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Vegan Broccoli “Cheddar” Soup

April 3, 2017 By newwestfarmers

Thanks to all who took part in the Mason Jar Meal Prep workshop last week with Chef Jen Hiltz! Jen prepared a wonderful plant-based three-course menu for us to sample. From a green smoothie, to a lunch quinoa and chickpea-based salad, to a rich and cheesy vegan broccoli “cheddar” soup (recipe below).

She imparted us with her knowledge of nutrients, alkaline and base foods, how to soak our grains and nuts, how to make cashew cream, and which oils to use for proper salad dressing in order to refrigerate and use them through out the week.

Everything was fresh, simple, and enlightening. We were pleasantly surprised at how filling, delicious, and rich the recipes turned out. This broccoli “cheese” soup (which we made the very next day at home!) might surprise you… proof you really can get super-cheesy without the cheese!

Vegan Broccoli "Cheddar" Soup

  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 small onion ((diced))
  • 1/2 tsp salt ((plus a pinch))
  • 3 cloves garlic ((minced))
  • 4 cups broccoli, stalks and florets
  • 1/2 cup peeled and chopped carrots
  • 1/2 tsp ground turmeric
  • 3 cups veggie broth

Cashew Cream

  • 1 cup cashews
  • 2 cups veggie broth
  • 3 tbsp white miso
  • 2 tbsp nutritional yeast
  • 2 tbps lemon juice
  1. Sautee onion in oil with a pinch of salt for about 3 minutes. Add the garlic and sautee for around 30 seconds.

  2. Add broccoli, carrots, turmeric, remaining 1/2 tsp salt, and broth. Cover and bring to a boil.

  3. Once boiling, lower heat to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes until carrots are soft,

Cashew Cream

  1. Add cashews to blender, along with broth, miso, and nutritional yeast. Blend until smooth.

  2. Add the cashew cream to the soup and use an immersion blender to puree, so that only tiny bits of broccoli and carrots are visible. Keep the soup on low heat, partially covered for about 10 mins until thickened.

  3. Once thickened, add the lemon juice, taste for seasoning, adjust if necessary and serve.

Filed Under: Blog, Recipes

Traditional Kale Colcannon

March 16, 2017 By newwestfarmers

With St. Patrick’s Day approaching, and heavy grey skies looming outside, it’s a perfect time to warm yourself up with some comforting Irish colcannon.

An inexpensive side dish, colcannon gets it name from the Irish cál ceannann (“white headed cabbage”) and combines mashed potatoes with kale or cabbage. While it pairs really well with sausages and stew, I’d happily eat a bowl or two of it by itself!

Our President Jen has tried, tested, and heartily approves of local author Sharon Hanna’s Kale Colcannon recipe from The Book of Kale, which the author describes as her idea of “sex in a pan!” Why not pick up the ingredients fresh at this Saturday’s market and give it a try?

  • 4-5 large floury potatoes ((such as russets))
  • 4 cups kale leaves ((preferable curly, in chiffonade))
  • 4 tbsp butter ((divided))
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup cream
  • 8 green onions ((chopped, including the green parts))
  • 1 tsp salt
  • black pepper ((to taste))
  • 2 tbsp parsley ((chopped finely))
  1. Boil the potatoes until tender. Drain and set aside. 

  2. In the same pot, cook the kale in a little water and half the butter until the kale is tender–about 8 minutes. 

  3. Meanwhile, bring the milk and cream to a boil in a small saucepan. Lower the heat and add the green onions, salt, and pepper. 

  4. Mash the potatoes, add the hot milk/cream mixture and the kale. Beat until light and fluffy. Turn out into a warmed bowl, make a well in the centre, and add the rest of the butter, plus a little more, and the chopped parsley. 

You can get a copy of The Book of Kale here, at New West’s Black Bond Books, or at Chapters.

Filed Under: Recipes

Farmers Market Challenge: Best Laid Plans

August 10, 2016 By newwestfarmers

Going into market day, I try to plan as much as possible. I research the website, price out as much as I can, and plan our meals and shopping list accordingly. We only have $40 to spend, I want to make sure we’re spending it wisely, getting everything we need, and hopefully a couple extras on the list too.

But sometimes, plans just don’t go according to plan.

Because the products at the farmers’ market are so reliant on weather and crops, you’re not guaranteed the same stuff week in and week out. What you loved last week may not be there the next week. Something new may be stacking those tables instead – throwing your plan completely off kilter.

And that’s the adventure of it.

For us, purslane was the culprit this week.

