Posts Tagged ‘Belltown’

Thursday, June 30th: Local Independence, Award-Winning Yogurt, Squash Blossoms, Basil, Strawberry Tarts, Burgers & Sausages for the 4th & More Marimba!!!

June 30, 2011

This Jersey Cow Yogurt from Silver Springs won best yogurt at the 2010 American Cheese Society Awards. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Are you one of those folks that values local farmers markets for the access they give you to great local food? Are you committed to supporting the local food economy, to help ensure it is always here for you in the future? Is how and where your food is produced, and how the farmers, workers, animals and land is treated as important to you as trying the latest, coolest food trend? Do you appreciate that local food, direct from the farm, tends to be fresher, more nutritious, better tasting, and even a better value? If you answered yes to any one of these questions, then you are just the person to help us. (Above: award-winning  jersey yogurt from Silver Springs Creamery.)

Squash blossoms from Alvarez Organic Farms. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

See, this is a tough year for local farmers. It has been cold and wet, and while that means you are bummed by the lateness and sparsity of many crops, for the farmers, it means they are losing out on the sales of crops they just don’t have. So when you come to your Interbay Farmers Market today, we ask that you think beyond what you wish you could have and instead focus one what the farmers have today. This is a unique year, and it will pass. The question is, will we support our farmers this year, when they need us, over our Americanized concept of eating whatever we want, regardless of season and annual growing conditions, but at the expense of local farmers. If your answer is yes, then please also help educate your neighbors, friends and family. Bring them to the Market. Tell them about this blog. “Like” us on Facebook. Maybe even pickup some extra lettuce for them, or teach them how to eat escarole. You will be helping to ensure that your local farmers continue to endure. (Above: squash blossoms from Alvarez Organic Farms.)

Fresh basil from One Leaf Farm. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Of course, slowly but surely, many of our favorite summer crops are coming in. Like this basil from One Leaf Farm. Just keep in mind that, as much as you’ve been craving you some fresh, local basil, you still need lettuce, and One Leaf has it, in abundance, on the very same table, in a great selection of delicious, heirloom varieties. And truth be told: because their lettuce, and most of their crops, were literally harvested this morning, they are days, and sometimes weeks, fresher than what you find in most Big Box grocery stores. So when you think about value, don’t just look at price. Think about the fact that the fresher something is, the more nutritious it is… the better tasting it is… and the longer it will last in your fridge, unless, of course, you eat it quickly, which you will want to do.

Gluten-free strawberry tarts and English toffee tarts from Dolce Lou. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Our local food artisans understand the difference between sourcing their ingredients from a nameless, faceless warehouses and getting them direct from local farmers. The difference is quality. That’s why Dolce Lou uses Hayton Berry Farms strawberries in its gluten-free strawberry tarts (above). And just to dispel another fallacy, in numerous surveys of produce prices in Seattle carried out by the business school at Seattle University, prices at farmers markets were, overall, lower than those for similar produce at all local grocery stores — all of them.  If you want convenience and savings, do all of your produce shopping direct from the farmers at your local farmers market, because while price comparisons may vary from crop to crop, overall our prices average out to be lower.

Strawberry-balsamic preserves from Deluxe Foods. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Heck, Deluxe Foods just made this beautiful batch of strawberry-balsamic preserves using Hayton strawberries as well. Indeed, they are dedicated to using local ingredients in all of their jams and jellies.

Kiss The Pig, the BLT of cupcakes from Cupcake Luv. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And don’t think that local ends with produce. In fact, Cupcake Luv, which makes amazing cupcakes and other goodies offered at your Interbay Farmers Market, uses Washington-grown flours from Shepherd’s Grain in it’s products, as well as many other local ingredients, from berries to bacon to smoked salmon!

