Patchwork Green is a hillside and ridgetop farm overlooking the beautiful Canoe Creek Valley several miles north of Decorah, Iowa. Our family grows five acres of vegetables on a farm near Decorah, Iowa. We grow a wide variety of high quality, chemical-free vegetables using sustainable techniques.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Final Patchwork Green Market for the Year


Don't miss your last chance for Patchwork Green vegetables this year! There is an indoor farmers' market at the Fairgrounds on Saturday from 9:00-Noon. We have a few storage crops left to offer: squash, potatoes (red, white, yellow and blue), carrots, rutabaga, cabbage (green and Napa), onions (red). Next week, we'll shut down the coolers, save a few flats of produce for ourselves for the winter, and take the remainder to the food pantry.

Many of you pledged $50 or more for a pantry share this year, and between your contributions and ours, we have so far been able to bring $1470 worth of fresh produce to the First Lutheran Church Food Pantry since June. That total is up several hundred dollars from last year. The volunteers at the pantry say that there are more and more people using the pantry, and that they really appreciate the fresh produce. It was nice for my girls to help me bring in tubs of lettuces and cabbages the week before Thanksgiving, and to get a 'behind-the-scenes' look at the operation. We plan to make one more delivery next week. Thank you for helping provide fresh vegetables to folks with limited incomes!

We got the garlic patch mulched, finally. Thanks for all the donations of bagged leaves! We had plenty for this year, and made a nice pile for mulching jobs next year. We covered the leaf mulch with straw, and are hoping for some snow cover to keep it all in place before the wind blows the mulch to Allamakee County!

We got a new issue of Taproot Magazine in the mail this week, and it included a few winter squash recipes. In an effort to try something new for dinner, I made the following squash casserole recipe last night. Is is very hardy, a bit sweet, and was a very good winter comfort food. We served it with a green salad, and would recommend rolls or maybe a side of broccoli. I also thought that the recipe could use some green - maybe chopped kale or parsley.

Squash Casserole by Ashley English

2 medium-size winter squash
2 T olive oil
1 medium onion, diced
1 colored bell pepper, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1# lean ground beef
2 T maple syrup (if your squash is sweet, you may want to skip this)
2 teaspoons sea salt, divided
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
8 eggs
1/4 cup half and half
1 stick softened butter
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese, divided

Roast the squash until soft, then let cool. Scoop out the flesh and mash in a bowl with a potato masher, then mash in the stick of butter. In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, saute the onion and bell pepper in olive oil. Cook for 8-10 minutes until the onion starts to brown a bit around the edges. Add the minced garlic, and saute for another minute. Remove the pan from the heat and transfer the vegetable mixture to a mixing bowl. Add the ground beef to the pan and return it to the heat. Cook for 5 minutes over medium-high heat, until fully browned. Stir in the vegetable mixture, maple syrup, 1 teaspoon salt, cumin, allspice, coriander, thyme, nutmeg and ground cloves. Stir and cook for two minutes. Remove the pan from the stove and set aside. Whisk the eggs in a medium mixing bowl. Add 1 teaspoon salt and the half and half; whisk until fully blended. Add to the bowl containing the mashed squash, along with the meat mixture and 1/2 cup of the cheese. Stir. Pour the mixture into a buttered 9" X 13" baking dish. Sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup of cheese over the top. Place the baking dish on the middle oven rack and bake at 375 for 1 hour. Let cool at least 10 minutes before serving.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

First indoor farmers market Saturday, November 9th

My cold fingers are a good sign that the season is changing. I had to hop in the truck and blast the

The next two nights are supposed to be well below freezing, and once a cabbage head is frozen solid, it takes most of the day to thaw out. You can't harvest a vegetable when it is frozen, or it will be rubbery and limp when it thaws out. This limits our harvest window this time of year. There is an indoor farmers market this weekend, and I'm playing it safe by harvesting many of the crops a few days ahead of time and storing them in the cooler (where it is a constant 36 degrees, often warmer than outdoors).

We'll be vending at the first indoor market of the fall this Saturday, from 9:00 to Noon at the Daanan Lansing Bldg at the Fairgrounds. We have lots of great fall carrots and broccoli, green and purple cabbage, red and white potatoes, winter squash and head lettuces. We also have parsley, dill, kale, chard, Napa cabbage, radishes, Salanova salad mix, boc choi and other greens.

