Transfer the onion to a bowl, and mix with the grated turnip. Season with salt and pepper. Refrigerate for 30 minutes to allow the flavors to mingle. Serve on small toast or crackers.
  • Greens with Cannellini Beans and Pancetta

Ingredients

  • 2 slices pancetta or bacon, chopped
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 small red onion, chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 1 bunch kale, roughly chopped
  • 1 bunch beet greens, roughly chopped
  • salt to taste
  • 1 (15 ounce) can cannellini beans, drained
Microwave the chopped pancetta or bacon on high for 3 minutes. Drain the drippings, and set the crispy pancetta aside.
In a large frying pan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Cook onion in oil until soft. Add the crushed garlic cloves, and cook a minute more. Stir in chopped greens, and season with salt to taste (be conservative at this point – you can always add more!). Partially cover the pan, and cook until the greens begin to wilt. Stir in crispy pancetta and cannellini beans. Cook partially covered for 5 more minutes, until the flavors have combined and the greens are tender.

6) Produce Storage Tips

To store kohlrabi for several weeks, remove the leaf stems and place, unwashed, in sealed plastic bags in the refrigerator.  Save the greens to eat!

Freshly picked dill leaves have the best flavor.  However, they keep for several days in the refrigerator, their stems in a jar of water and covered with a plastic bag.

Krystin harvesting green onions

Krystin harvests green onions

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Johnson’s Backyard Garden
9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E
Austin, TX 78742
Office Phone: 512.386.5273
Office Hours: M-Th 8am to 5pm, Friday 8am to 12pm

The farm office is closed 12 pm to 1 pm for lunch.

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com

Local vs. Organic — Which Would You Choose?

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

The new River Road Farm

The new River Road Farm

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Moving to the New Farm
  • Local vs. Organic — Which Would You Choose?
  • Johnson’s Backyard Garden Featured in the news this week!

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Slow Money Update
  • JBG Heirloom Plant Sale continues in March
  • Save the date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10
  • Intern Donations Requested
  • New Workshare Policy

4) Quotable Food

5) Recipes

6) Produce Storage Tips

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

While most of us were at River Road, Vicente rescued a hawk at the Hergotz Farm!

While most of us were at River Road, Vicente rescued a hawk at the Hergotz Farm!

1) In Your Box this Week

Rutabaga
Broccoli
Carrots
Lettuce
Green Garlic or Green Onions
Parsley or Dill
Bok Choy
Kale
Grapefruit
Oranges
Avocado

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Moving to the New Farm

We really started planting at the new farm this week.  60,000 plants, Travis, our new greenhouse manager, calculated.  And all that in only 10 of the 50 acres.   We have potatoes going as well, and this week Temo and Noe spent most of Wednesday and Thursday setting up the irrigation pipes.  If we can keep making progress like last week, then we’ll soon be over our production slump caused by the wet weather these past few months.  The crew has been split up the last week, half at Hergotz Lane and half at River Road, and it’s taking extra effort to stay in communication with everyone to make sure we all know what everyone else is doing.  Once River Road is in full production, the plan is to put Hergotz field to rest for several seasons, that is, to grow  cover crops that will return nutrients to the soil and make it healthier.  This is important because organic farming isn’t just about producing as many vegetables as you can, it’s about caring for the ground that you’re planting in.  It’s about creating an ecosystem that is in balance with nature.

It’s not as easy as it sounds, growing this way.   That’s why this expansion to River Road is so important.  The River Road farm is full of promise, and we are so excited for the week ahead!

From the Farmer’s Perspective is written by Neysa King.  To read more from Neysa, check out www.dissertationtodirt.com

Slow Money at work: this tractor came from a slow money contribution!

Slow Money at work: this tractor came from a slow money contribution!

  • Local vs. Organic –Which Would You Choose?

