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  • Seasonal local food recipe No.127: Spiced squash (or pumpkin) soup

    Posted on December 22nd, 2011 charlotte No comments

    This warming, spicy soup is a great antidote to rich, Christmas food. It’s an adaptation of a couple of classic recipes, using the squash or pumpkin as well as chillies, carrots, onions, garlic and parsley from this week’s Christmas vegetable boxes.

    Serves: 4

    Preparation: 20 mins
    Cooking time: 35 mins

    Ingredients
    750g squash or pumpkin, peeled, deseeded and diced
    2 tbsp olive oil
    2 tsp ground cumin
    1 tbsp ground coriander 
    1 fresh red or green chilli, deseeded and finely chopped
    2 onions, peeled and chopped
    2 carrots peeled and chopped
    1 garlic clove, peeled and finely chopped
    1.25 litres vegetable or chicken stock
    Lemon juice
    Flat-leaf parsley or chopped chives

    Method
    Preheat the oven to 180°c/gas 4.

    Peel the squash or pumpkin, remove the stringy bits and seeds and discard them. Chop it into cubes and put in a roasting tray mixed with 1 tbsp of the olive oil, the garlic and the spices. Cook in the oven for 20 to 25 minutes, until soft and brown at the edges.

    Place a pan on a medium heat with the remaining olive oil. Add the carrot, onion, celery and chilli and sweat until softened but not coloured. Then mix in the roasted squash or pumpkin and the stock.

    Bring to the boil, then simmer for about 10 minutes until all the vegetables are soft and cooked through.

    Blitz with a hand blender or in a food processor until smooth. Taste and season with salt, pepper and a squeeze of lemon juice, then sprinkle with some chopped parsley or chives.

    Serve with a swirl of creme fraiche and a scattering of toasted pumpkin seeds or crispy bacon pieces.

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    • Christmas veg boxes brimming with local seasonal produce

      Posted on December 21st, 2011 Trish No comments

      Our double-value Christmas boxes will all have:
      potatoes (Burlerrow Farm, St Mabyn)
      * onions (Camel CSA)
      * garlic (Camel CSA)
      sprout stalk (Restharrow Farm, Trebetherick)
      * salad bag (Camel CSA)
      * carrots (Camel CSA)
      * parsnips (Camel CSA)
      * squash (Camel CSA)
      * savoy cabbage (Camel CSA)
      * swede (Camel CSA)
      * chilli string (Camel CSA)
      green tomato and apple chutney (Camel CSA)
      tomato marmalade (Camel CSA)
      * parsley (Camel CSA)

      Standard boxes will have additional potatoes plus
      * leeks (Camel CSA)
      * red cabbage (Camel CSA)
      * beetroot (Camel CSA)
      jar of St Mabyn honey

      NB next veg box day is Friday 6 January 2012

      * = grown to organic principles

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      • Chilli festive garlands ready to go in Christmas veg boxes

        Posted on December 19th, 2011 charlotte No comments

        Camel CSA members got together as planned to create around 40 decorative chilli strings for our Christmas vegetable boxes.

        At a ready guess we used up more than 4,000 surplus chillies harvested from the magnificent crop in our second polytunnel.

        The garlands make beautiful swags for the mantelpiece, table centrepieces or runners, or Christmas tree decorations.

        And, of course, they can be eaten!

        Festive greetings to the chilli stringing team – Anne, Caroline, Cath, Charlotte, Danny, Evie, Jenny, Kitty, Mark, Penny, Robert, Tess and Trish F.

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        • Seasonal local food recipe No 126: Celeriac and Lancashire Cheese Bread

          Posted on December 16th, 2011 Trish No comments

          Thanks to Bridget for this recipe from Delia’s Vegetarian Collection. A tasty loaf – no yeast required.

