Spring CSA 2024: Bag Three

Spring CSA Bag Three is headed to you!

This week’s bag should include the following:

  • shredded savoy cabbage
  • micro greens
  • basil (or some other herb)
  • swiss chard
  • “farmer’s choice” greens: either spinach, red mustard, wasabi mustard, bok choi)
  • red onion
  • parsnips
  • carrots
  • celeriac
  • potatoes – French fingerlings
  • eggs (from our friends in New Braintree, MA)

Correct storage of the items in your CSA share is the key to successfully eating seasonally.  Here is a Storage Cheat Sheet that I hand out with Winter CSA that also applies to Spring CSA.  Check it out if you need storage tips.

This weekly letter will be coming to your inbox the day before your pickup and is also available at stillmansfarm.com/blog and stilllifefarm.wordpress.com.  

If you cannot recycle or reuse them, we are accepting returned CSA bags.  Please be sure that returned bags are clean and in good condition.

We will see you in TWO WEEKS for your next bounty of Spring bag. The spring CSA schedule is also on our website calendar.

Saturdays:

March 9, March 23, April 6, April 20, May 4, May 18, June 1
Jamaica Plain, 12-3pm

Sundays:

March 10, March 24, April 7, April 21, May 5, May 19, June 2
Lunenburg, 12-1pm

Thursdays:

March 14, March 28, April 11, April 25, May 9, May 23, June 6
Boston (Boston Public Market) 12-5pm
Brookline (Beals Street) 1-6pm
Watertown (City Hall) 12:30-1pm
Natick (Princeton Rd) 1:30-6pm
Worcester (Deadhorse Hill Restaurant) 5-9pm
Hardwick (Still Life Farm) 4-6pm
New Braintree (Stillman’s Farm) 12-6pm


Spinach Basil Frittata (you can also substitute mustard or bok choi)

  • 6 large eggs beaten with S&P
  • Spinach
  • Basil
  • onions/shallot/scallions
  • Garlic
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Olive oil
  • grated/shredded cheese(optional)


Pre-heat your oven to 350℃
Sauté garlic and whatever form of onions you are using in oil in a large oven-proof pan until golden. Turn heat to low, sauté spinach gently until wilted.
Distribute the veg evenly around the pan, and slowly pour the egg over it. Top it with your fresh basil, turn the heat to medium, this is where I move the veg around in the pan a little to make sure the egg is settling in around everything. After the egg begins to set up, sprinkle optional cheese over the top and put the pan in the oven. It should be set up completely in 5-10 minutes, egg cooked in the middle. Enjoy with a salad!

Running the below again because you have shredded cabbage this week! If you are not feeling the slaw, then whip up a stirfry?

Genevieve’s Go-to Slaw Dressing

Simple, simple, simple: To 1/3 cup cider vinegar add 1/2 tsp kosher salt (sea salt would be good too), a bunch of black pepper, a fat TB of Dijon or spicy brown mustard, 1/2 tsp celery seed (if you like); slowly whisk in 1/2 cup oil (something light, I use canola or safflower), Toss over anything shredded: kohlrabi, radish, cabbage, carrot, apple…

Baked Risotto with Greens

  • 1 T olive oil
  • 1 small onion, minced
  • 1 cup arborio rice
  • 1 3/4 cups low-salt vegetable or chicken stock
  • 1/2 cup tomato sauce (jarred pasta sauce will do)
  • 3/4 cup grated parmesan or pecorino cheese
  • 1 bunch greens such as kale, beet greens, or chard, stems removed, washed and coarsely chopped (about 4 cups)
  • salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 400. In 1-quart baking dish, combine oil and onion over moderate heat. Cook until onion is soft, 3-4 minutes. Add rice, stir to coat with oil, and cook for 1 minute. Add the chicken stock, tomato sauce, and greens, and simmer for 3-4 minutes. Turn off heat. Add half the cheese and smooth out the top with the back of a spoon. Add salt and pepper to taste. Sprinkle with remaining cheese. Cover and bake for 30-35 minutes, until rice is cooked through and has absorbed most of the liquid. Should be moist but not soupy.
Erica Fletcher (adapted from Patricia Wells’ Trattoria cookbook)

Sautéed Mustard Greens
Rinse leaves, let them stay wet, chop loosely. Add a splash of olive oil to skillet over medium-high heat, toss in a couple crushed garlic cloves and pinch of red pepper flakes, cook until garlic starts to brown, to infuse with flavor, then discard the garlic. Add in the mustard and sprinkle with salt. Cover and cook until tender (a couple of minutes), drizzle with balsamic and enjoy!

