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Located in Foley, Alabama
What Exactly Are Microgreens?
Statement about Microgreens from Heather Pritchard: Part of what a farmers’ market can do for farms or other businesses is product introduction. With direct access to the public, vendors can “test” an item and quickly learn what the public likes, which also helps diversify market products. Microgreens have only recently been introduced to consumers at Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market and the response is amazing. Knowing how super nutritious they are coupled with the many flavors and uses, it is no wonder they are popular. Furthermore, it is an example of alternate ways of growing in the home or small spaces. With all of the stress and uncertainty in folks’ lives, I believe that purchasing and feeding yourself something like this is a reward that most can afford and enjoy.
What are Microgreens?
Microgreens are tiny edible plants with an intense flavor, usually vegetable garden plants, that are grown in quantity and harvested while they are still juvenile plants, generally around 10 days. (www.growingmicrogreens.com) Popular microgreens are red cabbage, cilantro, radish, sunflower, kale, broccoli, amaranth, Bok choy, arugula, and basil. (from a Wikipedia article)
Are they healthy?
As reported by WebMD.com, in a research study conducted by the University of Maryland – College Park, microgreens were found to be anywhere between four to 40 times more concentrated in nutrients than a fully grown plant.
How are microgreens grown?
The advantage of microgreens is that they can be grown in small spaces, even in container gardens. Microgreens can be grown in soil or hydroponically. By harvesting microgreens after only ten to fourteen days after sprouting, microgreens can be intensely planted in a small space. A 10 x 10 feet space can easily supply a fine-dining restaurant, for instance, of all the microgreens needed. (Wikipedia)
Disadvantages?
Microgreens tend to have a short shelf life. Commercial microgreens are most often stored in plastic clamshell containers for viewing and for a quick sale. Farmers’ markets are the ideal venue for microgreen farmers to sell their product as the microgreens can be purchased by a consumer looking for something fresh and nutritious that will be consumed quickly rather than stored for later use. www.growingmicrogreens.com
How to Use?
Microgreens can be used almost anyway that a person’s imagination can create. Salads, toppings for meat or vegetables, pasta, smoothies, stir fry, and steaming. Many fine dining restaurant chefs use microgreens because of the intense flavor as well as making a great food presentation on the plate.
Are microgreens available at the Market?
Currently, at least two vendors sell microgreens at Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market with others exploring the possibility. In addition, Forland Family Market often has microgreens in their weekly Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) box.
Recipe of the Week: Chicken Alfredo Farmers’ Market Style
My oldest granddaughter loves Chicken Alfredo and she says it is her favorite Italian food. Of course, Chicken Alfredo is as authentic an Italian dish as Chicken Chow Mein in Chinese … neither are an authentic anything. However, I offer this recipe as a means of using microgreens and spoiling my grandchild.
Ingredients:
Chicken tenders (I use Publix Green Wise) about three per person
Butter (Forland Family Market)
Olive Oil
Half and Half (most recipes you can find call for heavy cream but ½ & ½ cuts fat and calories)
Farmers’ Cheese (Forland Family Market) shredded, about ¼ cup per person
½ tablespoon of drained capers per person
Parsley (from a plant I purchased at the Market)
White wine
Fettuccine
Sea salt
White pepper
Basil microgreens (available at the Market)
Directions:
For my granddaughter, she gets a soft drink (grandparents have a license to spoil) and a green salad with ingredients from the Market. For me, I have a glass of white wine and a green salad.
Enjoy and I’ll see you at the Market.
18/21 Rule and Other Advice I’ve Read That Actually Makes Sense
Health advice is abundant. While it reflects a worthwhile trend to having access to more information about health, some articles I’ve read are not very helpful. Ubiquitously, advice in articles frequently say for better health, “Lose weight” and it is given as casually as “Floss Teeth.” To get ready for bed you should brush and floss your teeth and lose twenty pounds. Hmm, I’m exaggerating, of course, but such casual advice is not helpful and unnecessary. In the same type of advice, articles frequently relate how many calories in a meal and how many grams of protein and how many grams of carbohydrates. I don’t know about you, but my life cannot be centered around perfection and following healthy advice all the time.
However, there are some suggestions that I’ve found are helpful and actually make sense for our less than perfectly ordered lives:
18/21 Rule
To explain this rule, here is a personal example. My granddaughter is a cheerleader for her high school that’s located in Mobile. During the fall months, my wife and I make Friday afternoon trips to Mobile to sit through the first half of a game before coming home. I’m sure you immediately envisioned what the Bayway and other sections of the Interstate Highway are like at that time of day on Fridays that we are traveling so we have to allow plenty of time. Sitting down to a perfectly constructed meal with nothing but fresh, healthy ingredients is not possible. Somewhere I read about, what the author called, the 18/21 rule and it made sense to me. Seven days a week, three meals per day, that’s twenty-one meals per week. The advice was to eat eighteen healthy meals. Twenty-one meals per week. Can I eat at least 18 healthy meals? Yeah, I can do that and that gives me three cheat meals. So, on Friday nights during the fall months, we stop at Five Guys, order a Little Hamburger with the veggies only – lettuce, tomato, and pickle – with mustard (no sugar-laden condiments like ketchup and no fat-laden mayonnaise or cheese) and a bottle of water. It’s one of my cheat meals, not bad, but not good either. Of course, I don’t go crazy with my three cheat meals, though I would like to. What does this have to do with the Market? Very little. But, read on.
