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CSA Season

A Handy Guide to Seattle Farm Shares

It’s technically spring, which means it’s time to find your CSA soul mate.

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A colorful Oxbow produce box, photo courtesy of their website.

It’s finally that time, when good things start to come to those who have waited (and waited): spring in the Northwest. Rainy mornings turn into brisk sunny afternoons. The ground is speckled with cherry blossom petals. The raincoat gets a little less wear. Patio furniture comes out of hibernation. And CSA (community supported agriculture) shares get snapped up. Springtime means almost-summertime, which means it’s time to start thinking about CSAs, and signing up for a share of the bounty to come.

As more farms offer CSAs, choosing one can be an overwhelming process. Here are a few excellent options.

The Food Nerd’s CSA
The Old Chaser Farm
Vashon Island
$1950 for the season, from mid-May to mid-October
$85 a week
Pick up at the Corson Building or Sitka and Spruce

From the farm that supplies James Beard nominee Matt Dillon’s restaurants, this is the most luxurious CSA. (And we want it.) In the weekly box, members can expect fresh fruits and vegetables, a half-dozen eggs, a dairy product, a loaf of bread, one jar of preserves, and a bottle of wine. Plus there’s an optional $650 meat share: eight chickens, half a pig, and a lamb.

The Restaurateur’s CSA
Oxbow Farm
Carnation
$420-$630 for the season, from mid-June through October, with the option for a winter CSA extension
$20-$30 a week
Pick up at various Seattle locations Thursday through Sunday

Oxbow’s list of restaurants it supplies will clue you in on the quality: Tilth, Walrus and the Carpenter, Café Flora, and Canlis to mention just a few. The 25-acre farm is certified organic and salmon safe, and partners with a collective of eastern Washington farmers to supplement the produce boxes with ripe cherries and peaches at the height of summer.

The City Dweller’s CSA
Amaranth Urban Farm
Rainier Beach and Kent Valley
$784 for the entire summer season, options for 1/2 season shares
$28-$30 a week
Pick up in the city at various locations (including Skelly and the Bean and Pike Brewing)

Amaranth is an urban farm run by Seattleites. The produce in subscribers’ boxes never goes more than 10 miles from where it was grown. (Unless it comes along on a picnic road trip.) Amaranth also serves as a model for other aspiring urban farmers and has opportunities for tours and work shares. (Plus there’s an optional 17-week, $170 flower share.)

The Musician’s CSA
Helsing Junction Farm
Rochester
$360-$666 for the season mid-June to mid-October
$20-$37 a week
Pick up at many Seattle sites as well as in Tacoma, Olympia, Centralia, and Kelso on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays

Helsing Junction farm has been around for twenty years, growing 30 acres of of fruits and vegetables and flowers. The farm sells produce to a few organic markets and restaurants in the northwest and hosts a music festival with an Olympia record company (complete with in-orchard camping) every summer.

The Community Activist’s CSA
Seattle Market Gardens
Seattle
$300-$500 for the season
$15-$25 a week
Pick up at various Seattle locations on Thursdays, Saturdays, or Sundays

Two of the South Seattle P-Patch gardens provide the produce for this CSA, as well as for a weekly farm stand. The gardens are manned by residents, and are part of the P-Patch program that is working to help communities become happier and healthier through the presence of gardens. It’s definitely a feel-good CSA.

The Aspiring Gardener’s CSA
The Root Connection
Woodinville
$692 ($678 if you register by April 15) for the season June-October
$33 a week
There are drop sites in Lynwood and North Seattle on Wednesdays, or pick up at the farm Wednesday through Saturday

Most CSAs proudly advertise that the produce comes to you less than 48 hours after being picked—members can grab their Root Connection share just four hours after its contents were picked. Most members go to the farm to retrieve their share in order to take advantage of the unique Root Connection bonus: free U-picking. This is a more hands-on CSA—no home delivery, no supercentral pick-up spots, but members can go tromp around the farm and harvest their own herbs, flowers, and greens.

The Lazy (but great) CSA-ish CSAs
Full Circle Farms
Year-round, $23-$45 a week
Home delivery

Full Circle is an organic produce delivery service, not a traditional CSA. Full Circle does have farms in Washington, but also sources from warmer places during the winter months. Customizable boxes of produce magically arrive every Friday morning, and subscribers can add in other organic groceries like Essential Baking Co. bread, Theo chocolate, fresh La Pasta fettuccine, and Boat Street pickled figs.