A recent national survey of U.S. consumers who shop at natural food stores posed the following question: “If you were purchasing a particular ingredient for a recipe and you had a choice of either a local product or a non-local organic one, which would you choose, assuming equivalent price and quality?” Faced with this comparison, 35 percent of respondents chose local and 22 percent chose organic; 41 percent chose both equally. Given the popularity of local, organic produce, there’s a surprisingly small number of farms that produce it in this country. According to recent Census of Agriculture results, approximately 136,000 farmers sell agriculture products directly to consumers through channels like CSA programs, farmers’ markets, and food co-ops. Only about 20,000, or 15 percent, of those farmers produce organic products. Gradually that’s beginning to change. Every time you buy local and organic, your food dollars vote for worthy causes like environmental stewardship and improving nutrition. Johnson’s Backyard Garden is proud to provide local, organic produce to the Austin community. Thanks to your support, together we promote sustainable, organic agriculture and strengthen Austin’s local food infrastructure. Local versus organic doesn’t have to be a choice – you can have it both ways!

  • Johnson’s Backyard Garden Featured in the news this week!

Last week, Tim Eaton spoke with the crew here at JBG about the Young Farmers Grant and the JBG internship program.  Click here to read the story.

News 8 Austin also came out on Monday afternoon to take a look at the internship program and the need for new farmers.  Watch the video here.

3)  Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Slow Money Update

“I had a great time touring the farm and was deeply impressed with Mr. Johnson’s conscientiousness.  He is very focused on building a bright sustainable future not only for his farm, but for the other small and mid-sized farms in Central Texas.  They are even starting a nonprofit to teach the next generation of farmers how to grow crops responsibly.  It was impossible to not be infected by Brenton Johnson’s optimism and enthusiasm; I definitely left the farm inspired.”

Kristi Willis wrote these words in an Austin Post article on Sunday.  Kristi articulates perfectly the need for slow money here at JBG, and we are really grateful for the mention.  Thanks, Kristi.  We are still in need of all of your support!  If you are interested in making a slow money loan to Johnson’s Backyard Garden, please email Carrie at farm@jbgorganic.com

  • JBG Heirloom Plant Sale continues in March

This Saturday we had a tremendous turnout for JBG’s heirloom transplant sale. If you weren’t able to attend, don’t distress. JBG will continue selling heirloom transplants until the last tomato vine has left our greenhouse. There are three ways to purchase JBG heirlooms for your spring garden: via our website, at JBG’s Saturday plant sales, and at the Farmers’ Markets. An online order form is accessible from JBG’s homepage. If you’re a CSA member and spend a minimum of $20, we’ll automatically deliver your plant order along with your next scheduled box pickup. Otherwise, plants are self-serve pickup at the farm. For two more Saturdays, March 13 and 20, we’ll sell plants at JBG from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. We’ll also continue to sell select varieties at the Wednesday Triangle Market and Saturday Downtown and Sunset Valley Farmers’ Markets during the next couple of weeks. Happy Growing!

  • Save the date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10

Saturday, April 10th, Johnson’s Backyard Garden will host its Annual Spring Potluck from 4 p.m. ’til dark. Join us for live music, great food, tractor rides around the farm, and lots of fun activities for the kids. Our CSA members are some of the best cooks in Austin, so come hungry to this locavore heaven, with tons of locally-raised and prepared dishes. We’re ready for this year’s potluck to be the best one yet!

  • Intern Donations Requested

The interns are always on the lookout for kitchen and bedroom supplies for their humble trailers.   If you have any gently used home goods you’d like to donate for our intern housing, please call us at 386-5273 or email Carrie at farm@jbgorganic.com.

  • New Workshare Policy

We always appreciate when workshares come out to help us on boxing days.  Recently, we’ve been getting such a great turnout that we don’t always know what to do with everyone!  So it’s probably time we got organized.  If you’d like to come workshare, please email us on Mondays.  We will send you a confirmation if we have space for you to come, and we’ll have a list for you to sign off on when you get here.  Please don’t come until you get a confirmation, and thanks so much for all your hard work!

