Recipes & Rants

First, the Good Food News. Below find two great recipes for the Labor Day Weekend from Gail Smythe of Earthly Kneads. Most of the ingredients for these recipes can be found right at Sweetwater Market this Saturday!

Then in the Bad Food News category, a few words to the wise about the FDA’s latest craziness. Please to go to register your dismay (and disgust) with the FDA for allowing lettuce and spinach to be zapped with radiation before coming to your favorite supermarket. Let the buyer beware – and have a great end of the summer holiday!

Gails Labor of Love for Labor Day Recipes

Shiitake Mushroom “Burgers”, Makes 4

6 to 8 ounces fresh Shiitake Mushrooms, stemmed, small dice

3 large eggs, beaten

1/2 cup oat bran, wheat bran, or bread crumbs

4 to 8 ounces of your favorite cheese – the amount depends on the strength of your cheese. For something like blue or parmesan, use 4 ounces. For a mild cheese, use 8 ounces.

1/2 cup chopped fresh parsley, chives, basil, or other fresh herb, optional

Salt & pepper, to taste (you may not need much salt depending on the saltiness of your cheese)

2-3 tablespoons Olive oil

Directions: Combine everything except the olive oil, salt, and pepper in a large bowl. Form into 4 “burger” patties. Sprinkle patties with salt and pepper. Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. Saute the patties in the oil for about 3-4 minutes per side, or until golden brown and cooked through. For a real outdoor treat, toss the cooked patties onto a hot grill for just a minute per side to get those great grill marks and some grilled flavor. Serve with a good red wine or some stout beer!

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Gail’s Grilled Potato & Vegetable Salad

This is a very flexible recipe.  You can substitute all sorts of vegetables for the ones I listed below.  Carrots, snow peas, snap peas, broccoli, tomatoes, artichokes, and sweet potatoes would all be welcome additions or substitutions.

Dressing:

3 Tablespoons Vinegar, Use something lighter, like Apple Cider, White Wine, White Balsamic Vinegar, or try the Leek Vinegar we sell by Food For Thought

1/2 Tablespoon Honey or Dijon Mustard

1 teaspoon salt, more or less to taste

1 Tablespoon chopped fresh herbs, I like tarragon, but basil, chives, marjoram, or parsley or any combination of them would would well, too

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

1 pound potato, I like to use large red-skinned potatoes, but any variety should work

1 medium zucchini or summer squash

3-4 bell peppers, mix of green & red

1 large or 2 small onions

1/2 pound fresh green beans, trimmed

1/2 pound eggplant

fresh chives or green onions for garnish, optional

To make the dressing, whisk together all the dressing ingredients except for the olive oil.  Whisk until the salt is dissolved.  Slowly whisk in the olive oil.  Be sure to slowly drizzle in the oil, otherwise the dressing will separate.  Set aside and cook the vegetables.

Heat the grill on high.  While it’s heating, wash and dry the vegetables.  Slice the potatoes, zucchini, and eggplant thinly, lengthwise, 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick.  Slice the onions into 1/2 to 3/4 inch slices, crosswise.  Don’t slice the onions too thinly or they will fall apart while grilling and disappear through the grate.  (OPTIONAL:  Sprinkle the eggplant slices generously with salt and put aside.  This step draws out liquid from the eggplant that can make it mushy and bitter.  Let the slices sit for about 30 minutes.  Rinse well & pat dry before using.)  Seed the peppers and cut them into 3-4 large pieces each.

Blanch the beans in boiling water for 1 minute, drain, and plunge into icy water to stop the cooking.  Drain well & set aside.

Brush the potato, zucchini, peppers, onions, and eggplant lightly with olive oil.  Grill for a few minutes on each side until tender.  The peppers will cook quickest, followed by the zucchini and eggplant, and then by the potato and onion (may take 3-5 minutes on each side).  Remove from the grill and set aside until cool enough to handle.  Cut everything into bite size pieces, throw it all into a bowl along with the blanched beans, and toss it with the vinegrette.  Top with chopped chives or green onions and serve immediately.

ROTHBURY the name will never be the same….

