Showing posts with label local food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local food. Show all posts
One of the most enjoyable spin-offs of the local food movement has been the birth - or rebirth - of farmers' markets all across the country. In 2014, 8,268 farmers' markets were operating across the United States, up an astronomical 180 percent over the 4,593 markets in existence in 2006, according to a 2015 study from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Bucks County is home to more than 60 farms, pick-your-own fields, vineyards, orchards and farmstands, according to the county PennState Extension office. Not included amongst that tally (for whatever reason) is a farmer's market right in the heart of Bucks County.

The Perkasie Farmers' Market opened for the season on June 20, 2015 and runs every Saturday through Oct. 17. It is relatively small, compared to some other markets, but the produce selection and quality can't be beat. 




My obsession this year is tomatoes - heirloom tomatoes, to be exact, and there is no shortage of those wonders at the Perkasie market.




Besides produce, other vendors sell handmade arts and crafts - including some wonderfully fragrant soaps and bath bombs.













Vendors vary week to week, but have included:

  • 14 Carrot Farm - Quakertown, PA
  • Brumbaugh's Farm - Telford, PA
  • Freeland Market - Pottstown, PA
  • Hershberger Heritage Farm - Sellersville, PA
  • Living Hope Farm, Harleysville, PA
  • Small Batch Kitchen, Harleysville, PA
  • Stone & Key Cellars - Montgomeryville, PA
  • World O'Honey - Silverdale, PA

With the addition of live music and family-friendly activities such as chalk drawing or painting with vegetables, the Perkasie Farmers' Market is a fun, laid-back weekend destination. It's one more way people are discovering - or rediscovering - warm and welcoming small towns like Perkasie, and one more way that community leaders are working to make those towns' downtown areas vibrant, attractive places to live, work, and visit.

To see what's coming up at the market each week, check out their Facebook page.

If you go:

What: Perkasie Farmer's Market
Where: Corner of 7th Street and Market, Perkasie, PA
When: 9 a.m. to noon
Why: Fresh food and supporting local farmers and crafts people
The recent cool, rainy, grey weather here in the Philly 'burbs has had me worried. Not just for my own sanity - honestly, after this past winter, we all NEED some sunshine, amirite? - but also for the health of my latest obsession: tomatoes. Well, my garden overall, really.

But my weekly garden tour and assessment perhaps should put some of my fears to rest. Everything seems to be gaining in size and production, and, so far at least, staying ahead of pests and diseases. Here is the nickel tour.

This is the newest area of our garden. I created it in May, by moving an old garden bench we had between the windows to the back by the deck and putting the arbor in its place, along with other various containers - including the picnic basket, which I got for about $8 at our local thrift shop. At the far right, in the first crate, is a Black Cherry tomato.


This is an Early Girl. I don't think I'll plant this one again next year. It has not proven to be particularly early, nor particularly prolific.


This is an Indigo Rose tomato, which was bred at Oregon State University and released in 2012. I picked this up as a seedling from Ott's Exotic Plants in Schwenksville, Montgomery County, PA. Watching it develop has been a true pleasure, and the blue-black of the fruit is intriguing. (I'll post a close-up later) I'm looking forward to tasting it.


Next up is a Sun Sugar. This one, I actually purchased from Frederick's Flowers in Souderton, and it was already of substantial size when I bought it. The foliage is a little more yellowy - lime greenish than I'm used to on a tomato, so I don't know if that's because I'm doing something wrong, or if that's just how the plant looks. One of these little gems has ripened so far, and the taste is amazing. So incredibly sweet and fresh. I hope this one keeps producing.


Next, is a 4 x 4 raised bed that we installed last year. Below, you can see a Super Sweet 100s red cherry tomato (on the right) and to the left is a Mr. Stripey, an heirloom that ripens to a red with yellow stripes. I'm going to try saving seed from this one for use next year, or the year after.


At the front of the bed is a straightneck summer squash plant. If we're not careful, it might swallow the house. So far, it is producing well, and we are staying ahead of powdery mildew, a fungal disease with which we have had issues in past years. Keep your fingers crossed. And send squash recipes. Many, many squash recipes...


My husband's poor little jalapeno plant has been totally eclipsed by the squash, but it honestly doesn't seem to mind. Hidden under those leaves, it is still flowering and producing little baby peppers.


A better view of Mr. Stripey. You can just barely see the first few tomatoes in the middle.


The second 4 x 4 raised bed is by now a sprawling mound of vining plants. Left, zucchini. Right, toward the fence section, is a burpless cucumber that is producing faster than I can keep up. Bottom right corner is Blue Lake Bush Beans - which started as five "little" plants. I've never grown beans before, and I just noticed the first few have materialized, so I am beyond thrilled that they are (so far) growing. Bottom left corner, barely discernible under the zucchini leaves, is a cantaloupe plant. My daughter picked it out, but I have since learned that cantaloupe is somewhat difficult to grow, so I'm not surprised that it hasn't done much. Plus - with the Monster Zucchini for a neighbor, the poor thing probably gets little sun.