4) Quotable Food

“You, as a food buyer, have the distinct privilege of proactively participating in shaping the world your children will inherit.” –Joel Salatin

Winterbor kale in a row

Winterbor kale in a row

5) Recipes

  • Penne with Ricotta and Green Garlic Sauce

1 1/2 cups fresh whole-milk ricotta

1/2 cup finely minced green garlic

2 Tablespoons minced parsley

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

1 pound dried penne pasta

2 tablespoons butter

1/4 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese

Combine the ricotta, green garlic and 1 tablespoon of the parsley in a large bowl; season with salt and pepper. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Add the pasta and cook until al dente. Just before pasta is done, remove 1/2 cup of the boiling water. Whisk enough of the hot water into the ricotta to make a smooth, creamy sauce. Drain the pasta and add to the sauce along with the butter. Toss well. Add 1/4 cup parmesan cheese and toss again, adding a little more of the hot water if needed to thin the sauce. Sprinkle with reserved parsley.

1 tablespoon olive oil

2 cloves garlic

1 pinch red pepper flake

1 large bunch greens (mustard, collard, spinach, kale)

1 medium size tomato, coarsely chopped

1/2 teaspoon salt

juice of 1 lemon

Preheat a large skillet over medium high heat. Meanwhile thinly slice garlic into slivers. Add the oil to the skillet, then the garlic and red pepper flake. Chop the greens into strips. Add the greens to the skillet. Continually stir the greens until the become tender. (4 minutes for spinach, 8 minutes for the other greens).

Add the tomato. Cook for only 1-2 minutes until just beginning to soften. Add salt, then lemon juice. Stir everything until combined and the lemon juice is almost evaporated. Roughly 2 minutes. Serve

6) Produce Storage Tips

Store Bok Choy in a plastic bag in your vegetable crisper. Wash immediately before using.

Remove the tops from carrots before storing them in you refrigerator. Greens draw out nutrients from the root.

Neysa uses a stirrup hoe in the market garden collards

Neysa uses a stirrup hoe in the market garden collards

7) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Johnson’s Backyard Garden
9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E
Austin, TX 78742
Office Phone: 512.386.5273
Office Hours: M-Th 8am to 5pm, Friday 8am to 12pm

The farm office is closed 12 pm to 1 pm for lunch.

Get Ready for Spring

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
We know how to enjoy sunny days

We know how to enjoy sunny days

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Get Ready for Spring
  • Vegetable Vampire Transformation, by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident

3) New Wednesday Round Rock Pickup Location THIS WEEK!

4) Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • JBG Heirloom Plant Sale continues in March
  • Save the date!  JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be Saturday, April 10
  • Slow Money Goal Reached! On to the next project…
  • Intern Donations Requested

5) Quotable Food

6) Recipes

  • Tofu and Bok Choi Stir-Fry
  • Lamb Roast with Spinach Stuffing

7) Produce Storage Tips

8) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Travis has recently been hired as our greenhouse manager

Travis has recently been hired as our greenhouse manager

1) In Your Box this Week

Spinach
Broccoli
Carrots
Lettuce
Green Garlic or Green Onions
Parsley or Dill
Kohlrabi
Bok Choy
Collards or Kale
Grapefruit
Oranges
Avocado

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Get Ready for Spring

An old Southern farmers’ saying is that after the last frost, the pecan and mesquite trees blossom.  This weekend that’s just what we saw at JBG, which means some big changes are coming to our fields and to our crops.  Before you know it, the winter greens, root vegetables and storage crops in your boxes will give way to spring and summer treats like potatoes, swiss chard, and those lovely tomatoes.  Our crops will start growing bigger, faster, and our mentalities will shift from winter’s conservation to the abundance of the spring harvest.  So much of a farmer’s time is dedicated to routines and preparation.  Now is the time to get ready for the one of the year’s busiest seasons.