          Makes 1 loaf (serves 4-6)

          Preparation: 15-20 minutes
          Cooking: 45-50 minutes

          Ingredients
          175g celeriac (peeled weight)
          110g Lancashire cheese, roughly crumbled into 1cm pieces
          175g self-raising flour, plus a little extra for the top of the loaf
          4 spring onions, finely chopped (including the green parts)
          pinch cayenne pepper
          1 tsp salt
          1 large egg
          2 tbsp milk
          You’ll also need a small baking tray, very well greased.

          Ingredients
          Preheat oven to 190C/gas mark 5.
          Sift the flour into a large mixing bowl , add the spring onions, two-thirds of the crumble cheese, the cayenne pepper and the salt. Then, using the coarse side of a grater, grate in the celeriac. Give everything a really good mix. Beat the egg and milk together and, using a palette know to mix, gradually add it all to the mixture until you have a loose, rough dough.

          Transfer the dough to the baking tray and, still keeping the rough texture, shape it into a round with your hands. Net, lightly press the rest of the cheese over the surface, sprinkle with a little flour and bake the bread on the middle shelf of the oven for 45-50 minutes, or until golden brown. Cool on a wire rack and eat as fresh as possible. This is lovely served warm, and if you have any left over, it’s really good toasted.

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          • Local and seasonal – contents of this week’s veg boxes

            Posted on December 15th, 2011 Trish No comments

            Everyone will be having:

            potatoes (Burlerrow Farm, St Mabyn)parsnips
            * onions (Camel CSA)
            * celeriac (Camel CSA)
            * parsnips (Camel CSA)
            * carrots (Camel CSA)
            * savoy cabbage (Camel CSA)
            * beetroot (Camel CSA)
            * turnip (Camel CSA)

            Standard boxes will have extra potatoes plus:
            * leeks (Camel CSA)
            * squash (Camel CSA)

            * = grown to organic principles

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            • Seasonal local food recipe No 125: Gnocchi with Tomato Sauce

              Posted on December 9th, 2011 Trish No comments

              A recipe from Masterchef presenter Gregg Wallace, shown in the BBC’s recent Great British Food Revival series.

              Serves 4
              Preparation and cooking: 30-40 minutes

              Ingredients
              For the gnocchi:
              300g floury potatoes
              50g plain flour, plus extra for dusting

              For tomato sauce:
              1-2 tbsp olive oil
              1 small onion, finley chopped
              1 garlic clove, finely chopped1 tbsp tomato purée
              1 x 400g can chopped tomatoes
              pinch of sugar
              salt and freshly ground black pepperbasil leaves, to garnish

              Method
              For the gnocchi, cook the potatoes in their skins in a pan of boiling water for 10-15 minutes, or until tender (a knife should slide in without much resistance). Drain the potatoes and set aside until cool enough to handle. Peel the potatoes and pass through a potato ricer into a bowl, then measure out 250g for the gnocchi.

              For the tomato sauce, heat the olive oil in a small pan and gently fry the onion and garlic for 2-3 minutes, or until softened but not coloured. Add the tomato purée and chopped tomatoes and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat slightly and cook for a further 10-15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season with a pinch of sugar and some salt and freshly ground black pepper.

              Meanwhile, tip the potato onto a floured work surface and knead in the flour until the mixture comes together to form a dough. Divide into four equal pieces and roll out into thick sausage shapes. Cut each sausage into 2cm/1in pieces and press with the tines of a fork to create a pattern.

              Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil and add the gnocchi. Cook the gnocchi for 1-2 minutes, or until they float to the top. Remove with a slotted spoon and divide among serving bowls.

              Spoon over the tomato sauce and garnish with fresh basil to serve.

