carrots

Rice & Veggie Bowls with Thai Coconut Lime Dressing

Here's something I don't take pictures of: cooked food.

I take many, many photos of our raw produce (haha, funny joke, everyone knows I only take baby and flowers photos now), but I don't ever photograph prepared meals. I feel that without professional lighting and staging it is basically impossible to make cooked food look appetizing in photographs, and ain't nobody got time for that in high summer. But, if I were ever going to photograph cooked food, it might have been this rice bowl. I guess you'll have to trust me that it was gorgeous and instead enjoy this photo of our carrots, which were featured prominently in said bowl.

This recipe meets one of my main criteria for summer eating in that in can be described by the following three steps. Step one: make some kind of spicy sauce and some kind of rice. Step two: cut up whatever veggies were harvested that day. Step three: mix together in an obscenely large bowl and eat. 

Adapted from this recipe on Food 52 for two people, but you should probably double it - it makes great leftovers! 

For the Thai coconut-lime dressing:
Juice of 1 lime (about 1/4 cup)
2 1/2 tablespoons fish sauce
1/3 cup full-fat coconut milk
1 tablespoon light brown sugar
Zest of 1 lime (about 1 to 2 tablespoons)
2 tablespoons fresh lemongrass, finely chopped
1/2 serrano pepper, seeded and minced (I used a japapeno!)
1 garlic clove, minced
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh cilantro
1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh mint

For the salad bowl and toppings:
1 1/2 cups cooked black or red rice
10 ounces poached chicken breast, shredded, if you want. Or tofu. Or nothing.
2 cucumbers
4 large radishes, thinly sliced
1 - 2 medium carrots, peeled and thinly sliced
4 hakurei turnips, thinly sliced
1 cup onion scapes or scallions, cut thinly on the bias
1/4 cup roughly chopped fresh cilantro
1/4 cup roughly chopped fresh mint

Tempura Tuesdays!

Here at Four Root Farm we take dinner very seriously. Even if it means eating at 9:00 pm (or 9:30... or 9:45...) we all sit down together to eat a hearty meal almost every night, and those meals are almost always almost entirely veggies just pulled from the field. And we don't take any day more seriously than Tuesdays - affectionately known as Tempura Tuesdays!!

This time of year our weekly tempura adventures get more and more exciting as we have more crops to add to the pile, but really we will tempura almost anything that can be sliced and won't disintegrate in steaming hot oil. We recommend you take the same approach - the more creative the better, you won't be sorry. We harvested our very first summer squash on Tuesday specifically for tempura, and also included bok choi, hakurei turnips, carrots, broccoli raab florets, and squash blossoms. 

Here's what you do to make the tempura batter - the rest is up to you.

  1. Slice whatever veggies you're experimenting with into manageable bite-size pieces. If they're too small they'll fall apart and if they're too big they'll be hard to bite.
  2. Mix together:
    1 egg
    250 ml cold beer (PBR is our prefered lager)
    salt and pepper
    100 g flour
  3. Meanwhile, heat vegetable oil in a heavy saucepan that's deep enough to submerge the veggies you've prepared. You can test the temperature of the oil by dropping in a drip of batter - if it sinks to the bottom and then rises up, the oil is hot enough. 
  4. Once the oil is the right temperature, coat the veggies in the batter and deep fry them for 3 - 5 minutes, or until they're golden brown. 
  5. Eat SOON! Tempura is best when it's just cool enough to eat.

 

Carrots

Care & Storage

For Eating Fresh: Remove the tops and then store the carrots unwashed in a perforated plastic bag in your fridge for up to a month.

Availability

June - November


Recipes

Vegan Cream of Carrot Soup

2 lbs carrots, pealed and chopped
4 cups vegetable stock
Salt to taste
3-4 tbsp margarine or olive oil
1 cup chopped onion
1-2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 cup soy milk
1 tsp grated (or powdered) ginger
Dash of sherry

Bring stock, carrots, and salt to a boil. Cover and simmer for 12-15 minutes. Let cool. Heat margarine or oil in a medium pan and sauté onion and garlic until softened. Add to the carrots and stock and puree. Return to the burner, add soymilk, and heat slowly. Add the ginger and sherry and season as needed.

 

The Best Carrot Cake Ever
Credit to Robin Gucker

2½ cups grated carrots
1½ safflower, grapeseed, or canola oil
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
½ tsp baking soda
½ tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon

Preheat the oven to 350° F. Whisk together oil, sugar, eggs, and vanilla. Stir in flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder, and cinnamon. Fold in grated carrots. Pour into a greased and floured pan and bake 45-50 minutes.