Yummy Dressing for Kale Salad

  • ¼ cup EVOO
  • 3 Tb apple cider vinegar
  • 1 Tb Dijon mustard
  • 1 Tb maple syrup
  • 1 tsp lemon juice
  • 1 Tb white wine vinegar
  • 1Tb white wine
  • S&P to taste

Pour this over your chopped kale and massage in. Add some sliced red onion, slivered almonds, shaved carrot…

Greens Sauteed with Garlic, Raisins and Pine Nuts


Farm Dirt:

Well, the crocus and tête a têtes and phlox WERE pretty on Easter…covered with ice and snow at the moment. Looks like the weather will warm next week (today is the 5th) and we can get to plowing fields.

Stillman’s Farm.  The seed potatoes have arrived! We are looking forward to plowing something besides snow and putting down the first plastic. Then we can actually start planting the potatoes and getting peas in the ground! We depend on the plastic mulch to prevent weed seeds in the soil from germinating and competing with the actual planted crop. Weeds not only take up the nutrients in the soil, but take extra water (hmmm, maybe could be useful!!!!), light and aeration away from the desired plant. The alternative to plastic is mechanical or chemical weed control. The creation of genetically modified or engineered organisms is partially a response to effective and more economical weed control. Just to recap what you already know, we do not grow any GMO anything here and we use, at much higher expense, plastic and/or manpower to keep the weeds at bay; this is why we could never compete with big ag and why, back to potatoes, we cannot compete with price. It is important to us to continue to conscientiously grow with integrity and offer not only safe produce, BUT THE MOST DELICIOUS!…that goes for SLF farm too.

Fun fact: we get a lot of questions about whether we spray our crops with gramoxone (Roundup is a popular brand).  No, we don’t. One would have to be growing GMO, gramoxone-ready crops to be able to spray over them with gramoxone. We don’t have a crop on the farm that would not die if we sprayed it with a non-selective herbicide/plant killer.

Still Life Farm: Busy pruning orchards, seeding in the greenhouse, transplanting crops into the greenhouse for Spring CSA and transplanting seedlings into the grow house. General farm cleanup activities like pulling plastic, burning brush, garden cleanup and of course, shoveling and snow plowing this week, sigh.

Eat well & love your food,

Genevieve Stillman (Stillman’s Farm) & Halley Stillman (Still Life Farm)

Spring CSA 2024: Bag Two

Spring CSA Bag Two should include the following:

  • Onions 
  • Sweet Potatoes
  • Fingerling Potatoes – great roasted
  • Purple-top Turnips – roasted, soups, au gratin recipes
  • Hakurei Turnips – sliced fresh in salads or lightly cooked in stir fry
  • Beets – my favorite way to prepare is wrapped in foil and roasted
  • Swiss Chard
  • Curly Green Kale
  • Spinach
  • Mesclun Salad Greens
  • Apples (Cortland and Macoun)
  • Fresh Greens (cilantro or Italian parsley)

If you are eating with us for Spring CSA, you are really getting to the nitty-gritty of farm food and seasonal eating.  Eating local and seasonal during the early spring means lots of overwintered roots, apples, and squashes.  We have the additional luxury of greens coming out of our high tunnels and greenhouses!

Correct storage of the items in your CSA share is the key to successfully eating seasonally.  Here is a Storage Cheat Sheet that I hand out with Winter CSA that also applies to Spring CSA.  Check it out if you need storage tips.

This weekly letter will be coming to your inbox the day before your pickup and is also available at stillmansfarm.com/blog and stilllifefarm.wordpress.com.  

We will see you in TWO WEEKS for your next bounty of Spring bag. The schedule is also on our website calendar.

Saturdays:

March 9, March 23, April 6, April 20, May 4, May 18, June 1
Jamaica Plain, 12-3pm

Sundays:

March 10, March 24, April 7, April 21, May 5, May 19, June 2
Lunenburg, 12-1pm

Thursdays:

March 14, March 28, April 11, April 25, May 9, May 23, June 6
Boston (Boston Public Market) 12-5pm
Brookline (Beals Street) 1-6pm
Watertown (City Hall) 12:30-1pm
Natick (Princeton Rd) 1:30-6pm
Worcester (Deadhorse Hill Restaurant) 5-9pm
Hardwick (Still Life Farm) 4-6pm
New Braintree (Stillman’s Farm) 12-6pm


Sweet Potatoes and Greens!

