FROM OUR FARM TO YOUR TABLE
Welcome to Dinihanian Farm's blog. Keep up with what's happening at the Farm, find a recipe, learn about your veggies, classes, CSA and more. We supply recipes and suggestions for our CSA members about what to do with the contents of their weekly share and we'd love to share them with you, too. The stories, recipes and suggestions here are posted often, so check back soon!
Friday, December 4, 2015
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
FARM STORE CLOSING NOV 24TH, CHRISTMAS STORE OPENS NOV 27TH
As the seasons change, so does our schedule. The new hours and days as follows:
FARM STORE:
As of Nov. 12th, Farm Store hours will be
Saturday-Thursday 10am until 4pm
Friday 10am until 6pm
Farm store officially closes for the season on Nov. 24th.
CHRISTMAS STORE
Opens for the season on Nov. 27th and will remain open until Dec. 23rd.
Hours will be 10am-6pm seven days a week for those dates.
Thanks and come see us soon!!!
FARM STORE:
As of Nov. 12th, Farm Store hours will be
Saturday-Thursday 10am until 4pm
Friday 10am until 6pm
Farm store officially closes for the season on Nov. 24th.
CHRISTMAS STORE
Opens for the season on Nov. 27th and will remain open until Dec. 23rd.
Hours will be 10am-6pm seven days a week for those dates.
Thanks and come see us soon!!!
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
HARVEST SHARE 2015
We will be offering our wonderful Thanksgiving HARVEST SHARE again this year, in time for the holidays. Let us do the shopping while you spend that all important time with your family. We plan for this bountiful array of local, organic, fresh fall produce to be the basis for your Thanksgiving celebration. The share also makes a great gift for friends, co-workers and other family members!
The contents of our HARVEST SHARE are chosen from the highest quality produce available. We can’t say exactly what the share will contain until closer to harvest time, but the following is an example of the kinds of things that were included in the box last year:
- Winter Squash (Delicata, Spaghetti, Butternut, etc.)
- Fall Cole Veggies (kale, red cabbage, kohlrabi)
- Broccoli, Kohlrabi or Brussels Sprouts
- Yukon Gold Potatoes
- Sweet Carrots
- Sweet Onions
- Golden and/or Red Beets
- Small Pie Pumpkin
- Sweet Potatoes
- Baking Apples
- 1 Dozen Fresh Free Range Eggs
The cost of the Share is $35.00*. Cut off for ordering is Wednesday November 11th .
Click Harvest Share to order or stop by the farm in person. Other items like cider, additional eggs, pies and honey are offered there as well. HARVEST SHARES are available to anyone; you do not have to be a CSA member to purchase one. Shares will be available for pick up at the farm, at 15005 NW Cornell Rd, the week prior to Thanksgiving. Exact dates for pick up T/B/A.
Attention Fundraisers: We also offer the Harvest Share at a quantity discount price or special order boxes to schools, scout groups, churches, etc. These make a great holiday fundraiser and practically sell themselves! If you have questions or need more information, call 503-432-6235, text or email suzanne.ballard@dinihanian.com
Attention Fundraisers: We also offer the Harvest Share at a quantity discount price or special order boxes to schools, scout groups, churches, etc. These make a great holiday fundraiser and practically sell themselves! If you have questions or need more information, call 503-432-6235, text or email suzanne.ballard@dinihanian.com
Monday, October 5, 2015
COME TO THE FARM SATURDAY TO MAKE BUG LIGHTS!!!
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
If you are into bread baking....
The article showed up in my inbox this morning and thought I would share it as well as a little story of my own. I have a special connection to Chef Reinhart, the subject of the article. I used to have my own farm in NC and was the organic veggie vendor at a posh downtown farmer's market. It was for the tenants in the high dollar condos in downtown Charlotte, NC. It was also adjacent to Johnson and Wales, the prestigious culinary school. One market day, I was located next to the demo booth for that week (a chef from J&W always came and did a demo at this venue) and the Chef that day was making a delicious Italian Bread Salad using my organic heirloom tomatoes. Since we had a lot of time to kill, I started up a conversation with the demo'ing chef. He said he was using day old bread from one of his classes for his recipe. I commented that while I loved the idea of making my own bread, I was terrible at it. (I can make a souffle rise like a champ but not so much with yeasty breads...). He asked me some questions and made some suggestions about what I might could do differently to have more success and we had a great time talking about food and heirloom veggies, etc. After his demo was over, he packed up and left. Later that afternoon, he brought me a copy of a book. Written and signed by him with a note about our day. It was Chef Reinhart, whom I had no idea who he was at the time. I treasure this as one of my favorite "foodie" moments...a private lesson from a world class chef, all without me having a clue.
