CSA Summer Share 2015- Week #6 (11 February/13-14 February)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #6 We are half way through our CSA season!!  We have had several members let us know how the box is working for them and send through recipes that they have enjoyed.  We really appreciate the feedback (as we start planning for next season in April) and the tested recipes are a great addition to our newsletter!  Please email or talk to us on the farm. We really do want to know what you are enjoying and what you find more challenging to work with.
NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING
The heat is back which is great news for the second melon planting, watermelons, red capsicums, eggplants, sweet corn and beans!  I feel like this next bean planting has taken ages and I am really missing these wonderful warm season vegetable.  Peter thought they would be ready today but had a test pick and they still are not.  If we try and pick them too young, we damage the plant.  So we will see what Friday brings.  We do have three more bean plantings after this one...with the last one being seeded this week!The first melon planting is finished now.  We have tried something different with the second which is looking good so far - we used weed mat to try and keep the weeds down.  The melon plants do not like to have their roots disturbed so pulling weeds is not a great option.  We weeded the first crop three times and it was still overrun with large weeds which shaded the plants and fruit.  This did not help seeing it was a cool wet season so far.  The second planting is virtually weed free and full of forming fruit.We are picking from our second corn planting now and planting our third zucchini planting.  The first zucchini planting is slowly sucumbing to powdery mildew.  It did fantastic though seeing it was badly hit by frost in November!

Farm Pick Up times are Friday 2-5pm and Saturday 8-11am.  Pick up is available at other times by appointment only. 

There may be more boxes of cucumbers available for preserving.  If you are interested, please email us at petercarlyon@gmail.com. We will be finishing with the first planting soon and the second planting is smaller.  If you are thinking about preserving, now is the time.

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 itemsBasil – Big bunches of Italian Green basil, perfect for pesto.  You can make pesto without the cheese and freeze it for use throughout the winter.  You can add the cheese once it has thawed. Carrots – Bunches of heirloom orange carrots 'Little Fingers'. We have cleaned out a planting and will be starting on a new planting on Friday.  Some of the bunches for Wednesday did contain "Ugly" carrots.  These carrots are still very tasty and nutrient dense! Celery –  'Tall Utah'.  There is a great recipe for celery soup (link below) tried by one of our CSA members. Chilies –  'Hungarian Hot Wax' . On the Scoville scale (the measurement of how hot a chili is) these rate at 3500-10,000 (The Thai Hot Chillies rate at 30,000). Corn –  Sweet Corn...best eaten on the day you receive your box. Cucumbers – We are growing three varieties of cucumbers in this first planting.  Two have dark green skin and small warts (some with little bristly hairs).  These are "classic" cucumbers with cool flesh and slightly bitter skin.   The third variety is one we are trialling.  It has a lighter green colour and the skin is very smooth.  This does not have the bitterness of the other two. All three have the wonderfully cooling flesh we all love in this summer vegetable. Lettuce – 'Freckles' or 'Summer Harvest'. Onions – These are 'Cream Gold'.  They are a wonderful onion with a full flavour and store well. Potatoes – 'Exton'.   With freshly dug potatoes, the skin is very tender. We find a light wash is all they need before cooking.

Tomatoes –  We are harvesting the following varieties - all heirloom. 'Rouge de Marmande', 'Marglobe', 'Druzba', 'Oxheart', 'Jaune Negib' (a yellow tomato), 'Grosse Lisee' and 'Black Russian' (which is black).   Tomatoes are best left out of direct sunlight and out of the refrigeration.
Zucchini – 'Black Beauty' and 'Costa Romanesco'.

Extras Capsicum – Purple and green capsicums.  The purple taste like the green and turn green when cooked.  The red, yellow and orange sweet capsicums come later in the season. Cherry Tomatoes – We are growing four different cherry tomatoes this year - 'Black Cherry', 'Sungold', 'Little Yellow Bee' and 'Tommy Toe'. Chilies –   'Pimiento de Padrons'.  These are wonderful fried.  We rotate the 'Padrons' through the boxes and the harvest has just started.  We give you a good size bag to make heating the oil worthwhile.  There is a recipe for them here. Eggplant – We have just started harvesting the first of the eggplant.  These are 'Long, Thin Purple' great in stir fries and barbecued.  The plumper eggplants are forming on the plants and we may start harvesting them next week. Melons – We are harvesting 'Eden's Gem' and 'Early Hanover' both a honey dew and 'Hearts of Gold' and 'Hale's Best' cantaloupes. Radishes – 'Cherry Belle' Squash – 'Golden Crookneck' and/or 'Bennings Green Tint'(also known as Patty Pans - We like them baked.  Here is the recipe.)

