lydamorehouse: (Default)
 Back to your regularly scheduled FOOD posts....

a table full of bounty
Image: the penultimate summer box, plus sun-washed out cat.

In this latest Hmong Farmers' Association box, I got: curly kale (....yay?), arugula (yes!), ten ears of corn, a huge bag of green beans, Thai bird peppers, rhubarb, yard-long beans, and bitter ball eggplants.

Not pictured because already re-homed: four slicing tomatoes.

My family is not a fan of searing heat, so I chopped up the peppers and made them into... jam?  I'm not sure this one worked out as well as previous attempts as, when I last tasted it, it still tried to set my MOUTH ON FIRE. But, my thought is, that perhaps, in this concentrated form that will last for several months, I can cautiously add a bit of heat to things that would benefit from such an addition. If not, well, I mean, it was a fun experiment?

I was stoked to see rhubarb making a return this late in the season. Shawn is trying to decide which of the many rhubarb deserts we will make with it. 

And then, there were these, so MANY of these....
Yuck, in a cute green package
Image: a horrifying amount of yuck in an adorable green pumpkin shape.

No offense to the fine people of Liberia, Ethiopia, and the other African countries that really love bitter ball eggplants, this lily white Midwesterner did not like how bitter the bitter ball eggplants were. If you're curious about this plant, its scientific name is: Solanum aethiopicum ; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_aethiopicum.  I suspect that my biggest issue is that I do not know how to cook these beauties. They are adorable as all get out, but they are very, very, very bitter. They are related to the nightshade (not unlike potatoes and tomatoes), however, this was one time when my body said WHAT IS THIS?? IT TASTES LIKE IT MIGHT KILL US!

It is said that one can eat them raw, so before cooking I tried a tiny bit.
interior shot of death, incarnate.
Image: Interior shot of death, incarnate.

I will admit that I never found a particularly good recipe to try online, so I tried to simply add them to a stir fry. I think I was so fooled, thanks to my amazing luck with the Thai eggplants that look somewhat like this but are larger and HONESTLY DELICIOUS. Do not accidentally buy these little f*ckers.  I ate the dish as my friends [personal profile] naomikritzer and [personal profile] pegkerr can attest, but, wow, I do not know what I'm going to do with the rest of them. 

There is probably some trick to making them less bitter...  or perhaps it's an acquired taste, like coffee?

Speaking of coffee, my coffeemaker broke the other morning and I ordered a replacement. It hasn't come yet, so I've been getting along on tea. I swear to god this morning, however, all my neighbors helped me survive by brewing the strongest smelling coffee ever. When I took the compost out to the pile, I stood for a while just inhaling the scent of darkly roasted coffee like the addict that I am.

lydamorehouse: (Default)
 I finally decided what to do with those Thai eggplants I got from the CSA.... https://myheartbeets.com/thai-eggplant-green-curry/

I nearly completely changed the original recipe to suit the needs of my family (they like some spice, but no way would they tolerate Thai peppers... and then there were just things we didn't have around, or did, as in the case of these bone-in chicken thighs.)

a skillet full of chicken thighs and cute green eggplants
Image: chicken thighs frying in a pan with cute green golf ball shaped Thai eggplants, cut into quarters.

The end result looked like this (the carrots are just garnish. The dish would have been more colorful with more of the ingredients that 'my heart beets' wanted):

finished dish with rice
Image: finished dish, with rice.

This dish was AMAZINGLY delicious. I am super looking forward to having the leftovers for lunch today. (I will tell you that I decided to go all out for lunch because St. Paul was under a heat advisory for the latter half of the day, and so I figured EAT BIG AT LUNCH. I regret nothing.)  

The Thai eggplants were fascinating. First of all, I watched a video that implied that I should really try one fresh, uncooked, and so I totally did. They are crunchy and oddly peppery? A little like a softer radish? The heat was a surprise. No offense to purple eggplants which I also adore, I tend to think that anything called an eggplant is going to be tastier cooked and then kind of be mild and more about texture? So, I was unprepared and pleased with the raw taste.

I was likewise surprised that even after cooking in the coconut milk and curry paste for a decent amount of time, the Thai eggplant totally kept a bit of its outer crunch in a REALLY SATISFYING way. Like, I expected the creamier (yet still spicier than expected) interior flesh, but getting a bit of a crunch from the exterior was really nice. 

The sun-jewel melon was likewise delicious and fun. It tasted like a honeydew? Again, I watched a video (I watch a lot of food prep videos when dealing with new-to-me foods) where the nice lady showed me that for the best taste, you really want to _very gently_ remove the inner seeds because the sweetest part of the rind is really the bit right next to the seeds. You can eat the seeds? But they were watermelon sized, and I'm not keen on seeds that big. But, so the flesh is hard and really delicately flavored? Smelled a bit like a rose? I found it delightful to just munch on, but the melon they sent us was big and so, since I had a small batch of strawberries macerating in the fridge, I just cut up the remaining melon and made a strawberry + sun-jewel melon jam that was insanely yummy.  

shiny, chunky strawberry colored jam in a jar
Image: Shiny, chunky jam in a jar on the table on our porch.

The picture doesn't quite do the jam's color justice. It's very sparkly, and so you can see why sun-jewel melon got that name. The jam tastes mostly like strawberries, but you get a lovely aftertaste of something floral. 

I literally just made one jar. Shawn is on a list of small batch canning and they're forever just making a single jar of something. Obviously, this is not full-on canning--it's only for the fridge, but it should last a couple of months, easily... in theory. We've already eaten half the jar.

The last thing I need to figure out what to do with from the CSA is collard greens. I have a TON.
lydamorehouse: (more renji art)
A lot.

On Friday, just before the hail rolled in, Shawn and I stopped very small farmer's market that's on the way home from her work. It's on Lexington Avenue and Summit, in the parking lot of that big church there (St. Thomas Moore?). At any rate, there was one Hmong farmer there selling veggies, so we picked up two bundles of rhubarb, some green onions, and asparagus. The rest of the sellers had specialty items like honeys and jams. One lady sold meats and eggs. The majority were flowers. I guess it was really more of a flower market than a farmer's market which reminds me of Italy, but the point is, we got rhubarb!!

On Sunday, Shawn and I made a small batch of strawberry-rhubarb jam and a super-duper delicious strawberry-rhubarb pie (she did the filling, I made the crust):
audubon and more 130

Here's some action shots of the jam making:

audubon and more 122

audubon and more 125

More later! I have to run and pick up the little guy from school!

March 2026

S M T W T F S
123 4567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 10th, 2026 01:54 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios