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Farmers Market Challenge: The Greens are Greener at the Market

August 10, 2016 By newwestfarmers

The start of the series is here if you have missed it so far.

Let’s talk about salads.

I eat a LOT of salads. And not because it’s the trendy thing to do, or because it’s the healthy thing to do, I genuinely like the taste of greens and raw veggies. I eat salads for lunch, I eat salads for dinner, and sometimes I even have salads for breakfast.

This isn’t new. I’ve been loving on salads for years. But what is new is the level of super tasty greatness that market greens have added.

Seriously, the salads I’m creating these days are so crazy rich with flavour, I’ve stopped adding dressing. Salads before the market always had balsamic vinegar or oil and vinegar. Market salads get a squirt of fresh lemon, or parmesan shavings, or nothing at all.

They are that good.

What’s the difference?

Before the market, my greens were either solely spinach, or a mixed container variety. I have no idea when they were picked, how they were picked, where they were picked. I have no idea how long they were in transport, how long they were in a cooler or freezer, or how long they were on the floor before I grabbed them.

At the market, my greens have either been picked that morning, or at the latest, the day prior. It is the ultimate freshness.

On top of that, I’m getting varieties I’ve never had before. I’m mixing my straight up lettuce greens, with kale, and spicy mustard greens, and red spiky lettuces, and microgreens, and purslane, and rainbow chard. On average, I’ve got four or five different greens in my salads at once – plus all the fresh veggies and herbs, and pretty much anything else I can find in my fridge too!

It’s like a Whole Foods salad at a fraction of the cost!

Market salads: so rich in flavour, they don’t need dressing!
Market salads: so rich in flavour, they don’t need dressing!

This week’s loot:

  • 1 bag of ruby streaks mustard greens: $3 (Zaklan Heritage Farms)
  • 1 head of green leaf lettuce: $1 (Bose & Sons Family Farm)
  • 1 green pepper: $1 (Fresh Quality Produce Ltd.)
  • 1 bunch rainbow chard: $3 (Ossome Acres)
  • 2 cucumbers: $2.50 (Yarrow Ecovillage)
  • 6 eggs: $3.25 (Rockweld Farm)
  • 1 block of smoked cheddar cheese: $8 (Golden Ears Cheesecrafters)
  • 1 bottle of 2014 pinot gris: $20 (Blind Tiger Vineyards)

In total we spent $41.75, but had $1 leftover from the previous week, leaving us over budget by 75 cents.

This week’s market meal was centred on the celebration of me completing a chemistry course I had dreaded/avoided for 1.5 years. It was a hard slog this summer, and pass or fail, I deserved a reward. As such, the brunt of our expenditure went to the bottle of pinot gris from Blind Tiger Vineyards, an organic-certified vintner located in the Okanagan.

To compliment the wine, my husband cooked up a peasant-style French meal of simple omelettes with basil, green onion stems, and sharp cheddar, and a side of boiled nugget potatoes drizzled in browned butter.

Market Meal: a French-inspired peasant’s meal of omelettes and boiled potatoes.
Market Meal: a French-inspired peasant’s meal of omelettes and boiled potatoes.

The only thing missing from the meal was we should have been eating it on a terrace overlooking the Mediterranean in the south of France.

Ahhh, dreams…

The great thing about eggs, they’re a surefire win with the toddler age.
The great thing about eggs, they’re a surefire win with the toddler age.

The week in meals:

  • 3 breakfast smoothies – with rainbow chard
  • 1 breakfast portobello and egg “sandwich” – with ruby streaks, purslane, smoked cheddar
  • 1 breakfast frittata – with rainbow chard, Italian onion, smoked cheddar
  • 4 full-plate lunch salads – with green lettuce, rainbow chard, kale (from last week), pizzo mustard greens (from last week), purslane (from last week), cilantro (from last week), ruby streaks, cucumber, onion stems (from last week), and Italian onions (from last week).
  • 1 full-plate dinner salad
  • 6 half-plate dinner salads
  • 2 1/4-plate dinner salads
  • 2 servings grilled green pepper
  • 2.5 servings shrimp quinoa – with rainbow chard stems and leaves
  • 3 servings omelette – with 6 eggs, basil (from last week), green onion stems (from last week), smoked cheddar
  • 2.5 servings boiled potatoes (from last week)

The lesson learned this week: get to the market early.

In week’s past, my husband and I have arrived at the market around 3:30, shortly after it opens. Parking is ample, atmosphere is relaxed, and booths are stocked full. This week, however, we arrived closer to 5. Several vendors had sold out of items we wanted.

Farmers’ markets aren’t supermarkets; they don’t have an endless supply of product in storage; they’re going to run out. If you snooze, well, you lose.

Duly noted.

Filed Under: Eats and Drinks, Uncategorized Tagged With: eating well, farmers market challenge, healthy food, salads

All About Wild Mushrooms

March 4, 2016 By newwestfarmers

Blog post by RCFM contributor Katie Bartel

Okay, so I’m just gonna put this out there, maaaaaybe, just maybe, my second recipe in I shouldn’t have opted to wing it. Probably. But hey, my family and I are still alive, and this adventure is all about going big or going home. Right 😉

So, at the last Farmers’ Market my husband’s eyes lingered at the forager’s booth. While I love mushrooms, like really love them, let’s be honest, they don’t really speak sexy. And oddball? What’s so oddball about mushrooms aside from the poop factor?