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box.

CSA Summer Share 2015 - Week #5 (4 February/6-7 February)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #5 Peter spotted a five foot Tiger snake near the pumpkins yesterday.  The good news is that this is a great signal that the pumpkins are ripening...the mice head into the patch to check them out as they start to ripen...looking for ones which may be split or sunburned to feed on...and where there are mice, there are snakes!  The bad news is, we have to head in there too to harvest them!  We are always mindful of the ecosystem we are nurturing and the fauna it attracts.  We also harvest pumpkins wearing gumboots and making lots of noise!
NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING The next planting of beans is still not ready for harvest due to the cooler weather.  It is filled with beans, they are just tiny!  We have started harvesting our nectarines.  Although the trees are not as laden as last year, the fruit is amazing.  We have included a few in each box as a present.

Farming is a guessing game...the predictions we read in November were stating that this would be a hot season.  So we planned our greens plantings based on that information.  This is actually great weather for growing Spinach and lettuce...and I am sure broccoli would love it too. But as most summer weather hurts these crops, and we hate to have broccoli completely filled with the green caterpillars very prevalent during summer, we do not have excess greens and no summer broccoli planted.  There is more Spinach coming along with rocket and 'Perpetual gator' in the coming weeks.

The Autumn crops continue to be planted and seeded.  With the cold we have been having and the days shortening, it almost feels like Autumn...we sure hope that we get some heat though in February.  The field tomatoes are filled with green fruit and although we are harvesting from them, we are not seeing the flush that we normally get at this time.  Luckily the polytunnel tomatoes are still very healthy and producing!

More Sweet Corn!  We harvest this right before the truck leaves to ensure you receive really fresh corn.  EAT IT TONIGHT as it will be the best now!

Farm Pick Up times are Friday 2-5pm and Saturday 8-11am.  Pick up is available at other times by appointment only. 

There may be more boxes of cucumbers available for preserving.  If you are interested, please email us at petercarlyon@gmail.com.

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 itemsBeetroot Carrots Corn Cucumbers Lettuce Onions Potatoes Radishes

Tomatoes 
Zucchini

Extras Capsicum Celery Cherry Tomatoes Chilies Eggplant Melons Nectarines Squash

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box.

CSA Summer Share 2015 - Week #4 (28 January/30-31 January)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #4 We loaded the van this morning with jumpers on!  While we would not complain about the rain we have had this summer, last night felt like Autumn was coming...and we only just started harvesting corn! The cooler weather has slowed the zucchini and the tomatoes a bit.  They are still producing but they do produce quicker when it is warmer.

Speaking of Autumn, the Autumn crop seeding continues as does the planting of crops for Autumn harvest.  The next broccoli crop is in the ground now and the leeks are growing strong!  We are approaching the time when the whole farm is filled with crops. The farm looks like a patchwork with Summer, Autumn, Winter and next seasons Spring crops all planted. That happens about mid April. And it is just a small window of time before crops are tilled in and the winter cover crops planted.  The fields are always changing.

NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING

We have started harvesting the first crop of melons.  We are a bit worried about them.  Although we harvest when the plant slips the fruit from the vine, some of the melons we have tried are a bit over ripe and others are not as intensely flavoured as we like.  The flavouring is due to all the rain we have had and also the cooler weather.  Melon flavour intensifies with the heat of summer and a bit of water stress.  We have started putting them in the boxes as we cannot tell what they will be like without trying every one.  We hope you receive a good one and apologise in advance if it is not quite right.  The second melon crop is looking much healthier than the first and hopefully they will have some hotter days to ripen.

We have also started harvesting the Sweet Corn!  We harvest this right before the truck leaves to ensure you receive really fresh corn.  EAT IT TONIGHT as it will be the best now!

The next bean planting may be ready for Friday harvest but was not ready for Tuesday harvest.

