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Athens Locally Grown
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Recipes

Steamed Chicory with Pine Nuts and Raisins

This lovely, simple recipe accentuates the bittersweet taste of cooked chicory by pairing it with fruits and nuts. Make a pretty variation by substituting dried cranberries for the raisins and slivered almonds for the pine nuts. Or try chopped dried apricots (use unsulfured for a deeper flavor) and toasted chopped pecans or walnuts. From Farmer John’s Cookbook: The Real Dirt On Vegetables

Serves 4

3 tablespoons raisins
1 pound chicories, such as endive, escarole, or radicchio, leaves separated but left whole (if you’re using radicchio, simply cut it into quarters)
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 cloves garlic, peeled, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons pine nuts
salt
freshly ground black pepper

1. Put the raisins in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Set aside to plump, then drain.
2. Put the chicory in a steamer basket, set over 1 1/2 inches boiling water, and cover. Steam just until wilted, 2 to 4 minutes. Transfer the greens to a colander to drain.
3. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the garlic and pine nuts and cook, stirring constantly, until the pine nuts begin to brown in spots, about 3 minutes.
4. Give the greens a few chops on a cutting board, then add them to the skillet and stir until the greens are well coated with the oil. Remove from heat and stir in the raisins. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

Market News

Since we had a few days off school for Fall break, our family made our annual pilgrimage to Hunting Island State Park, just outside of Beaufort, South Carolina for a long weekend of camping on the beach. If you’ve never been, and are looking for an inexpensive beach getaway (and who isn’t?), I can’t recommend this place highly enough. Campsites are $12 or so a night, with water & electricity, showers with hot water, all just off the prettiest, most uncrowded beach I’ve ever been to. I’m listening to the surf as I type this, in fact.

We took most of our food with us for some good old fashioned camp cooking, all from Athens Locally Grown. Sausage & eggs for breakfast, potatoes & onions & sweet nardello peppers fried in a cast iron pot, a beef stew with carrots, onion, garlic, potatoes, rosemary, & some other odds & ends. Not to different from the sorts of things I make at home, come to think about it. But anyway, we also left some time for exploring the food local to that area. It’s a fun thing to do, and as Athens Locally Grown shoppers, you’re better positioned than most to spot local food when you travel too.





Right on the shore among the salt marshes, sea food is the main find. It’s Gullah country, and it seems like most every house in the marsh has at least one boat tied up next to it with a few hand-thrown fish or shrimp nets. A few larger shrimping operations make their homes there too, but none are the large trawlers that are causing so much damage to the off-shore fisheries. The biggest boats I’ve seen here look to have a crew of six or so.

Just further inland a couple miles, the salt marsh turns to grassland, and there are a few beef pastures and even a few vegetable farms. Barefoot Farm in St. Helena Island is one interesting example. They grow a wide variety of summer produce, but market most of it to tourists who pass by their very large roadside stand. They say the locals are really interested in what they do, and prefer to get their produce from the grocery store. They don’t grow organically, either. The pest and disease pressures are intense there at the edge of the marsh, and they told me they just don’t feel they can risk what they already have for an uncertain market with organics. Still, it’s an unexpected place to find a vegetable farm at all, and was nice to visit.

When you’re traveling, whether for business or vacation, try to discover the food local to that place. It can be hard to find sometimes, especially with the chain restaurants that make every place seem just like every other place, but it’s there. And finding it can often be the thing that turns a ho-hum trip into something to remember.

Thanks so much for your support of Athens Locally Grown, all of our growers, and local food in general. You all are part of what makes Athens such a great area in which to live. We’ll see you on Thursday at the old state market on Broad Street from 4:30 to 8pm!

Coming Events

FOLK is holding their second annual Apple Festival this coming Saturday. I received this from one of the organizers: "FOLK’s second annual Fall Apple Festival… FOLK (Furthering Our Local Knowledge) is a local nonprofit organization dedicated to reviving traditional forms of understanding and doing things (www.folkathens.org, if you’d like to know more about us). Our apple festival will be held from 1 to 8 on October 17th this year, and we’re trying to bring out more farmers and local artists this year; last year we had 500-700 people, and we’re expecting it to be just as big, if not bigger (depending on weather) this year."

The Athens Farmers Market is held every Saturday morning at Bishop Park from 8am to noon. It’s a totally separate entity from Athens Locally Grown, but you’ll find many of the same growers at both. And of course, you can learn more about that market on their website.

Also, Watkinsville has a thriving farmers market every Saturday morning, behind the Eagle Tavern. And further east, Comer has a nice little market Saturday mornings as well. Several of our growers also sell at the Hocshton
farmers market, also on Saturday mornings. Please support your local farmers and food producers, where ever you’re able to do so!

We thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible!