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Let me indulge in some gentle proselytizing today, yes? I’ve just come home laden with plastic bags and I’m feeling chatty. Have a look at the collection of fruits and vegetables that I picked up today from my CSA drop-off point at a church here in Queens.

We’ve got a bundle of sweet carrots, a huge kohlrabi, some scallions, a bag of tender baby lettuces, a bunch of beets and their lovely greens, two cucumbers, the smallest, whitest turnips I ever did see, a gaggle of dark-green zucchini, a box of raspberries, a box of blueberries, a hardy head of lettuce, and two rond de Nice zucchini. (Oh, and a bunch of wispy dill, but I left that in the swap box, since my neighbors aren’t here to take it.)

Now. Do you know how much this whole assortment cost? Go on, guess. I’ll wait. Ready?

$24.00.

Ben and I and our friends upstairs share our CSA box, so usually we divvy everything up fair and square (they get the fruit because they pay extra), and Ben and I find ourselves with more vegetables than we can usually finish for less than $10 a week.

Try and buy that same amount of food at Whole Foods or Garden of Eden or your local grocery store and you’ll be spending, what, twice, three times that amount? I should do a little price comparison. Next time.

CSA’s are not only a way to eat fresh, local produce for more than 6 months a year and support a family farm instead of a huge, industrial farm (organic or not), but they’re also very affordable, which is pretty important any day, but particularly in a time when people are finding the price of everything – gas, milk, bread, everything – going up. Plus, membership forces you to grow beyond your habits – you’ll find yourself eating vegetables you’d never even known about before.

Most CSA memberships are closed for the season, but if you’re at all interested in joining one, early next year is a great time for signing up – sometimes early birds even get a little discount on the fee.

Now, back to my vegetables:

I’m going to turn the carrots into soup, along with a fennel leftover from last week. I’ll leave it chunky and serve it at room temperature. Maybe a little sour cream on top. I never do that, so it’ll be a nice change.

The kohrabi I’ll just peel and slice into thin discs to crunch on, raw. Some people cook kohlrabi, but I simply can’t – it’s too good just as it is. Cold from the fridge, preferably. Who needs radishes?

The berries, Gemma and Seb’s, I’m going to either freeze and bag or turn into a pot of jam for them. It depends on how busy the rest of the week is.

I’m going to try to eat the beets raw this time. I always cook them, but I read this week that you lose all the antioxidant power of the beets when they’re cooked. So I’ll shred them, maybe with a carrot or two, and dress them with a tangy vinaigrette. As for the greens, I’m a little sick of the standard garlic-and-olive-oil-saute. Any ideas, dear readers?

The regular zucchini are so lovely that I’ll eat a few of them sauteed with olive oil and garlic (uhh…) and the rest I’ll turn into a soup, with mint and basil from the balcony.

My farmer says to just eat those little white turnips raw, which sounds like fun. I never buy turnips, never eat them, not out of any antipathy, just because I’m never quite sure where to start with them. So this feels easy and good. Although I could also be convinced to pickle them. I’m in a pickling mood. I’ll add the greens to whatever I end up doing with the beet greens.

And the round zucchini, well, there are too few to turn into petits farcis, so I might just do a little breadcrumb stuffing – homemade breadcrumbs mixed with a large amount of minced parsley, chopped capers, some grated Parmigiano, salt, and olive oil, then mounded into the hollowed-out zucchini and roasted in the oven.

What’s left? Oh, right, the scallions. I’ll admit, I’m stumped. I sometimes throw these into a grain salad of sorts, but I never really enjoy them, mostly because I don’t like any member of the allium family raw. So, another question for you, then, do any of you cook your scallions? Tell me how.

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52 responses to “Why You Should Belong to a CSA”

  1. Casey Avatar

    Grill those scallions and serve them with romesco sauce. They do this with young spring onions at Manresa in Los Gatos and they’re wonderful.

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  2. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Buttermilk/Yogurt Scallion-Dill Vinaigrette!

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  3. Susmita Avatar

    Hi there. Try this gratin with the beet greens. Its Alton Brown’s recipe for Beet Greens Gratin. http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,1977,FOOD_9936_21883,00.html. It is yummy. The turnip greens would be great in there too. I also make a casual potato and beet green sabji (dry indian veg preparation). You can do a number of things with the scallions – I use them in stir fry, I use them a lot in Indian dry curries (treat them like you do onions), I also use them for fajita veggies (grilled). BTW, I too LOVE my CSA. In ours, we have to go to the farm to pick it up, but it is great as the kids get to cut many greens themselves. Great looking produce!

