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At The Dupont Farmers Market March 29th, 2009

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E., a friend and market volunteer confirmed my estimation that the market opened to a large crowd last Sunday, despite the clouds and threat of storms.  “I counted 400 heads at the opening bell”, she said. It’s spring, and the crowds are returning rain or shine. There were fewer empty spaces between the vendors who line the street and bank parking lot. Under white tents, bright yellow daffodils and tall, sculptural clippings of peach blossoms and forsythia popped with color, and the promise of blooms. Market patrons fell into line in front of their favorite vendors to get the first pick of produce.

The Farm at Sunnyside has frise and escarole, did you get some?”, E. asked me. I hadn’t, but the thought of using TFAS’s escarole in a wedding soup that I made last year had me yearning to make it again. I could almost smell the tiny meatballs cooking in my home as I made my way to their stand. Alas, the frise and escarole were already gone. It was a bit of a disappointment, but there is no shortage of inspiration for farm to fork food at the Dupont Market.

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Take Next Step Produce, typically anchored by the owner, Heinz. Heinz is a font of helpful information when it comes to storing and preparing his bountiful produce. Erba stella, a salty, crisp salad green, caught my eye as well as “vitamin green”, a leafy vegetable that “tastes like mustard greens” according to Heinz. Large bags of fresh cress also had me thinking of salads, and a bumper crop of sunchokes was so plentiful that I didn’t feel bad taking 2 containers! I roasted the sunchokes* in the oven as soon as I got home, and made a creamy sunchoke soup with thyme and smoked ham. Truly, I recommend just simply roasting them-they taste like a sweeter, nuttier version of roasted fingerling potatoes.

Keswick Creamery’s stand draws folks like bees to honey, with generous samples of just about everything they make, including cheese, yogurt, quark and blue suede moo cheese dip. Melanie, the lovely owner, told Frank and me that no, we didn’t miss buying her eggs because we arrived a few minutes after the opening bell. Rather, she had just transferred her chickens to another location and the hens had not been out and about to scratch yet. She won’t sell her eggs unless they’ve truly been able to get out and roam. Her integrity results in some of the tastiest, richly orange eggs that’ I’ve found in the area. While I wait another week to purchase Melanie’s eggs, I’ll enjoy her yogurt, topped with berries, cherries and honey.

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Very soon, ramps, morels and asparagus will appear. I can’t wait.

Until the next At The Market, eat and buy local when you can.

*Jerusalem artichokes are not from Jerusalem, nor are they artichokes. Discuss.

Cherry Compote Over Chevre- A Light Dessert To Kick Off Cherrypalooza In Honor Of D.C.’s Cherry Blossoms

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OK. I think that I’m over oatmealpalooza for now, and in the spirit of the venerable Cherry Blossoms soon to bloom here in Washington D.C., I am reaching into my freezer to use a large bunch of sour cherries which I lovingly saved from last season.

Sour and sweet cherries are carried by several farmers markets in D.C., nearby Maryland, and Fairfax County, Virginia. I have had wonderful experiences buying stone fruits of all kinds (including these sour pie cherries) from Allenberg Orchards. They sell at the Kingstowne Market on Fridays, in season. Buying the cherries in bulk saves money, and allows me to store the cherries to enjoy later (Until I learn to can them, I simply store them in a zip-loc baggie in the freezer). The taste of the sour cherries is still very good-tart with a hint of sweetness and intense cherry flavor. The defrosted cherries work particularly well in sauces, compotes and even frozen treats such as gelato.

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My first Cherrypalooza entry is adapted from this recipe in Health Magazine, so as you can infer, it’s a good-for-you-no-guilt-dessert that is a wonderful play on ending a meal with fruit and cheese. You can use frozen cherries for this recipe without problem. Or, file this recipe in a tickler to remind you what you can make with fresh cherries this year!

Cherry Compote over Chevre (Goat) Cheese

serves 4

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 cups pitted cherries with juice (sour pie cherries or Bing cherries, fresh or frozen)
  • 2 tablespoons light brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • zest and juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 4-5 ounce fresh chevre (goat cheese)

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Directions

Add cherries and sugar to a heavy-bottom pot. Cook over medium-high heat until sugar is dissolved. Add vinegar, lemon juice and lemon zest. Simmer gently for 5 minutes. Allow to cool slightly.

Serve warm or cooled compote over 1 oz portion of goat cheese.*

*Serve with a dessert wine such as a Sancerre or Riesling.

