Lemon balm recipes for hot days

Prospect Farm has been fortunate to have a great crop of herbs growing in our raised beds, containers, and interspersed here and there in the in-ground growing plots between tomatoes or kale plants. Before I left the farm after our work day yesterday, I snipped some several sprigs of what I thought was mint, but turned out to be lemon balm.

lemonbalm

If you’re not familiar with lemon balm, it’s an herb in the mint family that looks quite a lot like spearmint but has a delicate lemony fragrance and flavor. When I was growing up it grew like a weed around our house, but we rarely used it except for an occasional garnish on a glass of iced tea. But there is much more you can do with lemon balm. It’s lemony-minty flavor makes it perfect for refreshing beverages and cocktails, like the Honey Lemon Balm Spritzer, Lemon Balm Martini or the ridiculously good-sounding Rhubarb Lemon Balm Spritzer.

Here’s our own recipe for Lemon Balm Simple Syrup. As the name suggests, it’s an incredibly easy way to try out lemon balm and has many uses: stir into carbonated water to make a soda, add to lemonade or iced tea, use as a mixer in cocktails, or drizzle onto vanilla ice cream.

LEMON BALM SIMPLE SYRUP

1 cup water

1 cup sugar

6 sprigs lemon balm

Combine water and sugar in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil and stir until sugar dissolves completely, about one minute. Remove from heat. Immediately add lemon balm sprigs to the mixture, pressing gently on leaves with a spoon to muddle them a little. Allow to sit for about 15 minutes, then strain the syrup into a glass jar. Store in the fridge up to two weeks.

Note: This recipe works well with a number of herbs, including mint, lavender, and rosemary.

 

Prospect Farm at the Brooklyn Food Conference

Brooklyn Food Conference
This Saturday, May 12, Prospect Farm will be at the Brooklyn Food Conference, a free, all-day event where food activists, local farmers, academics, restauranteurs, health advocates, and all those interested in food justice will farther to discuss the what it takes to create a healthy, sustainable, and fair food system. The conference will feature keynotes from notable food activists, workshops, panel discussion, food demos, family programming, art, and much more. Free child care is provided. See the official program (PDF)

Where you can find us:

Prospect Farm will be leading the Windsor Terrace/Kensington Neighborhood Meetup.
Members Gwen Hill and Meera Bhat will facilitate the session.
3:30 – 4:15 p.m.

Global and Local Food Security: Taking Profit out of the Food Basket
Presented by Prospect Farm founder Tom Angotti
11:00am-12:15pm

The Transition Movement: What is it? Why now?
Presented by Prospect Farm member Margaret Rose de Cruz and others
11:00am-12:15pm

In addition, Prospect Farm member Jay Smith has volunteered many hours to help organize the conference and was recently a guest on WBAI’s “Eco-Logic” show talking about the conference and urban agriculture. Listen to the archived show

Work Day and Call for Members

Come out and enjoy the beautiful spring weather at a Prospect Farm work day this Saturday, April 21, 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. We’ll be planting, weeding, and doing other early growing season tasks. Bring water and work gloves.

Become a Prospect Farm Member

Prospect Farm needs members! Members work on the farm an average one hour per week or 52 hours a year and contribute $25 per year. Members get to take home shares of the crops grown on Prospect Farm. We need composters, plot managers, and individuals interested in doing administrative stuff. To join, talk to us at a farm work day or email prospectfarmbk@gmail.com

Almost-spring Work Day Feb. 25, 2012

ProspectFarm2010_Sept03

This Saturday February 25, 11am-3pm, stop by to help put together our first raised bed. At Prospect Farm we use raised beds for starting seeds and growing small crops of plants we don’t want to grow in one of the main garden beds. Some of us have already started seeds indoors; if you’re interested in joining stop by and let us know.

In addition, our brand new tool shed is now mostly ready, but we’ll be adding hooks and shelves inside.

