Tag Archives: Dallas Farm to Table

Honey Lime Vinaigrette

 You may have been searching for  this vinaigrette recipe, like the bee in this picture is searching for pollen in the dahlia.  This is the last of our recipes from the May menu in the “Farm to Table” write up.  We will continue to give  information about growing vegetables  and using what you are growing in the future.  Keep searching Dallas Garden Buzz!Bee gathering pollen on a dahlia bloom 

 

 Ingredients:

¼ cup fresh lime juice

2 tablespoons  honey

1 teaspoon Dijon mustard

½ teaspoon garlic powder

¼ teaspoon cumin

½ teaspoon kosher salt

½ teaspoon ground black pepper

¼ cup olive oil

¼ cup canola oil 

Directions 

3 Easy Ways to Mix the Dressing: 

*In a blender.  Add everything except the 2 oils to the blender and mix until combined.  With the blender running, add the oils in a thin stream through the hole in the blender lid.  Blend until well mixed.

*In a bowl.  Whisk together everything except the 2 oils.  Continue whisking while adding the oils in a thin stream.  Keep whisking until well combined.

*In a jar.  Add everything except the 2 oils to the jar.  Cover and shake to combine.  Add 2 oils and shake vigorously until well combined. 

Serving Suggestions:

Toss dressing with your choice of salad greens.  Use approximately 1 tablespoon of dressing per 2 cups of greens. 

Drizzle dressing over sliced tomatoes or cucumbers. 

Yield:  About 1 cup

Linda

Tomato Sauce from Fresh Tomatoes

Stir 4 minced garlic cloves and 3 tablespoons of olive oil together in a cold large skillet.  Cook on medium heat for about 2 minutes until the garlic is sizzling and fragrant.  Stir in 2 pounds of cored and peeled tomatoes, cut in ¾-inch chunks and ½ teaspoon of salt.  Bring to a simmer and cook, stirring occasionally, until thick and chunky, about 15-20 minutes.  Reduce heat if sauce starts to stick to bottom of pan.  Remove from heat.  Stir in ¼ cup chopped fresh basil with salt and pepper to taste.

A “Farm to Table” Menu

Looking Back at the May Master Gardener Meeting

Planning to feed over 125 Master Gardeners a satisfying lunch fresh from our garden can be quite a daunting task.  Preparations must start early.  This year was no exception. 

In late January Jim set out over sixty 1015 onion slips.  By mid March it was time to plant green bean seeds.  We weren’t sure of the variety because the seeds were given to us.  However, they ended up producing one of those “bumper” crops.  Then in April some radish seeds were added to one of our raised beds.

Already in the ground and doing well after three years were four different varieties of blackberries:  Natchez, Rosborough, Womack and Brazos.  Also, our upright rosemary was so large it was about to overtake the raised bed planted three years prior. 

Blackberry Blooms at the Demonstration Garden

As May rolls around with the thought of providing a healthy and delicious lunch for our Master Gardener friends it’s time to get started with menu ideas.  Our speaker for the event was going to be a professional “bee keeper”.  How appropriate for our group since we all value and understand the importance of bees in the garden.  

Why not offer the group a “honey” based menu?  Here’s what we finally decided was doable with limited oven space but volunteers determined to meet the challenge. 

Menu  

Rosemary Chicken Skewers with Satay Sauce

Rustic Onion Tarts

Garden Salad Bowl with Fresh Green Beans and Radishes

Honey Lime Vinaigrette

Old Fashioned Blackberry Cobbler 

Blackberries Picked for our Cobbler

Here’s how we did it.  The onions were fully developed and ready by mid May so the harvesting and drying in bundles of eight began.  At the same time, our blackberry bushes were heavy with luscious ripe berries in beautiful shades of purple, black, and burgundy.  Picking them over the next few weeks was a treat. Our strategy was: eat one, pick a dozen.  And so eventually we dutifully harvested over 15 gallons and sent them to the freezer.  

Happily, our “garden to plate” plan produced the following: 

  • Enough 1015 onions for ten rustic tarts (each tart yielded 12 slices)
  • Plenty of “thyme” for flavoring the tarts
  • Blackberries to make six 13” x 9” cobblers (each cobbler fed 25)
  • 125 10” rosemary strips for the chicken skewers
  • Six gallons of green beans for the salad
  • One lonely radish (if you have to supplement somewhere, why not with radishes?)  Rosemary Skewers on the Grill

Thanks to Abbe’s husband, Neal, for bringing his grill to cook the chicken skewers on site.  What an enticing smell as MG’s were arriving!  It was a delightful morning for our event.  Lots of full and satisfied gardeners celebrated the joy of locally grown, fresh organic food.   

Waiting in line for homegrown cooking!

 Now it’s time to get our hands dirty again and put that fall crop in the ground.  After all, some new menu ideas are buzzing around in our heads! 

Linda