Open Field Farm

Open Field Farm is a community supported farm in Petaluma, California, raising grass fed Corriente beef, pastured eggs, mixed vegetables, flowers, herbs, and dry corn.
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Each week we will post our newsletter and pick list on the blog. We will also add posts with recipes and farm updates here.

Grass

Open Field Farm January 7, 2020

When we awoke Sunday morning after returning home late Saturday evening, we were grateful to see the farm gloriously green. In contrast on the frosty mornings, the farm is white and almost appears to have a dusting of snow. By afternoon though, we are often in t-shirts.

We are planting another round of lettuce, pac choy, fennel, and scallions in the tunnels. There is a gopher that has taken up residence in them, so we are also working to stop the damage.

This week’s pick list:

  • Cabbage

  • Winter squash

  • Fennel

  • Kale

  • Beets

  • Chard

  • Potatoes

  • Parsley

  • Carrots

  • Leeks

  • Scallions

  • Escarole, Frisee, Sugarloaf, and Radicchio

  • Radish

  • Turnips

  • Rutabaga

  • Kohlrabi

  • Celeriac

  • Celery

  • Onions

  • Broccoli

  • Brussel sprouts

  • Parsnips

  • Dried tea herbs

  • Dried ground peppers

  • Revolution Bread

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Homemade Egg Noodles, thespruceeats.com

  • 1 cup flour (we do sift out the bran from our flour when we make noodles)

  • 2 large eggs

  • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt

Combine the flour and salt in a large shallow bowl or on a clean work surface. Make a well in the center, almost like a "bowl" of flour to hold the eggs, and crack the eggs into it.

Use a fork to beat the eggs and then gradually start incorporating the flour into the eggs (as you beat them, they will slowly but surely take up some flour from along the edge of where the eggs meet the flour).

Keep stirring and pulling in more flour until a solid dough forms. The dough will be sticky. Don't worry, you'll be working in more flour in a moment. Too much flour now and the extra flour needed to roll out the noodles will lead to an oddly dry, rather than tender, noodle in the end.

Turn the dough out onto a well-floured work surface. With well-floured hands, knead the dough, incorporating more flour as necessary to keep it from sticking to either the work surface or your hands, until the dough is smooth and firm and no longer sticky. This takes 5 to 10 minutes for most people.

Wrap the dough with plastic wrap and chill it for at least 30 minutes and up to overnight.

Divide the dough into 2 pieces and work with one half of the dough at a time.

On a well-floured surface roll out the dough to the desired thickness (anywhere from 1/4-inch to paper-thin—the call is yours!). Be sure to rotate, or otherwise move the dough, between each pass of the rolling pin to keep the dough from sticking to the work surface underneath. Sprinkle everything with flour—including lifting the dough and flouring the work surface again—as necessary to keep the dough from sticking.

Use a sharp knife or pizza cutting wheel to cut the noodles. You can make them as narrow or wide as you like but cut them as evenly as possible to ensure a uniform cooking time.

Lay the noodles on a cooling or drying rack and let them sit until ready to cook. Repeat rolling and cutting with the remaining half of the dough.

Boil the noodles in well-salted water until tender to the bite. Drain and serve with butter or cheese, with stews, or in soups.

Tips

You can let these uncooked noodles air-dry until completely dry and store them in an air-tight container at room temperature for up to a month.

You may be tempted to store the uncooked noodles in the fridge in an effort to keep them "fresh." Avoid this temptation. It's strange, but true that they keep much better dried than they do in the refrigerator, where they will get soggy.

If you have a pasta roller, you can use that instead of a rolling pin, when rolling out the dough, if you like. This will lead to more evenly formed noodles.

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Open Field Farm

Open Field Farm is a community supported farm in Petaluma, California, raising grass fed Corriente beef, pastured eggs, mixed vegetables, flowers, herbs, and dry corn.

Open Field Farm is a community supported farm in Petaluma, California, raising grass fed Corriente beef, pastured eggs, mixed vegetables, flowers, herbs, and dry corn. All of our produce is distributed through our CSA program, which includes free choice, on farm pickup, and some pick your own crops. 

Open Field Farm | 2245 Spring Hill Road, Petaluma, CA 94952, USA

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