It wasn’t on my list, and before last Thursday, it wasn’t even in my vocabulary. But when I was under the Zaklan Heritage Farm tent picking up my 2 for $5 greens, and saw those pretty leaves of purslane, I asked owner Gemma McNeil for details.

It’s a fast-growing succulent that’s super high in Omega-3 fatty acids and contains vitamin A, vitamin B, vitamin C, magnesium, calcium, potassium and iron. It’s grown all over the world, and adds a lemony flavour to your salads.

She had me at Omega-3.

FM5purslane
Purslane

You know how sometimes when you discover something you’ve never heard of before, suddenly you’re hearing about it everywhere? This weekend my son and I went into the valley for a family birthday party. I packed along a lunch salad, and when my mom saw the purslane atop all the greens, she told me the old farm garden was full of it.

She had never tasted it until she took a bite of my salad. She liked it!

A few hours later we were in Chilliwack, and my great nephew’s grandma was giving me a bag full of freshly picked zucchini, cucumber, carrots, and pears (I don’t turn my nose up at free food). She told me she’d normally have beans ready to go too, but they got sacrificed in her effort to blow out the “annoying” purslane.

Yes, folks, although super healthy, and, in my opinion, super tasty, many farmers look at it more as a weed than a crop. Lucky for us, though, a few vendors at Royal City Farmers’ Market treat it as the latter.

Yet another market-great discovery.

This week’s loot:

  • 4 red peppers: $5.90
  • 1 zucchini: $1
  • 1 lb. green beans: $3
  • 1 bag each of kale and pizzo mustard greens: 2 for $5
  • 1 head red-leaf lettuce: $3
  • 1 oz. basil: $1
  • 1 bunch purslane: $2
  • 1 bunch cilantro: $2
  • 2 cucumbers: $2.40
  • 1 bunch Italian onions: $2.70
  • 3 corn on the cobs: $3
  • 1 handful each of mint and rosemary: free
  • 1 bag tortilla chips: $3
  • 1 container pico de gallo: $5
This week’s greens: pizzo, purslane, kale, and red-leaf lettuce.
This week’s greens: pizzo, purslane, kale, and red-leaf lettuce.

Every week we try to incorporate at least one full market meal into our meal plan. This week, we did stuffed Mexican peppers – no meat – with a side of fresh tortilla chips and pico de gallo (made that morning!!!), and a mix of market greens. It was a bit out of our comfort zone, as we are very much meat eaters in this house. I had been wanting to try to make stuffed peppers for quite sometime, but all the recipes I saw were filled with ground beef, and while we are meat eaters, we’re not so much beef eaters. So when I saw a recipe with quinoa and black beans, and saw that we could incorporate several ingredients from the market, and we had all others on hand, I thought it was perfect.

Red peppers: Greendale Herb and Vine; Stuffing: Roasted corn: Country Village Market; Italian onion stems: Yarrow EcoVillage; Cilantro: Zaklan Heritage Farm. Tortilla chips and pico de gallo: Muy Rico. Mixed greens: Zaklan Heritage Farm
Red peppers: Greendale Herb and Vine; Stuffing: Roasted corn: Country Village Market; Italian onion stems: Yarrow EcoVillage; Cilantro: Zaklan Heritage Farm. Tortilla chips and pico de gallo: Muy Rico. Mixed greens: Zaklan Heritage Farm

The recipe can be found at http://www.thegardengrazer.com/2015/10/mexican-quinoa-stuffed-peppers.html

We altered the recipe a bit. Instead of baking the peppers in the oven, we grilled them on the barbecue. We also grilled the corn, something my husband, the chef of the house, had been wanting to experiment with for quite some time. Both added a really nice, smoky flavour to the meal. And instead of the nutritional yeast, we opted for shaved parmesan. We made 4 peppers, and had leftover filling for two lunch salads.

Not only smoky, the sweetness really came through on the grilled corn too.
Not only smoky, the sweetness really came through on the grilled corn too.

In total, we spent $39, which means we’ve got an extra dollar to spend next week.

Happy shopping!

Filed Under: Blog, Buying local, Featured, Recipes Tagged With: farmers market, food challenge, Katie Bartel, meal planning, New Westminster, Shop Local

Farmers Market Challenge: The Taste of Microgreens

July 18, 2016 By newwestfarmers

“Daddy, why are you putting dead flowers onto mommy’s salad???”

Oh child, those aren’t dead flowers, nope, those are microgreens, and you better be liking them because they’re a new must-have staple in our market-buying groceries. (Note: Microgreens do not look like dead flowers; this was the observation of a three-year-old.)