We’re at the strange time of year when we are still eating “storage” produce BUT we have lots of spring greens coming from the greenhouses.  How lucky are we that it’s March in New England and we have access to BOTH?!?

Pictured above you can see Still Life Farm’s sweet potato harvest from October 2023 – those are the same sweet potatoes that you have in Spring CSA Bag Two!  Sweet potatoes are a wonderful storage crop and are good for you – these high fiber roots are packed with antioxidants and vitamin A.

At our farms we have invested a lot of resources into greenhouses and high tunnels for season extension. This is really paying off.  We are now able to supply our customers with fresh greens year-round, even in the deep winter and the early cool months of spring.  And the greens are coming in hot, so get eating – Spring CSA Bag Two contains salad mix, spinach, Swiss chard, kale, AND fresh herbs – ALL these are coming from the greenhouses. I’m sure I don’t need to tell you the numerous benefits of eating your dark leafy greens, they are many.  Eating like kings – even in March!

Sweet Potato & Black Bean Burritos from Flourish Farm.

  • 1 lb. ground meat
  • 3 cups sweet potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 1 small onion, chopped
  • 1 Tbsp EVOO
  • 2 cups cooked black beans (or one can)
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 3/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 8 flour tortillas (or corn, as you choose)
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded cheddar cheese

Heat oil in a large fry pan and sauté onions and sweet potatoes until tender.  Add water as needed to keep from sticking.  Add black beans, cumin, cinnamon, and salt, then cook until heated through.  Spoon this mixture evenly into tortillas, top with cheese and roll up.  Place in a lightly oiled 9×13-inch baking dish.  Cover with foil and back at 350 degrees F for about 25 minutes until warmed through.  Serve with your favorite garnish: salsa, fresh cilantro, sour cream.

Hearty Lentil Soup from Edible Pioneer Valley, Winter 2016.

  • 3/4 cup lentils
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 3 Tablespoons EVOO
  • 2 medium onions, diced
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • 3/4 teaspoon coriander
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons flour
  • 1 large bunch collards, stemmed and thinly sliced crosswise (I used Swiss chard, but you could literally substitute any type of cooking green)
  • 1 bunch cilantro, chopped
  • 3/4 pounds potatoes, quartered
  • juice of one lemon

Place the lentils, 1 tsp of salt, and 6 cups of water (I substituted chicken stock) in a large pot.  Bring to boil, reduce heat, simmer for 15 minutes.  Meanwhile, in a large pan over medium heat, warm the EVOO.  Add onions, remaining salt, pepper, and coriander (I also added some chopped carrots). Cook, stirring occasionally, until onions are well-browned and caramelized, about 15 minutes.  Add garlic and cook 1 minute, then add flour, collards, and cilantro (I chopped the whole bunch, stems and all), and cook, stirring occasionally, until the greens have wilted, about two minutes.  Stir the onion mixture into the pot with the lentils.  Spoon a bit of broth from the soup into the empty pan and use to deglaze pan, scraping up any brown bits.  Add the mixture to the soup.  Stir in the potatoes and lemon juice and return the soup to a simmer.  Continue to cook until potatoes are tender, about 15 minutes.


Farm Dirt:

Stillman’s Farm.  Seeding is in full swing.  Glenn has been working away all week, seeding over 1,000 trays of tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers.  Reid and Kirsten were able to get the extensive heirloom tomato collection organized and seeded.  The first group of H2A Jamaican labor – Merrick, Melbourne, and Ali – have returned to the farm.  The forward motion of spring is upon us!

If you are planning your gardens, Stillman’s Farm has lots in store for you later this Spring. Genevieve has many available seedlings listed online, be sure to check out what’s available.  For the best selection be sure to schedule a trip to the New Braintree farm to pick out all your seedling needs!

Still Life Farm. We have just wrapped up our winter farmers markets, we were absolutely delighted to be vendors at both the Wayland Winter Farmers Market AND the West Brookfield Winter Farmers Market – it was a fabulous winter season!  Now it’s on to spring planning.  With such a busy winter, we have gotten a bit behind on farm projects, so we are working hard to knock those out while we have some “down time” in March and April.  We’ve seeded quite a few flats of early crops, including all the alliums, tomatoes, peppers, hardy herbs, and special crops just for the Spring CSA.