Let it rain

water tank

If you’re anywhere near Brooklyn, you know we’ve been getting more than our fair share of rain this month. For the garden, rain is generally a wonderful thing, but it’s frustrating to know that so much of what falls goes more or less unused. New York City is largely paved over (some would consider that an understatement), so when it rains, water runs over impermeable surfaces like asphalt and cement that can’t absorb it. Often it ends up as combined sewer overflow, merging with our waste water and forcing polluted water into NYC rivers.

Recently Prospect Farm became part of the solution to this problem, while also shoring up our own water supplies, enabling us to store rainwater during a shower and use it later when we need it. We installed a rainwater harvesting tank!

The tank, located on an adjacent property that belongs to the Farm’s founder, can hold up to 155 gallons of rainwater. It is fed by rain gutters that connect to the rooftop of the property. About 500 gallons of rainwater can be collected from a 1,000 square-foot roof when we receive an inch of rainfall, so the tank can easily be filled by a decent rain shower (more info here). The tank, in turn, is connected to a hose that reaches to the garden. (The tank is raised on a platform to provide water pressure.)

So far, our garden seems to love the harvested rainwater (as does the water bill!). Good thing, too, since it looks like there’s plenty more headed our way.

Here are the numbers from harvest week 6 (August 7-13):

Tomatoes: 24 lbs

Cherry tomatoes: 10 lbs

Cucumber: 3.75 lbs

Kale: 2.25 lbs

Collard greens: 1 lb

More fun with tomatoes / Harvest Week 5

Mark Bittman has a series of recipes designed to make the most of summer’s best tomatoes. Good thing, because we’re still raking them in, though the rate is beginning to slow down.

This week we harvested:

  • Cherry tomatoes: 16.25 lbs
  • Tomatoes: 52 lbs
  • Zucchini: 9.25 lbs
  • Winter squash: 15.75 lb
  • Kale: 1.55 lb
  • Purple kale: 0.7 lb
  • Broccoli: 0.5 lb
  • Broccolini: 0.45 lb
  • Cucumber: 1 lb
  • Basil: Fraction of an ounce
bounty

My harvest take this week

Prospect Farm Mural

PF_mural

Hi everyone,

Students from my high school’s Environmental Club and I have been working on some designs for the concrete wall at the back of the farm during the spring and summer. As we’ve worked we’ve shown the sketches to some people in the farm, but I figured that now that we have two designs pretty much finalized I’d show them to everyone and we can have a vote to determine which one we should paint.
I hope you like them!

—Yasmin

It’s Tomato Time!

bucket of tomatoesFarmers, our long national nightmare is over: after months of watering day and night, watching the tomatoes torture us with their stubborn greenness, imagining they would never ripen (ok maybe this was just me)… it is finally tomato time. Real tomato time, not silly little cherry tomato time.

After taking their sweet time through June and the first half of July, the tomatoes now can’t seem to stay on the vine. We went from zero tomatoes on July 20th to more than 20 pounds on July 30. And wouldn’t you know, they’re just delicious? I’m just starting to explore what to do with my bounty – luckily, the New York Times anticipated our dilemma and put out this series of summer-tomato recipes. I’m making the tomato stracciatella tonight!

tomatoes 2
It wasn’t all tomatoes, of course. Here’s a rundown of Prospect Farm’s harvests over the last two weeks:

July 20 & 23

  • cherry tomotoes: 21.4 lbs
  • tomatoes: 2.25 lbs
  • cucumbers: 2.6 lbs
  • zucchini: 10.7 lbs
  • fennel (with fronds): 0.5 lbs
  • greens (broccoli greens and kale): 0.25 lb

July 27 & 30

  • cherry tomatoes: 19 lbs
  • tomatoes: 37.5 lbs
  • zucchini: 4 lbs
  • herbs: 0.06 lb (1 oz)
  • chard: 0.06 lb (1 oz)

On July 23rd we also sold a little of our harvest to neighborhood restaurants like the Brooklyn Commune and Crossroads Cafe:

  • cherry tomatoes: 1.5 lbs
  • zucchini: 4 lbs

Weekly harvest totals:

Week 3: 43.2 lbs

Week 4: 60.6 lbs (WOW!)

Other exciting developments: We have planted eggplant, a gift from a kind friend of the Farm. And the peppers have finally started to grow in!