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  4. Allie Avatar
    Allie

    just use scallions, finely chopped, when you saute other veggies. can use in carrot soup or with the greens. Or blend in food processor with yogurt and cucumbers. Enjoy! We, sadly, were too late to join our neighborhood CSA. Must remember earlier next year.

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  5. christine Avatar

    What a beautiful group of produce! I recently pickled kohlrabi and it was delicious…in a rare blogging moment I put the recipe up, but you can also check out another similar recipe on the modernbeet, http://www.modernbeet.com/archives/138.
    As for the turnips, Sassy Radish recently had a recipe for them.
    I almost always cook my scallions. If I’m making any asian noodle dish, I cook the whites minced or chopped into small discs with my garlic/shallots/what have you and then throw in the greens in inch or so pieces to wilt for about a minute at the end. I also will do the same kind of treatment with eggs…cook the whites first then throw in the greens with the eggs to cook down.
    There’s also a great Marcella Hazan recipe for pork loin with scallions. Bascially the ingredients are, 1 -2 bunches scallions, 1-2 T capers, chopped, 1 pound sliced boneless pork loin pounded thin, a bit of vegetable oil, a bit of butter, flour for dredging and salt and pepper to taste.
    Flour the pork chops while heating a tablespoon or so of oil and butter. Brown the pork well on both sides and then remove and reserve.
    Cook the scallions (cut into inch long pieces) down in the pan on low heat covered (she recommends 20 minutes, I ususally give up at 15).
    Add the capers and another tablespoon or so of butter and return the meat to the pan. As soon as the meat has reheated it’s ready.

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  6. Ian Avatar
    Ian

    Salad turnips are great just sliced raw, with a bit of flaky salt on them. (I think some people like to butter them, too, although I don’t think it’s really necessary.)

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  7. Lydia (The Perfect Pantry) Avatar

    I don’t eat raw alliums either, so I just saute briefly before adding to salads like tabbouleh or quinoa-based vegetable salads. Beautiful selection of produce from your CSA this week!

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  8. mahlookma Avatar
    mahlookma

    I grew up eating these lightly sautéed with a little fish sauce and an egg–like a scrambled omelet with far more greens than egg. Use it to top jasmine rice, and you’ll be eating a typical childhood breakfast for me.
    During more frugal days, I remember my mother just snipping off the tops of various alliums she might have planted around, leaving the bulb in the ground to grow more greens.

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  9. Mercedes Avatar

    I usually use the base of scallions just like onions, sauteed, in your soup or a stir fry or something. The tops of scallions I use as garnish, over rice pilaf or anything with an asian flavor.
    The little turnips I like to braise whole in a mixture of molasses and lemon juice, by the way.

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  10. DC365 Avatar

    I recommend roasting the scallions at 425 for about 3-4 minutes until they just start to char. Then toss them in vinaigrette and serve warm as a salad. Delicious!
    Those small turnips are a favorite of mine at the farmer’s market. I make an asian stir fry with the turnips and greens, chickpeas and sesame seeds over brown rice. SO good.

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  11. Ana Avatar

    grill the scallions and then spray a little lime and a sprinkle of salt on them. yummy!

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  12. Selina Avatar

    Awesome assortment of goodies from the Earth! I wish I could join a CSA, but I travel during the weekdays and would not be home to consume them all! As for the scallions, I have a fried rice recipe on my blog that incorporates them more as a garnish, but my mother would throw them in along with the other vegetables until cooked. In Chinese cuisine, they are also used in rice porridge, aka congee.

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  13. Mia Avatar

    My boyfriend refuses to eat scrambled eggs if they don’t have a chopped scallion or two mixed in!

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  14. Jess Avatar
    Jess

    Make yourself a treat that would pair well with the soup…scallion pancakes! The simplest recipe I’ve seen was on Jen’s blog
    http://jenyu.net/blog/2008/04/30/return-to-me/

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  15. David Avatar

    fry up some pa jeaon, Korean pancakes, with those scallions. yum!

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  16. Catherine Avatar

    I too make a greens gratin, usually of kale and mustard greens: Saute shallot and onion, make your roux, add milk, toss in your blanched greens, cover with a bit of shredded parm reg. Though, I am not sure there is a stitch of anti-oxident left when it is all said and done, it is tasty! I have tried and failed multiple times to love beet greens… I cannot be a resource there, I’m afraid.

