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Spring is Sprung – Where’s the Food?

I want to pretty much congratulate myself on calling it. The New Haven farmers’ market run by CitySeed was packed on Saturday. As crowded as it ever gets. I could have told you that – the weather and all.

Surprise – not much food. It’s always a bit of a disconnect when the weather and the growing season don’t match. Although I have to say, given the number of folks using greenhouses, hoop houses and such, there were a surprising number of folks with fresh greens. And the evergreens – eggs, meats, bakery stuff, milk and cheese.

But in the end, the market was about people – catching up, being seen, not being seen. Yup, Colin McEnroe was quietly winding his way through, large black dog in tow. And Patrick Horan of Waldingfield Farm had a lot more to talk about than food to sell. David Zemelsky of Starlight Gardens was out of arugula in a half an hour. And ficelles? Forget it – all eaten.

But it’s just the beginning.

Post New Year’s Culinary Stew

A stew of food notes is what we’re talking about here.

Wooster Square Market Jan. 16, 2010

The Diehards and Newcomers

CitySeed’s first New Haven market of the winter season (oh thank you for those 45-plus-degrees!) had a hefty showing of the stalwarts on Saturday: Stone Gardens still with Brussels sprouts and some pristine garlic; greens from Starlight and 2 Guys from Woodbridge; Waldingfield Farm had some lovely potatoes.

And of course there were the – essentially — non-seasonal guys: Trinity Farm with the full compliment of milk products and butter! They don’t always have that. Four-Mile-River was happily long on eggs and the various cheese guys had plenty.

And there were some welcome newcomers: Riverbank Farm from Roxbury, an organic grower with a commercial kitchen. So aside from loads of lovely looking carrots and parsnips, they had a large selection of prepared products. Riverbank is no stranger to Westport and Fairfield and a bunch of other markets, but they’re new to Wooster Square.

And an interesting surprise – Skappo restaurant in New Haven, known for Umbrian home-style specialties, also came loaded with soups and such. It’s all going make venturing out on those cold future Saturdays a lot more worth it. Market runs first and third Saturdays of the month at Wooster Square, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Warming up in Fairfield

For all the thin-blooded types who have been griping (and believe, me, I’ve heard you) about the winter Fairfield market being outdoors – good news, it’s back indoors. The market is in the Warehouse at the Fairfield Theatre Company, 71 Sanford Street, but had been relegated to the parking lot these last really, really, really cold weeks while repairs were being finished. They’re finished. Market is Saturdays 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

And speaking of FTC – Play with Your Food is back for another season at FTC, as well as in Greenwich and Westport (where it began in 2003). $42 will buy you a catered lunch and readings of one-act plays plus discussion.

Changing Hands

We reported several weeks ago that Arturo Franco-Camacho of Bespoke/Sabor and formerly Roomba in New Haven had two new enterprises planned for Branford. A deal to sell Bespoke/Sabor was underway at the time and was completed as of the end of the year. Bespoke and Sabor have new owners, new chef – all with histories in the Max Group (and elsewhere). Check out the website for the particulars. End of an era for New Haven, but as we reported – the three food carts ain’t going anywhere.

A Tale of Two Farms

The store shelves at Hindinger Farm are a bit bare at this late date, just a few weeks before it closes for the season. The last of the farm-raised produce consists of acorn and butternut squashes, a lone cabbage or two and a dozen or so different apple varieties – all of them pock-marked by the hail that might have otherwise meant doom for something of a lesser constitution than this fourth generation family farm that sits high atop Hamden’s hills with a southern view that takes your breath away – all the way to Long Island.

But it didn’t mean doom.

And that’s the point here.

“I was up in the middle of the night when it was hailing,” Liz Hindinger says. “I could hear it. I’m sitting there looking out the window freaking out. Everything was just like – you put it through the shredder the next day.”

And then Liz and her brother George, who own and run this farm founded in 1893, went on and finished their season. They farm 100 of its 138 acres, and that includes about 50 acres of orchard. And they’ll be out there pruning their 18 different apples and their pears and peaches and nectarines and plums again this winter.

Not a stone’s throw away, it would be a different outcome for Nature’s Mirror Farm in North Haven – a half-acre spread is all that’s really left of hundreds of acres that once belonged to the Melillo family in the area that is now home to the Route 40 connector.

After a few years farming and selling at area farmer’s markets and to restaurants, the farm is changing course – looking at raising quarter horses and in general looking for more land elsewhere.

These are stark reminders of three things – farming is really tough, financially difficult work; farming is really tough, financially difficult work; farming is really tough, financially difficult work.

Get the picture?

Liz and George have seen the changes. “In Hamden there were a lot of farms,” Liz says. “Mix Avenue, that main avenue where all the apartments are was all farms and there was a farm down that way,” she says pointing south, “Mr. Benham’s farm. And then there was a farm adjacent to ours.”