When I walked past the Nutrigreens tent at last week’s market, I looked at my list and sure enough microgreens were there, but only on the maybe side. That meant that only after we got our necessities for the week purchased could we splurge on the maybes.

We are working with a budget after all; we’ve got to stick to the plan.

The list of definites and maybes.
The list of definites and maybes.

The maybes are things we don’t necessarily need but that may intrigue us, something we have yet to try, something that may only benefit one of us, not all three, or something that’s more a treat than a necessity.

Microgreens are like the premies of baby greens, seedlings loaded with mega nutrients. I’d seen them at the market before, but had never tried them. At $5 for a 300-gram container, I wasn’t so sure I wanted to commit; I thought I could find better value in veggies elsewhere.

But I got to chatting with the vendor, he told me if I got the plastic container instead of a bag, he could stuff more in there, and if I relocated them to a tupperware container at home with a damp cloth (I used paper towel) on both the bottom and top of the container they’d stay fresh – lasting up to 12-14 days without going bad.

He handed me a flower.

Market goers, I know you already know this, but for those of you new to market buying, this is a thing – we eat the produce before we buy.

Sampling: it’s a brilliant selling feature!
Sampling: it’s a brilliant selling feature!

The flavour that bursted in my mouth with that tiny sample, it was something I don’t think I’ve ever tasted in my greens before. So loud and prominent, like a kid jumping around in my mouth shouting “Look at me! Look at me!” Even my husband, who is a bit more reserved with his salad explorations, was wowed by the flavour kick – putting it atop our salads and into his tuna sandwiches for an added twist.

However, based on the amount we liked them, there’s no way they were going to last 12 days; by week’s end, there’s was enough for maybe two salads left.

This week’s loot:

Aged havarti cheese: $11
Half dozen eggs: $3
Microgreens: $5
Head of red spiky leafed lettuce: $3
2 yellow zucchinis: $1.50
1 red cabbage: $2.80
Bunch of green onions: $2.50
1 lb fava beans: $3.00
4 carrots: $3.50
Cluster of rainbow chard: $3.00
1 giant cookie: $2.00

The loot bag: veggies, eggs, cheese, oh my!
The loot bag: veggies, eggs, cheese, oh my!

Just like last week, we had a plan, but unfortunately a few things needed to be altered on the fly. When we’d heard Vale Farms was coming to town, we’d hoped to acquire lamb, but discovered lamb wouldn’t be available until September. A quick brainstorming session had us purchasing a half dozen eggs and the award-winning aged havarti from Golden Ears Cheese for a quiche-inspired market meal.

160712marketquiche

Market ingredients: Quiche = 4 eggs, 2-cups cheese, ~3/4 cup green onions, ~1 cup rainbow chard; Salad = red lettuce, red cabbage, ruby streaks mustard greens from 2 markets ago, microgreens, green onions, scapes from 3-4 markets ago, and broccoli from 2 markets ago.

A huge thumbs up from all three of us!

Carrots were on the necessity side this week. I wanted to compare between the bulk bags of carrots we usually get and the freshly pulled from the ground carrots offered at the market. As suspected, the market carrots did not disappoint. As soon as I took that first bite, it was a throwback to my childhood years growing up on the family farm, which after 30 years was sold last year. It’s a taste you don’t get in bulk: not just crunchy, but earthy and moist too.

Unfortunately, though, at $3.50 for a bunch of four, though bulky, the flavour was not enough to justify the expense.

Carrots are the easy, go-to vegetable for both my son and I. I, alone, eat at least two, sometimes three or more a day. Four carrots barely gets us through a day, let alone a week.

Sadly, the carrots will be more of a treat than a staple.

Tally for the week:
• 4 full-plate lunch salads
• 2 lunch side salads
• 7 dinner 1/2 plate salads
• 2 dinners with grilled zucchini and green beans
• 1 breakfast smoothie (with greens)
• 3 microgreen-infused tuna sandwiches
• 1 dinner with sautéd green beans (from last week’s loot)
• 1 dinner with quiche (plus 2 servings left over)
• 2 snacks of carrots
• 1 dessert cookie split between two happy boys

With the weather being somewhat crummy this week, we ate more dinner salads and stove-prepared meals than grilled vegetables, which meant that by Monday, we were running low on our greens, and still had quite a bit of zucchini left. I was able to off-set the greens with a small harvest of arugula and spinach from our patio pallet garden. We still have green beans left over from last week, and scapes from three markets ago that still look and taste fantastic. In fact, I think they’re getting even more garlicy with time.

Salads: I’ve always had mad salad-making skill, but these days, they’re becoming more and more Picasso-esque in both beauty and flavour!
Salads: I’ve always had mad salad-making skill, but these days, they’re becoming more and more Picasso-esque in both beauty and flavour!