Farm Pick Up times are Friday 2-5pm and Saturday 8-11am.  Pick up is available at other times by appointment only. 

There are boxes of cucumbers available for preserving.  If you are interested, please email us at petercarlyon@gmail.com.

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 items
Basil Bunches– Large bunches for making pesto. Capsicum Carrots Chilies Corn Cucumbers Garlic Lettuce Potatoes Rocket Silver beet Tomatoes Zucchini

Extras Cherry Tomatoes Chilies –   'Pimiento de Padrons'. Melons Onions Squash

RECIPE SUGGESTIONS Simply Perfect Steamed Corn Spanish Truita - Potato Omelette Spinach and Chicken Curry Black Rice, Rocket, Grilled Zucchini, Fresh Tomatoes and Caper Salad - I took this recipe and substituted ingredients to make a great tasting and pretty salad.

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box.

CSA Summer Share 2014 - Week #3 (21 January/23-24 January)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #3 Our Mid Summer Cover crop of Buckwheat was sown in many areas of the farm this week. When turned in, the buckwheat adds organic matter and makes soil nutrients, particularly phosphorus and calcium, more accessible to the Autumn crops that will be planted soon. Buckwheat’s shallow white blossoms attract beneficial insects that attack or parasitize aphids, mites, and other pests. These beneficials include hover flies (Syrphidae), predatory wasps, minute pirate bugs, insidious flower bugs, tachinid flies, and lady beetles. Flowering can start as early as three weeks after planting – so it is a very quick crop.

The melon plantings are starting to ripen and we hope that with the warm weather this week the sweet corn will be ready to get into the boxes next week. The Capsicum, Eggplant and Chilli plantings are all looking very healthy and while they are just starting to fruit they will be rotated through the boxes until there is enough for all.

NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING

Photos this week...

Farm Pick Up times are Friday 2-5pm and Saturday 8-11am - Outside of these times, by appointment only. 

There are boxes of cucumbers and zucchini available for preserving.  If you are interested, please email us at petercarlyon@gmail.com.

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 items
Mixed Basil Bunches Mixed Beans Beetroot Carrots Chilies Cucumbers Lettuce Onions Potatoes
Tomatoes
Zucchini

EXTRAS Capsicum Cherry Tomatoes Chilies Kale Silverbeet Squash

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box.

CSA Summer Share 2014 - Week #2 (14 January/16-17 January)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #2We would really like to hear how the box is working for you, what produce you like, what is harder to know what to do with and what meals were a highlight in your house.  If you are picking your box up, please do share with us.  If your box is delivered and you are home, please chat a bit with Belinda or Peter.

NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING Another 40 degree day this week has caused our lettuce planting for this week to bolt - go to seed.  There is no lettuce in the boxes this week.  There is another planting for next week which looks fine.  It also sun scalded capsicums and apples, burned half of a new celery planting, burned parsnip babies and caused much of the fennel to bolt.  We have harvested what fennel did not bolt and it is in the boxes this week.  We try not to put things like fennel in the box two weeks in a row but if we did not harvest it now, we would have lost the planting.  We have included a great recipe for a warm dip that is really good.  

Heavy rain was forecasted for much of last week and while we received some rain, we did not receive what we thought.  We spent time pruning the field tomatoes to try and give them good airflow to make it through the wet and the humidity.  The field tomatoes are starting to ripen and the plants look good.  The rain came today, Tuesday and as I write this, it is pouring.  We tried to get most of the harvesting done early and then spent the afternoon weeding the pumpkin crop.  There are many small pumpkins forming and the plants look healthy!

We welcomed a new work share volunteer this week, Paul.  Paul is from this area and has spent the past months wwoofing on interesting farms up north.   We really enjoy the diversity the work share volunteers and interns bring to our farm and are also very thankful for their help.  

There are boxes of cucumbers and zucchini available for preserving.  If you are interested, please email us at petercarlyon@gmail.com.