Our town of Hardwick is being put through the wringer yet again (remember the Racetrack issue???).  Now Casella Waste is proposing to put a 45-acre regional landfill in town.  If approved, the landfill will be just over a mile from the Quabbin Reservoir – the water supply for the greater Boston area and an increasing number of other towns in MA.  The horror of hosting a regional landfill in our right-to-farm town is unimaginable and risks damaging our town of Hardwick and the many surrounding farming communities.  Curt and I have been spending ample time on this new development.  Please stay tuned, it is likely that we will need help from you our customers one more time in order to keep Hardwick farming.  More to come on this…

So, that’s some “farm dirt” from two of your two favorite farms.

As always, thanks for choosing to eat local with us – our customers are the best!

Eat well & love your food,

Halley Stillman (Still Life Farm) & Genevieve Stillman (Stillman’s Farm) 


Spring flowers bursting into color at Still Life Farm.

Spring CSA 2024: Bag One

Welcome Spring CSA Peeps!

It’s been a rainy week and at this point, we’d all rather see the rain instead of snow. Just not too much rain this year, please! Maybe we can hope for an early planting season???

This week’s bag should include the following:

  • pea tendrils
  • potatoes
  • onions
  • daikon radish
  • parsnips
  • carrots
  • celeriac
  • apples
  • winter squash (Spaghetti or Carnival Squash)
  • popcorn
  • something green (Swiss chard, spinach, or kale)

If you are eating with us for Spring CSA, you are really getting to the nitty-gritty of farm food and seasonal eating.  Eating local and seasonal during the early spring means lots of overwintered roots, apples, and squashes.  We have the additional luxury of greens coming out of our high tunnels and greenhouses, to be cherished!

Store any greens in your fridge, if they are not wrapped, definitely put them in a bag or something to retain moisture. The roots and apples should live in the fridge as well. Store the potatoes and onions in a cool, dark place – I mean, the onions would be fine on your counter, but might sprout in the light 😉 Some of the spaghetti squash has some spots on the outside, but I  cut open two yesterday and they were perfect inside 🙂

Popcorn! A super fun treat from Still Life Farm, just remove kernels from cob and pop (just like making any other popcorn).

You are part of a relatively new wonderful family collaboration between Stillman’s Farm (Glenn, Genevieve, Reid, Kirsten and sometimes Faith Stillman) and Still Life Farm (Curt, Halley and sometimes Kip Stillman), joining forces to bring you a most satisfying addition to our varied CSA offerings. Family Farm Force! Pretty catchy, right? This weekly letter will be coming to your inbox the day before your pickup, and is also available at stillmansfarm.com/blog and stilllifefarm.wordpress.com.  

We will see you in TWO WEEKS for your next bounty of Spring bag. The schedule is also on our website calendar.


Pea Tendrils

Pea shoots

This week’s featured item is pea shoots!  Pea shoots are literally the delicate edible tips of the pea plant.  This is a wonderful crop that we are able to cultivate in our greenhouses throughout the winter.  They have a beautiful, sweet pea flavor that evokes all the happiness of spring.  Enjoy them stir fried, steamed, folded into soft scrambled eggs, or raw in salads…they are a nice source of iron, vitamin C and fiber.

I LOVE them piled on top of a grilled chicken sandwich (any sandwich)!

For a quick delectable salad, whip together a dressing of lemon juice, Dijon mustard, shallot, EVOO, S&P, then toss with your pea shoots, thinly sliced apple, and some Parmesan. We enjoyed a salad of pea shoots and spinach with shredded daikon for Faith’s birthday this week.

Roasted Vegetables

Right, I am sure you are all over roasting veggies, but in case you haven’t for a while or just got your first oven, here’s a refresher.

All the roots and bulbs you got today (yes you radish!) and likely will get in the coming months are excellent roasted. Pointers include (but not limited to) cooking in a medium hot oven and using a glass dish to create the best caramelization, cut the veggies into similar sizes, smash garlic cloves if using, add anything juicy (I’m talking to you onions) later in the cooking process.

Preheat oven to somewhere between 390°F and 400°F

Cut your veg – carrots and snips and celeriac should be similar size/thickness as each other. With the exception of butternut, leave the skin on winter squash and cut into chunks.

Toss in oil and herbs – If using onion or less dense winter squash, toss separately in its own so you can add later and not have mushed or burned onion. Toss all the other veg in 3-4 T of EVOO, 1/2 tsp salt and fresh pepper… I love thyme and sage with roasty veg, but they don’t need it.

Roast – I use a large glass baking dish (the one I use for lasagna). Roast 30 minutes and then toss in onion, and winter squash if using. Roast for another 1 hour, OR until everything is all done brown and smells most sentimental – okay, not really, but there should be some nice browned edges happening.