Anyway, if you are a Local Harvest user, you can probably get this deal. If you, you can still check into Craftsy and what they offer. Enjoy!!!
~Suzanne
"Dear LocalHarvest Community,
I'm an occasional bread baker and until now have always stuck to a basic sandwich loaf. A friend of mine is a more adventurous bread baker and she swears by Peter Reinhart's books, so when our friends at Craftsy offered to let me take their online class Artisan Bread Baking with Peter Reinhart, I was very curious. Within moments of settling into the videos, I knew this class was going to help me improve my breadmaking immeasurably. Peter Reinhart is a master.
Overall, the thing I appreciated most about this class was how it demystified a sometimes intimidating craft. Peter teaches students how to think about bread making, step by step. The instruction goes well beyond learning how to follow a bread recipe, to really understanding how bread works. After that, Peter shares many of his favorite recipes for a wide variety of breads including baguettes, focaccia, marbled rye and chocolate babka. This class is so packed with information that I know I'll be going back to the videos and class materials again and again. One thing I noticed about this Craftsy class in particular is that there is a lively online discussion among students and the instructor, which adds to the learning. I feel confident that both beginning and experienced breadmakers will be pleased with what they take away from the course. The people you share your homemade bread with will be pleased too!
Fall is a great time to learn to make artisan breads. What could be better on a crisp Autumn night than a big bowl of soup and a loaf of crusty homemade bread? To learn to make great bread, enroll in Peter Reinhart's Artisan Bread Baking. By enrolling, you will receive lifetime access to this class and enjoy the flexibility of watching online or through Craftsy's mobile app. Craftsy is offering LocalHarvest users a special price on this class of $14.99 - that's *63*% off for you. Enroll! You'll be glad you did.
Happy baking!
Kerry
Kerry Glendening
Community Coordinator
LocalHarvest
Anyway, if you are a Local Harvest user, you can probably get this deal. If you, you can still check into Craftsy and what they offer. Enjoy!!!
~Suzanne
"Dear LocalHarvest Community,
I'm an occasional bread baker and until now have always stuck to a basic sandwich loaf. A friend of mine is a more adventurous bread baker and she swears by Peter Reinhart's books, so when our friends at Craftsy offered to let me take their online class Artisan Bread Baking with Peter Reinhart, I was very curious. Within moments of settling into the videos, I knew this class was going to help me improve my breadmaking immeasurably. Peter Reinhart is a master.
Overall, the thing I appreciated most about this class was how it demystified a sometimes intimidating craft. Peter teaches students how to think about bread making, step by step. The instruction goes well beyond learning how to follow a bread recipe, to really understanding how bread works. After that, Peter shares many of his favorite recipes for a wide variety of breads including baguettes, focaccia, marbled rye and chocolate babka. This class is so packed with information that I know I'll be going back to the videos and class materials again and again. One thing I noticed about this Craftsy class in particular is that there is a lively online discussion among students and the instructor, which adds to the learning. I feel confident that both beginning and experienced breadmakers will be pleased with what they take away from the course. The people you share your homemade bread with will be pleased too!
Fall is a great time to learn to make artisan breads. What could be better on a crisp Autumn night than a big bowl of soup and a loaf of crusty homemade bread? To learn to make great bread, enroll in Peter Reinhart's Artisan Bread Baking. By enrolling, you will receive lifetime access to this class and enjoy the flexibility of watching online or through Craftsy's mobile app. Craftsy is offering LocalHarvest users a special price on this class of $14.99 - that's *63*% off for you. Enroll! You'll be glad you did.
Happy baking!
Kerry
Kerry Glendening
Community Coordinator
LocalHarvest
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
IT IS OFFICIALLY FALL!!!
Fall officially arrived at 1:22 PDT this morning! For some unexplained reason, I woke up at exactly 1:22. I guess my circadian clock wanted to remind me of how much I had been looking forward to this season!
I posted this passage on my FB page this morning and I think it is so good I am sharing again. I can just picture my agrarian ancestors when I read this. And I like the idea of those relationships with neighbors.
So commence the feasting!!!
"The harvest is a time of thanks, and also a time of balance -- after all, there are equal hours of daylight and darkness. While we celebrate the gifts of the earth, we also accept that the soil is dying. We have food to eat, but the crops are brown and going dormant. Warmth is behind us, cold lies ahead."
"Early agricultural societies understood the importance of hospitality -- it was crucial to develop a relationship with your neighbors, because they might be the ones to help you when your family ran out of food. Many people, particularly in rural villages, celebrated the harvest with great deals of feasting, drinking, and eating. After all, the grain had been made into bread, beer and wine had been made, and the cattle were brought down from the summer pastures for the coming winter."
~Suzanne
~Suzanne
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
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