Thursday, March 21, 2013

Dreaming of tomatoes

March can be a difficult month.  You generally get a couple days early on that feel like May - warm, perfect days, not too windy, where you can walk around in your shirtsleeves - and your mind starts to get ahead of you.  In my minds' eye I had the whole month planned out two weeks ago, getting some rototilling done not only in the high tunnel but out in the field, where I would have peas and potatoes in by now, not to mention a second round of spinach, lettuce, and mesclun to complement the ones inside.  At one point I even called my potato supplier, a little worried that I wouldn't get my delivery in time for this imaginary planting.

Well, as you know, it hasn't been an issue.  Since our beautiful early-March weekend, we have seen several days of thick wet snow and a persistent failure of thermometers to climb up out of the twenties overnight.  Most days, even when it's nominally in the low forties, the wind blows so hard that it's hardly picnic weather.  Crops are growing in the high tunnel, especially when it gets at all sunny outside...but the ground is still cold, wet, and stuck somewhere in that gelatinous state between frozen and muddy.  Potato planting is not yet a concern.

And so, on such days, I can at least head downstairs and check out the tomatoes.  I love tomatoes, as I imagine you do too.  Everyone loves fresh tomatoes.  As a kid I never liked them on sandwiches or salads - I still tend to avoid them unless I know their source - but I eventually figured out that it's not the tomatoes' fault.  Its just that fast food chains go in for the "moist cardboard" type of tomato, so they can supply us year-round.  In-season tomatoes are a totally different plant, and of all of them - of all the tomato magic out there, the heirlooms, the grafts, the esoteric pruning and trellising techniques - the Sungold Cherry Tomato has a special place all its own.

Parents know that finicky children will eat sungolds like candy, popping them into their mouth one after another.  This is almost always enough...a pint or two of fresh-picked sungolds will disappear this way in most families' homes overnight.  We all know that tomatoes are 'technically a fruit' (the media are still surprised by this, though - they all write it as if it was discovered yesterday), but with sungolds there is never any doubt.  People treat them as a berry.

Only once have I really had to do anything with these delicious summer treats besides eat them raw.  Last year, a friend of mine managed a farm in central PA with such ferocious efficiency that he grew far more of many crops than he could market.  I stopped in to visit him and he shoveled produce at me - bushels of cucumbers, boxes full of potatoes, barrels of kale, buckets of sungolds.  Imagine a five-gallon bucket full of cherry tomatoes and you'll get the idea.  So we started figuring out what to do with them.  They make great ketchup (so naturally sweet you don't need to add any sugar).  Dried in a food dehydrator, they turn into a bite-sized burst of tomato flavor perfectly sized to add to a late-winter dish.  You can do almost anything to them that you can to a normal tomato - just don't end up in a recipe where you have to peel them!




I've been thinking of this bounty lately when I check out my seedling tomatoes, because there are a lot of sungolds down there.  I planned on having enough to pretty much fill the greenhouse this summer, and enough to sell some at market to interested customers.  I hope we have some interested customers, because they have germinated at nearly 100% efficiency.  I would estimate that over five hundred plants are growing away by this point -  not all of my tomatoes, mind you, just five hundred plus Sungold cherry tomatoes.  They're wonderful to see on a snowy, windy day.  They smell like tomatoes already.  I hope you're as excited as I am!  But if not we'll be enjoying our ketchup again this winter.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Catching Up


Already a month or more has gone by since I wrote on here! March is underway and it's always such a crazy, variable month...last week it felt like summer was already here, and then this week we have had snow, rain, sun, wind, and everything in between.  But we were able to take advantage of the nice weather on Sunday to get the high tunnel plastic on, so now we have our own little home to ward off the worst of the weather and get things started.
Getting the plastic secured to the frame

All covered up on a sunny March day!

There are already a few sprouts starting to come up inside, too.  I actually sowed a few beds before the plastic was even on, figuring I'd take advantage of the big snow we had forecast on the 6th to water them in.  Sure enough, there are tiny baby mesclun mix plants coming up in there today...still almost too small to see in the photo, but there they are...okay, they are too tiny to take a picture of yet, all my photos are too fuzzy to make out.  But here's some of the starts that have been moved out to the greenhouse; mainly cool-weather stuff like onions, kale and lettuce:
 Here's the four beds currently planted in there: from left to right, mesclun, spinach, more mesclun, and radishes.  Lettuce should be going into the leftmost bed tomorrow.


 And there's still lots going on inside under lights, too.  Here we have some Amish Paste tomatoes; the bigger ones you can see at the top right of the picture are sungold cherry tomatoes.  (They're bigger since they're going to end up in the tunnel this summer; so I planted them a little earlier).

Oh, and just to finish up with all the themes of last month's post: here's one of our baby chicks!  This picture is about a month old by this point; the four-week old chicks are far too big to perch on your index finger any more.  We'll see if I can get some pictures of them for the next blog post, which will be, let's say, Tuesday, and try to make a weekly round of it from then on out.




Other news: we have a CSA member willing to host a pickup in Mechanicsburg...so if you're interested in a share and live out that way, we may have a dropoff nearly on your doorstep.  The organic certification is in and the inspector should be out soon, and the farmer's market apps are in too - so we should know by the end of the month if we'll be selling at the Carlisle market or not.  If not: Camp Hill and New Cumberland are both looking like good options.

One more photo: we actually have a crop growing outside already!  Last year's garlic planting is popping up fast:




I can't wait for garlic season, and before that, for scapes! If you've never had them, check back in with us in June and try some out.
Dave