New Roots
Ballard
Year-round, $30-$40 a week
Home delivery

Much like Full Circle, New Roots delivers boxes of organic produce year-round to Seattleites. The company sources primarily from Washington, but also Oregon, California, and Mexico, when the pickings get slim up north. The boxes are somewhat customizable and they get delivered right to the door.

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Tags: Farmers Markets, Matt Dillon, Sitka and Spruce, Canlis, CSAs, Farms, Full Circle Farm, Tilth, Summer Eating, Farm to Table, Summer Plans, Matthew Dillon

Summer in the City

SAM Intros Picnic at the Park

This summer, Thursdays in Olympic Sculpture Park = food truck bonanza.

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All’s not lost on the food front at Olympic Sculpture Park.

Even though the farmers markets won’t be happening this summer, Olympic Sculpture Park will still play host to food folk on Thursday evenings. One of the initiatives Seattle Art Museum has rolled out is Picnic at the Park, a weekly shindig that begins July 7 and runs through the middle of September. The gist: a bunch of food trucks will park it in the park alongside toques from Taste. Also, live music.

The events get underway at 5:30 and go until 8. Note that for whatever reason the picnic won’t happen on September 1.

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Tags: Seattle Art Museum, Summer Eating

Summer in Seattle

Today in Alfresco Dining: Betty Opens Outdoor Dining Deck

And here’s what it looks like.

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Betty-deck

The new dining patio at Queen Anne restaurant Betty.

It’s been awhile since we’ve surfaced our outdoor dining series, but hey, it’s back!

The Queen Anne crowner Betty unveiled this 20-seat terrace Monday. I can dig it.

Check it out, then hit up these 45 other alfresco options.

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Tags: Alfresco Dining, Summer Eating

Favorite Seattle Salads

Good places to get your greens (and fried chicken, too).

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Bastillesalad

Salade verte from Bastille recreated at home
Photo: Jess Thomson

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Salade verte from Bastille recreated at home
Photo: Jess Thomson

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Baguette Box, home of the drunken chicken salad.

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Goi is good at Tamarind Tree in the ID

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The salade verte at Le Pichet downtown: a hazelnut-enhanced classic

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The big salad changes daily at Nettletown and may take longer than an hour to eat.

Seattle Met recently featured a recipe for Bastille’s salade verte, I highly recommend you try it at home. When the French decided that hazelnuts should be a regular ingredient in salad dressing they were very much onto something.

Here are some more of my other favorite everyday, easy-to-come-by salads around town:

A salad need not be light. The drunken chicken salad at Baguette Box is a total calorie whore, but who really cares when you’re looking at a bed of mixed greens—spruced up with orange slices, almonds, croutons, and caramelized onions, and covered in fried balls of chicken that have been crisped to perfection? Nobody, that’s who cares.

On the lighter side are shredded-veggie Vietnamese salads (gỏi), although my favorite does come topped with beef. It’s the gỏi bò at Tamarind Tree: slices of tender beef in an herby fish sauce lie on a bed of shredded cabbage, carrots, herbs, pickled onion, and roasted peanuts.

Le Pichet is a great place to remember when you’re downtown on the weekend in search of a late lunch—the menu is available from 11:30 to 5:30. When I’m there, I must order the cafe’s version of the classic salade verte with hazelnut vinaigrette. It’s basically a ball of bibb lettuce drizzled in perfect vinaigrette with a smattering of toasted hazelnuts tossed on top for good measure. On Capitol Hill, an identical salad is to be had at Cafe Presse (same owners).

It’s been a few months, but I’m still freaking out about Nettletown. The big salad changes daily, and features whatever foraged goodies have made their way into Christina Choi’s kitchen. The first time I went for lunch, I ordered a sandwich and one of my dining companions went for the salad. I actually had to leave her there after an hour to go back to work, she was still digging her way through that big old bowl of greens, and happily.

The insalata mista at Tutta Bella gets big points from me for having white beans as well as white balsamic vinaigrette. White balsamic is less syrupy than its brown counterpart, and when it has its zippy way with a plate of raw veggies the results are mighty fine. It also has carrots, olives, sweet red onions, roasted peppers, and the option to add Gorgonzola cheese. By all means, add it!

So there you have some of my favorites. But come now, good readers. Surely you have some favorite salads of your own. Please, tell us about them.

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Tags: Vegetarian/Vegan Whatnot, Nettletown, Le Pichet, Salad, Vegetables, Summer Eating, Tamarind Tree, Bastille

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