Spring is in bloom

We can see that a lot of Austinites are getting ready Spring, too.  Saturday JBG had a huge turnout for the Slow Food Tour and Heirloom Plant Sale. Locavores from around the Hill Country toured JBG’s fields and heard Brent’s perspective on organic, sustainable farming.  That morning we started with two tables and a trailer covered in transplants; there were only a few flats left by the end of the day!  Special Thanks to Austin Slow Food for putting the tour together and bringing so many people out to see our farm.

From the Farmer’s Perspective is written by Neysa King.  To read more by Neysa, click here.

  • Vegetable Vampire Transformation, by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident

Grit

3) New Wednesday Round Rock Pickup Location THIS WEEK!

Beginning this Wednesday, March 10, 1119 Sam Bass Road will no longer be our Round Rock pickup site.  The new Round Rock pickup site will be:

2009 Bent Tree Loop, Round Rock, Texas, 78681

If you are currently picking up Wednesdays at Sam Bass Road, you do not need to do anything at this time.  You will automatically be transferred to 2009 Bent Tree Loop for your March 10th pickup.  If you are picking up at a different pickup site and would like to change your pickup location, please call us at 386-5273 or email the office at farm@jbgorganic.com.

4) Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • JBG Heirloom Plant Sale continues in March

This Saturday we had a tremendous turnout for JBG’s heirloom transplant sale. If you weren’t able to attend, don’t distress. JBG will continue selling heirloom transplants until the last tomato vine has left our greenhouse. There are three ways to purchase JBG heirlooms for your spring garden: via our website, at JBG’s Saturday plant sales, and at the Farmers’ Markets. An online order form is accessible from JBG’s homepage. If you’re a CSA member and spend a minimum of $20, we’ll automatically deliver your plant order along with your next scheduled box pickup. Otherwise, plants are self-serve pickup at the farm. For two more Saturdays, March 13 and 20, we’ll sell plants at JBG from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. We’ll also continue to sell select varieties at the Wednesday Triangle Market and Saturday Downtown and Sunset Valley Farmers’ Markets during the next couple of weeks. Happy Growing!

  • Save the date! JBG’s Annual Spring Potluck will be April 10

Saturday, April 10th, Johnson’s Backyard Garden will host its Annual Spring Potluck from 4 p.m. ’til dark. Join us for live music, great food, tractor rides around the farm, and lots of fun activities for the kids. Our CSA members are some of the best cooks in Austin, so come hungry to this locavore heaven, with tons of locally-raised and prepared dishes. We’re ready for this year’s potluck to be the best one yet!

  • Slow Money Update

Great news! Thanks to the overwhelming support of our CSA members and other contributors, we reached our initial Slow Money goal and will sign the paperwork for our Capital Farm Credit loan later this week. The money will go toward three used tractors (all cost less than half the price of new equipment), vegetable washing equipment and tools to install drip tape irrigation at the new property on River Road.  These crucial equipment needs would not have been met without your support.  Everyone at JBG gives you their sincere thanks.  As JBG continues to move toward greater sustainability and efficiency, we hope you will be proud of the substantial contribution you made, and continue to make, to our success.

If you’re interested in making a Slow Money contribution to JBG, we can still use your help!…just email us.

Making a loan to JBG is not only socially responsible, but it also makes good financial sense. The minimum loan amount is $5,000. In return, we offer monthly payments at 4% annual interest over 7 years.

When you offer your financial support to Johnson’s Backyard Garden, you become a positive force in Austin’s local food chain. You help ensure that some of Austin’s last historic farmland is preserved and continues to be cultivated using organic, sustainable methods.

