To see the world in a grain of sand,
And heaven in a wild flower;
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour.-William Blake
Blog
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One Local Summer, Week 6: Rainbow Chard Saves the Day
We returned from our trip today and didn’t have time to make it to the farmer’s market before it closed. Or, to be more accurate, we’d already driven for over three hours, I was mildly carsick, and I was so not going to hop back in the car until I’d eaten food and hosed myself off.I was a little worried about our local meal. Would it have to be another plate of backyard green beans and peas?
Then, looking through my photos for the week, I realized I’d already eaten one entirely local meal!
(Plus the kids had baked me some local scones. Oh, and does foraging for wild raspberries and wineberries count as local snacking?)
(Just so you know, I don’t photograph everything I eat. It just worked out that way. I was planning a post about different ways to prepare swiss chard, that don’t inspire your children to make obligatory gagging sounds.)
(Sorry about my ongoing love affair with parentheses. I like for us to feel that I am sharing secrets.)
Anyway. I cooked up an armful of rainbow chard like so:
- Separate greens from stems. Cut stems into 1/2″ pieces and put into oven-safe dish. Drizzle some oil over top, mix well, and put into oven. (Ours was already set at 425 to bake scones. What, did you think I was going to let the kids bake scones and not cook something else at the same time? That’s good energy wasted!) Tweak your temperature and cooking times as needed to suit whatever else you’re cooking at the same time.
- While stems are cooking, chop up leaves into smallish hunks. This will yield a ridiculously large pile of greens.
- After 20 minutes, start checking those stems. At 425 degrees I was happy with their texture after about 23 minutes- browning and tender.
- Heap your pile of chopped leaves on top of your cooked stems. ( They threatened to overflow my 8×8 dish, so if you are dealing with more than 9 good-sized stems, you’re going to need a bigger boat. )
- Drizzle with a bit more oil, toss very carefully, return to oven for five minutes or so, until everything is nice and dark and wilted.
- Add some local heavy cream and salt and pepper. Turn off heat, put dish back into oven until cream is bubbly (or until table is set and dinner is ready). Normally I would add some parmesan at this point, as it adds a nice salty edge. But, all I had was local smoked cheddar, so I went with that instead.
I put two-thirds of it in the fridge ( it re-emerged that evening tossed with chicken and served warm over rice).Then I whipped up a quick omelet with local eggs and filled it with the remaining creamy cheesy chardy goodness.
Mmmm….inadvertently local.I like cooking with chard!
What’s your favorite way to prepare it? - Separate greens from stems. Cut stems into 1/2″ pieces and put into oven-safe dish. Drizzle some oil over top, mix well, and put into oven. (Ours was already set at 425 to bake scones. What, did you think I was going to let the kids bake scones and not cook something else at the same time? That’s good energy wasted!) Tweak your temperature and cooking times as needed to suit whatever else you’re cooking at the same time.
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Another Weekend Away
Far away there in the sunshine
are my highest aspirations.
I may not reach them,
but I can look up and see their beauty,
believe in them,
and try to follow where they lead.
-Louisa May AlcottWe are visiting a farm this weekend and I am not sure how internet-friendly it will be.
Jacob and Maverick will post tomorrow evening when we return, and I’m sure I’ll pop in with our local meal update.
Here’s some fun reading, some green, some not so much, until then:
- The Million Lights Project wants to send you a free CFL.
- Learn to compost your humanure (via Treehugger) Not the way to talk my husband into starting a compost pile, methinks…
- “Plastic Backpack Bags Cow Farts” Well, it’s about damn time…
- British Government advises eating your leftovers Meanwhile, Americans receive checks in the mail and are encouraged to buy plasma-screen TVs…
- Green photography tips that I found helpful. (via Epic Edits Weblog)
- My favorite baby eats his first local meal.
- My beloved Thoreau traveled in Maine following Wabanaki canoe routes. Bridget Besaw photodocuments this trail and now I want to move to Maine– make sure you click on her slideshow on the right…
- Relax, the FDA says high fructose corn syrup is natural; gee, thanks for clearing that up, FDA…
- Bill Nye and Ed Begley go toe-to-toe over who is greener I win the green dork contest because this article made me so blissfully happy! Now I want to know who would win in an arm wrestling competition…
- Estimated cost for oil heat this winter: $2593. (via The Huffington Post)… Estimated temperature setting in my house this winter: 60 degrees…
- The best Alice in Wonderland photos ever… I have these framed in my living room.
- Last but not least, George W. pumps fist in air, signs off from G8 with a “Goodbye from the world’s biggest polluter”. Really, is it too much to ask, that our President not act like some embarrassing frat boy?
Have a good weekend!
Get out in that sunshine!
