Category Archives: classes

alchemy

leek scapes and other vegetables

Last week I plucked some leek scapes from the garden.  Have you ever eaten green garlic scapes?  You can find them at farmers markets in the Pacific Northwest in June.  Well, leeks send up flower heads, too, and they’re delicious pickled — more sweet than garlic scapes.  Into the crock they went with some other crunchy vegetables…

And today this batch of Giardiniera came out of the crock!

curious farm giardiniera with leek scapes

Crunchy, garlicky, refreshing, sour, infused with oregano and thyme…  just right for a picnic or a cocktail party or next to your sandwich.  Curious Farm Giardiniera with Leek Scapes is available direct from Curious Farm until it’s gone.  And, if you’d like to learn how to make your own live-cultured vegetable pickles, think about taking a class at Curious Farm!

 

summer classes at Curious Farm

Curious Farm’s summer class schedule has been posted.  You can learn to make your own crunchy, delicious, tangy sauerkrauts and pickles!

Sauerkraut classes:  calendar and description here

Pickling classes:  calendar and description here

I’m offering several sessions of each class because I know that summer is busy for all of us.  Hopefully, one of the sessions will work for you!  For those of you looking for kimchi classes, I’ll offer them this fall for students who have taken a previous class at Curious Farm.

mary’s special sauerkraut

mary's special sauerkraut

In June, a former student stopped by the booth to tell me about her ongoing sauerkraut adventures. She shared that — by far — her family’s favorite combination is cabbage, apples, and onions. 

I said, “Wow…  I bet Curious Farm customers would love that, too!  The apples would bring tartness, and the onions would bring sweetness…  Hey, Mary, would you give me permission to make that and share it with my customers?” 

Thankfully, she gave me permission (and I paid her in Curious Farm products).  This weekend at the Beaverton Farmers Market, you can taste Mary’s Special Sauerkraut for yourself.  It’s delicious!

photo from a busy former student…

One of the wonderful people who took the last Pickle class has fallen in love with making pickles, and she sent this photo today:

a student's pickle jars

2 fermenting jars weren’t enough during the peak of cucumber season so she put her own airlock jars together!  I feel so happy for her!

market joy and classes

Curious Farm booth at Beaverton Farmers Market

It poured most of the morning, and lots of folks stayed home from the Beaverton Farmers Market.  Those that came anyway were wearing rain gear in a rainbow of colors.  The fun jackets, the flowers, the colorful tents — all made the Market seem even more like a crazy quilt of joy and bounty. 

It wasn’t a warm summer rain at all, and I laughed at the kids wearing shorts, flip-flops and wool ski caps…  until I looked down at my shorts and sandals and realized that I probably was just jealous of their ski caps (making mental note to put one in my supply box).

But what I really want to share is that four formers students swung by today to tell me about their sauerkraut and kimchi-making adventures.  They all are on fire with how this process transforms the season’s bounty into deliciousness.  They told of friends’ stealing their sauerkraut, of making new friends through sharing their fermented vegetables, and of discovering a whole new way of enjoying their gardens this year. 

 photo taken by student Sarah from winter 2012 class  (thank you, Sarah!)

From these conversations, *I* came away with some fabulous ideas for new products.  In fact, one former student’s recipe was just so simple and so perfect for Curious Farm customers — just as she shared — that I asked her if I could bring it to the Market and name it after her.  She said yes!  So look for Mary’s Special Sauerkraut by September.  You’re going to love it. (And, since I’m a former writer and veteran of the publishing industry, please know that somehow I will compensate Mary for her gorgeous recipe.)

There’s nothing I love more than teaching classes, but I’m in a pickle right now.  I’m worried about scheduling a class during the summer in the new Pickle Lab because the class may fall on a very warm day/eve.  There is no air-conditioning in the Pickle Lab.  Too many bodies, too many brassicas, too many alliums, and too much heat = uncomfortable.

I am considering the idea of waiting until September/October to do more classes.  However, I know that some customers have been waiting very patiently for pickling and kimchi classes, and it might be very frustrating to wait until autumn.  Thoughts? 

If you want to be put on the email list for notifications about upcoming classes, please email me.  If you so so so want to learn about kimchi-, pickle-, and sauerkraut-making soon (!) that you don’t care how warm the Pickle Lab might be (or what aromas of transformation you might encounter), please email me about that, too.  Okay?  This new commercial kitchen space is an unknown environment for me in summer months.

Thank you.  And thank you to everyone who came to the booth at the Beaverton Farmers Market today — students, regular customers, old friends, and new friends.  You brought such joy on a chilly morning!

 

another fun class!

Why would you want to take a class at Curious Farm?

Because you can choose from a bounty of delicious organic vegetables and spices when making your sauerkraut, kimchi or pickles.

table full of organic produce for making sauerkraut

Your teacher is encouraging, thorough, and wears a pretty apron made by Chelsea Phillips (who will give me the link to her Etsy store as soon as it’s up).

cathy in apron, trying not to break the camera

When you arrive, everything is in order.  You have your own space for working.  There’s time to sit on comfortable furniture and try different fermented foods and become inspired by new flavor combinations.

kitchen before the class

Then things get messy and fun as we turn our vegetables into sauerkraut or kimchi.  Notice tea cups (and imagine paper plates).  There’s plenty of time for more kimchi or a turnip pickle.

working with the vegetables

When we’re all done, we put on a sauerkraut parade and show off our colorful jars of happy, ready-to-ferment vegetables.  You get to take the jars home and re-use them over and over as you make your own creations at home.

finished sauerkraut on feb 4th

I really love to teach folks how to make fermented foods.  It makes me want to fly with joy.  I’ll teach more classes this summer and fall and will post dates here on the website.