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  17. ann Avatar

    I have got to get in on this CSA action… So beautiful, all those veggies… I can’t remember, but you left the dill there because you despise it, right? That’s a bummer! Because a delicious grated beet salad in the Polish-way always benefits from a light dusting of dill. But, I understand 😉 Maybe you should add the beet greens to your soup? that would be seriously delicious and make the color so intense! Enjoy your veggies!

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  18. kitty Avatar
    kitty

    I like to pretend scallions are baby leeks, and braise them with butter. Yum! They make a lovely wilted, oniony tangle.

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  19. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    I recently made a great frittata (following a recipe from The Art of Simple Food) with greens from my CSA. The gratins everyone is describing here sound great too – thanks for the inspiration!

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  20. Paige Avatar

    I’m right there with you–the CSA experience is one of the best a cook can have, both for the quality of the ingredients and the challenge of using the unfamiliar. I started a separate blog last summer all about this, and it’s going strong this summer, too. My variety here in the north (upstate, near Hudson) isn’t the same as yours (and I think weather has something to do with that–the “hot” crops here are a bit late because of all the rain) but, oh, the flavors. And your farmer is right about the turnips. They’re so good raw, sliced in little discs in salad. You don’t even need to peel them, b/c the skin is still so tender. If you like raw kohlrabi, I think you’ll like them, too.

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  21. kat Avatar
    kat

    For scallions try braised scallions in msutard sauce from the silver palette. Last week I make it with scallions and red spring onions from my CSA and replaced cream with greek yogurt. Leftover mustard sauce was delicious mixed with quinoa.

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  22. Maxine Avatar

    I seriously considered joining a CSA this season, but we don’t have as reasonably priced options in Chicago. Even a 1/2 bushel sounded like a lot of food for 2 people and it was closer to $50 every week. I love the idea and I’m so jealous of all your fresh, seasonal food! Maybe next year I can find some friends to join too. 🙂

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  23. radish Avatar

    Oh Luisa, it is my dream, DREAM!, to be part of this delivery!! All these veggies look delightful.

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  24. Michele Avatar
    Michele

    I belong to the same CSA, and every week it is like being on Iron Chef. I am very proud that so far, I have only let a forgotten bunch of swiss chard go to waste, considering how much arugula we got the first few weeks!
    So, what I have been doing with the escarole/swiss chard/beet greens/dinosaur kale is the following:
    depending upon the green, either steam or boil until tender; saute onion and 2 cloves garlic in good olive oil; add greens and saute. From that point, I either add some Niman Ranch smoked ham and then eat it with hot sauce and vinegar (=southern greens) or add some sort of acid (lemon juice or rice vinegar) and cool and call it greek greens (=horta, I think, in Greek).

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  25. Aaron Avatar
    Aaron

    Slice the scallions, sautee like any other allium, and then cook blanched beet and turnip greens in with them.

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  26. Marsha Avatar

    Beet greens: do the usual garlic and olive oil sautee, then add beaten eggs to cover and make a fritatta. Top with a splash of balsamic and sprinkle of parmesan, and serve with shredded raw beet roots (pickled if you like).
    Scallions: (from memory from the George Bernard Shaw Vegetarian Cookbook) stir together equal parts chopped scallions, shredded cheddar cheese, and mayo. Cut the crusts off some sliced sandwich bread, then cut each slice into quarters. Top each quarter with a spoonful of the scallion mixture, sprinkle with paprika, and pop into a 450 oven till they start to bubble and brown. Nutritionally pure evil, but diabolically delish. The scallion goo also goes well as a stuffed mushroom filling.

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  27. Jessica Avatar

    I must join this next year. I had no idea you were in New York!! I would love for you to come to the blog meet up I am putting together as well as being apart of the Food section of the new Design for Mankind New York Insert. Are you interested?

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  28. mbbored Avatar

    Mark Bittman has a lovely recipe for raw beets in today’s Minimalist column (it’s recipe #1.) I’ve had something similar at a local restaurant, and I swear I didn’t like beets until then.

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  29. Megan Avatar
    Megan

    A few more greens ideas for you…
    http://www.culinate.com/columns/front_burner/how_not_to_give_up_on_greens
    I also have been know to blanch and chop greens and throw them in a spanish tortilla or frittata

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  30. Veronica Avatar

    I’m so sad, I finally decided to take the leap and join a local CSA and they were sadly, all full! Anyway, thanks for the post. I agree wholeheartedly!

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  31. Luisa Avatar

    Between the Marcella Hazan scallion pork chops and the roasted scallion salad and the Silver Palate mustard sauce recipe, I’m going to need to go and buy more scallions! Thanks, everyone.
    Ann – dill, to me, tastes like dirty fridge. Does that make sense? Yes.
    Jessica – of course I’m interested! Send me an email about it. I’d love to come.
    Veronica – oh no! Thank goodness for the farmer’s market 🙂

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  32. rachel Avatar
    rachel

    grill them and than sprinkle with good salt and fresh lime juice. Good hot or cold.