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 items
Basil – Big enough bunches to make pesto. Beans – Green French beans. Celery – This biodynamic celery is packed full of minerals.  The natural salts celery is known for are really tasted!  We enjoy it with this beetroot dip if you have any extra beetroot from last week. Cucumbers – We are growing three varieties of cucumbers in this first planting.  Two have dark green skin and small warts (some with little bristly hairs).  These are "classic" cucumbers with cool flesh and slightly bitter skin.  The fruit and leaves of wild cucurbits have been used in Indian and Chinese medicine for thousands of years, as emetics and purgatives and to treat liver disease. More recently, researchers have shown that cucurbitacins can kill or suppress growth of cancer cells. Luckily, the cucumbers we eat have been "tweaked" a bit to make them not so bitter.  If you peel these, the bitterness is removed.  The third variety is one we are trialling.  It has a lighter green colour and the skin is very smooth.  This does not have the bitterness of the other two. All three have the wonderfully cooling flesh we all love in this summer vegetable. There are extra cucumbers this week.  We have cucumbers with balsamic vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper for snacks.  We also love bread and butter pickles throughout the year.  There is more information in this preserving post. Fennel – You can use this as a main salad ingredient or carmelise it with butter and use it to stuff zucchini or as a base for risotto.  Great roasted too! Garlic – 'Australian White'. We put the smaller bulbs in the boxes first as the larger ones store better. Perpetual Gator Silver Beet – This is a wonderfully versatile silver beet - great raw and cooked.  It has a lemony taste that adds a lot of flavour to a variety of dishes. English Spinach – Eat raw or cooked, with eggs or wrapped in fillo. Tomatoes –  There are five varieties in the polytunnel - all heirloom. 'Rouge de Marmande', 'Marglobe', 'Druzba', 'Oxheart' and 'Black Russian' (which is black).   Tomatoes are best left out of direct sunlight and out of the refrigeration. Zucchini– 'Black Beauty' and 'Costa Romanesco'.
Extras Beans – Purple French beans. Carrots – Bunches of heirloom orange carrots. Capsicum – There have been a few green capsicums ready for harvest with many more smaller ones growing.  The coloured sweet capsicums come later in the season. Chilies – There have been a few 'Hungarian Hot Wax' and we have started picking the 'Pimiento de Padrons'.  These are wonderful fried.  We rotate the 'Padrons' through the boxes and the harvest has just started.  We give you a good size bag to make heating the oil worthwhile.  There is a recipe for them here. Potatoes – 'Cranberry Red'.  Wonderful boiled, roasted and mashed.  With freshly dug potatoes, the skin is very tender. Radishes – Bunches of 'Purple Plum' radishes - great raw in salads or roasted! Squash – 'Golden Crookneck' and/or 'Bennings Green Tint'(also known as Patty Pans - We like them baked.  Here is the recipe.)
RECIPE SUGGESTIONS Spinach and Feta Triangles Fennel and White Bean Warm Dip Pesto! Celery Gratin Spinach Pie - Quite like the triangles above but a different presentation

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box.

CSA Summer Share 2014 - Week #1 (7 January/9-10 January)

CSA SUMMER SHARE WEEK #1 I apologise for the late arriving What's in the Box.  With the 40C day looming and rain fore casted for the next five days, we started early in the field to try and prepare the crops for the weather.  And then we lost power until after 9pm.

We would really like to hear how the box is working for you, what produce you like, what is harder to know what to do with and what meals were a highlight in your house.  If you are picking your box up, please do share with us.  If your box is delivered and you are home, please chat a bit with Belinda or Peter.

With the days heating up, please do leave a large esky out and we will pack your veggies into to help them cope until you get home.  Belinda and Peter do try and find a shady spot for the box but even in the shade, the greens wilt very quickly!

 

NOTES ON WHAT'S GROWING Heat above 36C does really effect crops.  The tomatoes, capsicum and eggplants can drop all their flowers, the cucumbers can just give up, the pumpkins which are starting to grow can get sun scalded as can the capsicums, tomatoes and fruit.  The melons, corn and zucchini seem to thrive.  The cloud cover in the late afternoon, the cool change and the rain falling now helps!There are melons growing well, with some about the diameter of a dessert plate, and the field tomatoes are ripening.  We have welcomed a new intern, Tahlia, who will be working with us through March.  The Autumn brassica plantings continue to be seeded as do more plantings of lettuce, basil, beans, corn, coriander, perpetual gator, rocket, spring onions and zucchini.

We were lucky to have the rain after the heat on Saturday.  Some of the apples and capsicums were scalded by the sun but most things recovered well with the cool change and rain.