I probably stir the veg around every 15 minutes, which helps them cook evenly and prevents me from overcooking.

If you are ambitious or have several baking dishes, make a lot at once…leftovers are awesome on a salad OR, puree the lot of it with excellent broth or water, add cream or coconut milk and enjoy some silky soup 🙂

Moroccan Carrot Salad

  • 4 carrots, peeled and chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves, crushed
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 1/2 teaspoon cumin
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp of sugar
  • 2 1/2 TB olive oil
  • 1 TB lemon juice
  • Fresh parsley, chopped

Cook the carrots to al dente, coat with the mixture above. Wonderful warm, cold, or at room temp.


Farmer Glenn seeding onions at Stillman’s Farm.

Little tidbits from the farms:

The vultures are back, as well as mobs of Blackbirds! I am literally having a “LOOK SQUIRREL!” moment as there is a gray squirrel busy outside my window building a nest. She is quick to run down the Catalpa tree, gather up a wad of leaves, scurry back up the tree, disappear into a hole, then reappear 20 seconds later to rinse and repeat.

Stillman’s Farm Dirt. Filling up the greenhouses! Glenn is sick of seeding of alliums and he’s not done yet. One of our suppliers has back ordered our beloved Sweet Spanish and he has more cippolini to do. Speaking of seeds, good grief, some of the prices have gone through the roof and left me cancelling some varieties and looking for alternatives for some others. On the bright side, I did get the tomato transplant list updated on our website – it is as fabulous as ever, and also have been having fun planting flowers and designing hanging baskets for Spring sales.

The first of our amazing crew from Jamaica arrived last Friday and just in time for some good weather to begin readying the fields and orchards.  It is always wonderful when they arrive – in fact, it is like having your family return from an extended trip

Still Life Farm Dirt.  Having just wrapped up Winter CSA, Curt and Halley are busy taking inventory of what is remaining in their vegetable storage. Spring seeding has also begun for SLF.  They, too, have seeded their onions, leeks, hakurei turnips, herbs and I am sure will be on to cherry tomatoes soon.

SLF farm can also be found at the West Brookfield winter market on Wednesdays, as well as their monthly pop up at Lunenburg.

Eat well & love your food,

Genevieve Stillman (Stillman’s Farm) & Halley Stillman (Still Life Farm) 


Winter CSA 2023-24: December Newsletter

December, Winter Newsletter #3

The December box includes the following items: 

  • Apples (Evercrisp & Golden Russet) – Sourced from our friend Keith at Ragged Hill Orchard. The Russets are meant to have a matted exterior – try them, they are hard, sweet, and delicious!   
  • Winter Squash (Butternut and Spaghetti) – Butternut is great in any squash recipe.  Spaghetti cooks to long strands (hence the name) and is a wonderful savory dish.
  • Pinto Potatoes – Still the best, use for any recipe.  I never peel them. Skins are super thin and flesh is extremely creamy.
  • Sweet Potatoes (Orange)
  • Onions (Red & Gold Coin Cippolini) – Red onions make great quick pickles, dress up your sandwiches or charcuterie board.  Cippolinis are sweet, amazing whole roasted with balsamic drizzle.
  • Garlic
  • Leeks – Curt hates onions, so I have been subbing these for everything (He’ll never know, and if he does, I don’t care) .  A beautiful sweet and mild allium.
  • Cabbage (Deadon Savoy) – I consider this a winter green.  Saute, soup, slaw, salad, wraps, casseroles…use it in everything!
  • Brussels Sprouts (Purple) –  Cook and use them the same as the green ones.  If you boil them, they will turn green, if you roast, they will keep their color.
  • Kalettes –  Hybrid crop between kale and Brussels sprouts.  They have a cult following and are SO GOOD.  If you roast or sauté them, they stay crispy on the outside but get soft and meaty on the inside.
  • Greens (any mix of three: Green Kale, Swiss Chard, Mesclun Salad, Bok Choi)
  • Farmer Dealer’s Choice (either broccoli or fennel)   

*Contents and amounts of Individual Share may differ slightly.

Remember: CORRECT STORAGE is key to using your winter CSA share to its potential.


Happenings on Still Life Farm.