This is the first large-ish tomato to begin ripening. This is an Amish Paste, another heirloom variety that legend has it was collected from the Amish in Lancaster County, PA. It is supposed to be great for making tomato sauces, as it is very thick-walled with lots of flesh. I've never grown this one before, so we'll see how it turns out. The plant itself, I put in a pot that I now realize is too small for it - but I'm afraid to re-pot it into a larger grow bag, at this point.


Speaking of grow bags, below are two different kinds that I ordered after the tomato seeds that I started actually produced seedlings. (I've never started anythings - successfully - from seed before, so I was kind of surprised that it worked.) By the time the seedlings were established, I had already planted in every container I had and a few I had to buy. Grow bags were recommended to me by Craig LeHoullier, the author of Epic Tomatoes, which I admit I have read cover to cover. They have proven to be an economical alternative and the seedlings are flourishing. The two plastic grow bags are the kind Mr. LeHoullier said he uses, ordered from GrowOrganic.com; the two fabric ones are "Dirt Pots" I ordered on Amazon after checking literally every garden supply shop within miles. No one carried them locally. 

Unfortunately, the seedlings were desperate to be planted, and in the rush to get them in the soil, I forgot to mark which was which. I do know that the one in the back Dirt Pot is a Yellow Pear, an heirloom that produces small, pear-shaped sweet tomatoes. The other three are heirlooms too: a Black Krim (originally from Russia), Box Car Willie, and Cherokee Purple. I just don't know which is which, at this point.


I do have one more tomato, a Cherokee Purple that I bought as a seedling, but I forgot to take a picture of it. That will have to wait for the next update!

Are you growing anything this year? What is working and what isn't? I would love to hear your thoughts and stories.


New pursuits fall into my life and consume all of my attention. And so it was that I fell into canning.

My mother had always canned. Each summer would yield dozens of pints of tomatoes and beans and cut crystal jars of ruby red strawberry jam.

I had never expressed an interest in canning - probably not least of which is because I envisioned hours bending over steaming pots in my tiny kitchen, and trying to find different things to do with the dozens of jars of finished products.

Last summer, my colleague Rose introduced me to Food in Jars, the book penned by food blogger Marisa McClellan - who also happens to live in the Philadelphia area. I was immediately smitten.

McClellan, who lives in an apartment in the city, focuses on canning in small batches. Many of her recipes yield only a couple pints of this or four half-pints of that. The smaller amounts somehow made the whole idea seem less intimidating.

She demystified the whole process of canning, especially the equipment needed. In the end, it turned out that I had much of what I needed already on hand and I only needed to buy a couple items to launch the Great Canning Experiment of 2014 in my own kitchen.

Into my Amazon cart went a granitewear canning pot. A trip to Target yielded small, 4 oz canning jars (OH SO CUTE) and various implements. The utensil set - a jar lifter, lid lifter, headspace tool and wide-mouth funnel - was a particularly good buy at something like $6. I also picked up a copy of the tried and true Ball Blue Book guide to preserving.

For my first attempt, I chose one of McClellan's recipes that looked simple enough but offered the promise of tantalizing flavors - Blueberry Ginger Jam.

Ingredients include blueberries, sugar, fresh ginger and crystallized ginger. My mouth watered just reading the ingredients list. I could just taste that flavor explosion.

Key to the success of this project was going to be the freshness of the blueberries. As with most dishes, the simpler the recipe, the more important it is to use the best, freshest, most flavorful ingredients. Since I don't grow blueberries, I had to find an alternate source.

Living in Bucks County, Pa., offers no end to the options for fresh, local food. We buy our milk in glass bottles produced at the dairy (Penn View Farm) in the same township where we live. Within a 7-minute drive from my front door, we can get pulled pork and maple-glazed, spiral-sliced ham from Blooming Glen Pork, grass-fed Angus beef from Tussock Sedge Farm. And whenever I want fresh, in-season, local produce, I stop by Bolton's Farm Market, literally 4 minutes from my house. A quick trip to Bolton's on this particular day yielded two dry pints of fresh-picked blueberries.


McClellan's recipe - Blueberry Jam with Crystallized Ginger - was simple. If you're interested in checking it out, it's in her Preserving by the Pint book. You may be able to find it in a local bookstore. There's a link on McClellan's blog.

As for my experiment with it, everything went as planned. I was pretty focused on the process and didn't stop to take enough photos. But you get the idea.



The result: 4 tiny jars of amazing flavor.