- a pound of pickling cucumbers
- a pound of summer squash (I chose zucchinis; they had yellow squash and a variety of more globular ones)
- a bunch of edamame plants (to be harvested properly at home!)
- a bunch of kale or collards (I got lacinato)
- a head of lettuce (I got green leaf)
- two eggplants
- a quarter pound of basil
- a pound of Walla Walla onions
- two young fennel
- two pounds of tomatoes (yay!)
- a pound of orange carrots
I had hoped for more corn; maybe there will be some more in future weeks. Current plans include pickling the carrots (along with last week's), sauteing the no-longer-young broccoli from previous weeks, doing something with the tomatillos, now that I have hot peppers and even some tomatoes), more salad, roasted veggies (eggplant, summer squash, fennel), and blanching the edamame and freezing it.
This week's porch tomato harvest: 11 cherry tomatoes, and one full-sized one of some (red) sort.
Yesterday I did not get cod! I got haddock instead.
I was in a bit of a rush, so I filleted one of them (the first side is always easier than the second, and I still don't have the hang of dealing with that front section on the bottom), cut the fillets into pieces, then did the double dunk (mayo and hummus, then white wheat flour with lots of tandoori spice and some ground ginger). I guessed and baked them at 425 F (ish) for 12-13 minutes, figuring they weren't as thick as the cod, and that worked well. I had some for dinner last night, and some for breakfast this morning. I had planned to deal with the other fish tonight, but tonight's errands and other tasks got the better of me, so I did neither that nor any vegetable cookery (though I did assemble a salad for a quick dinner about two hours ago: tomato, cucumber, basil, last week's lettuce, feta, black pepper, olive oil).
no subject
Date: 2009-08-27 10:12 am (UTC)At table, with salt and pepper and some spices, it was good. Next time I'll add some chunks of tomato in the fish layer, as well.
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Date: 2009-08-27 12:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-27 12:43 pm (UTC)Once you exclude frying and other higher fat preparations, life can get dull. :-)
I hope to concoct some more casserole style fish bakes, and otherwise. On a rerun of Jacques and Julia that we watched recently, Jacques tried a very butter intensive recipe that I really want to adapt. He took a loaf of day old bread, cut open the top and pulled the stuffing. He lined the bottom with herbed butter, tossed in a variety of seafood, placed more butter on top, shredded the removed interior bread into crumbs, and mixed that and some olive oil on the top of the open container, and baked. Sliced, it looked amazing.
Since I can't do nearly that amount of butter, or any, I'm trying to create a modification that will work. You might like the original. My current plan is to line the "vessel" with super-thin slices of zucchini, and use a bit of fat-free mayonnaise instead of butter. And lots of fresh herbs and some garlic.
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Date: 2009-08-27 02:13 pm (UTC)The fish share has pretty much been plain white fishes all the way, which I suspect is challenging to a lot of the people who signed up for the share. I'm still planning to re-up for the next 12-week season :-).
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Date: 2009-08-27 02:19 pm (UTC)(I wouldn't re-up - white fish is relatively cheap, and available already filleted. Have you calculated roughly what your price/per-pound is for whole fish?)
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Date: 2009-08-27 02:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-27 04:02 pm (UTC)Personally, I'd rather have a choice of fish, as well as what day it arrives. :-)
Mind you, we're big fans in the house of supporting local agriculture. My wife volunteers for our local farmer's market, and writes their web site, a weekly newsletter, and a bi-weekly newspaper column on the topic, as well as being in process with a cookbook on the same.
I was surprised to learn that Stop and Shop (amongst other stores) is a big believer in local sourcing. Some of the fish is local, and a lot of the produce. I went into my local-to-work Whole Foods, and not ONE of the fruits that I saw this week was local. Go figure.
De Gustibus, and all that. I don't mind filleting and boning my own fish, in fact it is fun. But if all you are getting is cod and haddock, and not a full service of that all the time, I would consider the share uneconomical and not worthwhile.