To learn more about slow money…. check out our Slow Money page.  Now that we have the right equipment, we want to use it in the best way possible.  JBG’s next big initiative is to adopt Precision Ag practices.  What is Precision Ag?  Put simply, it is the use of new technology to make farms run at optimum efficiency.  In our case, we would install GPS technology on our tractors in order to make them work more precisely, efficiently, and easier on our drivers.  Installing a GPS system would essentially guide our tractors along the same, pin-straight rows again and again.  What good does that do?  Well, it eliminates human error when we make our beds for planting.  Straighter rows mean we use all the land possible for growing vegetables.  Also, it reinforces and isolates soil compaction to the aisles, rather than the beds, making our beds looser for the vegetables to grow (looser soil = better growing).  Finally, knowing exactly where our beds will be made throughout the entire season will let us keep our irrigation drip tape in the ground longer than we currently can (a few months at best).  This means we will greatly reduce the waste generated by having to pull up our drip tape up several times a season.  Reducing waste is something we all know is good!

To learn more about Precision Ag and the tools involved, click on one of these links:

www.gpsfarm.comwww.agleader.com

  • Intern Donations Requested

The interns are always on the lookout for kitchen and bedroom supplies for their humble trailers.   If you have any gently used home goods you’d like to donate for our intern housing, please call us at 386-5273 or email Carrie at farm@jbgorganic.com.

5) Quotable Food

6) Recipes

  • Tofu and Bok Choi Stir-Fry

1 1/2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
1 tablespoon dry Sherry
1 teaspoon oriental sesame oil
1 teaspoon cornstarch
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
3 large garlic cloves, minced
1 tablespoon minced peeled fresh ginger
1/8 teaspoon dried crushed red pepper
3 1/2 cups thinly sliced, trimmed bok choy
1 5-ounce can sliced water chestnuts, drained
3 green onions, cut into 1-inch pieces
10 1/2 ounces extra-firm tofu, drained, cut into 3/4-inch pieces

Combine first 4 ingredients in small bowl; mix well. Heat vegetable oil until very hot in heavy large wok or skillet over high heat. Add garlic, ginger and crushed red pepper. Stir-fry until aromatic, about 30 seconds. Add bok choy and stir-fry until just wilted, about 2 minutes. Mix in water chestnuts and green onions and stir-fry until onions are tender, about 1 minute. Add tofu and lightly stir-fry until tofu is just heated through, about 2 minutes. Pour over soy mixture. Stir-fry until liquid boils and thickens, about 1 minute.

  • Lamb Roast with Spinach Stuffing

Leg of lamb (about 6 lb), boned and butterflied
10 ounces of chopped spinach
3 minced garlic cloves
2 medium eggs, beaten
6 cups of plain croutons
¾ cup of onion, chopped
½ cup of water
½ cup of celery, chopped
¼ cup of parsley, snipped
¼ cup of grated parmesan cheese
¼ cup of olive oil
3 tablespoons of basil, snipped
1 teaspoon of dried rosemary, crushed
Pinch of dried marjoram, crushed
Pinch of freshly ground black pepper
Mint sprigs, to garnish

Cook the onion, celery, and garlic in hot oil until tender. In a suitably sized mixing bowl, stir together the spinach, beaten eggs, parsley, basil, marjoram, and black pepper. Add onion, celery and garlic to the bowl. Add the parmesan cheese and the plain croutons, then drizzle with water and toss gently. Set aside. Pound the lamb to an even thickness, then sprinkle with the dried rosemary. Spread the stuffing over top of the lamb roast. Roll up the meat and tie. Place the lamb seam side down on a rack in a shallow roasting pan. Roast in an 350°F oven for two hours. Once cooked, allow to stand for twenty minutes before carving. Garnish with mint sprigs and serve.

7) Produce Storage Tips

When storing carrots, don’t expose them to ethylene gas, which is given off by fruit such as apples and pears. Ethylene triggers a bitter taste in carrots.

Our carrots keep going and going...this one probably won't go in the boxes

Our carrots keep going and going...this one probably won't go in the boxes

8) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Johnson’s Backyard Garden
9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E
Austin, TX 78742
Office Phone: 512.386.5273
Office Hours: M-Th 8am to 5pm, Friday 8am to 12pm

The farm office is closed 12 pm to 1 pm for lunch.