The grill at Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And with July 4th weekend coming up, well, tomorrow, why not celebrate American independence with local meat for the grill, like these sausages and hamburgers from Skagit River Ranch. Farms like this one actually helped pioneer the first-ever USDA inspected mobile processing unit, based in Skagit County, in 2001 in order to unchain themselves from factory farms and processors. The independence this rig provided local ranchers allows them now to sell their meats directly to the public at farmers markets. Better yet, because it can roll right onto the farm, it lowers the stress on the animals. Better for them. Better for us. The result is delicious, pasture-raised meats that are lower in saturated fats and higher in beneficial omega-fatty acids. Remember, George Washington helped found a farmers market in Richmond, Virginia in the last 1700s in order to free Virginia farmers from the shackles of selling their products to Europe, only to end up in debt to the French and English. Today, Farmer George from Skagit River Ranch practices similarly revolutionary acts. Celebrate this 4th with some of his revolutionarily tasting meats!

Of course, this is just a highlighting of what you will find today. There is still plenty of other stuff just waiting for you at your Interbay Farmers Market this week. For a full accounting of what you will find, see What’s Fresh Now!

Thursday, June 9th: Opening Day! Sugar Snap Peas, Strawberries, Hard Cider, Local Beef, Pea Vines, Milk, Artisan Breads & Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata! But Wait, There’s More!!!

June 8, 2011

Chef Brandon Kirksey performing a cooking demonstration last August at Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Woohoo! It’s time! Time for your new and improved Interbay Farmers Market, hosted by Interbay Urban Center at 2001 15th Avenue W, just north of the Magnolia Bridge, in front of the Interbay Whole Foods Market. We’ll miss the spectacular sunsets and the beautiful views of the Seattle skyline and waterfront at the Olympic Sculpture Park we enjoyed last year, but alas, a second season there just did not work out. So we’ve moved a little north.

Visit us this, and every Thursday, from 3-7 p.m., through the end of September, to stock up mid-week on fresh, local deliciousness from great local farmers, ranchers and food artisans. And enjoy cooking demonstrations at 4 p.m. most weeks, kicking off with a demo by Chef Brandon Kirksey from Tavolata in North Belltown. Brandon is always a delight, and he will offer you great ideas of what to do with the local bounty at the Market. Hey, if he can do it under a tent in a parking lot on two butane burners, you can do it at home!

Sugar snap peas from Alvarez Organic Farms. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

It has been a long, cold, wet winter, and many crops have been delayed this year, but now that spring has finally actually arrived, crop growth is beginning to accelerate. Alvarez Organic Farms, for instance, has the first sugar snap peas (above) of the season, as well as snow peas, asparagus, green garlic and onions and more!

Skagit River Ranch brings local meat, poultry, eggs, and grilled-to-order burgers. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Skagit River Ranch is renowned for their great, grass-finished beef, pastured pork, organic chickens and eggs. And this year, they’ll also be slinging freshly grilled hamburgers made with their own beef, served on Tall Grass Bakery buns! You can grab your groceries, and a delicious local snack to tide you over until dinner, too!

First of the season strawberries from Billy's. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Yes! Strawberries!!! Oh, happy day! But these strawberries from Billy’s will likely sell out fast, so get here early. Of course, Billy’s will have some amazing rustic arugula, tomato plants and more… but strawberries

Pea vines from Lee's Fresh Produce. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Lee’s Fresh Produce is a 30-acre vegetable farm just east of the end of SR 520, on Avondale Road in Redmond. You’ve probably driven past it many times and not even noticed it. Lee’s grows spectacular produce. These pea vines (above) are tender and sweet, perfect tossed quickly in some warm olive oil until wilted, or added to a salad or some soup. They’ve also got baby bok choy, dill, cilantro, green onions, kale and much more!

Bread and pastries from Grateful Bread Bakery. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Grateful Bread Bakery in Wedgewood makes some wonderful artisan breads, pastries, muffins, cookies, and great bagels. Personally, I’m addicted to their chocolate croissants!

Pink Beauty radishes from One Leaf Farm. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Meet King County’s newest farm, One Leaf Farm, from Carnation. For a first-year farm, their produce easily can stand shoulder-to-shoulder with any farm in the state. It’s beautiful, fresh and delicious. They offer many interesting heirloom varieties, like these pink beauty radishes, and almost a dozen kinds of lettuce, and they’ve got some of the best salad mix I’ve ever had!