Sweetwater Vendors at ROTHBURY Festival
Sweetwater Vendors at ROTHBURY Festival

Well, we did it! A Four day Farmers Market at a festival with 40,000 people!
The freak storm the day before the festival took two of our pop-up tents and twisted them like Tinker Toys and damaged 3 more. We got soaked at the beginning and end of the festival, and didn’t sell nearly enough of our wonderful food because we ended up in a quiet cul-de-sac but still, most of us said we would go back next year.

On day two I started to write down names of states as people walked up: Oregon, Maine, Ohio, New Jersey, Tennessee, Colorado….that whole day there was only 1 couple from Michigan, and they had just gotten back from East Africa! They were coming home to be married and then returning after the festival. Working with kids in a refugee camp.

The festival itself was truly amazing. The way the visual arts were woven into and around the music, one could walk from a huge red-curtained venue ringed with food vendor booths, mega pop stars (John Mayer, and is that….her?) and thousands of cheering fans, to an eerily quiet woods with wonderful hammocks to swing in, bathed in soft swirling lights, and then back to a rave dome packed with frenetic dancers and a never-ending thrumbeat. It just went on and on.

The people who did find us, who made the U-Turn away from the main path out of the campground back to us, appreciated finding such great fresh organically grown food. There were many many great conversations around food, just like at our regular market. Only difference was sometimes you would be talking to a person dressed in a turquoise sequined rabbit suit, or a fairy with wings.

These are a few of my favorite things….

Brief rainstorm at market early summer 08
Brief rainstorm at market early summer 08

The market yesterday was lovely. Cloudy skies and a weirdly wild but brief storm the night before had us worried that we would have to cram everyone inside, but positive thinking sent the clouds away and we had a good market. Our fundraiser the week before for the Groundswell Community Farm netted $220 for Katie and Anna – we hope that helps them get back to us soon! Thanks to everyone who contributed, and the Groundswell Gals thank you too!

This morning I was thinking what a blessing it is to be associated with such hard working splendid people like the farmers and vendors of Sweetwater. This came to me as I cut two thin slices of Das Brot, Earthly Kneads fabulous Spelt Bread, and toasted it. To this I added a schmear of Dancing Goat Creamery’s plain Goat Cheese, and topped it off with a dollop of Food for Thought’s Wild Blueberry Merlot jam. We had strawberries from Fruitful Acres so I added a handful to a smoothie made with my own homemade Keifer made with raw milk from our milk share with Liberty Family Farm. Breakfast, and what a great one!

Anyone have other Sweetwater food stories to share? Do tell!

Groundswell Farm Fundraiser & Drum Circle at this Saturday’s Market

Barb Pitcher & Common Unity Drumming up a Fundraiser!
Barb Pitcher & Common Unity Drumming up a Fundraiser!

Our intrepid and inspired baker Gail Smythe of Earthly Kneads wrote this in her weekly email and I’m borrowing it to re-post here:

There’s a fund raiser for the gals at Groundswell Farm this weekend. Please come by the Sweetwater Market and show your support. Barb and Amy are going to be there with their awesome drum circle and all coffee cup sales and a portion of vendor fees will be donated. I know it’s not exactly a vegetable, but we’re donating 80 loaves of bread for their CSA members next week. If you have something you’d like to contribute, please let me know and I’ll see if we can get it in their delivery.

