n Tuckahoe Notebook: 2011

Monday, August 1, 2011

Chicory

Cichorium intybus

Being out on the farm, you get to experience a lot of beauty in places you might not otherwise look.  All summer we have been admiring the chicory blooms.  Aside from its beauty, chicory is an amazing plant.  It is a valuable forage for sheep, cattle and honeybees, and humans have used the root as a coffee substitute. 


Here's to you chicory:

Deep roots carry here through the cold of wintertime
Spring timely arrives and opens her to the sun
Rainstorms sweetly bring out her bloom of beauty blue

Queen of the pasture
there is none other like her
Sky above so blue 
is a reflection of her bloom


Queen of the pasture
Queen of the pasture 
May you bloom and bloom forever 

When the days fall so short
Frost welcomes her in the ground
Her death is sleep
But she will soon bloom again 
                                                                                                      DANIEL 

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Recipe: Grilled Chicken with Blackberry-Ginger Sauce


Yesterday at the Byrd House Market we scored a big bucket of Agriberry jam blackberries.  We plan to make jam with most of the berries, but tonight I wanted to try something different.

While Daniel grilled one of our chickens I made the blackberry sauce. 

Our favorite way to grill Tuckahoe chicken is in two-halves.  Cutting the chicken down the middle helps it cook more quickly and evenly than a whole bird on the grill.  Because the majority of our chickens' diet is fresh grasses supplemented with minimal local grains, the flavor of the bird is outstanding.  

To bring out the flavor of our pastured chickens, we simply brush the bird with a small amount of melted butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and grill.  



Blackberry Ginger Sauce

For the sauce, I gathered a pint of blackberries and put them in a sauce pan on medium heat.  While the berries were heating, I grabbed my potato masher and squished the berries as much as a I could.  




Next, I add 1/3 cup of white wine and stir while the berries began to simmer.  To the wine and berry mixture, I add the juice of half of a lime, a pinch of ground ginger, and a table-spoonfull of brown sugar.  Stir, turn the stove to low and allow to simmer for 15 mins, stirring occasionally.   Remove from heat and allow to cool slightly before serving.   



When the blackberry sauce is finished, it should have a slightly syrupy consistency and chunks of fresh blackberries throughout the sauce.  

Once the chicken is finished, we divide the halves into traditional chicken pieces: leg, wing, thigh, breast.  After dividing the chicken out between the diners, we spoon the warm blackberry sauce on the chicken for an amazing summer treat.   


Recipe for Grilled Tuckahoe Chicken with Blackberry Ginger Sauce
Serves 4-6

Chicken
1 whole Tuckahoe Chicken 3-4lbs
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
1 tbs butter 

Divide chicken into 2 halves.  Brush with melted butter and sprinkle with salt and pepper.  Grill approx. 45 mins until cooked through, turning occasionally 

Blackberry Ginger Sauce
1 pt fresh blackberries (we prefer Agriberry)
1/3 c white wine
1/2 lime-squeezed
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1 tbs brown sugar

Heat blackberries over medium heat.  Using a potato masher or large spoon, crush warming blackberries.  Add wine, lime juice, ginger and brown sugar.  Stir.  Reduce heat to low and allow sauce to simmer 15 mins before serving, stir occasionally.  Spoon sauce onto grilled chicken. 

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Tuckahoe Yarns

This fall, we sheared approximately 85 sheep...Cotswolds, Cheviots and Border Leicesters.  We couldn't think of a better way to share our wooly bounty than to have it spun into yarns. 


So, on a trip to Quebec with Case and Manse, I stopped by Green Mountain Spinnery in Putney, Vermont and delivered a mountain of fleeces.  Green Mountain was certainly worth the detour.  The Spinnery is a worker owned Co-Op and David and the rest of the team are amazing using turn of the century machines and green processes to create outstanding yarns.

Many months later, the wool is back and has been transformed from raw fleeces into beautiful sport weight yarns in a natural creamy white and natural grey.


The yarn is Sport Weight, 172 yards, $10/skein and available on the farm AND
The Byrd House Market~Tuesdays 3:30pm-7pm
South of the James Market~Saturdays 8am-Noon
St. Stephens Farmers Market~Saturdays 8am-Noon

You can also pick up Tuckahoe yarn at the Yarn Lounge in Carytown.  If you haven't been there, check it out.  The Yarn Lounge mission is to share their passion for knitting by providing knitters wih natural fibers, unique yarns and accessories in a comfortable and friendly atmosphere.  They teach classes, too for experienced knitters and spinners and kintter/spinner wanna-bes.  So next time you're in Carytown, check them out.  They're right on Cary just past Belmont. 

Stewart and Cate, two of the great Yarn Lounge ladies picked up a few skeins for themselves a few weeks ago at South of the James. They both loved the yarn and Stewart decided that the Yarn Lounge needed to stock Tuckahoe yarn!  Awesome!  

See their Blog Post Re: Tuckahoe's Yarns Here:  Tuckahoe Plantation yarn? RICHMOND's Tuckahoe Plantation? Yes!