8 More days until the Garlic Festival here in Hutch. It is all things garlic this month here at Clay Coyote. We will be featuring our tastiest garlic recipes prepared with our favorite Clay Coyote pieces. I will be creating my dishes from my weekly produce box from Loon Organics. I was inspired to create this dish after a recent discussion on different methods of preparing baba ghanoush. I thought, “Zucchini might be a tasty alternative to eggplant.” Mmm mmmmmm I was right! I had previously roasted and then frozen multiple heads of garlic, so this recipe was prepared in less than 10 minutes.
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Roasted Garlic Zucchini Dip
August is Garlic Month at Clay Coyote
This week at Loon Organics, we harvested part of the garlic crop. As I sat in the sunny field and rubbed the dirt from each head, I developed a new appreciation for this little allium. “Nothing is easy about garlic.” I heard Adam say as he moved down a row, rhythmically pulling head after head from the dirt. I was quick to understand why. The heads don’t give up easily. Sometimes they stay in the ground, and all you come up with is the top of the plant. The pitchfork is then used to free the garlic. After each head has been cleaned, they are loaded onto the wagon and escorted by Toby back to the barn for drying. Up the ladder and into the loft of the barn they are lined up to dry. Hearty German, Music, and Red Chesnok varieties of garlic filled the warm air inside the barn with their fragrances. I biked home that day winged with green garlic stalks bursting from my backpack.
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Fennel, Scallion, and Egg Spread
I have taken a hiatus from my oven during our recent heat wave. After working outside, the last place I want to be is over my hot stove. This makes menu planning for week 5 a new type of challenge. Use my entire box, 2 dozen farm fresh eggs, heat up the house as little as possible, and create a flavor explosion for my mouth. Week 5′s box is packed full of old friends, broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, and cucumber, to name a few. There is also a stranger in the midst. Fennel. I did a little research and discovered Fennel dates all the way back to 500 BC. The Greek word for fennel is marathon. The Battle of Marathon was fought on a field of fennel. This hardy perennial flavors absinthe, wards off fleas, and helps soothe digestive troubles. Prometheus brought fire to man in a fennel stalk. Impressive herb! [Read more...]
Swiss Chard and Carmelized Onion Tacos
I have been fortunate to have the opportunity to do a work share at Loon Organics, a CSA just outside of Hutch.(aka Hutchinson, Minnesota) In exchange for a little hard work and sweat, I receive an entire box full of delicious, organic vegetables every week. The gratification I experience from working outside is something I get to take with me as well. I am challenging myself to use the entire contents of each box. This takes a bit of planning, preparation, and research. Until this week, I had never used a garlic scape. I didn’t know of the existence of a Japanese salad turnip, and I had never truly considered the value in properly storing my produce. I have a cookbook from Featherstone CSA near Rushford, Minnesota. This book contains storing techniques, recipes, and other useful information about a wide variety of fruits and vegetables. I have linked the ingredients in this week’s recipe to their website for storage techniques. I would recommend picking up your own copy of Tastes from Valley to Bluff: The Featherstone Farm Cookbook.
This is a recipe from Loon’s first week newsletter. Its combination of Swiss Chard and garlic
scapes makes for a healthy, satisfying, head bobbing good meal. You can always add a grilled chicken breast to please the carnivores at your table. It was prepared entirely in my Flameware Skillet.
Swiss Chard and Caramelized Onion Tacos
1 bunch of Swiss chard, thick lower stems removed (or sub spinach for chard)
1 1/2 tbl. oil or bacon drippings
1 large onion, thinly sliced
1 bunch garlic scapes, finely chopped
1 tsp. red pepper flakes
1/2 cup chicken or vegetable broth Salt
12 warm corn tortillas
1 cup (4 ounces) Queso Fresco or other fresh cheese such as feta or goat cheese
Salsa for serving
Slice the chard into 1/2-inch ribbons. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion then cook until golden brown, about 4-5 minutes. To the onions add the red pepper flakes and garlic. Stir for about 20 seconds until you are hit with the aroma of the garlic then immediately add the broth or water, 1/2 teaspoon salt and the greens. Adjust the heat to medium-low then cover the skillet. Cook until the greens are almost tender.
For Swiss chard this will be about 5 minutes. Spinach only takes about 2 minutes. Uncover the pan, adjust the heat to medium-high then cook until the juices have reduced significantly and merely glaze the greens. Taste and add salt if you think it needs it. Serve with the corn tortillas, crumbled fresh cheese, and salsa.
“Here’s looking at you, kid.”
“Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine.”
The gin joint this Travel Mug walked in to was the aromatic kitchen of none other than Betsy and Tom of the Clay Coyote (and anyone who knows Betsy knows there’s sure to be some “eau de pine tree” in the cupboard).
So you ask, “did the Travel Mug jet over to Morocco?” Nope, it witnessed a little Morocco in Minnesota! For March was Tagine Month at the Clay Coyote, and what a month it was…full of amazing recipes, spices and longing thoughts of North Africa.
And who can think about Morocco without conjuring up memories of Lisa and Rick at the airport in the 1943 movie Casablanca?
Not me. And probably not these lovely judges as they sampled the many recipes sent in by readers. The Travel Mug couldn’t miss out on all the fun, it had to make an appearance at the Tagine Recipe Contest judging panel.
Here is the Travel Mug with judges Kay Johnson (of the Hutchinson Leader), Megan Peterson (of Nutmeg Catering) and Laura Frerichs (of Loon Organics) and maybe, just maybe, the winning tagine recipe is under the lid! Sorry, but you will have to wait for the official announcement to find out who won!
Don’t forget to send in your Travel Mug’s adventure. We’ll stick it on the big map!
Until next time; “here’s looking at you, kid.”
-Coyote East
PS: Want to explore the Mediterranean? Look no further than your own kitchen!







