How I Learned To FarmOn! | Kale Salad with Lemon, Serranos and Mint Recipe

How I Learned To FarmOn! | Kale Salad with Lemon, Serranos and Mint #Recipe

Rural Mom is truly pleased to welcome our guest writer today, Tessa Edick, author of Hudson Valley Food and Farming:: Why Didn’t Anyone Ever Tell Me That?

My food legacy: Born and raised in Upstate New York, I fled farming life for a city mentality, a cosmopolitan lifestyle, success and glamour. I traveled around the world in search of education, a career and like- minded people. Funny thing about traveling in search of something is that everything you need is always within you, never where you are going. Ironically, I ended up back in an agricultural community—the kind of community that made me so happy in my youth.

Having traveled the world, I’ve experienced farming in many forms, but the commonality is the connection to your food. Somewhere along our food ways, we lost our way with food. We swap convenience for nutrition. We demand cheap food, and instead of giving value to our family, community and farmer, we let our ever-packed “to-do” list sideline family dinners for “activities.” But being cheap with our food means we’re cheap with our health—something we rarely value until it is too late.

Living in Europe convinced me that the age-old tradition of eating what’s in season and what comes from the local terroir is sustainable and the only way to live. Eat strawberries or corn until there is no more left to pick and eat. Then switch to what’s available next. There is no other way. to get all of the nutrition your body craves and needs to optimize health and, ultimately our common goal, to look and feel great. You eat in moderation and in the rhythm of the seasons based on climate and yield, culture and availability. It’s what all-natural eating should represent but has come to be meaningless on our over-processed, heavily distributed packaged food system.

Stand up for your farming community and local food choices and sources.

When you eat today, thank a farmer. He works hard to feed you well. He just needs more of us to buy from him directly. That small choice three times daily to eat quality fresh food is vital to our health, the health of our children and our communities and our welfare. Wouldn’t you want to stand up for your farming community and food choices if you knew the upside? Ask: what is my criteria for buying food? How do my choices impact the family farm? Who do they benefit? How do I help preserve farming in America?

I want you to think about what you eat not based solely on taste and convenience but also why we must eat and base it on these three easy-to- remember thoughts:

Responsibility: who made it?
Quality: where did it come from?
Nutrition: how was it made?

Hudson Valley farmers are reestablishing a foundation of values and wellness that are pure goodness and make me inspired to bridge rural-to-urban marketplaces and inspire a re-education in food and eating that starts in public schools and with our children into what the “mother” of American food, Alice Waters, calls an “edible education.” We can all re-create this model in our own communities.

One of the best ways to celebrate our farmers is to eat their food! I helped Jean-Georges Vongerichten build out a citified CSA at his renowned Manhattan restaurant, ABC Kitchen. Every week, subscribers to the ABCSA get armfuls of freshly picked produce from our favorite Hudson Valley star-mers (as I like to call them). His Kale Salad, below, is one of my favorite ways to enjoy the beautiful bounty (it also happens to be one of first lady Michelle Obama’s favorite recipes too):

Kale Salad with Lemon, Serranos and Mint (serves 4)


Kale Salad with Lemon, Serranos and Mint (serves 4)

By Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten
Adapted for Seriouseats.com from Home Cooking with Jean-Georges

For the dressing:


7 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons + 2 teaspoons lemon juice, freshly squeezed
1⁄2 piece of garlic, germ removed
1⁄2 piece Serrano chili
5 tablespoons Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons kosher salt
Pinch black pepper, finely milled
11⁄2 cups sunflower oil
5 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

Method for the dressing:

In a blender, combine red wine vinegar, lemon juice, garlic, Serrano chili, Dijon mustard, salt and pepper together. Combine first set in vita prep and puree. Slowly add the oils together until emuslified.

For the croutons:

2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
sourdough-like bread, crust trimmed off, 1⁄8-inch cubes
(slightly frozen, sliced on slicer)
kosher salt
black pepper, freshly milled

Method for the croutons:
 Liberally coat the bottom of a sauté pan with oil and heat until smoking. Add bread and sauté until all sides of the croutons are golden. Place croutons on paper towels, and season gently with salt and pepper.

For the pickup:
1 bunch Tuscan kale, washed and dried, ribbons
1⁄2 cup dressing
16 leaves mint, medium-sized, ribbons
3 serrano chili slices, rounds sliced extremely thin
24 pieces croutons
Lemon, to zest
black pepper, freshly milled

Method for the pickup:

In a bowl, mix the kale with dressing and mix well.
Evenly place the salad on a plate and top with mint, Serrano slices and croutons.
Finish with lemon zest and freshly cracked black pepper.

~

The above excerpt and recipe is from my book, “Hudson Valley Food & Farming: Why Didn’t Anyone Ever Tell Me That?” It’s a love-letter to farmers and part of my broader mission to change the way America eats, shops and farms.

FarmOn! Foundation established a working farm in 2014 based in community connection and educational ag-entrepreneurial curriculum in New York’s Hudson Valley dedicated to educating the next generation in the business of food about the art of sustainable farming. Young people are more and more aware of the importance of their food choices, which has reignited an interest in farming. In order to maintain that interest, these young entrepreneurs need to understand how they can make a living in agriculture. That is where the FarmOn! Foundation will make a critical difference — by reversing the trend of Agribusiness back to re-establishing economically and environmentally sustainable small scale and family farm operations.

~

Want to support local farming in America? Purchase a copy of Hudson Valley Food and Farming:: Why Didn’t Anyone Ever Tell Me That? (American Palate)! All proceeds benefit FarmOn! Foundation…

Or come visit us at the farm!

Address: FarmOn! Empire Farm 556 Empire Road Copake, NY, 12516, Columbia County NY Phone number: (518) 329-FARM.

We have an exciting summer of music, food and family events planned in New York City, the Hamptons and the Hudson Valley … stay tuned to FarmOn! Foundation http://farmonfoundation.org for the latest scoop.


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Tags: Recipes
by
Barb Webb. Founder and Editor of Rural Mom, is an the author of "Getting Laid" and "Getting Baked". A sustainable living expert nesting in Appalachian Kentucky, when she’s not chasing chickens around the farm or engaging in mock Jedi battles, she’s making tea and writing about country living and artisan culture.
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Comments

    • pragati
    • January 13, 2015
    Reply

    This salad seems very simple..and that’s a lot of dressing! Also, you have raised some good questions about food sourcing.

    thanks for sharing!

      • Barb Webb
      • January 14, 2015
      Reply

      Thanks for stopping by pragati! Glad that you enjoyed the article and recipe!

    • Linda A. Kinsman
    • January 15, 2015
    Reply

    Thanks for sharing another way we can all help support our farmers. I enjoyed learning about the Hudson Valley Farm and will try and visit one day. The Kale salad sounds tasty easy to make too.

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