Ragu - Not The Stuff In A Jar

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Recently, Frank and I enjoyed a lovely dinner at Rustico, a restaurant/gastropub in North Old Town, Alexandria. It was a dinner to remind me that I need to get the hell out of my own kitchen and enjoy great food that is right at my fingertips, so to speak. Not only does it save on cleaning the kitchen, but this dinner in particular served to give me inspiration–inspiration to make a ragu like the pork ragu over rigatoni I enjoyed so much, that I had to ask what seasonings etc. were used. Oregano, rosemary, thyme and garlic, I was told. Very simple, yet something else was going on. The pork tasted…nutty. “Ahh”, I thought-I’m tasting the pork. No, not just the pork, but what the pig ate. It was then that once again, I inquired (to the manager) about where they sourced their pork from. As I has suspected, the pork is from Babes in the Wood, a terrific producer in Virginia. Fortunately, I’m able to buy BITW products locally at the Alexandria Farmers Market on Saturday mornings, so I set out to buy pork shoulder (an excellent cut for braising), buy wound with two equally wonderful pork shanks, due to availability. After defrosting the meat, it was on to making the ragu.

Ragu–what do you think of first? The stuff in the jar, right? At least, I did. The brand has been around forever, and up until a few years ago, I might have bought it myself (now I generally make my own). And I know, ragu is also what many Italians call spaghetti sauce, or gravy. That’s the second thing that comes to my mind-a long-simmered sauce with bits of meat that gently cooks, tenderizes and flavors homemade meatballs while being stirred by Nona in her apron.

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Ragu is a beloved Italian sauce from Emilia-Romagna and at its core, it is chopped meat(s), sauteed vegetables and liquid (wine, tomatoes, stock, milk, cream). In Northern Italy, ragu is typically chopped into the sauce, while in Southern Italy, meat may be cooked in the sauce, then served separately from it. With aristocratic origins, ragu became a peasant dish as a sauce served over pasta. Lesser, more affordable cuts of meat were braised often with tomatoes, and cream which rose to the top of a can of heated milk. Broth was not used, as it involved animal bones which were too expensive for most. Salt pork,  which was available and affordable, was added to the meat for bulk and flavor.

Many of you are perhaps familiar with Emilia-Romagna’s most famous ragu-bolognese. If you haven’t made bolognese from Marcella Hazan’s recipe, you owe it to yourself to do so. Not simply marinara with meat, Hazan’s bolognese is meat cooked in tomato, milk and white wine. Its richness and intensity of flavor is beyond compare-served most judiciously as a primi over tagliatelle.

Now, where was I? Oh right, ragu. Similar to bolognese, time, lots of love (I sound like Carla Hall, hootie-hoo y’all) and following 4 basic steps are required and apply to many braises, including osso bucco. First, season and sear your meat. This will create flavor. Second, saute a sofrito or mirepoix to create depth of flavor and aroma. Third, add liquid to cover meat by 1/2 to 3/4.  Fourth and last, allow the braise to refrigerate overnight. It will not only taste better, but you will be able to defat the liquid.

 These are the basics for this pork ragu, and after two days of preparation, Frank and I were finally able to sit down and and enjoy our ragu. The pork shank was succulent and deeply flavored from the braise. My version ended up being a bit heavier than Rustico’s, but terrific none the less.

So, if you can plan ahead, get a great piece of braising meat, and can wait the duration while your house smells like heaven, go ahead and make this ragu while the weather is still cool. Enjoy.

Pork Ragu with Rigatoni

Ingredients

  • 4-4 1/2 pounds pork shank (you can use pork shoulder, or beef shoulder/shank)
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • fresh thyme
  • fresh oregano
  • fresh rosemary
  • extra virgin olive oil
  • 2-3 carrots
  • 3 celery stalks (leaves included, if you have them)
  • 1 onion
  • 1 small can tomato paste
  • 1 cup tomato puree
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • 2 cups dry white wine
  • 2 bay leaves
  • salt and pepper to taste

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Directions

First, let me say something about seasoning long cooking dishes, such as braises. You want to layer flavors as well as layer seasoning. Adding salt layer by layer is very important. Begin by seasoning your meat and vegetables as you prepare them. Continue add salt judiciously as the braise cooks, because you don’t want to end up with an over-salted dish. The flavors of the braise concentrate as you cook, because inevidably, there is some evaporation during cooking, even if you are using a heavy-lidded pot, such as a dutch oven, which I highly recommend. You can always add more salt at the end, if needed.

