Spring Tacos? It's a Thing! Chaia Shares Farm-to-Taco Recipes

tacos with ringWords by Susan Able with photographs by Hannah Hudson and styling by Raisa Aziz. If you’ve been smitten by the flavorful vegetarian tacos served up by Chaia at FRESHFARM’s Dupont Circle market, then you’ve joined the throngs who waited patiently in line and then plopped down on the nearest curb or bench to devour them. Chaia’s first retail space will be opening later this spring in Georgetown. Here, Chaia founders Bettina Stern and Suzanne Simon share some of their early spring recipes with Edible DC, highlighting the season’s freshest vegetables loaded in their handmade corn tortillas. Try the taco mavens’ spring salsa and roasted carrot tacos, recipes below.

Suzanne and Bettina

 

Sorrel and Jalapeño Salsa

Sour and lemony, this bright green sauce really stands out when paired with our potato and kale taco, or the sweet roasted carrots below. This seasonal sauce can only be found occasionally on our menu in the spring, and it has a wonderful lightness. Besides topping tacos, this versatile salsa can also be served alongside eggs, roasted vegetables, fish and meats. Makes about 1½ cups.

3 cups sorrel leaves, washed

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 garlic clove

¼ cup warm water

1 jalapeño, seeds and pith removed

5 sprigs cilantro

½ teaspoon kosher salt

Place all ingredients into a food processor or blender and pulse until blended and bright green. Taste for seasonings; add more salt if needed and perhaps a little water to obtain the desired consistency. If the taste of sorrel is too acidic for your liking, it can be tempered by adding about ½ cup of Greek yogurt to make a creamier version. Refrigerate in a glass jar.

Roasted carrots closeup

Roasted Moroccan Carrots, Chevre and Mint

This is a simple and delicious way to prepare roasted carrots. We like to use a rainbow mix of colors—orange, purple and white. Serves 4–6.

Roasted Carrots

2 pounds carrots cut into ½-inch sticks

Extra-virgin olive oil

Kosher salt

For Garnish

Cilantro and mint and pea shoots

Crumbled goat cheese

Dressing

¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil

½ teaspoon cumin seeds, toasted

½ teaspoon coriander seeds, toasted

4 tablespoons lemon juice

1 clove minced garlic

¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes

Kosher salt, to taste

Preheat oven to 400° F. Toss carrots with olive oil to coat. Season with salt. Roast in an even layer on a baking sheet until soft, about 15 minutes. Combine dressing ingredients. Toss, to taste, with cooked carrots. Place on a platter and serve with crumbled goat cheese, a mix of chopped cilantro, mint, and pea shoots scattered on top, with warm corn tortillas on the side.

Recipes courtesy of Chaia, chaiadc.com. Opening in late spring 2015 at 3207 Grace St., NW in Georgetown. Kitchenware provided by Salt & Sundry.

Worm Composting: Small Footprint, Large Payback

Photo: Susan Able

Photo: Susan Able

Words and photos by Susan Able | EdibleDC

Anthony Wallace got tired of throwing food away. Wallace, a management consultant and D.C. apartment dweller, realized that at the end of the week he had too much produce that had gone bad—and he felt bad about that. He describes red worm composting, or “vermicomposting,” as the perfect marriage of his love for digging into new hobbies and his environmental consciousness.

Internet research revealed a deep knowledge base with instructional videos that Wallace used to launch his own composting program. He started by selecting containers for the composting infrastructure, knowing the worms needed large enough containers to do their work and something opaque because they are light sensitive. Purchasing five-gallon paint buckets at Home Depot, Wallace then drilled tiny 1/16-inch holes into the bottoms to provide air, although he points out plastic tubs would work as well—they just need to have a tight-fitting lid.

Next, he ordered his worms from, yes, Amazon.com, starting with 250 red wiggler worms, a number he chose based on the size of the buckets and because worms are prolific breeders, doubling their population in 60–90 days. So, in addition to giving nutrient-rich compost to his gardening friends, he will also have starter worm populations to share.

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SAMSUNG CAMERA PICTURES

“Those worms love apples—you should see them rip through the cores,” Wallace said as he showed how he turns and aerates the compost every 30 days. Wallace follows standard composting guidelines and composts produce (with the exception of citrus), coffee grounds, tea bags, some paper products and eggshells. Eggshells provide calcium for the compost. He does not put any dairy or meat in the mix.

Is there a smell? Not at all. Just the smell of dark, rich dirt. Fruit flies or bugs? Not a problem, Wallace fitted the top of his lid with a filter that keeps insects out or in.