Bottle-fermented, sparkling hard ciders from Finnriver Farm & Cidery. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Finnriver Farm & Cidery makes bottle-fermented, sparkling hard ciders the old-fashioned French way, and the payoff is it the first sip you take. Do you love traditional ciders? Now, you can get it made locally!

Jessie Hopkins from Colinwood Farm on his antique potato planter. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Speaking of old-fashioned, check out Jessie Hopkins of Colinwood Farm on his antique potato planter. Colinwood Farm is located in, and I do mean “in”, Port Townsend. The farm is right smack in the middle of town, surrounded by neighborhoods. And yet their farm sports some of the richest, darkest, most fertile soil I have ever seen anywhere. And being located in the “Banana Belt”, that warmer, drier, sunnier swath of the Olympic Peninsula that is in the rain shadow of the Olympic Mountains, they have mastered the use of greenhouses and row covers to be able to have crops year-round at our Ballard Farmers Market, and to be the first to offer summer squash, carrots, tomatoes and more! Of course, these things will likely sell out fast today, but they’ve got plenty of gorgeous greens, salad and braising mix, storage spuds and more. So come meet one of the best, old-school farms in the state coming into Seattle to serve us you may never have heard of. After today, you will never forget them!

Gingered rhubarb jam from Deluxe Foods. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

How about jams, jellies and fruit butters made from local ingredients? Deluxe Foods has got you covered. They offer a wonderful variety of great flavors. Your toast will never be the same!

Milk and light cream from Silver Springs Creamery. Photo copyright 2011 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Lastly, for today anyway, and certainly not least, meet Silver Springs Creamery from Lynden. They milk jersey cows and goat. Then they bottle some of the best milk and cream, including old-fashioned chocolate milk, you will find anywhere. And that’s not all! They also make goat yogurt, as well as jersey cow yogurt that won “Best Yogurt” at the 2010 American Cheese Society Awards in Seattle last August. And they make great aged and fresh goat and jersey cow cheeses, too!

Of course, this is just a highlighting of what you will find today. There is still plenty of other stuff just waiting for you at your Interbay Farmers Market this week. For a full accounting of what you will find, click on “What’s Fresh Now!” in the upper right-hand corner.

What’s Fresh Now! pages Activated for Opening Day!!!

June 6, 2011

One of the many features of the official blog for your Interbay Farmers Market is the What’s Fresh Now! pages, which you can always find in the right-hand margin menu. These list all the products we expect our vendors to have at the Market this week.

The What’s Fresh Now! pages have just been activated for the opening of your Interbay Farmers Market, and they are updated for what we expect on opening day!

See you this Thursday, June 9th, 3 p.m.!

Welcome To Interbay Farmers Market!!!

March 29, 2011

Rainbow chard from Oxbow Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

We are pleased to announce that we’ve found a new home for your Thursday farmers market! It’s just a short drive, bike or bus ride north to Interbay Urban Center on 15th Avenue West, just north of the Magnolia Bridge, where Whole Foods is located.

Interbay Farmers Market will debut on Thursday, June 9th at 3 p.m.

We were sad that the Seattle Art Museum was unable to continue to partner with us at Olympic Sculpture Park, without question the most visually stunning farmers market in the area. But as someone famous once said, you can’t eat scenery. And besides, all the blog info from the 2010 Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market has been carried over to this blog, including recipes, vendor profiles and more!

Interbay Farmers Market is served by the following bus routes: 15, 18, 19, 24, 33, 81 & 85. It has plenty of free parking. And it is served by the Interbay Bike Trail. Plus, it will have space for many more vendors! Besides continuing to serve the people of North Belltown and Lower Queen Anne, it will now serve commuters from Ballard and Magnolia.

Please follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

Stay tuned for more information.

We Bid You Adieu.

March 6, 2011

The sun sets over Puget Sound and the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

It is with heavy hearts that we report that your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market will not be returning for a second season in 2011.  While the market was a great success in many ways in 2010, the current economic climate, and its effects on local governments and institutions, has left our generous hosts, the Seattle Art Museum (SAM), unable to afford to host us again in 2011.  Given that the Olympic Sculpture Park is home to many world-class works of art, SAM was required to provide additional staffing on market days, and that simply is not something it can afford in its budget in 2011.