Sara and I would appreciate any feedback you have to offer on how the season went for you and your family. We were pretty pleased with how the season came out, considering the weather patterns. We had good help on the farm this year (as usual!) and a strong finish to a season with such a slow start. You can email responses, give us a call (387-0837), or chat with us at the indoor market. Your feedback will directly improve the Patchwork Green Farm and what we can offer you next season.

1) Reflect on the contents of your CSA bag - quantity, quality, value,
2) Be specific: what vegetable or herb did you see too much of, what crop would you like us to grow, what kept poorly ....
3) How can we run the CSA traditional share better so that it best serves the needs of you and your family (more frequent delivery, alt. pick-up site, food from other farms like meats and baked goods, more flexible pick-up system ....)

Thanks for your feedback!!


Roasted Root Vegetable Soup from Love Soup by Anna Thomas

1# rutabagas
1# turnips
1# sweet yams
1# fennel
1# carrots
2# onions
4 T olive oil
2 tsp. sea salt
black pepper
2 tsp fresh thyme or 1 tsp dried thyme
2 tsp finely chopped fresh sage or 1 tsp dried
3 T dry sherry

For the vegetables: Preheat oven to 375. Peel and dice all the vegetables to a fairly uniform size, about 1 inch. Mix the vegetables together in a large bowl with the olive oil, salt, pepper to taste, thyme, sage and sherry. Vary the amounts of herbs to your taste, and the types of veggies you have on hand. Spread the vegetables over 2 shallow baking pans and roast them for an hour or a little longer, until they are tender and flecked with dark brown spots. Mix and turn the vegetables a few times during the roasting. There may be more than you need for the soup recipe, so save them for another dish!

1/3 cup pearl barley
1/2 tsp sea salt
5-7 cups vegetable broth
4 cups roasted root vegetables
1/2 cup whole leaves fresh flat-leaf parsley
2-3 tsp sherry vinegar

Combine the barley in a large soup pot with 1 1/2 cups water, a dash of salt, and 5 cups of vegetable broth. Bring the liquid to a boil, lower the heat, and simmer the barley, covered, for 25 minutes. Add 4 cups of the mixed roasted vegetables and simmer the soup for about 15 minutes to marry the flavors. Taste, and add more salt if it is needed. Add the parsley and sherry vinegar during the last few minutes.
Optional garnish: fruity olive oil or fresh creamy goat cheese.
heater several times this morning to thaw my hands out. I was harvesting cabbages, and needed thin gloves to have the dexterity to peel off the wet outer leaves. At 36 degrees, with clouds and a stiff breeze, it was hard to keep them warm! But, not to complain. It is November, after all.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

We are hosting Practical Farmers of Iowa field day – July 21

You are invited to visit Patchwork Green--we are hosting a Practical Farmers of Iowa field day – July 21. The event, “Alternative Takes on Vegetable CSA Marketing,” is free to attend and will include snacks and drinks. RSVPs are requested; please reply to Lauren Zastrow at lauren@practicalfarmers.org or (515) 232-5661 by Thursday, July 18.

“There is no single CSA model anymore; it’s important for people to see that,” says Erik, who started farming in the area with Sara in 1999. “We’ll be presenting CSA models from three farms in this area to give CSA farmers and supporters different ways of looking at how CSAs can be successful.”

Attendees will get to tour the farm and participate in an informal roundtable discussion focused on different CSA marketing models, methods and communication issues. The discussion will feature speakers Meghan Spees and Anne Bohl of Sweet Earth Farm and Ann Bushman of Annie’s Gardens and Greens. Additional topics will include high tunnel production; marketing fresh, local produce; quality of life for vegetable farmers; and equipment and machinery for a small-scale farm.

“The goal is to bring folks together who are looking to expand or change their models to capture greater profits or improve the farmers’ quality of life,” Erik says. “Bringing in other CSA farmers’ experiences is a great way to generate a lively discussion.”

Learn more at http://www.practicalfarmers.org/assets/files/news/article_13july10.pdf

A visit in July

Cousins were in town over the 4th so we did a quick showing of the goats working on restoring the prairie and the hoop house. We didn't get up into the garden so no pictures of that this time.

Enjoy....
















Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Early July market busy and hot


















Sara at Market


















 Kohlrabi samples!














The big sign at market!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Where’s the produce?!


We have been planting, transplanting, weeding, trellising and protecting all manner of wonderful vegetable plants through week after week of cool, wet weather.  Most of the crops are looking OK, though many don’t seem to have grown an inch in the past month!  Apparently, plants need sunlight. 
The forecast for the upcoming week looks more promising: 80 degrees (and rain, of course) with a few days of sunshine.  I expect the crops will take off.  It’s about time!