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Total investment? Wallace said he spent around $25 on the whole setup.

The payback? “This project has totally changed my outlook on food waste. Composting as a deliberate process makes you very aware of what you are throwing away and what you are wasting. I’m much more focused when I grocery shop on what I will really eat and what can be composted instead of just become garbage.”

Next DIY project? Wallace grinned: “Apartment aquaponics!”

 
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Susan Able is the Publisher of @edible_dc and writes about food, makers and sustainability. Pictured here with Chef Jeremy Hoffman of @preserveeats in Annapolis, a restaurant that sources only local farm foods for its menu. On intagram @susieqable

The Skinny on Asparagus

By Eugenia Bone, author of The Kitchen Ecosystem, special to Edible Communities SAMSUNG CAMERA PICTURES

When my son was very young he was a binge eater. One fall he ate tomatoes and apples. Just tomatoes and apples. The following winter it was ground beef. But after a full Spring of his eating pretty much nothing but baked asparagus, which he nibbled from top to bottom, I became exasperated and asked his doctor if these eating habits were going to cause malnutrition or…or what? But Dr. Heiss put my worries aside. He said the whole idea of a daily food requirement was bogus (and some say a government-supported fiction perpetrated by the food industry lobby), and that a good diet only makes sense from an annual perspective. Over the course of a year, at the rate my son was going, his diet was perfectly fine. I started to think about this, and how much sense it makes in terms of eating seasonally. What nature wants us to do is binge on fresh, regional foods at their nutritional peak. How much nutrition are you getting from asparagus picked in Chile in December and shipped thousands of miles? Better to eat and preserve them now, while the wild (well, not exactly wild, as Asparagus officinalis are feral: they’re escaped domestic asparagus) and cultivated asparagus are in their glory.

Wild asparagus grow pretty much all over the country. You’ll find them along fence lines, ditches, and roads; though avoid roadsides where you suspect there may have been weed spraying. Once you locate a patch you’ll be able to harvest these perennials every year. (It’s easy to locate a patch before everything starts greening up as they stand out from other weeds. For guidance, check out http://hungerandthirstforlife.blogspot.com/2014/03/identifying-year-old-wild-asparagus.html) The tender shoots or spears come up in the spring, and as the temperature warms, the plant become ferny and bushy, eventually producing little red berries (which are inedible). Wild asparagus can be anywhere from a foot high to as tall as you, and the spears can be stringy and tough, but the flavor! It was wild asparagus that opened my mind to the byproducts that could be made with asparagus.

Cultivated asparagus are sold thick and thin, and vary in color from white to green to purple. White asparagus are blanched by mounding earth around the plant to protect it from the sun. Interestingly, people either seem to love them or hate them. (I love them poached in stock, with sautéed morels on top.) Thick asparagus come from older plants or early harvests, and thin asparagus come from younger plants or later harvests, as the new asparagus shoots become thinner as the season progresses. (By the way, the distinct smell of your pee after eating asparagus is a result of metabolizing certain compounds in the asparagus. The younger the asparagus you eat, the stronger the smell.)

I prefer thick asparagus as the texture holds up better under cooking and canning, and I like the purple cultivars the most, as they are especially sweet and tender, though if you pickle them they stain the vinegar purple. It’s okay. Weird, but okay. Look for firm stalks with tight tips. Once the buds start to open the spear quickly becomes woody. Store asparagus in a jar of water in the fridge as you would cut flowers. If you ask me, they’re just as beautiful.

You don’t need to peel asparagus unless the stems are tough, and then, only the lower half of the asparagus. So how much of the spear to use? You can use it all. To trim asparagus, either peel the tough end, and cut off the dry tip, or snap the spears. Hold the ends of the asparagus and gently bend. It will break at the point where the tender part of the asparagus ends. The tougher end of the spear has plenty of flavor, and can be used to make an aromatic stock. You can use the stock many ways: as a soup base (it’s a fabulous base for fish soup), as a poaching liquid for fish, to make risotto, and to cook spaghettini.

Cooked with fish or eggs, pickled and used in place of capers in dishes like Chicken Piccata, poached and dressed with homemade mayonnaise, or simply baked and drizzled with oil and Parmesan cheese, asparagus are a real seasonal treat. I pig out on them when they are in, especially in conjunction with other spring foods, like lamb, morel mushrooms, and soft shell crabs, and vegetable plates with artichokes, peas, and ramps. Not only are they delicious, but I know binging is the best way to access their great nutritional profile. At least, that’s what the doctor told me.