All gone – as are most of the folks who used to freeze and can fresh food for the winter.

“I wish they’d get back into it, because it would be great for us,” says George.

“We used to sell so much bulk,” adds Liz. “We used to sell peppers by the bushel left and right. We used to sell eggplant by the bushel left and right.”

“Corn like crazy, broccoli by the box,” George finishes. “The problem is really you can get whatever you want 12 months a year. It’s not like you can’t get broccoli in the winter anymore or red peppers or corn or eggplant. You can get anything all year, so I think that’s where it started to change a little bit.”

But the Hindingers are still here.

“That’s the way we make our living,” George says. “We don’t want it to be a trend,” he says of the Buy CT-Grown campaign and local and fresh and all that.  “We want it to be a habit,” he says.

An interesting way to view things. Think about it the next time you eye that asparagus in January, and actually consider buying it.

Honey, Look What I Bought at the Market

Truthfully, it was a little questionable we’d get to this point – that late season deluge of local produce, given the early season situation of 2½ months of rain, drowned cherries, what seemed like the shortest strawberry season on record, and the late blight tomato disaster.

But it turned out all that rain was good for some things. For the guys who had tomatoes, boy did they have tomatoes. There were some instances of emergency pick-your-owns for peaches, which were so dense, tree branches were in danger of breaking. And the blueberry season – well it’s still going.

So we’ve definitely hit deluge and it doesn’t take much to completely overdo it at the farmers’ market. We’ve all been there — suddenly the leftover corn from last week is being crowded out by the dozen new ears you decided looked too good to pass up. Ditto the peaches, beans, squash, peppers, and yes tomatoes.

I’m not a canner so my M.O. is to use what I have some way for immediate consumption. Or freeze something cooked, like a sauce. Or freeze the raw items, which I do mainly with fruit to use over the winter in smoothies, since fruit tends to look pretty wretched when it thaws.

But really I’ve been cooking and baking – and EATING – a lot lately. I’m sorting through a stack of recipes I’ve set aside, figuring out which work and which don’t; going back and tinkering with old ones; and just throwing things together.

So some of my suggestions for all that stuff:

TOMATOES: I’m big on quick sauces. I take all my half-ripe, half-rotting, otherwise screwed up tomatoes – cut out the bad stuff and chop up the rest (including the under-ripe parts, skins, seeds). Into a big saucepan goes:

1. Olive oil

2. Some combination of onions/scallions/leeks (sometimes garlic) plus fresh hot peppers of varying heat (I’m long on jalapeños this year) – all sautéed until just soft.

3. Chopped tomatoes. Simmer the whole thing, seasoned with salt, until tomatoes begin to break down and excess liquid is gone. Depending on amount and size of pan – it’s about 20 minutes or so.

Obviously it can go on pasta, but it’s also a great sauce for fish, like grilled monkfish, swordfish or bass. And for those inveterate meat eaters, you can always start of with finely chopped pancetta. Crisp that up and then proceed.

FRUIT: These are recipes I’ve run into in the last few years. All are from gourmet, but they definitely needed some adjusting. The links will get you to the original recipe.

Peach Blueberry Cake – This is truly a slow cooker, and I’ve made it into a deeper cake so cooking time is closer to 2¼ hours.

For the filling: use 2½ pounds of peaches – 8-9 medium ones; 1½ cups blueberries; 1 tablespoon lemon juice; ¾ cup sugar; 2 tablespoons flour; 2 tablespoons tapioca. Best way to prepare filling is to put all the fruit in a bowl; mix it with lemon juice, followed by sugar, followed by flour and tapioca. There is no need to grind anything but the tapioca.

I recommend a 10-inch springform, with foil under it. Do not skip the foil on top.

You can use raspberries instead of blueberries, but you’ll need to increase the tapioca a bit.

Plum Blackberry Streusel Pie – I’d go for about 2¼ pounds of plums and 1 pound of blackberries. Increase the tapioca to 4 tablespoons, but keep the cornstarch the same. This pie expands – so don’t think you can do without the baking sheet underneath.

Buttermilk Raspberry Cake — 1 cup of raspberries is nowhere near enough. I use 2 cups and the recipe works just fine. Bake at 375; 400 is just too high. It might take an extra 5 minutes or so.

CORN: Grilled is best in my book. For leftovers just scrape it off the ear. Nothing fancy needed other than a big knife. Balance the corn on one end and scrape down all the way around. Flip it over and finish the rest. This cornbread recipe is based on one I saw in The NY Times. But frankly I’ve tinkered with it so much at this point, it’s pretty much my own.