Well folks, have you met Matt McAllister? Young guy, pretty chill, knows an insane amount about mushrooms. Which is probably a good thing seeing as how he’s selling them to you, and you really don’t want to be popping a Death Cap in your mouth – they’re poisonous.

Matt

McAllister didn’t grow up dreaming of a career in foraging; he had aspirations of being an entomologist, geologist, pretty much anything with “ologist” in the name.

“I kind of blindsided me,” he said, “but it makes sense; it’s dealing with the natural world.”

And like so many of today’s millennials, about five years ago, fresh out from his parent’s nest, McAllister was looking for ways to offset the daily costs of living. Out for a walk one night he was stopped in his tracks by a mushroom that most others wouldn’t have even noticed. Hmm, he thought. Those look quite a bit like the ones I’m buying in the grocery store. Hmm, he thought. LIGHTBULB! A quick jaunt to the bookstore, and a mushroom bible, that has barely left his side since, was acquired.

Mushroom Bible

In five years, he estimates picking 40 or 50 edible varieties – oyster, pine, Man on Horseback, porcini, morels, chanterelles, hedgehogs. He’s travelled all over B.C. and the Yukon. It’s easy, he said. Once you know the distinct features to look for, they’re everywhere.

signs2

And you know, five minutes talking to this guy, it was clear I was wrong, so totally wrong. Mushrooms are sexy. Take the pack of Tumbler Ridge fire morels I took home with me. These guys are not your average Joe Blow creminis found at every vegetable stand, oh no, these dudes have crazy history.

In 2014, about 60 kilometres southeast of Tumbler Ridge a massive wildfire wiped out over 30 hectares of the region. These morels were of the first living things to resurface and reproduce on the land the following spring. It is a foragers goldmine.

“There’s about 1,000 people camped out from May to July picking and drying,” said McAllister, who dried his on a hand-crafted clay oven over a wood-burning fire. “Once you start [foraging] it’s like falling down the rabbit hole.”

THE RECIPE:

Okay, so for about three months now, ever since I polished off my last bite of the delectable quinoa salad from Tractor Foods on West 4th in Vancouver, I have been craving it, like drooling about it just thinking about it, dreaming of it even. There’s quinoa, there’s sundried tomatoes, golden raisins, goat cheese, parsley, cilantro, and roasted mushrooms. Try as I might I could not find a comparable recipe, so I thought, hey, I’ve got all the ingredients, I know how to make quinoa – I’m totally gonna wing it. AND, while it wasn’t Tractor style, it was still pretty darn tasty! So many flavours just bursting in my mouth. Buuuuut, the problem, there were far too many other powerful ingredients to get a full feel for the fire morels.

IMG_7507 (1)

Luckily, the dehydrated bag of mushrooms plump right up on hydration and there were plenty more for a round 2. This time with a recipe.

IMG_7530

The recipe called for hazelnuts but we didn’t have any so instead we opted for shrimp, and it was the perfect pairing. The smoky, deep, down-in-the-earth taste of the morels, along with their chewy nature fit so complementary to the salty seafood. And in fact, I’m betting they’d work beautifully with clams and mussels too.

And just look at the cuteness factor – they even look like seashells!!! A match made in belly heaven!

mushroom2

To learn more about McAllister’s shrooms, visit him at the next Royal City Farmers’ Market this Saturday, or check out his website www.yourwildestfoods.com.

RECIPE: Drunken Wild Mushroom Pasta (acquired from http://www.joyfulhealthyeats.com/drunken-wild-mushroom-pasta-recipe/)

Ingredients

  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 26 oz. assortment of wild mushrooms, sliced (crimini, shitake, oyster, baby bella, whatever you want)
  • 1 red onion, diced
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 2 tablespoons sherry cooking wine
  • 2½ teaspoons fresh thyme, diced
  • 1 lb. Dreamfields linguine pasta
  • 6 oz. goat cheese
  • ¾ cup reserved pasta cooking liquid
  • salt to taste
  • ¼ cup hazelnuts, chopped

Instructions

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil.
  2. Heat a large skillet to medium high heat.
  3. Add olive oil and mushrooms. Saute for 7-10 minutes until mushrooms start to brown.
  4. Next add onions, garlic, and season with salt. Saute and stir onions for 3-4 minutes.
  5. Add in sherry cooking wine and cook down until liquid is evaporated. Finish with fresh time and set aside.
  6. Add noodles to pot of boiling water. Cook until al dente (according to package instructions)
  7. Reserve ¾ cup of pasta cooking liquid and drain the rest.
  8. Add the noodles, wild mushroom mixture, goat cheese, and cooking liquid to a large bowl. Toss to mix everything together until goat cheese is completely melted.
  9. Top with chopped hazelnuts!

Serves: 6-8

Filed Under: Blog, Buying local, Featured, Uncategorized Tagged With: blog post, farmers markets, healthy food, Mushrooms, salad

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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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