Date: Fri 26-Jul-1996
Date: Fri 26-Jul-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Illustration: C
Location: A9
Quick Words:
farmer's-market-Valenta
Full Text:
(farmer's markets & seasonal produce for cooking, 7/26/96)
Seasonal Produce Always An Inspiration For Meal Preparation
(with photos)
By Kaaren Valenta
Beautiful weather and an enthusiastic group of shoppers greeted the opening of
the 16th consecutive season of the Bethel Farmer's Market last Saturday.
Located on the grounds on the Connecticut Co-Operative Extension System on
Stony Hill Road (Route 6) in Bethel, the farmer's market offers a large
selection of fresh Connecticut-grown produce, flowers, honey, maple syrup and
home baked goods. It will operate rain or shine from 9 am to 1 pm every
Saturday until late October.
Farmer's market coordinator Russell Johnson was on hand to oversee opening day
even though his own crops of apples, peaches and Concord grapes weren't quite
ready to harvest yet.
"We really got off with a bang this year," said Dr Johnson, who - when he
isn't growing produce - is a dentist in Brookfield.
A few crops, like tomatoes, aren't ready yet but several farmers were selling
greenhouse tomatoes which they had grown. There were ample supplies of sweet
corn, summer squash, green beans, new potatoes, many varieties of peppers,
cucumbers, bunches of fresh basil, salad greens (including interesting Asian
greens like mizuna), boxes of blueberries, and lots of other just-picked
produce.
Nothing inspires meal preparation like beautiful seasonal produce. When
vegetables are truly fresh from the garden, they virtually sparkle with
vibrant flavor that no supermarket offering can match. For those who need some
ideas about creative uses for all the produce available at the farmer's
market, there are a lot of new cookbooks that fill the bill.
Renowned chef and cookbook author Perla Meyers, who has a weekend/summer home
near Washington Depot, has a new book, Fresh From the Garden (Clarkson Potter,
May 1996, hardcover, 372 pp, $30), which serves up a cornucopia of
full-flavored, easy-to-prepare dishes that reflect a diversity of
international influences. Focusing on more than two dozen popular vegetables,
organized by season, Ms Myers offers a collection of nearly 250 recipes
ranging from soups to pastas to entrees.
Chapters highlight each individual vegetable in its turn, with suggestions for
maximizing its potential throughout the season in which it shines most
brightly. She begins with a discussion of the vegetable's best uses and
preparation tips, continues with optimal gardening results and harvesting
instructions, and ends with recommended varieties and advice on storage.
Lettuce in Your Kitchen (Chris Schlesinger and John Willoughby; William Morrow
& Company, June 1996, hardcover, 264 pp, $22.50) gives salad a whole new spin.
Welcome to the world of the well-developed salad, where ingredients like
grilled chicken, black beans and shrimp are completely at home and where
roasted pears and other fruit become sweet companions to pleasantly bitter
greens.
Chapters like "Simple Salads" focus on easy-to-prepare salads with few
ingredients, while "Salads with Meat and Fish" take the classic chefs salad on
a spin around the world with selections like Dr Hibachi's Spinach Salad with
Grilled Lamb, Roasted Peppers and Garlic Chips, or Chicory Salad with Sweet
Potato, Bacon and Lemon-Flavored Crumbs. The book includes tips on salad
making, including how to resuscitate wilted greens and how to roast garlic to
perfection.
Fresh & Fast (Marie Simmons, Chapters Publishing Ltd, June 1996, hardcover,
352 pp, $29.95) is aptly subtitled "Inspired Cooking for Every Season and
Every Day." The book is an extension of the syndicated newspaper column "Fresh
& Fast," which appears in eighty newspapers across the United States.
Fresh food is more convenient than packaged, the author says, and includes
more than 200 recipes to prove her point. Whether it's Warm Egg Salad on Whole
Wheat Toast or Lemon Basil Chicken, each recipe is deftly simple yet freshly
conceived and imaginative. Each recipe tells exactly how long it will take to
prepare (most less than 45 minutes) and alerts you in advance to steps that
require a little extra time.
Beyond Bok Choy: A Cook's Guide to Asian Vegetables (Rosa LoSan Ross,
ArtisanJune 1996, hardcover, 192 pp, $25) is a beautiful book designed to help
consumers identify, choose and -most importantly - cook the tasty, healthy,
leafy greens, gourds, melons, squash, roots, sprouts, herbs, shoots, peas and
beans you've been eating in Chinese restaurants and can now find in
supermarkets and often at farmer's markets.
The book is filled with color photographs and its guidebook-like format makes
it possible to slip it into your shopping bag for a trip through the market.
The book includes seventy recipes, some classic Chinese, some original fusion
recipes, such as Sesame-Flavored Flowering Cabbage, Wilted Mizuna with
Balsamic Vinegar and Pea Shoots with Velvet Shrimp.
Nicole Routhier's Fruit Cookbook (Workman Publishing, July 1996, softcover,
432 pp, $15.95; hardcover, $24.95) contains over 400 recipes that range from
appetizers to desserts, all made with fruit. Try, for example, a Roasted
Pepper and Apple Dip with Steamed Shrimp, Cream of Fennel and Pear Soup,
Grecian Pasta (orzo tossed with tomato sauce, feta cheese, sauteed greens and
a handful of dried fruits), Salmon Cakes with Gingered Citrus Sauce, Sauteed
Chicken Breasts with Peaches, Orange Beef with Peanuts, or Creamy Cabbage and
Pears.
There are chapters on chutneys, relishes and pickles, fruit breads (quick and
slow), festive breakfasts, smoothies and spirits, sorbets and ice cream, and
every kind of fruit dessert imaginable. Useful sidebars and tips include
everything from best-taste combinations for a fruit-and-cheese board to
techniques for working with chocolate.