This week we went 30 cents over budget. After all the necessities and a couple maybes were purchased, we had $1.70 remaining. My husband’s eyes drifted to the Artisan Bakery stand.

“Surely, we could splurge,” he suggested. “It could be a treat,” he offered.

After all, farmers’ markets aren’t just about the veggies, you know!

Filed Under: Blog, Buying local, Recipes Tagged With: blog series, budget, buy local, farmers market, Katie Bartel, meal planning, outside the box

Cooking Up Kalettes

February 19, 2016 By newwestfarmers

Post written by contributor Katie Bartel

Okay, so let’s be honest here for a second shall we. I am not a master of the kitchen, not even close. Before my husband, I lived on omelettes and grilled cheese sandwiches. But that’s not to say the kitchen doesn’t fascinate me. I grew up with parents who both are fantastic in the cooking realm, I have always been drawn to recipe magazines, and when on maternity leave a few years ago, after being gifted a subscription to Cook’s Country by my pops, I embarked on a 12-month challenge that had me trying my hand in the savoury world once a month. And you know what, I totally I didn’t poison us! Quite the feat. Still, though, unless it’s a birthday, or some other special sort of event, it is rare that I am the one with chef’s apron on in our house.

Well folks, that is about to change.

A new challenge has been steeping in my brain for about a month now – and it’s all about the fresh, local, awesomeness of the Royal City Farmers Market. Every market day, I have committed to seeking out the strangest, unique, most oddball ingredient I can find, and working a recipe from it.

First up: kalettes.

160211Kalettes2

Have you heard of kalettes? I hadn’t, not until I showed up at Ossome Acres’ booth on the morning of Feb. 6 and saw these little puffs of purple-greens. Hey, what are those, I asked. Why, kalettes of course – the love child of kale and Brussels sprouts. W’oh! Who knew?

Although the brainchild of this hybrid was developed 15 years ago in Europe, it wasn’t debuted until 2010 and only hit North American soil two years ago. And still, you’d be hard pressed to find it in grocery stores, said Noella Oss of Ossome Acres, a Chilliwack farm that prides itself on standing out with its crops. “I’m pretty sure we’re the only ones growing it out here.”

160211Kalettes1

A mix of nutty and sweet, chewy and crunchy, these guys are good raw, roasted, blanched and steamed, said Oss. They’re huge in fibre; it doesn’t take much to fill a belly. In fact, one $4 bag got us five meals worth.

And the flavour, “is so nice and sweet right now because of the snow and frost,” said Oss. “They’re full of concentrated sugars.”

So, how did I use them?

I threw a few rosettes into a kitchen sink soup, lightly roasted a bunch on the barbecue with sea salt oil and balsamic vinegar, (I think they may even be better than kale chips!) and put together this sweet and salty salad from www.kalettes.com – they EVEN have their own website!

160211Kalettes4

Happy kalettes eating my friends.

Recipe: Kalettes Salad with Apples and Bacon

Ingredients:
5 oz Kalettes
1/8 c. apple cider vinegar
1/4 tsp. salt, divided
1/8 c. extra virgin olive oil
pepper
1 apple, cored and sliced
2 slices bacon
1 onion, sliced

Directions:
1. Slice stem end from Kalettes, allowing some leaves to fall loose and leaving centre leaves intact. In salad bowl, add Kalettes and drizzle with vinegar. Sprinkle with 1/8 tsp. salt and toss to coat. Set aside for 10 minutes.

2. In a skillet over medium, add 2 slices of bacon. Cook until brown and slightly crunchy. Remove bacon from pan, leaving grease, and drain on paper towel. Add sliced onion to pan and sauté over medium high until carmelized, about 10-15 minutes. When bacon is cool, crumble into small pieces.

3. In a measuring cup, add extra virgin olive oil, 1/8 tsp. salt, and pepper to taste. Shake or stir to combine dressing. Add the sliced apple, bacon and onions to bowl with Kalettes. Pour the dressing over the salad and toss to coat.

Filed Under: Blog, Featured, Recipes Tagged With: farmers market, in season eating, Kalettes, Ossome Acres, Recipes, salad, winter harvest

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Land Acknowledgement

Our market is grateful to operate on the unceded land of the Qayqayt, Kwikwetlem, and other Halkomelem speaking Peoples. We acknowledge that colonialism has made invisible their histories and connections to the land. We acknowledge the incredible gift this land is to our market and BC Agriculture. We commit to the ongoing work of decolonization and allyship.

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