Well, we made it through the pre-Thanksgiving madness…lots of additional holiday markets, special orders, and more, but we powered through.  We hosted a combination of the Stillman and Terry families for Thanksgiving dinner, 21 heads in total.  My little brother came home with his girlfriend (for the first time) and we had an amazing visit with them at the farm.  The girlfriend gets the thumbs up, and David wins the prize as the “Funcle”. After Thanksgiving we had a couple days to ourselves, and then it was back into the thick of things with wreath-making.  We did take a day to cut our Christmas tree – Kip is smitten with it.  And the “Elf of the Shelf” has made an appearance in our lives – I’ve now sentenced myself to years of December evenings remembering to rearrange Santa’s helper…at least I have leverage for good behavior in the form of an elf report to Santa.  Mild weather made for a little relief for the vegetables left in the ground – we still need to pick some remaining beets, the rest of the leek crop, and the Brussels sprouts and Kalettes.  Our broccoli didn’t quite meet expectations, but we picked as much as we could of the micro version – I guess when life gives you mini broccoli you just shut up and take it.  The greenhouse crops are looking really nice.  The spinach has finally sized up and my herbs are growing like crazy.  This month we are giving out THREE different types of greens in the CSA boxes – that’s a wonderful thing, and we’ve been working towards this for a while. Winter greens are the equivalent to summer tomatoes.  Seed catalogs have begun to arrive at our PO Box.  As of yet, I have not worked up the energy to begin planning next season, but maybe after the holidays…right now I just want to go to sleep for a week.  As we always do, Curt and I reflect on all of you, our valued customers, and thank our lucky stars that you allow us to live such a wonderful and blessed life.  Thank you for eating locally with Still Life Farm.    


Recipes.

Crisy & Crunchy Brussels Salad with Apples and Boursin Cream…you had me at Boursin.  😉 @starinfinitefood

For the Salad:

  • 1 ½ lbs. Brussels sprouts, trimmed/halved (divided)
  • 5 T olive oil, divided
  • ½ t salt
  • ½ t garlic powder
  • ½ t paprika
  • 1 T honey or maple syrup
  • 1 apple, finely chopped

For the Walnuts:

  • ¼ cup walnuts
  • EVOO
  • Salt

For the dressing:

  • 1 ½ T balsamic vinegar
  • 1 ½ T honey or maple syrup
  • 1 T EVOO
  • ½ T Dijon mustard
  • ½ t salt
  • Pepper to taste

For the Boursin:

  • ½ block of boursin cheese (2.5oz), plus more for topping
  • 1/3 c Greek yogurt

Preheat oven to 450.  Place a sheet pan in the oven while it preheats.  Place 1/3 of the Brussels onto a cutting board and finely slice, then set aside.  Make the cream.  Add the Boursin and the yogurt to a bowl.  Use a whisk to combine. Set aside.  Add the remaining 2/3 of the halved Brussels, plus 2 T EVOO, salt, garlic powder, paprika, and honey to a bowl.  Toss to coat.  Remove the sheet pan from the oven and add the remaining EVOO to the pan.  Then the Brussels face down.  Place in the oven for 30 mins, flipping halfway. Next add walnuts to a sheet pan, drizzle with EVOO and sprinkle with salt.  Place them in the oven for 3-4 minutes to toast.  Remove and chop them up.  While the Brussels roast, make the salad.  First, make the dressing.  Add all the ingredients for dressing to a small bowl and mix to combine.  Next, add the raw sliced sprouts to a bowl with the apples and walnuts.  Add the dressing and toss to coat.  Once the cooked Brussels are done, add them to the salad and toss once more.  Spread the Boursin cream onto a plate, top with the salad, then add Boursin crumbles if desired. 

Crisy & Crunchy Brussels Salad with Apples and Boursin Cream

A few important tidbits to know for the season:

  • Please be at your monthly pick-up or find a sub to pick up for you. We deliver monthly and do not have the flexibility to accommodate missed boxes. If you need to change your pick-up location, please email in advance and we will be happy to bring your box to a different location if possible.
  • Boxes. We reuse our boxes. Please return your empty box when you pick up your next share. Do not rip the boxes. If you cannot figure out how to break down your box, please leave it assembled, we will do it for you. Please be careful! Otherwise, you will be subject to “Halley’s Box Tutorial Session” (No, this is not a joke).   😉
  • Email us! We love to hear from our members…share feedback, recipes, agriculture-related articles, whatever…

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from the Still Life Farm team!

Love your food,  

Halley Stillman


Still Life Farm

PO Box 211, 1643 Petersham Road, Hardwick, MA 01037

Owners: Curtis & Halley Stillman

Contact Us:

  • Email – StillLifeFarm@aol.com
  • Phone – (413) 477-8268
  • Website – StillLifeFarm.com
  • Social Media – @stilllifefarm