Harvest Monday November 30, 2015

Welcome to Harvest Monday, where we celebrate all things harvest related. Cooking this week seemed to revolve around something other than vegetables. On Monday we got a fresh, pastured turkey from a local producer (Uebelhack Turkey Farm). The bird wound up weighing a little over 17 pounds, which is a lot of turkey for the two of us! That’s all part of the plan though, and we wound up baking it Wednesday and starting our Thanksgiving turkey-thon a day early. It was a joint effort, with me baking the turkey and my wife making side dishes of mashed potatoes and braised kale. I harvested about a pound of White Russian kale for the occasion, and it was tender and sweet after cooking up.

White Russian kale

White Russian kale

We don’t eat pie very often, but it wouldn’t be Thanksgiving for either of us without a pumpkin pie. My wife makes a great one, using her grandmother’s recipe that calls for a touch of whiskey in the filling. For this pie she used pureed Canada Crookneck winter squash, which won our pumpkin smackdown last year. It’s great tasting but a shy producer here for me, so we saved it for a special occasion like this pie! You can find her recipe here on her blog.

Whiskey Pumpkin Pie

Whiskey Pumpkin Pie

We wound up eating on the turkey for six meals, and filling up the freezer with turkey related stuff for future meals. We used the meat to make a double batch of my Chicken Chipotle Taco and Burrito Filling. We ate turkey taco salad for one meal and froze the rest for later. The next day we had turkey reuben sandwiches on homemade rye bread using our homemade cabbage sauerkraut. After that we got the remaining meat off the bones and used them to make turkey broth, which I slow simmered for several hours. We used the broth to make turkey soup, which we ate on for two meals. My wife used some of the meat to make a turkey pot pie which she stuck in the freezer, and we put the rest of the meat with the broth and froze it.

Turkey Reuben sandwich with braised kale

Turkey Reuben sandwich with braised kale

After all that turkey, we were ready for something completely different! It came in the form of some scallop tacos my wife made, served up with sweet potato fries. For the fries we included all three sweet potato varieties I grew this year. We wanted to compare the white fleshed newcomer Bonita along with the tried and true Purple and Beauregard. My wife cut the sweet potatoes into thick slabs, tossed them with olive oil and baked them in a 450°F oven until brown and crispy. I think all three were tasty prepared this way. Bonita is a keeper, and I look forward to more experimenting with it in the kitchen. On the plate in the photo below, from left to right we have Bonita, Beauregard, and Purple.

Bonita, Beauregard and Purple sweet potato fries

Bonita, Beauregard and Purple sweet potato fries

Another small harvest came in the form of greens for a frittata. I cut leaves of Speedy arugula and Mizspoona that are growing in the greenhouse. I need to do another greenhouse tour to show the assortment of winter greens I have growing there. Mizspoona is a cross between mizuna and tatsoi, though to me it looks more like a big-leaf mizuna.

mizspoona and arugula for frittata

mizspoona and arugula for frittata

The last harvest of the week came in the form of some small kohlrabies I pulled from one of the cold frame beds. These suffered an early setback when some critter munched on them shortly after planting. Some recovered and went on to produce, but most in that bed didn’t. The five kohlrabies in the below photo weighed just 12 ounces total, but they will be edible all the same. I grated up one of the purple ones for slaw, adding it to the last of the fall cabbage.

last of the kohlrabies

last of the kohlrabies

Harvest Monday is a day to show off your harvests, how you are saving your harvest, or how you are using your harvest. If you have a harvest you want to share, add your name and blog link to Mr Linky below. And be sure and check out what everyone is harvesting!


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10 Responses to Harvest Monday November 30, 2015

  1. Susie says:

    Turkey taco salad?! Awesome. And I think I’m going to have to try that whiskey pumpkin pie – sounds great!

  2. I’m very interested in your different sweet potato varieties, certainly something I want to try and grow next year. Very impressed with your Kohl Rabi again, they look perfect!

  3. The Mizspoona looks interesting. Here’s when I wish I had more garden square footage to try other crops. If something new goes in, something has to be deleted! Your kohlrabi look beautiful. Aren’t they gorgeous growing in the garden? Look forward to the greenhouse tour.

  4. Margaret says:

    That is a lot of turkey, but it definitely seems like you put it to very good use. Those greens look great – I keep having issues with timing when I try to harvest the mizuna as it’s been frozen each time I go to get some. It’s always at these times that I regret not fast tracking a cold frame.

  5. Michelle says:

    The best thing about Thanksgiving dinner is the turkey leftovers! You have some very inspiring ways to use them.

    I had a touch of brain freeze when I wrote my harvest post, I dated it the 15th but it is for today. Too much tryptophan perhaps?

  6. Phuong says:

    I love all you did with the leftover turkey. Very impressive. The only thing we ever did with leftover turkey was shred it and fry it up in butter with salt and pepper for sandwiches. And that pumpkin pie sounds absolutely amazing.

    Isn’t it wonderful, having so many different things from the garden and being able to use them in all your meals.

  7. That certainly is a lot of turkey! But I really like the way you used it all up in different meals 🙂

  8. The turkey reuben looks really tasty. Is the bread recipe on this site?

  9. Sue Garrett says:

    The first time we made pumpkin pie we were really surprised at the flavour. We really like it but the flavour was totally unexpected.

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