We joined the Bobier’s CSA this year and it’s been like Christmas opening our box every week to see what vegetables are inside. We had a full Sweetwater Market dinner the other night, and I wanted to share it with you. See the bottom of this email for recipes and ideas. Everything turned out so tasty that I ate most of the leftovers before Patrick could get his hands on them! Everything made enough food to feed 6-8 people.
OUR ASIAN INSPIRED SWEETWATER MARKET DINNER
We had some asparagus from Fruitful Acres, garlic scapes and shiitake mushrooms from Dave (our Mushroom guy), baby pak choi, green onions, red & white radishes, kohlrabi, and sirlion steak from Earthscape/Full Circle Farm, and eggs from Creswick Farms. This is what we did with all of it:
CRISPY SHIITAKE MUSHROOMS
Once they were cooked, we sliced the caps and tossed them with some grilled tofu and grilled sirlion steak. For a vegetarian version, omit the steak! To grill the tofu, cube it, toss it in the leftover marinade from the shiitake mushrooms, skewer it, and cook over high heat, turning every few minutes until there are nice grill marks on each side. Yum!
Ingredients:
1 pound fresh Shiitake mushrooms caps
1/2 cup water
3 garlic scapes, minced
1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
1/3 cup vegetable oil
1/3 cup rice wine vinegar
1/3 cup soy sauce
Whisk together all the ingredients except the mushrooms. Toss the mushrooms in the marinade and let sit at room temperature for 1 hour, turning the caps frequently. Grill on high or broil for 3 minutes per side or until the edges are brown and crispy.
SIMPLE ASIAN SLAW
2 medium/small Kohlrabi, cut in thin julienne (or coarsely shredded)
Small handful of radishes, thinly sliced
2-3 green onions, sliced thinly on the diagonal
1/2 teaspoon grated ginger
Toss all the vegetables in a bowl with a small splash of tamari sauce (or soy sauce), a splash of seasoned rice wine vinegar, and a dash of toasted sesame oil. Adjust seasonings to taste. Let sit while you prepare everything else. Top with some toasted sesame seeds if desired when serving.
BOK CHOY AND ASPARAGUS FRITTATA
Found this recipe online. We substituted the garlic with a few garlic scapes, but kept the rest of the recipe the same. I cooked it in a cast-iron skillet.
http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/asparagus-and-bok-choy-frittata

Bon Appetit!

Welcome to Good Food News!

In our market’s 3 + years of existence one of the things we treasure the most is the many exhilarating conversations we have every market day. The vendors and customers of Sweetwater are a wonderfully diverse group and we all like to talk – about food, politics, you name it! The problem is that so many conversations go unfinished because most importantly we are a marketplace and need to conduct business. So, this blog is an attempt to have those longer conversations about our local food system and all the things that go with it.

So let’s start this first conversation off with some good news and some bad news. The good news is that the Sweetwater Local Foods Market has been asked by the ROTHBURY Festivalpromoters to bring the whole market to the Festival, and we have agreed! The bad news is that we can’t be in two places at once, and have decided to close our regular market on Saturday, July 5th.

The opportunities, both in terms of advancing the cause of organic agriculture and the chance for our vendors to have an extra financial windfall in the summer were just too great to pass up. We’ve posted the Press Release for the event below. We hope many of you might be attending the festival; if so be sure to look us up!

In the meantime, please let me know what you would like to talk about here – this blog is for you too!

For good food,

Diana Jancek

Market Manager

Sweetwater Local Foods Market

PRESS RELEASE

ROTHBURY Music Festival

July 3-6th – to Feature

Local Farmers Market to Promote Green Thinking Among Music Fans.

Billed as a New American Celebration, the ROTHBURY Music Festival, to be held at Double JJ Ranch in Rothbury, MI over the 4th of July weekend, will offer attendees the opportunity to taste the “healthy, humane, homegrown” food of the farmers of the Sweetwater Local Foods Market. The Sweetwater Local Foods Market in Muskegon is Michigan’s first farmers market to exclusively sell local fruits and vegetables raised using organic farming practices and meat, eggs, and cheese from humanely raised animals.

“We were thrilled to learn back in March that festival promoters were seeking an ‘organic farmers market’ for their festival,” said Sweetwater Market Manager Diana Jancek. “After our initial call they immediately offered us the opportunity to bring our market and its farmers into the festival. Their invitation highlights the fact that organic farming is becoming more accepted and the food our farmers grow is becoming more appreciated and in demand.”

Sweetwater farmers will offer festival goers a range of fresh vegetables, meat and cheese packaged as snacks, baked goods, and other locally grown items in a farmers market that will operate from 11am to 6pm each day of the festival.

“Many of our vendors have prepared unique items especially for the Festival,” said Jancek. “I think people will experience both great food and great music this weekend – all the while supporting a green, sustainable food system.”

The ROTHBURY Festival is the first in Michigan to consciously promote an ecologically intelligent approach to large music events. All eating utensils, bags, and other wrapping will be made from compostable materials like corn-based plastic. The festival is also sponsoring an Eco-ThinkTank of presentations, each day, on how to solve some of the important ecological challenges before us.