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  33. dhmspector Avatar

    You could take your scallions and some red onion and some shallot, sauté them, and then add them (and some currants!) to to dry cous cous just before you cook it to make a 3-onion cous cous…
    good under salmon, duck, chicken, and more…

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  34. gemma Avatar
    gemma

    aww…. looks like we missed a GREAT week!! but please don’t freeze the berries. EAT THEM. all that antioxidant power – it will put you in the best mood 🙂
    miss you. hope nelson is surviving without us. give him a BIG hug
    x

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  35. Marieta Avatar
    Marieta

    While living in Brittany, a friend served me a marvelous beet salad. Just equal parts raw grated beets, and raw grated tart apple, with at touch of a simple vinaigrette. Give it a try ! (perhaps in the fall when apples hit the market)

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  36. Sean Avatar

    I love the idea of a CSA, but I also love going to the farmers market, choosing my own produce, and chatting with farmers and purveyors. It’s part of my Saturday ritual that I’m loathe to give up, especially in the summer. Still, the cost savings you’re getting, especially in these times, gives me pause because while I love going to the market, it’s expensive!
    As for the scallions, you can broil or roast them at the same time you might be roasting bell peppers, jalapenos, or garlic. Obviously you’ve got to be mindful of the time because not all of these cook at the same rate. Scallions cooked this way are delicious in grain salads, mashed potatoes, guacamole, tomatillo salsa, corn bread, grilled salads, etc.

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  37. Kim Avatar

    For summertime I like mine grilled with lots of lime juice and olive oil along with some cilantro. In the winter I make a Southern version creamed. Not light on calories, but good.

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  38. Debin Hawaii Avatar

    I love and envy the variety of items you get in your CSA box–I just don’t get the same variety here in my weekly box (except for the occasional exotic and more seasonal fruits they sneak in). Still the value and the idea of the CSA program is excellent! I combine mine with additions from the farmer’s market and feel I get great quality and good value.

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  39. Rebekah Avatar
    Rebekah

    I am a member of a CSA for the first time this year and LOVE it. We’re in Chicago and split with friends–our portion comes out to $15 per week–Cheap! I just wanted to pass along a few recipes:
    For zucchini I peel it, and then with the vegetable peeler peel it into long ribbons and then just dress it with salad dressing–usually I make an asian style dressing, but yesterday I made it with lime, olive oil and mint (from Deborah Madison) and it was delicious.
    With greens, there’s a great swiss chard tart in Patricia Wells’ Bistro cookbook that I have used with all manner of greens, and it’s delicious. It’s basically like a quiche with parmesean and greens but low on the custard and heavy on the greens. The crust is made from just flour and olive oil and you press it in to the pan rather than rolling it out. She also has a sweet version of the same tart that’s very intriguing, but I’ve never tried it. (and thanks for the blog–you’ve saved my cooking blahs many times)

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  40. Lindy Avatar

    This week for us: A cabbage, beets(with greens),zucchinis,collards,ruby lettuce,rainbow chard ,strawberries, scallions, parsley, rosemary, radishes , and 2 free range chickens (extra). Next week, raw cow’s milk cheddar and chevre (also extra), and there are going to be tiny new potatoes..
    My CSA farmer delivers the chickens and cheeses for his neighboring organic farmers, to order.It works out very well. Sadly, his one amish neighbor who sold the lovely free range eggs has retired.

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  41. Mollly Avatar
    Mollly

    Slice the scallions crosswise, saute’ for a minute, add the beet and turnip greens, continue stir-frying, toss in a handful of dried currants or dried cranberries and some toasted pinenuts towards the end. Splash with some balsamic vinegar.
    I bet you could use some of those fresh red currants instead of dried and it would be beautiful.

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  42. suz Avatar
    suz

    I’ve been eating scallions lately cooked on the grill. Wrap them in a little foil packet with some good olive oil and a bit of salt and then grill them for 10 minutes. The taste is mellow and good, so different from the raw scallions you won’t believe they are the same vegetable.

