Turnips with Greens and Apples

27 06 2010

Our farm share started this week and now summer feels like it’s here in earnest. Sorting through the bag of vegetables, talking about what’s there, figuring out how to store and use them — these have become as much a part of summer as watching my kids run through sprinklers or sell lemonade.

This week we received peas, turnips, butter lettuce and garlic. Believe it or not, my kids are most excited about the turnips, having grown fond of the turnip puree I make each summer. Today, however, I tried something new so I could use the greens at the same time. (Greens are perishable and after two days it was time to use them.)

The recipe I followed, Braised Turnip Greens with Turnips and Apples, ran in the last issue of Gourmet (November 2009). As written it serves 8, an indication of the issue’s Thanksgiving theme. I made a scaled-down version with just 8 ounces of greens, 1/2 pound of turnips, 1 apple and 2 cups of water, plus correspondingly smaller amounts of salt, butter and vinegar. I also skipped the ham hock and minced a few slices of Hormel’s preservative-free smoked deli ham instead.

Overall, it’s more of a dish for company than a family dinner, but we liked the pairing of turnips and apples as the latter’s sweetness brings out a rarely-seen side of turnip greens. Stay tuned for more turnip recipes!





Garlicky Pasta with Sausage and Greens

18 04 2009

IMG_0555The beauty of this dish is that it’s more of a technique than a recipe. In place of precise amounts, I have listed steps so you can tailor it to fit the number of people you are cooking for and how you want it to be (i.e., lots of sausage on a small bed of noodles vs. mostly noodles with green flecks, etc.). Turnip greens are hard to find, but if you can get your hands on them, go ahead and use them here. Their peppery bite is a great accent to the other flavors.

1) Boil salted water and add whole wheat pasta, cooking according to package directions.

2) While the water is boiling, pan fry one or two Italian sausages (or use leftovers from last night’s dinner on the grill), then remove them from the pan and cut into slices.

3) Clean several large handfuls of turnip greens and chop coarsely (remember that greens cook down greatly in size). If you have baby turnips attached, cut them off and save them to eat as snacks, in salads, or however you would eat a radish.

4) Add one or two cloves of minced garlic to the same saute pan you fried the sausage in, and a swirl of olive oil, if necessary. Cook over medium heat about 30 seconds to a minute, then add in the turnip greens, partially cover, and cook for a few minutes. If the pan seems dry, sprinkle in some water with your fingertips so there’s enough moisture to cook the greens.

5) Drain the pasta when it’s done, then add it to the saute pan along with the sliced sausages. Toss everything together and season with parmesan, kosher salt and pepper.





To Market, To Market

14 04 2009

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Not even the brisk morning air could dampen my excitement as I headed to Boulder for my first farmers’ market of the year. Walking the aisle, I felt as if I were welcoming a dear friend who had been out of the country. “How good to see you,” I felt like saying. “We are all so glad you are back.”

Others felt it, too. Around me, customers greeted favorite farmers, full of questions about how their winter had been, how the wife was, what was new for this season. Talk about a difference from summer when corn and peaches take center stage and crowds grow so thick you have to elbow your way to the front to pay. But on this day, under a damp, iron sky, we weren’t just at a farmers market, we were at a reunion, and people had time to talk.

Still, it was chilly, and since my two-year-old had refused to wear her coat, I finally accepted the fact that I had to stop chatting and start shopping. Not that I minded. After five months of storage crops and root vegetables, the abundance of so many tender greens was a welcome sight.

Beet greens! Turnip greens! Mizuna! Rainbow chard! All called out for my attention, asking me to take them home. I ended up with turnip greens from Jay Hill Farm, with plump jewels of baby turnips dangling from the bright green leaves; my son chose carrots, greens still attached; and my daughter picked … a cinnamon roll. Not as healthy, but still local and yummy. She obviously felt an affection for the greens, though, because she fussed until we let her hold the bag and then chanted happily the whole drive home, “To Market, to Market,” (as in Mother Goose’s “To market, to market, to buy a fat pig, home again, home again, jiggity jig”).

Turnip greens are tender and, like beet greens, highly perishable, so I cooked them up straight away for a hearty lunch. Just what we all needed after a chilly morning with an old friend.

Coming later this week, the recipe for Garlicky Pasta with Sausage and Turnip Greens.








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