Our new labor-saving technology this year is an EcoWeeder cultivator, made in Canada and imported by Windridge Implement here in Decorah.  It is pulled by and powered by the tractor.  The operator controls two basket weeders that spin small weeds out the soil on either side of a crop row.  It is working best on crops like potatoes and Brussels sprouts where the tractor and cultivator drive over a single crop row.  We are still working on perfecting the row spacing to allow for mechanically cultivating two rows (the spacing we use for many of our crops).  Here are Meg and Erik cultivating young potatoes this weekend:


  
We plan to start vending at the Winneshiek Farmers Market this Wednesday, June 12.  We’ll have lots of beautiful lettuces, a few fresh herbs, asparagus and rhubarb, radishes and a few other spring treats.  We don’t expect to have large quantities of anything for a few weeks, so come down to market early for the best selection.
The sugar snap peas and summer squash are beginning to flower, and we hope to have them producing in two weeks.  Also, coming soon we’ll have beets, kohlrabi and broccoli.  Bring on the vegetables!


Your Patchwork Green Farmers, Erik and Sara

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Is The Garden Planted Yet?


I try not to chuckle when we get this question.  Home gardeners often plant their entire garden in a single day in May, getting in the potatoes, green beans, lettuce, carrots and sweet corn in one fell swoop.
The Patchwork Green Farm has to operate a little differently.  Because we strive to provide a consistent supply of each type of vegetable for as long a season as possible, we spend a lot of time planning and executing successions.  I maintain and annually modify a large spreadsheet that I call my ‘planting schedule,’ otherwise known as my ‘back-up brain.’  
My planting schedule, for example, shows that the first green beans should be planted on May 13.  This is based on the fact that dark-seeded beans (including the green bean variety that I grow) germinate in cool, but not cold soil, I want to harvest beans ASAP each summer, and the old farmers’ wisdom that you can plant corn and beans when the oak leaves are the size of a mouse’s ear.  I then will plant green, yellow and purple beans every two weeks through July 17, after which time there are not enough days to mature a crop before the killing frosts of fall.  Ideally, this will ensure that we have beans available from July through September.
Each year poses its’ weather challenges that affect the timing of the successions, and I’ll modify the spreadsheet based on experience, new varieties and customer interest/demand.  No, the garden is not yet planted!  We plant from March (onions seeded in flats) through October (garlic cloves are planted), and it is one of my favorite parts of our weekly routine.
This spring, we have had to postpone early, direct-seeded crops like peas, radishes and spinach because of the cold, wet weather in April.  Transplanted crops like onions went in several weeks later than ‘usual.’  Last week, however, we got a lot of field work done, including planting all the potatoes, the last of the onions, and many flats of lettuces, kohlrabi, beets and parsley, among other crops.  With a wet start to this week, we’re hoping to get the first succession of cucumbers and summer squash transplants in the ground by Wednesday.  
We are not harvesting much this week except for asparagus and rhubarb, but the spring greens are loving this wet, mild weather, and we hope to be harvesting lots of crops by June 1st.  Thanks for being patient with us, as we work with the seasons!
Your Patchwork Green Farmers, Erik and Sara

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Can’t wait any longer……must plant


Getting the hoop house ready for spring.
This past weekend provided ideal drying conditions: dry, breezy and sunny. We shallowly tilled a few beds of wet soil on Saturday, then came back and tilled them a bit deeper on Sunday. Once tilled, our soil quickly warms and dries out, although it was so wet that we were still transplanting into almost-mud on Monday morning.

We hedged our bets, keeping a close eye on the low temperatures forecast for later in the week. On Monday, we transplanted beets, kohlrabi, lettuces, bok choy and a few onions, and immediately covered them with floating row cover. The spun-bound rolls of row cover are supported by wire hoops. We then bury the sides with soil, and presto, a mini-greenhouse has been created over the new plants. It warms the air 10-15 degrees during the day, and 4 degrees at night. The cover also keeps flea beetles from turning the boc choi to lacework, retains moisture (not a problem
this week) and protects the tender plants from wind damage.

On Sunday morning, we also cajoled friends to help us pull the plastic top on our big 96-foot hoop house, where all the cherry tomatoes are grown. We left the house closed up tight during the early week heat wave, and the high temperature warmed the soil. Hopefully, we’ll be transplanting all the Sun Gold cherry tomatoes (and a few other varieties) in mild temp’s in the hoop house Friday, while it rains and snows and blows outside!