Posts tagged turnips

Pan-Fried Turnips

Posted by Lisa

Pan-Fried Turnips

Turnips are another under-appreciated vegetable, I think.  They really aren’t all that common in American kitchens.  I’ve made turnips in quite a few different dishes, from stews and sautées to sliced onto lettuce-based salads and starring in a turnip slaw.  Out of all the preparations I’ve tried, the one we love most and, incidentally, the one I prepare most frequently is pan-fried turnips.  The simplicity of this dish makes it perfect for a busy evening, but the taste is outstanding.  Almost browning the butter in the sauté pan before adding the turnip wedges  imparts a slightly nutty and smooth flavor, while the caramelized  edges of the turnips are sweet and tender and some of the centers are just faintly bitter, but not unpleasantly so.  The whole pan of turnips is always eaten up when I prepare this side dish and it’s enjoyed by even our pickiest eater.

Pan-Fried Turnips

printable recipe

  • two bunches of turnips (or about 1 1/2 pounds loose turnips)
  • 2-3 tablespoons butter
  • sea salt

Wash and trim the ends from the turnips.  Cut into wedges. I cut smaller turnips into quarters and larger into 1/8’s or 1/12th’s.  Heat a heavy bottomed sauté pan (I always use my enameled cast iron pan) over medium-high heat.  When pan is hot, add enough butter to coat the bottom of the pan when it is melted.  Right before butter starts to brown, add turnip wedges.  Continue to cook on medium-high heat, stirring frequently to prevent burning.  You want the cut edges to brown nicely, but they can also start to burn pretty quickly.  When the turnips are nicely browned, reduce heat to low and continue to cook until they are tender all the way through.  When the turnips are tender, remove from heat and season to taste with sea salt.

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Growing Wild Meal Plan: 6/10-6/16

Posted by Sheila

Our veggie harvests this week include lettuce, turnips, radishes, green garlic, garlic scapes, green onions, kale, parsley, chard, and kohlrabi.  We also started harvesting some of our lovely dark cornish meat chickens, so that along with our goat meat means we have to purchase less meat.  We buy a little lamb from our friend’s at Bide-a-Wee and until our pigs get processed next week, some pork from Sky Ranch of Yamhill, Oregon.  Here is this week’s meal plan.  The last few weeks–the first few weeks of our market season–were mostly chaotic as our schedules shifted and we all adjusted.  All the progress I had made at planning meals went out the door, but I made one this week, because I have really come to enjoy the ease of once a week shopping and no last minute dinner debacles when I have no idea what to cook.

  • Thursday: Breakfast–Poached eggs with pinto beans & green garlic   Lunch–Chicken stock with polenta, green garlic, and kale         Dinner–Tacos w/ ground lamb, green garlic, and kale w/ radish salsa and chopped lettuce
  • Friday:  Breakfast–Buckwheat pancakes w/ scrambled eggs                  Lunch–Curried lentils with turnip greens and green garlic            Dinner–Slow cooked goat stew w/ sun-dried tomatoes and green garlic, creamy polenta, braised swiss chard and a reduction sauce
  • Saturday:  Breakfast–Egg scramble w/ kale and green onions               Lunch–Chicken liver pate & hummus w/ rye crackers, roasted turnip salad (made like potato salad w/ bacon, green onions, & mayonnaise), lettuce Dinner–Roast chicken with braised turnip greens and green garlic
  • Sunday: Breakfast–Fried eggs and bacon w/ whole green onions        Lunch– Gluten-free pasta w/ leftover goat stew, parsley, and green onion Dinner–Baked beans, Lettuce Salad w/ radishes
  • Monday:Breakfast–Buckwheat pancakes w/ eggs                             Lunch–Pate & white bean dip w/ sunflower seed crackers, kohlrabi slices, lettuce salad w/ radishes                                                                        Dinner–White bean & kale soup w/ garlic scape pesto
  • Tuesday:Breakfast–Scrambled eggs with garlic scape pesto                   Lunch–Leftover soup                                                                               Dinner–Lamb meatballs, white bean dip, roasted turnips, salad
  • Wednesday:  Breakfast–Egg drop soup w/green onions and turnip greens Lunch–Polenta pizza w/ sun-dried tomato & parsley pesto (made with walnuts instead of pine nuts), salad                                                               Dinner–Sprouted lentil and kale patties w/ turnip fries

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Asian Turnip Slaw

Posted by Lisa

 

IMG_2954

Asian Turnip Slaw

 

Salad turnips and carrots are so sweet this time of year.  Combined with the gentle acidity of rice wine vinegar and the nuttiness of sesame oil, they made a light and simple salad.  My youngest informed me that  she could eat the whole bowl of turnips.

