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Chicken and Dumplings

We’ll all have chicken and dumplings when she comes…

Materials

One or two whole pasture-raised chickens. Giblets optional.

A large pot

Onion, carrot, celery (amount depends on what flavor you want)

Salt, whole peppercorns, herbs de Provence or some other mixture of herbs including thyme and marjoram. (Or…not, if you don’t like thyme and marjoram with chicken. You do what you want.) A few bay leaves, and or some dried mushrooms or mushroom powder would go well. Maybe soy sauce? Something for umami flavor is the idea.

Other vegetables (canned or frozen corn or peas work well)

Dumplings (see below)

Optional: grass-fed butter, green onion, parsley

Method

Put the chicken(s) in the pot and cover it with plenty of water. Simmer the chicken for several hours. A lid helps. Do not boil the chicken, this can make it tough.

Remove the chicken from the pot. Reserve the broth (which you have just made) in the pot. Let the chicken cool.

Vegetables and Broth. (Heirloom carrots, some are yellow.)

Chop onion, carrot, and celery and add to the pot with the broth. Add salt. Add a small handful of peppercorns. Add herbs or herb mix. Add bay leaves. Turn up the heat to a slow boil.

Shredded Chicken separated from bones

When the chicken is cool enough to handle, pull off the meat. Discard the bones, and the skin unless you want to eat it; optionally, save the largest, thickest bones.

Taste the broth, add salt if needed. Optionally, add the largest chicken bones back to the stock for more flavor. (You will need to remove these eventually.) Continue boiling the soup for 10-15 minutes, then reduce to a simmer.

When the carrot and celery are soft, add back in the chicken meat and any extra vegetables. We like to use sweet corn. You can cut the kernels off the cob when corn is in season and freeze it for use over the winter.

A chicken in every pot

Taste for seasoning one last time. Optionally, add in a few tablespoons of butter.

Drop dumpling batter, mixed

Add the dumplings. There are a lot of different dumpling recipes. You can use a biscuit mix from the store, you can make spaetzle, you have a lot of options. A simple drop dumpling recipe is as follows: Combine 2 cups of flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1/2 teaspoon baking soda, 2 teaspoons sugar, salt, and seasonings (we use a seasoning salt). Mix together 1 cup of whole milk, a few tablespoons of melted butter, and a dash of apple cider vinegar. Fold the wet ingredients into the dry. Don’t overmix. Make sure the soup is simmering enough to create steam. Use 2 spoons to drop (thus the name) large spoonfuls of dumpling batter onto the top of the soup. Cover with a lid and simmer the dumplings 15 minutes.

Serve the dumplings right away, or they’ll begin to disintegrate into the soup (not the end of the world). Consider garnishing with green onion and fresh parsley.

Boiled Meat Dinner

IMG_20200315_170456.jpg

Grey!

Tasteless!

Boring!

None of the above!

If this were called “Simmered in a Bone Broth with Multiple Layers of Flavor Dinner” nobody would remember the name, but we would all remember how good it tastes.

You can play around with variations within the theme of the basic components; here is how we made it. 4-year-old approved.

Pigs feet (cleaned and split) - or some other cartaliginous, flavorful pork cut. There might be a few small hairs left on your pigs feet: take a carmelizing torch or lighter or other flame source and burn those off.

Oxtail - or some other cartaliginous, flavorful beef cut (or perhaps mutton).

We added in beef short ribs as well.

If not using pigs feet or a lot of oxtail, consider adding chicken feet or some marrow bones. The goal is a rich, gelatinous bone broth.

For extra flavor, sear or roast the meats and bones to brown them before boiling.

Place in a large pot, cover with water, bring to a rolling boil.

Turn down the heat to a simmer, so that the water steams and bubbles are just barely coming to the surface. Skim off most of the gunk that came to the top after bringing it to a boil. There’s nothing bad about this stuff, but it forms a layer on top of the broth that interferes with proper cooking.

Keep slowly simmering and check back tomorrow and see if the meat is falling off the bones yet.

Remove the oxtail and shortribs and set aside, then carefully strain the very hot broth. Most of the pig’s feet will have fallen apart and dissolved into the broth, so feel free to pick out any larger pieces of meat that are left and then throw out the bones.

To the broth add back the short ribs, oxtail, and trotter meat, then add:

Salt to taste and whatever herbs you like

Whatever amounts you like of celery, mushrooms, pearl onions, and root vegetables (carrots, turnips, parsnips, rutabega)

and one Whole Chicken

Continue simmering until the chicken is fully cooked.

Serve by removing the meats and vegetables from the broth, then serve the broth on the side.

CSA Pickups and Farmers Markets, Summer 2019 (updated 9/27!)

This is a list of farmers markets we will be attending this summer. The list of markets is not final and we will be at some markets in the winter time as well, so check back here or send us an email if you don’t see a market near you.

If we’re not at your local market one week, chances are we are somewhere else and we’ll be back to your area soon.

CSA Pickups

This list also includes dates and locations for CSA pickups. We continue to look for additional CSA pickup locations, so if we don’t have anything convenient to you then please let us know.

When markets close for the season we will be adding CSA pickup locations in the same areas for the winter months, so when your CSA pickup spot closes you will be able to pick up chicken at another location nearby. (If you want that pickup location to be in your driveway, let us know.)

Chicken Subscription CSA Members: If you ever need to change your CSA pickup location or postpone pickup until some other time, just let us know at least a few days in advance and we will do our best to accommodate you. If we don’t hear from you and you don’t show up to get your chicken, unfortunately we can’t give you a refund (we can’t sell somebody else your chicken.)

Albany Farmers Market (SW Ellsworth St. & SW 4th Ave., 9am - 1pm Saturdays)

We are cutting back on market days in Albany because we are beginning to run low on several popular items. If you want something in particular, we urge you not to wait too long!

October 5 (CSA Pickup)

November 2 (CSA Pickup)

November 16

Beginning in December, Albany CSA pickups will be at the farm in Scio. Contact us for more information.

Newberg Farmers Market (N Howard St. & E 1st, 1pm - 6pm (Wednesdays)

October 9 (last market this year)

Portland Farmers Market - Shemanski Park (10am - 2pm Wednesdays)

October 23 (CSA PICKUP)

November 27 (CSA PICKUP)

Beginning in December, Shemanski Park CSA pickups will be move to 3415 SW Stonebrook Drive in Portland.

West Linn Summer Market (14th St. & Willamette Falls Drive, 4pm - 8pm Wednesdays)

As the West Linn market has ended for the year, West Linn CSA pickups are at 2562 Pimlico Drive in West Linn.