Adventures in CSA (week 6): What’s $0.47?

According to my spreadsheet, this is the first week that we haven’t come out ahead. However, I refuse to believe it for the simple reason that the item that I had the hardest time pricing (eggplant – which was on sale at the store this week) was also the one item where no good equivalent could be found. Our grocery store carries only the big, hulking purple eggplants. The one that we got in this week’s CSA was a more delicate globe eggplant, referred to as a Rosa Bianca on the painting on the back of a Cooks Illustrated. It also didn’t help that the grocery store’s sale price tag was so huge and so wedged in that I couldn’t even peel it back to see the regular price (without drawing unnecessary attention). So, I know that the price for the actual eggplant I have *should* be higher, but I have no way to prove this definitively. So, the deficit stands…all $0.47 of it.

Prices have gone up again for a few items – beets have reverted back to the higher $2.99 that we saw in a prior week, and both apples and potatoes have started to go up a little. I find it interesting that items which are most definitely IN SEASON in this area have gone up in price. One would really expect the opposite, no?

Furthermore, there was some serious irony in the fact that our grocery store was touting how the devastation from Hurricane Irene makes it all the more important to buy local produce. Why yes. Yes it does. But, since most of the items they put out (unless they go out of their way to note it) could come from Outer Mongolia and I wouldn’t know it, it makes it really hard for me to be sure what’s local and what’s not unless they note the origin. A little information could go a long way, guys.

Without further ado, here is this week’s price comparison…

Week 6 CSA
Weight
(lb)
Grocery Store Unit Price
(per lb)
Grocery Store Total Item Cost
Leeks 1.00 $2.99 $2.99
Beets 1.00 $2.99 $2.99
Butternut Squash 1.84 $0.99 $1.82
Garlic 0.05 $2.99 $0.14
Carrots 0.91 $0.99 $0.90
Parsnips 0.84 $2.49 $2.10
Macintosh Apples 1.98 $1.59 $3.14
Red Potatoes 2.02 $1.49 $3.00
Corn** 3.00 $0.60 $1.80
Globe Eggplant* 0.55 $1.19 $0.65
Grocery Store Total Cost $19.53
Week 6 Savings (Deficit) ($0.47)
Program-to-Date Savings (Deficit) $15.30
Notes:
* Items were not available; closest equivalent was used.
** Closest equivalent is husked corn cobs sold in 5pks; unit price was derived from this comparable item

Of course, there was enough savings already built up that we’re still ahead. I’m now wondering whether we could end up basically getting 9 weeks’ cost of veggies out of the 8 box program, since we are still within spitting distance of $20 savings. Then again, with only two weeks left to go in this program, it may not be possible. I’m still coming out ahead, so far, and that’s a wonderful thing. I’ve also discovered that I really like roasted beets – and that’s a VERY good thing. Plus, I’ve branched out in some of my cooking and rediscovered how much I like puttering in the kitchen. Were the kids younger, this would be a lot tougher, and were they older, this would be a lot easier. Still, I think we’re managing okay. Of the people that I know who are really major kitchen putterers, the overwhelming majority have no children or have children old enough that you can leave them on their own for a while.

And really, I do love that all I have to say to my daughter on a Friday afternoon is…”Guess what I have in my car…?” and she enthusiastically responds: “VEGGIE BOX!!!” That’s pretty fantastic, regardless of whether I’m coming out $0.47 ahead or behind on any given week.

Sweet Summer Squash

Necessity being the mother of invention, and me being the mother of two hungry children (plus a wife to a hungry adult), I needed to invent some quick and tasty dish to go with dinner last night. We were piecing dinner together using the corn we got in our week 6 CSA box, and I wanted to see if we could work more veggies in. So, using the yellow (summer) squash and honey from a prior week’s box, plus carrots from this week’s box, I was able to make something that totally worked. Best of all, it hit on my primary requirements: fast, simple & tasty. That’s just a wonderful trinity.

Note: this dish doesn’t cook the carrots fully, although the squash will be cooked nicely. If you mind having carrots that have crunch to them, you may want to steam the carrots for a few min before you add them to the pan for this dish.

 

Sweet Summer Squash

Cinnamony goodness

 

Prep Time: 5 mins

Cooking Time: 8-9 mins

 

Ingredients

1 medium/large summer squash

2 carrots

1 Tb butter

1 Tb wildflower honey (sub clover if you don’t have wildflower)

1/4 tsp ground cinnamon

 

Make it Happen

1. Cut the squash into small pieces. Peel and cut the carrots into small coins.

2. Melt butter in a large non-stick skillet over medium heat.

3. When the butter is melted, add the squash and carrots to the pan, stirring frequently to coat and heat evenly.

4. After about 5 min of cooking time, drizzle honey and sprinkle cinnamon on top of the veggies. Stir well to combine.

5. Cook for another 3 min, stirring frequently. Then, remove from heat and serve immediately.

Adventures in CSA (week 6): Leek-tastic!

When I got the teaser e-mail for this week’s box, I was excited at the prospect of getting leeks. I don’t get potato-leek soup often, but so have the basic components of the same in one veggie box was like handing me one of my favorite meals that I have no reason to avoid making in the first place. So, picture my joy when I opened the box and the teaser was correct – a quartet of luscious leeks, plus a couple pounds of red potatoes…all just calling out “Make us into soup! Make us into soup!” D’okay…if you insist!

Looking over the contents and putting them into my tracking spreadsheet, I think this is the first week that I may not get a savings over the grocery store, but we’ll have to see. As I’m looking at price variability, quality may end up becoming more of an issue. as it is, color me shocked to find that the corn we got in this week’s veggie box was not only good – it was excellent. Unlike the prior weeks, when it was immature, this week’s corn was mature and intensely sweet. I’m not sued to the idea of corn in the fall, and this stuff was light years beyond what you can still get in our grocery store, so I know that – on a quality basis – the $0.60/ear stuff at our store just won’t compare at all.

 

Week 6 CSA

Potato-Leek Soup...and more!

 

This week’s veggie box contents:

  • Leeks
  • Macintosh Apples
  • Beets
  • Butternut Squash
  • Garlic
  • Parsnips
  • Red Potatoes
  • Corn
  • Carrots
  • Globe Eggplant

 

The eggplant still presents a challenge – I just don’t think that I’m ever going to love eggplant. But, I’m willing to give it a shot. I found a recipe that involves doing things to eggplant with an oven and cheese, and if there are two things that I think go great together: it’s an oven and cheese. I’ll report back later on how it all went.

In the meantime, expect this week to hear about how to make potato-leek soup in the crock pot and what to do with CSA honey and veggies to provide a simple, sweet accompaniment to any weeknight dinner. I also suspect that the parsnips and beets will meet a happy roasting end in the oven this weekend. Now that I’ve learned how good roasted beets are, I can’t WAIT to get those babies in the oven. OM NOM NOM…