We were excited to spy lots of native Australian bees today.  These blue banded bees are great pollinators and wonderful proof that the diversity within our ecosystem is growing!

NOTES ON STORING THE HARVEST Please check out our Vegetable & Fruit page on the website to find tips on maximizing the life of your veggies.  We envisage that many of the vegetables you are receiving this week will last for two weeks with careful attention to storing upon arrival. Although we do wash all the greens after harvest, we are washing to take the heat out of the plants and wash away some surface dirt, not to prepare them for consumption.  We also spray a seaweed/herb brew about every ten days.  While this will not harm you, it does have a taste. We do suggest washing your produce prior to eating.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX The following are the items harvested this week.  Items and quantities in your box may vary depending on your harvest day and the total harvest of each crop.  The boxes are completely governed by what is ripe and ready for harvest and how much of it there is.  We endeavor to divide the harvest fairly. 1/4 share: 5-7 items   1/2 share: 8-10 items   Full Share: 10-12 itemsThai Basil – Wonderful on salads, vegetable dishes and meats.  Great mixed into a summer curry with lemon grass, fish sauce, lime juice, sugar and soy. Beans – Green and purple French beans. Beet Root – Large bunches of tender beets. Carrots – Bunches of heirloom orange carrots. Green Coriander Seed –The fresh coriander seeds lend so many savory preparations a huge jolt of flavor and crunch.  They taste like a cross between fresh coriander leaves and dried coriander seed - bright and verdant but not as intense as the leaves.  They are citrusy and slightly nutty, and they pair very well with beans, lentils, rice, and roasted or grilled vegetables.Fresh coriander seed makes a great garnish on rice, in salads, on meats, in sauces. Mix it into marinades and dressings. Try it roughly cracked and with black pepper on any grilled meat or fish. Or sprinkle them on a salad of ripe tomatoes with salt and extra virgin olive oil.  You can infuse them in vodka for a wonderful cocktail.Crush them lightly and mix them with ripe peaches for a great salsa.  You can replace the dried coriander seeds in a curry but put them in near the end to retain their freshness. Cucumbers Fennel – You can use this as a main salad ingredient or carmelise it with butter and use it to stuff zucchini or as a base for risotto.  Great roasted too! Garlic – 'Australian White'. We put the smaller bulbs in the boxes first as the larger ones store better. Lettuce Potatoes – Wonderful boiled, roasted and mashed.  With freshly dug potatoes, the skin is very tender. English Spinach – Eat raw or cooked, with eggs or wrapped in fillo.

Tomatoes 
Zucchini

Extras Broccoli – The last of our Summer broccoli.  The crop will be back again in March. Capsicum – There have been a few green capsicums ready for harvest with many more smaller ones growing.  The coloured sweet capsicums come later in the season. Chilies – There have been a few 'Hungarian Hot Wax' and we have started picking the 'Pimiento de Padrons'.  These are wonderful fried.  We rotate the 'Padrons' through the boxes and the harvest has just started.  We give you a good size bag to make heating the oil worthwhile.  There is a recipe for them here. Peas Sugar snap peas or snow peas. Wonderful in a salad or a stir fry! Squash

RECIPE SUGGESTIONS Green Beans and Potato Salad Spinach and Chicken CurryWARM ROASTED BEETROOT, CARROT AND FENNEL SALAD Ingredients 1 bunch beetroots, peeled and quartered 12 baby carrots, trimmed and peeled 1 brown onion, peeled and cut into wedges 1 fennel bulb, trimmed & cut into wedges 2 whole garlic bulbs, halved across salt and pepper 1 tablespoon brown sugar 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar extra virgin olive oil 150g soft goats cheese, cut into thick slices crusty bread to serveMethod 1.  Preheat oven 200°C 2. Combine vegetables in a large baking dish and toss through sugar, vinegars and oil. Season with salt and pepper. 3. Roast covered for 35-40 minutes or until vegetables are tender. 4. Carefully remove foil and place goats cheese over the top. Cook for a further 5 minutes or until cheese becomes soft and bubbly. 5. Remove and serve immediately, with a good drizzle of extra virgin olive oil.

You can search our recipes by looking for the key ingredients on our website recipe page.

Please note - Photo is a randomly selected full share box with the addition of padrons.