Aug 15, 2011

Week 11, August 15-22, 2011

In your CSA bag

Regular may take all vegetables listed, Single size members may choose 6 items, Seniors choose 5.

~ Potatoes – 1 quart
~ Carrots – 1 bunch
~ Cabbage or Collards – 1 choice
~ Zucchini - 1
~ Summer Squash or Patty pans – 2
~ Cucumber – 1
~ Chard – 1
~ Peppers – 2
~ Tomato – 2 small
~ Basil – 1 bunch

Recipe of the Week
Sweet Peppers and Pasta


News from the Field
We are very happy to see this week’s rain. It helps save us a lot of time setting up the irrigation rotation. We are unable to get water to our fields up on Dean Rd in Underhill. This season, we have winter storage beans on the Dean Rd field and they are tolerating the dry spell quite well. I think Monday’s rain will bring them up to date to continue growing healthy. Only final yields will really tell, as the plants still look quite healthy. We can irrigate most of the valley; we usually use the piped water from the irrigation pond. From these pipes, we can set- up our generator to pump the water to the water wheel. The waterwheel sprays the water slowly over the crops while retracting its hose. When it’s done and the reel is full of hose it automatically shuts off. When the pond is not available we can use water from our large tanks along with the generator and either the water wheel and/or the irrigation sprinklers. Of course this all takes quite a bit of time to keep up with, but for now the rain is a blessing.

Sweet Peppers

Green and Purple, sweet bell pepper have 2 times as much vitamin C as oranges; red and yellow bell peppers have 4 times as much.

Sweet bell peppers can be orange, yellow, red, purple, brown, black, ivory or green, depending on the stage of ripeness and the variety. Green bell peppers are fully developed, but not ripe. All sweet bell peppers start out green, and change color as they ripen. (They also get sweeter). The color depends on the specific variety; the most common variety is green when unripe and red when ripe.

The other colors can be sold at a much higher price, so they are always allowed to ripen before being sold. The yellow, orange, and red color takes an additional 20-25 days to fully ripen, this adds to the reason they are more expensive and because they are ripe, they have a shorter storage time.

Peppers have complete flowers that are both male and female parts in the same flower. The number of lobes is related to the specific variety of pepper. There are varieties of peppers that produce 2, 3-4, or 3-5 lobed peppers. The 4 lobed 'bell' pepper was (and is) more popular in the U.S., so plants have been bred for this characteristic.

Thanks!
Anne Tisbert

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