Another spectacular view of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

That said, the Seattle Farmers Market Association thanks SAM and its capable and highly professional staff for all the support and generosity they gave us in 2010.  SAM truly is a class act.  Additionally, we would like to thank the crew at TASTE Restaurants & Events for their support and generosity as well, and for their great food made from farmers market ingredients, as well as their unwavering support of local farmers, fishers, ranchers and food artisans.  We would also like to thank the staff of the Olympus Apartments for generously providing off-street parking for many of our vendors during market hours, the Seattle Department of Parks & Recreation for helping us with special activities planning during the market, the chefs from the surrounding neighborhood who performed the best cooking demonstration series at any farmers market in the area, and the market vendors for bringing us the best Washington has to offer every week.

Chef Peter Levine of Waterfront Seafood Grill putting the finishing touches on his Seared Salmon with Panzanella. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Please note that we are investigating other opportunities to serve this part of Seattle in the future, and we will keep this blog, as well as our Facebook and Twitter pages, active for the foreseeable future.  Please stay tuned to these pages for information about what we might be able to offer you all in the future, and feel free to avail yourself of the many chef recipes and great photos and information still contained herein.

Thank you,

The Staff of the Seattle Farmers Market Association

 

Grilled Sausages with Tomatoes, Onions & Peppers

September 24, 2010

Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As prepared by Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant for his cooking demonstration on September 9, 2010.

I love preparing this in the fall when the weather is still warm during the day and the hints of cool arrive in the evening.

Chef Craig Hetherington shows his audience proper browning. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Makes 10 servings

Ingredients:

  • 10 hot Italian sausages (he used Skagit River Ranch’s Sweet Italian)
  • ½ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 3# Walla Walla onions, julienned
  • 6# red, yellow, or purple peppers, thick julienned
  • 1 bulb garlic, rough chop
  • ½ teaspoon chili flake, more if you like it spicy
  • ½ cup capers
  • 4# tomatoes, large dice
  • 1 cup chopped rosemary, thyme, and basil
  • Salt & pepper to taste
  • Hoagie rolls of your liking

Browning Skagit River Ranch sweet Italian sausages. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Preparation:

Pre-heat grill.

In a large, heavy bottom pan over medium heat, add olive oil and onions, and cook until slightly caramelized. Once browned, the onions are the color you want (they will be sweeter the darker they get). Add the bell peppers, garlic, and chili flake. Once the peppers start to get a little tender, add the tomatoes, capers, and herbs. If there isn’t enough liquid from the tomatoes, you can add a little water. Cook until the tomatoes are broken down and the mixture becomes like a stew. Season with salt and pepper to your liking. (This can be made the day ahead.)

Developing sauce for sausages. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Grill your sausages over a lower heat so the casing doesn’t split and they hold in their moisture. If you made the stew the day before, you can heat it up on the grill if there is room or just heat it up on the stove in a large sauté pan. When the sausages are done grilling, set them in the stew to keep them warm.

Sausages finishing cooking in sauce. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Brush your hoagie rolls with olive oil, salt and pepper, and while your grill is still warm, grill them to heat them up.

Drop the sausage on your hoagie roll, top with as many onions and peppers as will fit and enjoy!

Sausages finished and ready for rolls! Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Market Fresh Salad

September 24, 2010

Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata explains the mighty lemon cuke. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As prepared by Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata for his cooking demonstration on August 26, 2010.

Ingredients:

  • Hierloom tomatoes
  • Lemon cucumbers
  • Basil, olive oil, Balsamic vinegar for dressing
  • Salt & pepper, to taste
  • Fresh truffle fromage from Mt. Townsend Creamery (or other fresh cheese)

Chef Brandon Kirksey tossing his salad. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Preparation:

Brandon didn’t give us specific instructions, and I’m guessing that’s because he figures we all know how to assemble a salad!  :-)

The finished salad. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Caponata

September 24, 2010

Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata tossing his pan of caponata. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As prepared by Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata for his cooking demonstration at the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market on August 26, 2010.