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  43. Lynh Avatar
    Lynh

    Hi Luisa – I love Clotilde’s beet and carrot recipe-just shredding them and throwing in some oil + vinegar, tabasco, honey, salt, pepper. It’s delicious and I feel super healthy eating it.
    As for the scallions, I’m vietnamese and I’ll often add them to my chicken broth with some ginger for congee or saute them in canola oil, add chicken/shrimp, and throw the chicken in some rice paper with basil, mint, lettuce, or whatever veg I have on hand to make spring rolls for entertaining. once I made cabbage spring rolls. Delicious!
    Thinking about doing UrbanOrganics instead of CSA as they are full in my ‘hood, but thanks for enlightening me and showing me what I am missing.

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  44. Kim Avatar
    Kim

    What is a CSA?

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  45. sue Avatar
    sue

    Kim,
    “CSA” is Community Supported Agriculture. You sign up for a box of veggies from a local farm, the contents of which changes as the seasons rotate.
    see the “my CSA” link in the opening paragraph above. It explains it well. One thing about a CSA box is that it encourages you to try things you wouldn’t normally be familiar with. Blogs and websites abound for recipe information.

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  46. Luisa Avatar

    Kim – Hey! Your first comment, big brother. Community Supported Agriculture basically means that you pay a share in a farmer’s season – early in the year, say March, you “join” a CSA by paying a lump sum which goes to the farmer around whom the CSA is structured. This lump sum goes towards the farmer’s preparation for the harvest: seeds, equipment, hiring help for planting and harvesting, upkeep of the farm. Then in June the farmer starts delivering the fruits of his labor to you so that you get a weekly supply of vegetables (and fruits, if offered) until the end of the harvest, which is usually sometime in November. The lump sum you paid in the beginning of the year pays for all the food you get over the course of the season. The food is local, usually organic, quite varied, and seasonal. Also, CHEAP! 🙂

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  47. Jennifer Avatar

    This is our second summer in our CSA, and it’s great. We get eggs and chicken from our CSA farmers (a young couple with two cherubically cute sons), who also sells goat meat. I really like that we know who they are, and we are supporting our local community. The variety of fresh veg, which forces some kitchen creativity, is delicious, and best of all, it’s very inexpensive. All good stuff. I look forward to Wednesday’s box. It doesn’t keep me from shopping at the Farmer’s Market on Saturdays, though, for those interesting extras!

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  48. Namita Avatar
    Namita

    Today was our CSA pickup day. We drove to the farm with our toddler daughter, a veggie lover but even she would never eat a supermarket green pepper raw, a red or yellow yes, but a green no way. On the way home, she grabbed a green pepper out of my hands and proceeded to eat half of it. Amazed, I of course had to try it myself. I never knew how delicious a fresh green pepper can be. Tender, crunchy and lightly sweet. This is a long way of agreeing with everything you wrote.
    Scallions, I chop a few along with the regular ginger, garlic, and onion and put into rice dishes and curries.
    I’ve never made this myself, but one of my favorite Chinese appetizers is scallion pancakes.

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  49. White On Rice Couple Avatar

    Many of our local farmers not only sell at the farmers market, but they also participate in CSA’s too. We normally buy directly from the farmer because it is so much more convenient for us to visit them once/twice a week. Thank you for bringing awareness about CSA’s and your package looks just wonderful! We even made a little cooking video about our farmers and CSA’s as well.
    As for scallions, yes! There are always scallions in my fridge or garden because I eat it just about every day. I always top them in soups, make fresh salsa with them and pickle them. I also make a scallion oil: chop scallions and fry them in a little grapeseed oil. I’ll top different dishes with the scallions and oil to give a nice flavor to noodle, rice, pasta and flat bread dishes. I’ve reserved just the oil too to use in stir fries because the oil is so fragrant is delicious!

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  50. Gwen Avatar

    Oh we have that to.Our farmer comes every week and brings us fresh food and fruits and it s the best thing ever,especially because of the selfmade cheese with comes along every week;)
    Some Ideas for cooking your vegetables:
    1.Zucchini:Sclice them thinly with a vegetable peeler
    2.Add some spices like paprika etc. with some olive oil.
    3.Rub the zucchini stripes with the spice oil
    4.Place them on a baking tray and bake them for about 10 or 15min
    5.Slice some garlic and pour over the done zucchine.
    It s so tasty.
    Now for the scallions:
    What I always do with them.
    Get some more vegetables slice them all,get a wok and roast them,add the other vegetables then add some asian spices like tumeric etc. and coconutmilk and mix with some asian noddles.
    Our alltime favourite.
    Or make some fish with it.
    Get some alufoil place a fish in the middle of it,on the fish place some dill,scallions a little bit of butter,some lemon juice and some whitewine.
    Make a little package with the alufoil and put it in the oven for about 20min.
    as side have some rice or some potatos.
    Yummy;)

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