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com

Those Fabulous Greens

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010
Garlic stays in the ground all winter, from November to April

Garlic stays in the ground all winter, from November to April

1) In Your Box this Week

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective …. Fabulous Greens
  • The Consistency of Change, by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident

3) New South Austin Pickup Location Replacing Brodie/Slaughter THIS WEEK!

4) New Round Rock Pickup Location

5) Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Johnson’s Backyard Garden Slow Food Farm Tour and Heirloom Plant Sale, March 6th, 13th, and 20th, from 10am to 2pm
  • It’s That Time of Year Again!  Johnson’s Backyard Garden Annual Spring Potluck
  • Resolution Gardens will Build a Garden for You!
  • Intern Donations Requested!
  • So Long, Keith; Good Luck Urban Patchwork!

6)Quotable Food

7) Recipes

  • Easter Carrot Soup
  • Warm Turnip Greens Dip

8) Produce Storage Tips

9) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Harvesting Red Ace Beets

A harvest of Red Ace beets

1) In Your Box this Week

Carrots
Turnips
Spinach
Broccoli
Kale
Lettuce
Dill
Green Onions

Avocado from G&S Groves
Oranges and Grapefruit from G&S Groves and Jonas Ybarra

(Jonas’ grapefruits may not be as pretty, but they’re just as tasty!)

2) Farm News:

  • From the Farmer’s Perspective… Fabulous Greens

We are almost finished planting potatoes at the River Road Farm.  Good thing, too, because our greenhouse is just bursting with transplants ready to go out.  Because we only have one transplanter, we’ve had to give priority to planting potatoes instead of transplanting other crops.  This week we should get back on schedule, though, and the beautiful plants in the greenhouse seem to have perked up in anticipation.  Hopefully with our expansion in the coming year, we won’t have to do this balancing act again.  The snow day last week wiped out a bed of cauliflower transplants, which are more susceptible to the cold than their green cousins, broccoli.  What is doing very well in the field, though:  the leafy greens.  We hope you are enjoying the kale, spinach, and mustard you’re getting in your boxes!  Cooked greens sure are tasty on a rainy day.  And don’t forget that gorgeous lettuce!  As the heads get bigger in our field, so will the amount of lettuce you get in your boxes.  Take notice of the lettuce in your box these coming weeks, and you’ll be able to watch them grow yourself.

Lettuce transplants

Lettuce transplants

  • The Consistency of Change, by Grit Ramuschkat, JBG Resident
Whenever my husband Steven and I take a stroll out into the fields, we are amazed at how different things tend to look compared to just a few weeks earlier. Historically, life in the city has been associated with such a fast pace and life in the country rather with a calm serenity, a slower pace and sometimes even a backward-ticking clock. Well, not so with Brenton in charge! With his seemingly bottomless pool of energy, steady enthusiasm for his work and his vision of growth for the farm, change is the only constant. Where there was a small barn, there is a big barn, where there was a small intern house, there is no house, where there was an orchard, there is two trees, then no trees, then an open field, then rows upon rows of promising looking vegetables. Where there was one tractor, there is three, all in different colors and with different applications. In the same parcel of the field, there was garlic, then came potatoes, then winter squash and now a sea of carrots.

These human-induced changes tend to catch our attention and often are rather finite (however, again, “finite” is not a term in Brenton’s repertoire). They often scare us a little and sometimes we feel resistant to accept them. However, I do have to say that with change being so prominent at this farm, I feel I have become more flexible and open to change myself.

Then there is nature, which itself is in constant motion. Nature’s changes are more subtle though and tend to quietly sneak up on us. Nature-induced change is cyclical also, and thus, while constantly changing also reoccurring. This steadiness of change tends to comfort us and reassures us that we are part of a bigger picture. In nature, change and consistency become one.