Wild Asapargus photo eugenia bone

Shaved Asparagus, Pea, and Pea Shoot Salad

I have served this surprisingly rich salad as a second course after a pasta dish, on top of a piece of broiled fish, and garnished with croutons: they’re all good! When choosing pea shoots, look for small pale leaves with plenty of thin, curling tendrils. Avoid large stemmy pea shoots, which are tougher. But if you do find them in the market with very long stems you can cut the stems off and throw them in the stockpot. Save the asparagus ends or peels for Asparagus Stock (below).

SERVES 4

1½ cups shelled fresh peas (about 1 pound in the shell)

12 thick spears asparagus, trimmed (as described in text above)

1 large garlic clove, smashed and peeled

½ teaspoon mustard powder

1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice

1 whole anchovy (see Note), chopped

2 tablespoons olive oil

¼ pound pea shoots

Salt and freshly ground black pepper

1 tablespoon grated Parmesan cheese

In a pot of boiling water, cook the peas until tender, about 10 minutes. Drain. Using a very sharp knife (or a mandolin if you have one) cut the asparagus into very thin slivers on an angle. Raw asparagus must be very thinly sliced to be palatable.

Rub the garlic clove around the inside of a wooden bowl. Add the mustard powder and lemon juice. Mix until the mustard powder dissolves. Add the anchovy and combine well.

Add the oil, mixing all the while. Add the peas, asparagus, and pea shoots and toss in the dressing. Season with salt and pepper to taste and toss with the Parmesan cheese.

Note: I prefer whole anchovies cured in salt, which you can find in Italian markets. Soak them for 10 minutes to remove the salt, then rinse and fillet them. You don’t have to get all the bones, just the spine.

Asparagus bunch

Asparagus Pesto

This puree is great to have on hand. It makes an excellent sauce for broiled fish or for pasta or ravioli, or a poached egg on an English muffin. With added cream and seasoning, it’s also perfect as a warm soup. It is not thick, but loose and light. To make this pesto more robust, add 1/3 cup pine nuts to the food processor. Save the asparagus cooking water and ends or peels for Asparagus Stock (recipe below).

MAKES 1 PINT

1 pound asparagus, trimmed (as described in text above)

1/3 cup pine nuts (optional)

2 garlic cloves, sliced

2 tablespoons olive oil

4 teaspoons fresh lemon juice

Salt

Cut the asparagus in large pieces and place them in a large pot. Add just enough water to barely cover and bring to a boil over high heat.

Reduce the heat to medium, cover, and boil the asparagus gently until they are fork-tender, about 10 minutes for slender asparagus, longer for thick ones. Reserving the cooking water, drain the asparagus.

Place the asparagus in a food processor along with 1/4 cup of the reserved cooking water and the garlic. Add the pine nuts, if using, the oil, lemon juice, and salt to taste and pulse to combine. If necessary, add a bit more cooking water to get a smooth pesto.

The asparagus pesto holds in the freezer for 8 to 12 months. Add salt and pepper as you use the pesto (seasoning loses its oomph when frozen).

 

Spaghettini with Asparagus Pesto

SERVES 4

If you have asparagus pesto on hand you always have a quick dinner. This pasta dish is elegant, beautiful as a first course or a light dinner. For an extra savory dish, cook the pasta in chicken broth (see side bar). You can also jazz up the garnishes: try sautéed shrimp, a dollop of homemade ricotta, or chopped fresh chives, or a combination.

¾ lb spaghettini 1 heaping cup asparagus pesto (recipe above), warmed Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

4 tablespoons grated Parmesan or pecorino cheese for garnish

4 tablespoons toasted breadcrumbs

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over a high heat. Add the spaghettini and cook until al dente. Drain. In a large serving bowl toss the pasta with the asparagus pesto. Add salt and pepper to taste, and garnish with the grated cheese and breadcrumbs.

 

Eugenia Bone-1

 

Eugenia Bone is a cook and author whose stories and recipes have appeared in newspapers and magazines across the country including The New York Times Magazine to Saveur, Food & Wine, Gourmet, Fine Cooking, The Wine Enthusiast, Martha Stewart Living, and The Wall Street Journal, among many others. She is the author of 5 books, among them Italian Family Dining, and Well Preserved: Recipes and Techniques for Putting Up Small Batches of Seasonal Food (nominated for a James Beard award); Mycophilia: Revelations from the Weird World of Mushrooms, and The Kitchen Ecosystem: Integrating Recipes to Create Delicious Meals. Visit Eugenia's blog, TheKitchenEcosystem.com.