For the rub

Peel 3-4 cloves of garlic and place in food processor. Add rosemary and oregano leaves. Pulse 5-6 times to chop the mixture. Slowly drizzle in evoo until the mixture is just past being a paste (you want to be able to liberally cover your pork). You may have noticed that i omitted the thyme from the rub. Fresh thyme leaves are very tiny and hard to harvest off of the stems. I simply rub the thyme whole over the pork and allow them to stay on the top and sides of the meat while marinating.

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For the pork

Place pork in a deep dish, and pour rub over the pork. Add the thyme an rub the mixture over the pork. Cover with plastic wrap and allow the pork to marinate in the refrigerator overnight.

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Take pork out of the refrigerator 30 minutes before searing. Remove thyme stems and discard. Liberally salt and pepper the pork on all sides. In a heated skillet or heavy-bottom pan, add about 3 tablespoons of evoo. Sear the pork on all sides, until browned. Discard the evoo.

While the meat in browning, roughly chop the carrots, celery and onion. Add to a food processor and blend until the sofrito mixture until smooth. Heat pan over medium high heat. Add 2 tablespoons evoo to pan and transfer sofrito to pan. Add a pinch of salt and a few grinds of pepper.  Saute the mixture for about 6-8 minutes to develop color on the vegetables, and fond in the pan. Add tomato paste and continue browning for another 5 minutes. Turn heat to high, push sofrito and tomato mixture to the sides of the pan, and deglaze the pan with the white wine. Allow the wine to reduce by half.

Decrease heat to medium and add the tomato paste and chicken stock. Stir to incorporate. If you are cooking the braise in the same pot, return the pork to the pot. If you are braising the ragu in a crock pot, pour the mixture over the pork which has been transfered to the crock pot. Add enough water to cover the meat by 3/4.  Add another 2 pinches of salt and several grinds of pepper.

Braise meat in a 300 degree pre-heated oven, or in a low crock pot for 6-7 hours, or until the meat is tender and falling off the bone/pulls apart easily.

Remove meat from the braising liquid and allow to cool for 20 minutes. Gently shred the meat, removing fat as needed (pork shanks have layers of fat between the meat which means more flavor) and reserve meat in a covered container in the refrigerator. Place braising liquid in the refrigerator and chill overnight. The next day, a layer of fat will have formed over the top. This fat can easily be removed with a slotted spoon.

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Return meat to braising liquid and gently heat while you boil the pasta. Mix the two together and it’s mangia time!! Serve with a sharp pecorino cheese if you like. I’m not sure it’s authentic, but it’s my belief that anything can be made better with cheese.

Recommendations

Happy St. Patrick’s Day, 2009

Frank and I, along with Tucker, enjoyed this year’s St. Patrick’s Parade in Old Town Alexandria. Enjoy the pics!

At The Dupont Farmer Market March 8, 2008

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(a market patron snatches up a gorgeous bunch of jewel-toned carrots at Farm at Sunnyside)

Well, after a month or more hiatus from going to the Dupont Market, Frank and I returned on a warm March morning to find the most dedicated of patrons lined up at their favorite vendors to get the pick of the day. Atwater’s Breads etc. had a lineup of 15 or so people, while Keswick Creamery’s stand was surrounded by those grazing on the free samples while waiting to buy cheese and eggs. And yes, it was me that bought the last carton of one dozen gorgeous white, brown, sand and green-blue eggs just after the bell was rung! Not surprisingly, the next long line that I saw was queued up at the flower stand in the bank parking lot. A warm day in late winter leaves one yearning for fair weather, while the colors and smells of a hand-picked bouquet of flowers helps to shed the winter blues.

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(Quaker Valley Orchards delicous jams)

What a joyous sound– you know, the opening bell? I like arriving early to the market and really get excited watching the stands being prepared for opening, and deciding upon my strategy after purusing all the goods and prices.  After scoring eggs and a feta sampler pack from Keswick, I restocked on one of my favorite morning treats, which is Quaker Valley Orchard’s Sour Cherry Jam. Next, Frank bought a few Gold Rush apples and we rounded out our purchases with a couple Teriyaki buffalo sticks (think Slim Jim) from Cibola Farms, a generous bunch of perky flat leaf parsley from Sunnyside Farm and a basket of black trumpet mushrooms from the Mushroom Stand.

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(bright orchids and Atwater breads fresh from the truck)

Our bag was heavy, we were happy and thus departed the market for the Italian Store to stock up on pantry goods, prepared frozen foods (the canneloni is a fantastic heat and eat meal) and of course, a Philly sub. Hoagie really, but I’ll go along with the lingo here.

OK. Time to eat and cook with the bounty we got on Sunday. Stay tuned!

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(market patrons come and go to the Dupont Market)

Until the next At The Market, eat and buy local when you can.