Brown Butter Sage Cornbread With Grilled Corn (and optional cheese)

3/8 cup corn oil

¼ cup chopped fresh sage leaves

1 cup flour

1 cup yellow cornmeal

1 tablespoon baking powder

½ teaspoon salt

1¼ cups buttermilk

2 eggs

3 tablespoons sugar

¼ teaspoon baking soda

1-1½  cups kernels scraped from grilled corn

5-6 ounces feta cheese, crumbled — optional

½ stick (4 tablespoons) unsalted butter

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Heat oil in a 9-inch cast iron skillet. When hot, add chopped sage and cook until crispy. Scrape oil and sage into a bowl and set aside.

While sage is cooking, in a large bowl, sift together flour, cornmeal, baking powder and salt. In a separate bowl, whisk together buttermilk, oil-sage mixture, eggs, sugar and baking soda. Gently fold wet ingredients into dry ones until just combined. Fold in corn, and optional cheese.

Melt butter in the cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat, tilting pan to coat bottom and sides completely. Cook butter 2 to 3 minutes, until it starts to color and smell nutty. Scrape batter into skillet; smooth surface with a rubber spatula.

Bake until golden and a toothpick inserted in center comes out clean, 30 to 35 minutes. Let cool 5 minutes. Cut into wedges and serve.

Note: If you don’t have cast iron, brown the butter in any kind of pan and pour into an 8- or 9-inch square baking pan.

If you’re not a sage fan – use up some of your hot peppers. Chop them up and fold in with the corn. No need to cook them first.

Do you have some special end-of-summer recipes? Send them along.

From Appel to Zinc

Denise Appel

Denise Appel

You think it’s easy to run a farm-to-table operation like the one at Zinc in New Haven? Take a stroll with owner-chef Denise Appel as she figures out how what’s in front of her at the farmers’ market can be what’s in front of you at dinner. Read about it in my story in Sunday’s New York Times Metropolitan section:

Farmers’ Market Mania

The official count is 123, but I wouldn’t hold the Agriculture Department to that. They might have missed a farmers’ market or two. No matter how you count them, there are a lot.

Jeez, there are only 169 cities and towns in the state.

All of which begs the question — are we at critical mass yet? I mean how many farmers’ markets can the state handle?

“Well Rick thinks that every year,” said Ag Department marketing representative Linda Piotrowicz of her fellow rep Rick Macsuga. “It’s anybody guess. Rick has said many time he thought we were maxed out many years ago and we still get more every year.”

It might be the family thing Piotrowicz surmised – markets with activities, themes, entertainment, ways to make a day of it. Sunday markets also seem to have some kind of magic to them – scooping up vendors who are otherwise tapped out on the more popular market days like Saturdays and Fridays.

Coventry, which opened last year, started the trend attracting record crowds. It has activities at each market – this week is Frugal Frolic – doing more with less. There are craft vendors and it’s all on the grounds of the Hale Homestead.

“You get people to make a day of it, or part of a day,” Piotrowicz said.

New and notable this year:

Hill-Stead Farmers' Market July 12.

Hill-Stead Farmers' Market July 12.

Hill-Stead: Sundays on the grounds of the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington. With guest vendors and activities, uber-vendors like Wave Hill and Bantam breads, and George Hall farms. They also snagged first-time vendor Tulmeadow Farm – which of course is known for its ice cream, and it’s now the only place to get Urban Oaks products other than at their New Britain farm. Market manager Peggy Hall said about 1,100 people showed up for the first market July 12. “All the stars were aligned,” she said.

Chester: Sundays, on that cute strip of downtown. Features music and events and many of the top market vendors in the state. In an effort to get top quality meats and seafood, market manager Nancy Freeborn picks up scallops from Stonington Seafood harvester, making the market one of the few places you can get Bomster scallops other than at their dockside facility in Stonington. And they’re also picking up meats from Soeltl Farm in Salem. “We just liked the idea of Sunday being a quieter day,” Freeborn said.

Bozrah: Friday evenings at Maples Farm Park. Mostly vendors from the immediate area.

Wethersfield: Thursday evenings in Historic Wethersfield.

It’s looking like a few of these have the momentum to join the ranks of the big boys.

New Haven Farmers' Market, Wooster Square.

New Haven Farmers' Market, Wooster Square.

Those would be markets like New Haven run by the non-profit CitySeed. These are some of the largest markets in the state, which through go to great lengths to help lower income people shop there.

Westport got so popular it’s had to move this year from the parking lot of the Westport Country Playhouse to the parking lot adjacent to the Woman’s Club. There are usually cooking demonstrations and other features.

Litchfield Farm Fresh Market, July 4.

Litchfield Farm Fresh Market, July 4.

The Litchfield Hills Farm Fresh Market has moved from Friday to Saturday this year and is packed with chef demos, kids activities, and all manner of entertainment.

If none of these are convenient, interesting, or fill-in-the-blank, there’s now a county-by-county farmer’s market guide the Connecticut Department of Agriculture website under publications. Or use the Buy CT Grown link here or on this website for a fully interactive way to figure out how and where and when to buy fresh anything in Connecticut.