The Dish on The Daily Dish

By Anya Kroupnik, special to Edible DC Zena warmly greeting the group, introducing her staff and describing their restaurant’s vision.

The Daily Dish is a quaint little neighborhood restaurant with a focus on the farm to fork experience, which we know benefits diners and local small farmers alike. Co-owners Zena Polin and Jerry Hollinger founded this restaurant and catering company to share their love for seasonally inspired, locally sourced food.

A rainbow of colors in our glasses: Sauvignon Blanc from Bodegas Carrau, Uruguay; Rose of Sangiovese, Alexander Valley Vineyard, CA; and being poured a Tempranillo/Shiraz blend from Monte da Gloria, Portugal.

We dined over a five-course meal accompanied by pairings of wines and cocktails, which were all well chosen and delicious. Welcomed by a flute of Cremant de Bourgogne, Brut Extra, Clotidle Davenne of Burgundy, France, we continued with Zena’s favorite selection of wines.

Margarita with blood orange garnish.

There was a large selection of dish and drink pairings, but our standout starters included the savory duck confit served in endive boats with applewood smoked bacon and roasted grapes and the house cured Gravlax on cucumber slices, topped with dill crème fraiche and capers. Along side we sipped a gorgeously sour, salty, sweet blood orange margarita.

Lox on cucumber

After a refreshing salad course, our third course included sautéed housemade purple sweet potato gnocchi and pan-seared scallops with pancetta atop of a romanesco sauce. It was all about that gnocchi--perfectly chewy and subtly sweet which perfectly complimented the firm scallops.

sautéed housemade purple sweet potato gnocchi and pan-seared scallops

The main dish was rich and whimsical- slow cooked beef short ribs melted in your mouth while tri-colored carrots pea shoots brightened the dish, both visually and flavorfully.

Slow cooked beef short ribs.

Every sweet tooth was satisfied with a variety of desserts. My favorite was the vegan chocolate cake with drunken berry wine sauce and ice cream.

We left with full bellies, high spirits, and a bag full of the goodies: Daily Dish’s Daily Dough To Go, a “make-your-own-pizza” kit, Goldilocks Goodies chocolate chip cookies, and coupons for Silver Spring’s local brewery, Denizens Brewing Company.


The Daily Dish, 8301 Grubb Road, Silver Spring, MD. A full service catering company and restaurant serving brunch, lunch, and dinner. Focus on using only local foods, the Daily Dish is True Blue certified and serves only Maryland crabs. 301-588-6300. www.thedailydishrestaurant.com

Craft Distilling: America’s “Re-revolution”

by Aaron Tidman, special to Edible DC MichaelLoweDerekBrown

Three experts on the craft distilling movement joined forces recently at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History at a new installment of the museum’s “After Hours” series, which focuses on the history of food and drink in America. In a lively discussion about “The Craft Distilling (Re) Revolution” in the United States, the panelists – Derek Brown, a James Beard Award-nominated mixologist and owner of DC bars Mockingbird HillEat the Rich, and Southern Efficiency; Michael Lowe, co-owner and distiller at New Columbia Distillers; and James Rodewald, noted journalist and author of American Spirit: An Exploration of the Craft Distilling Revolution – examined the expansion of craft distillers in recent years and the interest from consumers that has fueled the movement.

“We are a nation of drinkers and we always have been,” said mixologist Brown, noting that distilling has been an important part of our country’s past, primarily for practical purposes. Not only was drinking water often contaminated and therefore not safe for consumption in early America — meaning that men, women, and children drank alcoholic beverages routinely, mostly in the form of beer or cider — but the “economy of the farm” meant that it was more practical and profitable for farmers to distill their extra grain instead of hauling it to town.

JamesRodewald

While the number of distilleries in the U.S. has grown from approximately 70 to 729 in under 10 years, author James Rodewald pointed out that only 17 of those distilleries produce more than 50,000 proof gallons per year, so the apparent growth in output is deceptive. There is also actually no legal definition of “craft”, allowing any distiller to use the term in their labeling, an issue that concerns Rodewald “because we like things that are made by people we can meet and talk to, and we want to support local distillers and farmers.”

Brown considers the definition of “craft” to be somewhat spiritual (pun intended), saying that “craft” spirits are really about “going to the [distiller], being able to experience it,” having pride in your region, and knowing that your spirit was made with “a little bit of hands-on” love.