Eat more Seafood
We can live by this advice, easily. At Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market we have two options of vendors from whom we can buy seafood, most of which is packaged in a manner that can be eaten that night or put in the freezer to eat later. Shrimp, fish, crab cakes, shrimp cakes, good healthy eating. Recently, we were going to be out of town visiting relatives and returning late Sunday night. I bought a pound of shelled, deveined shrimp and stuck in the freezer. When we returned late Sunday night, I took the shrimp out of the freezer and put it in a large bowl. Sprinkled seafood seasoning on it and added a beer and some water. I then unloaded the car, unpacked, started a load of clothes in the washing machine, poured a glass of wine, and checked email and the news online for the day. Made a green salad using Craine Creek Farms lettuce as well as vegetables from the Market and then steamed the shrimp. Poured another glass of wine and I’m eating more seafood. Using the stock phrase of one of my wife’s favorite television chefs, “How easy is that?”
Eat Fresh Seasonal Fruits and Vegetables
This one is so easy for frequent shoppers at the Market that it’s superfluous to mention or expound upon.
Limit sweets and only indulge with sweets that have a redeeming value
This piece of health advice that I read took me by surprise, but it makes sense. We’ve seen the “limit sweets” advice a lot, but the author of this article took the advice a step further. I’ve never been one to enjoy sweet tastes, so I never felt I was sacrificing, but when I read this admonition, it made a lot of sense to me. Redeeming value to sweets means such things as a fresh fruit pie, pecan pie, dark chocolate, as I said, it makes sense. In addition to a year-round supply of fruit, another advantage we have visiting a farmers’ market regularly is the vendors who bring their homemade goods to the Market to sell: salsas, jelly, jam, bread, brownies, and pies. Fortunately, we have vendors who sell these delights at the Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market. With fresh fruit, I feel I can justify the indulgence as having a redeeming value and possessing some nutrition, but that’s only rationalizing as I know I’m not getting a lot healthy benefits but the pies are so good … and the pies have a redeeming value of being made with fresh fruit. Even this non-sweet lover can appreciate that.
Those are four healthy pieces of advice that I know I can follow, with the help of the gentle people of Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market and the advice actually make sense to me.
Recipe of the Week: Marinara Sauce
If you’ve followed the blog for any length of time, you probably have picked up on the idea that I like Italian food. Guilty. In reference to the theme of today’s blog about health advice that makes sense, one health advice that makes no sense but became popular in recent years was to eschew pasta. In what universe is pasta bad for you? I’m eating pasta and wishing every time I go to the Market that a vendor would be there selling freshly made pasta.
Italian sausage, defrosted (George Family Farms)
Shiitake mushrooms, when available (Terry Underwood)
1 cup sweet yellow onion, diced (available from several vendors)
1 cup bell pepper, diced (available from several vendors)
1 cup celery, diced (Forland Family Market)
1 cup of carrots, diced (Forland Family Market)
1 clove of garlic, minced (Forland Family Market)
1 28 oz can crushed tomatoes (Note: I prefer Muir Glen)
Oregano (from a plant purchased at the Market)
Basil (from a plant purchased at the Market)
Pasta of choice (My personal choice for this recipe is fettucine, but any will do.)
Cheese of choice
[Note regarding meat in marina sauce: In graduate school I got to know a guy who is first generation American whose parents immigrated to the United States from Italy and became naturalized citizens. I asked him about marinara sauce and he said that to truly understand marinara sauce, you have to think peasant food. It’s using what’s available and stretching it to feed a large extended family. He said that a true marinara sauce will have several meats, but a little of each – a little piece sausage, a little piece chicken, or a beef bone the neighborhood butcher gave you that has a few pieces of meat still clinging and can be cooked off. That’s the lagniappe for this week.]
Serve with a fresh salad made with Craine Creek Farm lettuce and a glass of red wine.
Enjoy! See you at the Market
Bob Zeanah
Author of No Anchor
Available online from Amazon or Barnes and Noble or Books a Million
Author of Work to Do
Available online from Amazon or Barnes & Noble or Books a Million
14410 Oak Street
Magnolia Springs AL 36555
251-752-5174 mobile device
bobzeanah@gmail.com
www.bobzeanah.com