(serves 4)

Ingredients:

  • 2# eggplant, peeled and cut into ½-inch cubes
  • Sea salt
  • 1/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 clove garlic, thinly sliced
  • ½ small onion, diced
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 15 Taggiasca olives
  • 2 tablespoons light brown sugar
  • 1 tablespoon capers
  • 1 tablespoon raisins
  • 1 tablespoon pine nuts
  • 1/3 cup balsamic vinegar
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Flavors meld into caponata. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Preparation:

Sprinkle the cubed eggplant liberally with salt. Let sit for at least 2 hours.

Use paper towels to dry the eggplant and brush away the salt. Heat 1/3 cup of the olive oil in a sauté pan over a medium high flame. Add the eggplant, stir and cook for 5 minutes, until tender. Transfer the cooked eggplant into a colander to drain.

Heat the 2 tablespoons of olive oil in the same pan over a medium flame. Add the garlic and let it infuse for about a minute. Add the diced onion and the bay leaf. Cook until the onion is translucent, about 3 minutes. Add the olives, brown sugar, capers, raisins, pine nuts, and balsamic vinegar. Stir to combine. Add the reserved eggplant, continuing to stir gently. Cook until the pan is almost dry, about 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Transfer to a bowl, and set aside until the caponata is room temperature, or refrigerate overnight.

The finished caponata & seared scallops. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Thursday, September 9th: Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Helps Wrap Up Our Inaugural Season!

September 9, 2010

The sun sets over Puget Sound and the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As the sun sets on the inaugural season of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market, let’s take time to celebrate and reflect upon an exciting first year of Belltown’s new, weekly grocery store. We enjoyed access to an incredible array of fresh, local food direct from the producers that would be the envy of people in most other parts of our country. We were entertained by music, dancing and cooking demonstrations by some of Seattle’s best chefs. We sampled Washington wines and enjoyed Market-inspired seasonal cocktails. And we did it all in one of the most beautiful places on earth — the Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park — surrounded by world-class art, the skyline of Seattle, Elliott Bay and Puget Sound, the Olympic Mountains and Mount Rainier. Honestly, I could not think of a more pleasant way to spend a Thursday afternoon in summer in Seattle.

Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant. Photo courtesy TASTE Restaurant & Events.

Our final cooking demonstration of the 2010 season features Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant at 5:30 p.m. today. I have had the pleasure of working with Craig for many years, and I can attest that there are few chefs as committed to using local ingredients on their menus in Seattle today as he has been to it for the nine years I’ve known him. Add to that his tremendous talent in the kitchen, and you have consistently delicious, guilt-free food. Stop by today for some great ideas for cooking local yourself, and if you haven’t treated yourself to TASTE Restaurant in the Seattle Art Museum on 1st Avenue, do it soon. You’ll thank me later!

New Moon cheese from Mt. Townsend Creamery. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Celebrate your access this summer to award-winning, local food. Like this New Moon cheese from Mt. Townsend Creamery in Port Townsend. It won First In Class in the Jack category two weeks ago at the 2010 American Cheese Society Convention & Competition held right here in Seattle.

Sausages from Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Reflect on all the recalls of contaminated factory-farmed meat and eggs lately, and that you are lucky enough to be among the few Americans who has access to meat, seafood, poultry and eggs from local family farmers and fishers — people who care deeply about the animals they work with and the people who eat them. Like Skagit River Ranch, which produces healthy, pastured beef, pork, lamb, chicken and eggs in Sedro-Woolley.

Rainbow chard from Oxbow Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Tired of produce that is shipped an average of 1,500 miles to get to your local Big Box grocery store? Fed up with it turning to mush in your fridge in just a few days, because it was harvested so long ago? We’ve answered that problem, too, with the freshest local produce direct from the farmers who grew it, usually within 24 hours of harvest. Good luck finding rainbow chard, like this from Oxbow Farm, any fresher anywhere else. Just look at the cuts on those stems. They cannot be more than a few hours old, and they have not even begun to brown.

Cherry tomatoes from Summer Run. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Ain’t it great to have access to tomatoes that taste like, well, tomatoes? In heirloom varieties developed over centuries to serve many functions in your kitchen? Of course it is! Just check out these beautiful cherry tomatoes from Summer Run Farm. A-friggin-men!!!