Historically, liquors were available in parts of the country where the agricultural products from which they were distilled were most commonly grown, meaning that certain regions might be known for spirits made from corn, rye, apples, and so forth.  Today, these agricultural products are available nationwide, but local spirits are still prized.  Michael Lowe’s own Green Hat Gin, for example, is distilled, mashed, fermented, and bottled in northeast D.C. from wheat grown in the northern neck of Virginia, giving the spirit a true local flavor.

ServingGreenHat

While all the panelists agreed that Prohibition left a mighty scar on craft distilling in the U.S., damaging the structure and institutional knowledge of the distilling industry, Lowe and Brown pointed out that Prohibition also preserved the legacy of classic cocktails and modernized cocktail culture by allowing women to drink with men in the speakeasies. This increase in the drinking population created an opportunity for distillers; according to Lowe, in 1923, there were 2000 stills and speakeasies busted in Washington, D.C. that year alone.

Noting that “people consider their spirit their identity,” Brown postulated that the choice of spirits is often the result of a marketing campaign that is influencing consumer choice, asking “Do we really need a bubblegum-flavored vodka or a cinnamon-flavored whiskey?”  Early in the 19th century, liquor was not sold in specially labeled bottles, but, rather, in plain jugs. Today’s marketing techniques are designed to lead consumers to a specific conclusion: for example, many whiskeys are labeled in such a way as to suggest that they were distilled in the state in which they were bottled, but unless the label actually says, “Distilled In Kentucky,” then it probably wasn’t.

Crostini

Following this informative discussion, audience members had a chance to sample cocktails featuring Green Hat Gin and snacks from Chef William Bednar, Executive Chef of the National Museum of American History.  The museum also displayed several objects from its food history exhibit, including one of Lucille Ball’s cocktail hats, an old home pot still, bottles of whiskey, and “gin pills” that doctors prescribed patients in the early 1900’s.

GinPills

You can learn more about the American History (After Hours) events here.

TEDx Manhattan "Changing The Way We Eat" Viewing Party in DC

by Anya Kroupnik Windhoffer, special to Edible DC

A recent TEDx Manhattan viewing party here in DC tackled issues that sometimes can seem obsessive, even to those who are, admittedly, food obsessed. Does a food need to be organic? How was this grown? Was this ethically harvested? The “Changing The Way We Eat” event explored these questions and others, ultimately confirming that food and sustainability do matter, and they matter to all of us.

As with all TEDx events, the organization brought together many experts and enthusiasts alike, from vegan rappers and inspirational teachers to world-renowned scientists. The D.C. viewing party offered an opportunity for local speakers to also share their work, experiences and visions from a decidedly D.C. perspective. Pam Hess, Executive Director of the Arcadia Center for Sustainable Food & Agriculture, kicked off the event by introducing Arcadia’s programs dedicated to creating a more equitable and sustainable food system, delivering locally grown foods via "mobile markets" to food desert locations in our city.

Picture of Pam Hess, “The US spends $190B annually on healthcare, expenses fueled by an abundance of salty, sugary, processed foods. Someone living in a food desert will on average pass 14 unhealthy food options before they come across healthy choices. It is our goal to change that.”

Zach Lester of Tree and Leaf Farm discussed his passion for soil and sustainable farming, reminding the audience that as “soil, soul, and society”, we’re all intertwined. 2015 is being declared the International Year of Soils by the UN General Assembly, putting an essential focus on the “importance of soil for food security and essential ecosystem functions”.

Picture of Zach Lester, “You have to give back to soil to be able to use it. Soil is living, it’s an organism that we must cherish and care for.”

Other speakers included Amos Desjardins, who runs for causes such as battling food insecurity for every Virginian; Tom McDougall, founder of 4P Foods, who spoke of utilizing technology to maximize benefits of eating locally; and Elizabeth O'Connell of Green America, who emphasized the importance of knowing where our food comes from and how it is harvested.

Sweetgreen salad.

Feeding this crowd was as important as what was said, simply because the attendees were people who truly care about what’s on their plates. Lunch featured fresh salads from sweetgreen, along with Fruitcycle’s locally sourced cinnamon apple chips and lemonade from Evensong Farm, made with herbs from their Maryland farm. Later in the afternoon, Sprout Kitchen Gardens shared their strawberry salsa and onion dip, a tasty footnote to a day spent learning about innovative food and sustainability programs and keeping the passion for food alive.

Sprout Kitchen Gardens strawberry salsa.


Digital Editor note: thanks to Danielle Tergis of the Tergis Group for organizing this local viewing party and arranging a start studded and engaging panel.