Thursday, May 27, 2010

My CSA with Tomāto Tomäto

So, I was looking at what I was going to pick up tomorrow when I pick up my CSA share for the week, and though I had many other things to blog about, it dawned on me: DUH! I should share about my CSA.

CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture. How it works, basically, is I purchase a "share" from a farm, or in this case, multiple farms working as a co-op of sorts through Tomāto Tomäto, which is actually an "indoor farmer's market" as well. Here's the description of the CSA from their site:

Community Supported Agriculture, most commonly known as a CSA, has become a very popular way to get healthy local foods and support your local farm economy at the same time.

Interested consumers purchase a share, or membership, and in return receive a bag of seasonal produce each week throughout the farming season. The Tomāto Tomäto CSA will begin May 8th and continue for 20 weeks. This will secure you with fresh produce for almost half the year.


I was so excited to be a part of a CSA this year, and I LOVE the company. There are multiple farms that are contributing, and I decided to purchase our little family a "big bag", which is supposed to be for a larger number of people, but we actually have used most of what we've been given every week (and plan to have people over to feed, or give away produce in the event that we will not use it all). I do have to tailor my weekly menu around the produce we get, but that's fine with me. Sometimes working from scratch with just about anything you could want from the grocery is taxing, and I end up falling into a funk or just not planning anything. I still have go-to recipes, but this pushes me to try new things and to utilize the freshest of ingredients.

For instance, last week, we got the BEST lettuces, one head of green and one of "purple" which was mostly green with purple at the edges. We used them for salads 3 different nights, one of which was for 4 adults. My parents were over, and they thought it was the best, freshest salad! And we only put lettuce, tomatoes, and radishes in it. But I had just picked up the produce less than 12 hours before, and it was just harvested less than 48 hours before. So... it made a huge difference. Another great thing about it was that, another night this week, my daughter helped me tear up the other lettuce leaves to make another salad, and she actually tried some. She has been wary of trying salad all her short life! But because she helped make it, she actually tried it. Knowing her, and early-childhood development, she will most likely try it again next time and actually eat some of it without complaint.

This week, this is what we are getting in our bag:
  • green cabbage
  • turnips
  • asparagus
  • rhubarb
  • cucumbers
  • fresh bread
  • either eggs or cheese, depending on if we are group A or B (I actually don't remember what we got last week, as sad as that is, because we used it all.)

Last week, we also received rhubarb, and I was SO EXCITED... but I had a busy weekend, and I forgot to use it. Luckily, I store produce correctly immediately upon getting it, a tip I learned from the Food Network a long time ago to keep produce fresher, longer, and to cut down on prep time. I LOVE rhubarb. I also LOVE strawberry rhubarb deserts, so I will be cooking at least one, and for the first time in my life, using fresh rhubarb. (Tomāto Tomäto also provided us with some recipes for rhubarb, correctly predicting that some of their shareholders would not have used it before.) If you've ever wondered about fresh rhubarb, stay tuned, because I will definitely post details about what to do with it and how, and if I have any roadblocks along the way. I'll also post a recipe or two!

Some tips, if you decide to join a CSA:

  • Unfortunately, it's probably too late in the season now. Farmers have to get a certain number of shares in order to survive via CSAs, and so you could get on a waiting list or get lucky, but most likely, the memberships for 2010 are closed.
  • Expect to pay up front, at least for part of the season. You might be used to buying groceries once or twice a week; you'll still have to use the grocery store for things other than what's in your CSA bag, so try to budget for both, and realize it will probably save you money to buy a CSA share by the end of the season... but you won't see the savings until then.
  • CSA shares start out with fewer items and typically end with more. In this particular CSA, they give us a growth chart for the season and it tells us what is in season when. This helps us prepare for what we will receive. They also informed us that in our area of the country, the produce will be more like a bell curve: we will receive the most in the middle, with it tapering at the end. I have already seen this begin to happen, as the first few weeks were lighter amounts of produce, and this past week's bag was rather large and heavy!
  • Get used to using seasonal produce, and don't expect to plan your menu around things that aren't in season, or you'll end up buying just as much from the grocery store and wasting what is in your share of the CSA.
  • Research seasonal produce and it's benefits! I'll have another post on this, but there is research that people have eliminated toxins to the point of having 10-year-old hair dye come out of their pores and gross things like that, just by eating locally (I believe that person in particular was also eating organic, and only local and organic, foods.)
  • See if the CSA has an option to buy things like eggs, cheese, bread, or meats, as Tomāto Tomäto offers. Not a bad option if you're looking for it!
  • Look into the sustainability of the CSA you're looking to join, or ask.

This website has GREAT information about local food: Sustainable Table It also deals with sustainability and other such subjects very well.

In order to keep this from becoming multiple pages long, I will end it here. Basically, the idea is that I LOVE my CSA, and I love buying local, fresh food. And I'm SUPER EXCITED about RHUBARB! If anyone has recipes to share that include one or more of my CSA ingredients, please share! I'd love to try some.

2 comments:

  1. This is an incredible blog post. You have sold me on CSAs. Keep posting and inform anyone who is currently not reading your blog that they are missing out.

    ReplyDelete