This post originally appeared in the Bloomington Herald Times on January 25, 2006
Linda Chapman is a farmer, and her body telegraphs her outdoor life from
the moment you meet her. She is tall, lithe, and strong, with her streaky
gray-blond hair pulled back from a face deeply tanned in summer and her blue
eyes crinkled with laughter and sun. Though she looks born to it, a farmer is
the last thing Linda planned to become. Growing up in suburbia, she thought
"farmers lived on some other planet" - and yet, here she is.
Thirty years after they bought a barren cow pasture out in Owen County, she and her partner, Deryl Dale, have transformed it into the lush and gorgeous
Harvest Moon Flower Farm. Walking on to their property in summer is like that
moment when Dorothy steps out of her black-and-white Kansas house and into a
Technicolor Oz - dazzling color blazes from row after row of wildly beautiful
flowers and berry bushes. What does she love best about being a farmer?
"It's waking up and walking out my front door and seeing beauty all around
me. … It's a good life" she says.
You probably know Linda, even if you don't know you know her. If you are
a Farmers'-market-goer, you're sure to have seen her selling her striking
floral bouquets. If you eat out in Bloomington restaurants, there is a good chance that the flowers on the table came from Linda's
farm. If you've attended a local wedding, it may have been Linda who decked out
the church in floral splendor. And if you've been pining for fresh
produce and local food products all year-round, it is Linda you have to thank
for the fact that the Bloomington Winter Market is launching its second year
from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in the Harmony School gym on Second Street.
As a member of Slow Food Bloomington, I've worked with Linda on the
Winter Market for two years now, though it makes me blush to use the word
"with," since really Linda has done almost all of the work herself.
This year she has confirmed 24 vendors who will come to the Harmony
School gym on alternate Saturdays to sell their fresh produce, meats, eggs,
cheeses, breads, pastries, honey, mushrooms, herbs and dried flowers, as well
as prepared foods - soups, salad dressings, heat-and-eat meals, and a hot
prepared-on-site breakfast.
Having a winter market is a boon for Bloomington shoppers- an off-season place to
buy the good local products we come to depend on during the summer months. But
the market is also a benefit for farmers, stretching the season from which they
can expect to make money and encouraging them to find new ways to grow produce.
At Harvest Moon, Deryl constructed hoop houses - greenhouse-like
structures with plastic stretched over a framed space big enough to work in -
that allow Linda to keep planting and harvesting throughout the winter.
But that changes the cycle of her work year. She says, "Growing for
winter harvesting entails the continuation of succession plantings thru
September, October and November. Most farmers get to take a breath from this
weekly activity by mid-to-late August if they're just growing for the warm
months.
"Not so for winter growers. We have to take advantage of the last
warm and longer daylight months of September, October and part of November to
get crops large enough and established enough to be productive in January,
February and into March."
Last year's market was light on fresh greens and winter vegetables as
area farmers hadn't been able to plan ahead, but this year expect that to
change. Join us on Saturday morning for a hot breakfast, some fresh bread, good
local music and great winter farm produce.
Roasted Sweet Potatoes with Curry and Lime
At last year's Winter Market, there were sweet potatoes galore. These
addictive sweets are as easy as can be and work as a side dish, a snack, or,
tossed with a little oil and lime juice dressing, as a salad.
6 tablespoons butter
1 1/2 tablespoons curry powder (to taste - depends on your own
preferences and the spiciness of the curry powder)
Sea salt or kosher salt
2 limes, cut into wedges
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
Melt the butter in a saucepan, stir in the curry powder and set aside.
Peel the sweet potatoes and cut into small wedges or cubes, about 1 inch
square. Toss potatoes with the curry butter so they are thoroughly coated.
Spread on baking sheets no more than one layer deep.
Roast potatoes for about 20-25 minutes, stirring occasionally, until
golden. These will be soft - if you like a crispier potato, try running them
under the broiler for a few quick seconds (watch carefully!)
When potatoes are done, remove to a serving platter. Squeeze limes over
them and sprinkle with salt to taste. Serve hot, with additional lime wedges.
Serves about 6.
Winter farmers' market
The second annual Bloomington Winter Farmers' Market will begin its
season Saturday when it will be open 9 a.m. to noon in the gym at Harmony
School, 909 E. Second St
There will be salad greens, spinach, micro-greens/shoots,
elk/venison/bison meats, eggs, squash, garlic, lamb, beef, gourmet goat cheeses,
baked goods, fresh breads, kale, sweet potatoes, potatoes, maple syrup, honey,
mushrooms, grist mill products, herbal products and plants, and prepared-to-eat
foods.
The market is sponsored and supported by Slow Foods Bloomington. Parking
is available in the Harmony School
Curried Squash and Mushroom Soup
Excerpted from The Moosewood Cookbook
(Butternut squash, garlic and exotic mushrooms available at the market
this week.)
2 medium butternut squash
2 1/2 cups water or stock
1 cup orange juice
2 teaspoons butter
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 medium clove of crushed garlic
6 ounces exotic mushrooms, sliced
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon coriander
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon dry mustard
1 1/4 teaspoon salt
dash of cayenne
Bake squash face-down in 375-degree oven until soft (30 minutes). Scoop
out insides (about 3 cup's worth). Blend with water or stock until smooth.
Combine in kettle with orange juice.
Melt butter and saute garlic, onion, salt and spices until soft (add a
little water if it sticks). Add mushrooms, cover and cook 10 minutes.
Add saute to squash. Heat together gently. Serve topped with yogurt and
chopped toasted almonds.
Market participants
Food producers
• Yeager Farms Produce: greens, carrots, onions, culinary herbs
• Biltz Green Houses: butternut squash, spaghetti squash, crooked neck
squash
• Heartland Family Farm: eggs, greens
• Bloomingfoods: coffee, breakfast pastries and bread
• Bobbi Boos and John Byers: maple syrup, garlic, dried tomatoes, fresh
herbs
• Harvest Moon Farm: greens, fresh/ dried herbs, wreaths, micro-greens,
plants
• One Sky Farm: salad mix, various greens, sweet potatoes, herbal teas,
soap, tomato sauces, jellies
• Seldom Seen Farm Inc.: greens
• Hobbit Gardens
• BLU Culinary Arts: handmade chocolates, pastry, brioche and other
fresh breads
• Linnea's Greenhouse: plants, herbs, some produce
• Grabow Orchard: baked goods, apples, cider, lettuce
• Indian Creek Farm: kale, spinach chard, collards, green onions
• Hunters Honey Farm: honey, beeswax products, pollen
• Pete Johnson and Leslie Smith: greens, potted herbs, winter squash,
garlic, potatoes
• D and K Produce: sweet potatoes
• Middleway House: soups, salad dressings, ready-to-heat-and-eat-meals ,
dukkah, cookies
• Royer Farm Fresh Beef and Lamb: steaks, chops, roasts and ground meat
- all pasture raised, no hormones/antibiotics
• Capriole Farm: goat cheeses
• Homestead Growers: exotic mushrooms
• Melody Acres: greens, root vegetables
• Double T Ranch: venison, elk and bison products
• Chris Vosters: grist mill products, kettle corn
• Harvest Lodge
Traveling Cafe: hot prepared-on-site breakfast items (crepes, pancakes,
frittatas), organic roasted free trade coffee beans, hot soups, tamales
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