How can we associate fear and resistance with one type of change and reassurance and comfort with another? Could we possibly take the feelings from one and transfer it onto the other, to make it also comforting to us? After all, it is change that propels us, that gets us somewhere (again, look at Brent!). Change is what nature does and since we are part of nature, let’s embrace change into our lives as well!

3) New South Austin Pickup Location Replacing Brodie/Slaughter THIS WEEK!

Beginning THIS Friday, March 5th, Brodie/Slaughter will no longer be a CSA pickup site.  The new site in South Austin will be:

8110 Cattle Drive, Austin, Texas 78749

If you are currently picking up Fridays at Brodie/Slaughter, you do not need to do anything at this time.  You will automatically be transferred to 8110 Cattle Drive for your March 5th pickup.  If you are picking up at a different pickup site and would like to change your pickup location to 8110 Cattle Drive, please call us at 386-5273 or email the office at farm@jbgorganic.com.

4) New Wednesday Round Rock Pickup Location!

Beginning Wednesday, March 10, 1119 Sam Bass Road will no longer be our Round Rock pickup site.  The new Round Rock pickup site will be:

2009 Bent Tree Loop, Round Rock, Texas, 78681

If you are currently picking up Wednesdays at Sam Bass Road, you do not need to do anything at this time.  You will automatically be transferred to 2009 Bent Tree Loop for your March 10th pickup.  If you are picking up at a different pickup site and would like to change your pickup location, please call us at 386-5273 or email the office at farm@jbgorganic.com.

5) Updates, Meetings, and  Events

  • Johnson’s Backyard Garden Slow Food Farm Tour and Heirloom Plant Sale, March 6th, 13th, and 20th

Saturday, March 6, JBG is collaborating with Slow Food Austin on a Slow Food Farm Tour and Heirloom Plant Sale.  Come by our farm to tour our greenhouse, fields, and participate in a discussion about organic farming and CSAs in Austin.  Browse through our heirloom Ark of Taste transplants and take some home to plant in your garden!  JBG’s heirloom transplant sale will continue through the first three Saturdays in March from 10am to 2pm.  These three weeks we will also be carrying heirloom transplants at the Downtown Austin Farmers Market and the Sunset Valley Farmers Market.

For two weeks only, current CSA members may order these transplants for pickup at their CSA drop off sites.  This sale will extend from Tuesday, March 9th- Saturday, March 20th.  If you are interested in purchasing heirloom transplants for your pickup during these dates, keep an eye on our web site for available varieties and directions for ordering.  We will send out an email to members once these details are online.

Boston Marrow Squash

Boston Marrow Squash

  • It’s That Time of Year Again!  Johnson’s Backyard Garden Annual Spring Potluck

Saturday, April 10th, Johnson’s Backyard Garden will host its Annual Spring Potluck!  Come join us for live music, great food, tractor rides around the farm, and lots of fun activities for the kids.  We truly believe that our CSA members are some of the best cooks in Austin, so come hungry to this locavores heaven, with tons of locally-raised and prepared dishes.  We’re ready for this year’s potluck to be the best one yet!  JBG will be sending out Evites soon, so save the date and keep a look out!

  • Resolution Gardens will Build a Garden for You!

Resolution Gardens will build a garden for you! If you’ve wanted to start growing some veggies in your back yard but haven’t got the time, tools or know-how, give Resolution Gardens a call. They’ll do all the hard work that it takes to get a garden installed including plants, soil, seeds, compost and siding- and then presto! you’re ready to start gardening for yourself.  They can even help you maintain, harvest and re-plant from season to season. From 4×8 Raised-Beds to Yard Farms and everything in between, if you want to grow food, they’ll help!

Resolution Gardens is located at 2205 W 35th Street.  For more info, check out www.resolutiongardens.com.

  • Intern Donations Requested!