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              • Seasonal local veg in the boxes this week

                Posted on December 8th, 2011 Trish No comments

                This week everyone will have:
                potatoes (Burlerrow Farm, St Mabyn)
                * onions (Camel CSA)
                * salad bag (Camel CSA)
                * sprout stalk (Camel CSA) – do use the tasty top too!
                * carrots (Camel CSA)
                * leeks (Camel CSA)
                * turnip bunch (Camel CSA)

                Standard boxes will have extra potatoes plus
                * parsley (Camel CSA)
                * purple sprouting broccoli/swiss chard (Camel CSA)
                * beetroot bunch (Camel CSA)

                * = grown to organic principles

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                • Hot chilli Christmas garlands create festive fire

                  Posted on December 4th, 2011 charlotte No comments

                  Camel CSA’s vegetable boxes have been overflowing with a surplus of produce for months now.

                  All kinds of chutneys and preserves have been made from the veg gluts, but we’ve been almost defeated by the enormous surplus of chillies cultivated in our second polytunnel.

                  The problem with chillies is that a little goes a very long way.

                  They feature regularly in our weekly vegetable boxes. Volunteer veg packer Henrietta has made some into chilli jam. Volunteer grower Mark M (who loves to crunch them up raw) pickled some chillies in vinegar. Membership secretary Cath experimented with chilli oil.

                  All these culinary enterprises proved extremely expensive and time-consuming. I still have hundreds - no thousands – of chillies drying out slowly on the laundry rack above my boiler at home.

                  Enter now the artistic wing of our food-growing social enterprise.

                  The latest plan is to turn the chilli surplus into natural edible garlands to go in our Christmas veg boxes. After the festivities are over, the chillies can be plucked from the decorative string and used in cooking.

                  We’re holding a chilli stringing evening this coming week, when the hundreds of chillis will be threaded on to fishing line. We’re supplying the wine, the chillies, the materials and the surgical gloves(!) Camel CSA members are providing the labour.

                  I’m amazed at what people charge for hot chilli garlands, centrepieces and edible chilli and herb garlands, so I’ll be interested to see how many we can string together in just one evening!

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                  • Seasonal local recipe No 123: Three-root boulangère

                    Posted on December 2nd, 2011 Trish 3 comments

                    With a selection of roots in our boxes this week – and with the weather getting colder – it seems a good idea to try this ‘comfort food’ recipe from Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s River Cottage Veg Every Day. He says that while it’s not exactly ‘light’, it’s certainly less rich than a creamy dauphinoise-style gratin. You could also substitute other seasonal roots such as Jerusalem artichokes, carrots or swede which would all work well. Good served with some big flat field mushrooms simply baked with some butter, garlic and cheese, and some good bread.

                    Serves 4

                    Preparation: 20 minutes
                    Cooking: about an hour

                    Ingredients
                    30g butter
                    2 onions, halved and sliced
                    2 garlic cloves, sliced
                    1 small celeriac
                    2 large potatoes
                    3 large parsnips
                    a couple of sprigs of thyme, leaves only, chopped
                    3 sage leaves, finely chopped
                    about 1.2 litres vegetable stock
                    sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

                    Method
                    Preheat the oven the 180C/gas 4. Melt the butter in a heavy-bottomed frying pan and use some of it to grease a large gratin dish. Add the onions to the pan and sauté over a medium heat for about 10 minutes, until soft, then add the garlic and cook gently for a further minute or two.

                    Meanwhile, peel the celeriac, potatoes and parsnips and cut into slices the thickness of a 10p piece, slicing the parsnips lengthways. Spread out the celeriac in the gratin dish, season generously with salt and pepper, then sprinkle with half the onions and half the herbs. Layer the parsnips on top, then scatter the remaining onions and herbs on top and finish with a layer of potatoes.

                    Bring the stock to a simmer and add some salt and pepper, then pour over the vegetables to barely cover them (you may not need all of it). Cover the dish with foil and bake for 30 minutes, then uncover and continue to bake for another 30 minutes or so until the vegetables are cooked.

                    At this point, if there is still liquid covering the potatoes, spoon off a little and return the dish to the oven for 15 minutes or so, to brown the potatoes on the top. Serve piping hot.

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