Dinosaur Egg pluots from Tiny's. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And fruit. Fresh, juicy, delicious, tree-ripened and brought to us by local family farmers at its peak. Washington enjoys almost an embarrassment of riches when it comes to tree fruit, which begs the question, why the heck would we be eating stuff imported by ship from Chile and New Zealand — taking weeks to get here and traveling thousands of miles — when you can enjoy this amazing array of fruit from right here? Like these locally-developed Dinosaur Egg pluots from Tiny’s. I mean, seriously, think about it. You never even heard of a pluot in a Big Box store until recently, because they finally realized what we’ve been enjoying for years at farmers markets. Farmers markets are where the innovation happens, and where the heirloom crops are preserved!

Gluten-free breads from Platypus Breads. Photo courtesy Platypus Breads.

And where else are you going to find this incredible gluten-free artisan bread from Platypus Breads? Maybe at another one of our farmers markets, but nowhere else. This stuff is moist and full of flavor, terms rarely associated with gluten-free bread. And don’t forget Grateful Bread Bakery, which offers artisan bread, cookies, croissants, bagels and more!

Saffron from Phocas Farms. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

How about local saffron? Seriously. This saffron is grown in Port Angeles by Phocas Farms. It is fresh and brilliantly flavored, and it is only traveling a few miles to get to you, not thousands of miles from Iran, from where over 70% of the world’s saffron comes.

Dante's Inferno Dogs. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Looking for a quick snack? We have that covered, too. Grab a dog or a local, Cascioppo Brothers sausage from Dante’s Inferno Dogs. They’ll dress it the way you like it to stave off that hunger until you can get home with your Market goodies to make a fabulous dinner for yourself.

Keith from Finnriver. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Hard cider and local grain. We’ve got that, too! Finnriver Farm from Chimacum brings it to us every week. And they’ve got freshly milled flours, too. Did you know that flour is really only good for about two months after milling before it begins to break down nutritionally and eventually go rancid? I recommend you toss that old flour in your cupboard, and come down to your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market today to get some fresh, local flour.

Our own (well, not really) Farmers blimp. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

So come celebrate and reflect upon your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market today, and stock up while you can. And if we’re lucky, we’ll get another visit from our very own (well, not really) Farmers blimp that flew over us last week. (I guess they got the dates wrong.)

Remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now!pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market.

Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market: Feeding the Body & the Soul!

Panzanella (Bread Salad)

September 8, 2010

Chefs Dana Tough (left) and Brian McCracken of Spür Gastropub. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As prepared by Chefs Brian McCracken & Dana Tough of Spür Gastropub for their cooking demonstration at the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market on September 2, 2010.

Veggies prepped and ready to go. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Ingredients:

  • 1 loaf rustic bread (crust removed)
  • 2 ea medium summer squash
  • 3 ea medium tomatoes
  • 1 ea head of treviso radicchio
  • 1 bunch chives
  • 1/2 bunch Italian parsley
  • 1 shallot
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 1 ea lemon
  • 1.5 cups extra virgin olive oil
  • 1/4 # hard cheese (Mt. Townsend Trailhead or Parmesan)
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Tossing together the ingredients. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Preparation:

  • Cut the bread into 1/2″ (crouton-sized) cubes, toss with 1/4 cup olive oil salt and pepper, and bake at 350 degrees until crispy an golden.
  • Shave the garlic, and toast in a sauté pan over medium heat with 2 tsp olive oil until golden brown.
  • Slice the summer squash thin, sprinkle with salt and reserve in deep dish.
  • Dice the tomatoes, reserving all juices in a large mixing bowl.
  • Slice the treviso into consistently sized pieces.
  • Mince the shallot and chives, and add to the tomato juices. Then squeeze the juice of one lemon in. Add the toasted garlic, whisk in the olive oil and salt and pepper to taste.
  • Add the bread, tomatoes, summer squash and picked parsley leaves. Mix together gently with your hands.  Taste the salad to check for seasoning. Add salt, pepper and lemon juice if needed.
  • Top the salad with grated cheese and serve.

The finished product! Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.


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