The interns are on the lookout for kitchen and bedroom supplies for their humble trailers.   Specifically, the interns need a microwave to heat up their lunches, and a washing machine for their dirt-caked work clothes!  If you have any gently used home goods you’d like to donate for our intern housing, please call us at 386-5273 or email Carrie at farm@jbgorganic.com.

  • So Long Keith.  Good Luck Urban Patchwork!

Keith just completed his 6-month internship.  We'll miss you!

Keith just completed his 6-month internship. We'll miss you!

JBG’s charming intern Keith McDorman completed the last day of his internship at the Downtown Austin Farmers Market on Saturday.  Keith is going to begin new employment at the non-profit CSA, Urban Patchwork.  Urban Patchwork supports community gardens and urban, local farms, as all the farmland is within the boundaries of the urban neighborhoods who choose to participate.  Neighborhood residents and businesses host farm plots in their yards in exchange for fresh veggies and other opportunities that reduce cost of living and increase the quality and value of their land and lives.  For more information on Urban Patchwork, visit www.urbanpatchwork.org.

6)Quotable Food

“A good farmer feeds all its animals even the ones that can only be seen with a microscope.” –Jean Paul Courtens, Roxbury Farm Soil Fertility Manual

7) Recipes

  • Easter Carrot Soup

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 medium yellow onion, sliced

1 1/2 pounds carrots, cut into 1/4 inch rounds

4 cups chicken or vegetable broth

1 tablespoon grated ginger

1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

1/2 cup heavy cream

3 tablespoons chopped fresh dill
Method:

Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium high heat.  Add the onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened but not browned, 5 to 6 minutes.  Stir in the carrots, broth, ginger, 1 1/4 teaspoon of salt, and the pepper.  Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat and simmer until the carrots are soft, about 20 minutes.  Let cool at least 10 minutes.  Using a blender, puree the soup in batches until smooth.  Return to pot and rewarm over medium heat.  Meanwhile, whisk the cream in a small bowl until soft peaks form.  Fold in the remaining salt and dill.  Divide the soup among individual bowls and top with the dill cream

  • Warm Turnip Greens Dip

5 bacon slices, chopped

1/2 sweet onion, chopped

2 garlic cloves, chopped

1/4 cup dry white wine

1 bunch turnip greens, finely chopped

12 ounces cream cheese, cut into pieces

1 8oz container sour cream

1/2 teaspoon dried crushed red pepper

1/4 teaspoon salt

3/4 cup grated parmesan

Method:

Cook bacon in a Dutch oven over medium high heat 5 to 6 minutes or until crisp; remove bacon, and drain on paper towels, reserving 1 Tbsp. drippings in Dutch oven.  Saute onion and garlic in hot drippings 3 to 4 minutes.  Add wine, and cook 1 to 2 minutes, stirring to loosen particles from bottom of Dutch oven.  Stir in turnip greens, next 4 ingredients, and 1/2 Parmesan cheese.  Cook, stirring often, 6 to 8 minutes or until cream cheese is melted and misture is thoroughly heated.  Transfer to a lightly greased 1 1/2 qt. baking dish.  Sprinkle evenly with remaining Parmesan cheese.  Broil 6 inches from heat 4 to 5 minutes or until cheese is lightly browned.  Sprinkle with bacon.

8) Produce Storage Tips

Spinach, Kale, Collards and Mustard Greens are best stored in a plastic bag or Tupperware in the vegetable crisper for 3-5 days.

Remove the tops from carrots before storing them in you refrigerator. Greens draw out nutrients from the root.

Our full greenhouse

Our full greenhouse

9) Johnson’s Backyard Garden Contact Info

Johnson’s Backyard Garden
9515 Hergotz Lane, Box E
Austin, TX 78742
Office Phone: 512.386.5273
Office Hours: M-Th 8am to 5pm, Friday 8am to 12pm

The farm office is closed 12 pm to 1 pm for lunch.

e-mail: farm@jbgorganic.com