Our Second Month of CSA Boxes for 2025

 After our first month here I was on such a good roll.. until I forgot to pick up my box! Then we had a few boxes where the produce wasn't that great. The corn was real tiny and quite pale, our tomatoes were often split open and two boxes in a row the eggplant was rotten inside. I've heard it's been a rough growing season were we're either getting so much rain and lots of cool weather or it's pure sunshine with temps in the 90's and no rain for weeks on end. 

CSA Vegetable Box #5 July 17th; I completely forgot it was Thursday until it was nearly 6 and since I have a 30 minute drive and boxes must be picked up between 2 & 6 I had to forgo my box this week.  

CSA Vegetable Box #6 July 24th; Basil, kale, cucumbers, tomatoes, onions, garlic, zucchini and squash


I used the cucumbers to make dill refrigerator pickles and both the garlic and basil to make a jar of pesto and a basil vinaigrette. 


The tomatoes went into our salad and the kale was roasted and served as a side dish at dinner. We diced some of the onions into our potatoes and roasted them both as our other side dish.  


The squash and zucchini were used to make zucchini relish (something my husband fell in love with years ago when one of his workers brought in a jar his wife had made and I decided to scour the web and find a recipe to try making my own). I also made zucchini bread. 

  


 Alec and I also made zoodles and a vegetable stir-fry for dinner one night. 


 

CSA Vegetable Box #7 July 31; cucumbers, zucchini, corn on the cob, eggplant, tomatoes, beets and waxed beans.  


I used many of the cucumbers and the tomatoes to make a cucumber salad. We used the corn to go with our burgers one night for dinner. I used the beans in the vegetable stir- fry I mentioned above using last week's zucchini and squash.  

We were gifted a lot more squash and zucchini from friends and neighbors that grow vegetables too so I spent one morning cooking up a double batch of squash casserole using up ALL the squash and making 4 small 8x8 pans of it to freeze for fall and winter. We didn't use the beets though; we can't seem to find a way we actually enjoy them. I've tried everything I can think of to prepare them.. 


 CSA Vegetable Box # 8 August 7th; corn on the cob, more cucumbers, red leaf lettuce, basil, eggplant, a cantaloupe, tomatoes, and some peppers. 

We ate the corn that very night with our meal. I used some of the cucumbers with a couple tomatoes and a few handfuls of the basil to make a cucumber caprese salad to bring to a pot luck picnic. I processed the rest of the basil into a pesto sauce for our pasta. We cut up the cantaloupe for everyone to pick at. 

Both eggplants were thrown away when I sliced into them and found they were a deep brown inside. I diced up the peppers with some onions, garlic, and ground turkey to make a pasta dish one night. The remaining cucumbers joined the remaining tomatoes and the red leaf lettuce with other veggies from our fridge to make a salad.

 CSA Box #9 August 14th: More cucumbers, squash, zucchini and tomatoes. A different type of lettuce, a small watermelon and another cantaloupe, a variety of peppers and some green beans.  

We used the green beans that night for dinner and I cooked up the eggplants first thing the next morning in preparation for the eggplant fritters I was making to go with dinner & I cut up both the melons for snacking.  

I made a salad and a cucumber salad using the lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes and other supplies we already had in the house.  And finally I cooked up a summer squash lasagna to use up most of the squash. Evan cooks up peppers and onions each week to use in his eggs or on his sandwiches each day so he used up the small ones for that. I used the larger peppers along with some bell peppers from my mother in law's garden and onions I had in the pantry to make fajitas for dinner another night. 

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Comments

  1. I think you've done a great job with your CSA boxes. You are really helping the farm by doing this! And, it's stretching you creatively with your cooking. I bet you are getting to the point where you are ready to be done for the season, though.

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    1. Yes, yes I definitely am! I always think around this time of year that I'm not going to do this next year as it does start to feel like so much work to use them up or make something to freeze and save for later before they go bad.

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  2. You have been busy! Dill refrigerator pickles are delicious. I would also use the basil to make a jar of pesto. I get lazy sometimes and end up buying pesto, but the homemade stuff is the best!

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    1. It really is! I think I have 3 jars stored up for fall/winter. But should make one last something with the bit that's left on my plant before it dies in fall.

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  3. I have so much basil in my garden. I sure wish that I liked pesto- (or anything with basil- the plant was an impulse purchase. It's a beautiful plant and I do use some occasionally but otherwise it's been a bit of a bust). You've made some great looking dishes pickles with your produce. It's too bad the season wasn't a better one for produce.

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    1. Alec and I love basil and pesto but the rest of the family really only tolerates it in small doses. They don't mind pesto marinated chicken or mixing a little bit in with a jar of sauce but that's about it.

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  4. When we did CSA boxes in Montana, I pretty much had a routine like you have established, putting as much away in the freezer as possible for the upcoming cold months when produce would not be as plentiful or as fresh. I thought it was just me here in Texas having a hard time with the garden, with a new growing zone etc. But I have read so many comments in various groups and blogs about seeds not being of good quality, or completely different than the envelope was labeled. And failure after failure, like the eggplants in your boxes.

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    1. Yeah, I don't blame the farm as I know even my mother in law's tomatoes are not great this year; the plant was plentiful and they are a nice bright red but they are awfully dry inside. I have heard from many gardeners that's it's been a tricky growing season.

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  5. Veggies rely on weather to grow well. You get a nice assortment of vegetables in your box and are very inventive in using them. Great job! #MMBC

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    1. Oh yes, right in our CSA start up we have to sign a waiver acknowledging that weather can play a huge role in crop production and that we are aware the farm can not control things like drought, hurricanes, etc. that could potentially result in us not really getting many CSA boxes for the summer.

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  6. Too bad you don't like beets! I don't like eggplant, but I love beets.

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    1. I can't say I LOVE eggplant but I will eat it; luckily the boys were willing to give the fritters a try and really seemed to like them. This week I'm going to try making eggplant "meatballs" as I got 3 more small eggplants in this week.

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  7. I don’t like beets either, but I love eggplant. What a cool box I wonder if we have anything like that around here?

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    1. I just started doing a bunch of Google searches for community supported agriculture near me and found quite a few. We have a different one near us just over the border in Rhode Island that I think I'm going to try next year.

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  8. Oh gosh I love pickles and yours look amazing! Great haul :)

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  9. That is a shame that the produce wasn't great from a couple of boxes but everything you got that was good, looks great!! You cooked up some delicious looking things.

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  10. All of this looks so good! I am a big fan of eggplant and also squash casserole!

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  11. You did such a great job of using your vegetables! There's just nothing like fresh veggies. 💜

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  12. You really do a lot with what you get in the boxes!

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  13. That's a lot of cooking : ) I've never had a zucchini relish but it sounds good and like something I'd enjoy. I love zucchini bread too. Have a great week!

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  14. Wait. You need to share that zucchini relish recipe...sounds so unique.
    Such a bummer about the eggplants being bad.
    Xoox
    Jodie

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