Asian Turnip Slaw

printable recipe

  • 3 medium salad turnips, halved or quartered, then cut into very thin slices
  • 1 large or two medium carrots, halved and cut into very thin slices
  • 3-4 scallions, finely chopped
  • 3-4 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons honey
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil

Place turnip and carrots slices in a bowl with chopped scallions.   Add 3 tablespoons of rice wine vinegar and remaining ingredients.  Toss to combine.  Let sit for 15-30 minutes to allow flavors to mingle and then add more rice wine vinegar if necessary.  Serve at room temperature.

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Spring Radishes and Salad Turnips Sauteed

tunrips and radishes

Radishes are a given in spring, and if you are getting produce from local farmers, you are likely to begin seeing salad turnips in your CSA share or at farmer’s market right about now too.  Unlike the more common fall and winter purple top turnip which works its way into those cold weather roasted root vegetable dishes, salad turnips grow quickly and are sweet and tender.  After months of vegetables that are more often than not served cooked rather than fresh, spring’s first radishes and these lovely salad turnips are hard not to simply eat off the greens in the case of radishes, sliced like apple in the case of the turnips.

But maybe you don’t care for that bit of spice a fresh radish wields or you want to make the most of those sugars encircled in those sweet round turnips.  There is a simple and delicious solution to either of these dilemmas.  A quick saute of either of these spring roots or both combined softens their crunch just a bit, dissapaits the heat from the radishes, and allows for those sweet turnip sugars to caramelize, making for a great side dish or stir-fry starter.   Just start with some green garlic, garlic scapes, or storage allium and saute until translucent, add these spring eats and continue to saute until  you see the sugars from the roots begin to turn a lovely golden brown.

my children's plate Quick Post CSA harvest day dinner:

plum purple and cherry belle radishes sautéed with turnips

with chicken and hummus, salad w/ balsamic vinegar

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Into the belly of spring

Posted by Sheila

shamrock cookies

St. Patrick’s Day came and went with Irish Pork Chops braised with stout and leeks, served with roasted cabbage, turnips, and more leeks (leeks, leeks, leeks…our winter staple which we are still enjoying even as we size up the Walla Wallas as they work their way towards spring harvests).  We also had this gluten-free Irish soda bread, ours made with sweet sorghum rather than teff flour.  Our gluten free baking is usually reserved for just such special occasions, and the littlies in the house revel in the treat–we had the leftover bread as French toast the following morning, it was as if they had woken up in heaven.  Dessert was rice flour shamrock shortbread drizzled with mint chocolate and for the adults,  Irish Cream Coffee with the whiskey but not the Creme de Menthe, just another drizzle of the mint chocolate on the top of the whipped cream.

St Patrick's Day

With the passing of this holiday that we love and feel a bit akin to having our own fair share of Irish blood between the two of us and vested in our kids, we invoke a celebratory mood that we keep with us to mark the coming of Spring (and our son’s birthday) just a few days later.  As we make the move from winter to spring, we also begin to shift from winter to spring eating.  The changes have already begun on our table with a handful of lovely baby lettuce salads for a few dinner parties and to round out some weeknight meals for the first time since early December!  We have also begun harvesting our kale, adding  it either lightly sauteed or just tossed and rubbed in oil and vinegar  with just about every meal we can because it is beyond delicious harvested now, after the winter’s cold has sweetened it more than you can imagine when you try to recall summer’s more biting kale and even when compared to the fall’s first frosted leaves.

The mustards and Asian greens have begun to flower, sending up tender rapinisthat we eat out of hand for snacks or saute just a moment to toss with pasta or to top a simple olive oil/aged cheese pizza (we are using Willamete Valley Cheese Co.’s Borenkaas, a raw cow milk aged gouda), this replacing our regular winter pizza of arugula and sun dried tomatoes or sauce tomatoes from the freezer.  The arugula, too, now budding, no longer the base of our simple, winter side salads.

We are only three years into our lives on this farm, two years into eating really seasonally, and just one year into growing vegetables through the winter.  Still, more than ever, we mark the circle around the sun in vegetables.  The trees, leaves or not, flowers here or gone, birds, bees, rain or sun…these things we feel and keep time by with great enthusiasm, even more so since we began to farm; but as we see the dishes on our table wax and wane the varying season’s bounty, we feel even more deeply connected to this cycle. And so we march forth towards the equinox with bellies full of winter and ready to be filled with spring.

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Turnip Salad

Posted by Lisa
Turnip Salad

Turnip Salad

I bet that when most people think of turnips, they think of eating them boiled or mashed or even in a soup.  Farm fresh, overwintered turnips are sweet and crisp and make a delightful late winter salad.

Fort this turnip salad, I washed and very thinly sliced a share’s worth of  turnips.  I had some mung bean sprouts (so easy to sprout yourself) on hand, though any sprout would be delicious and I also sprinkled some sunflower seeds on top and then drizzled a simple Dijon balsamic vinaigrette on top.  This fresh, crispy salad was the perfect accompaniment to quiche.

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