Asparagus forest from Cedar Hill/Kernan Farms at the Grennmarkets

Imagine a forest of giant asparagus spears just next to a lake of drawn butter.  That’s what I did when I saw this lovely community of fresh green stalks from Cedar Hill Farm/Kernan Farms at the Greenmarket.  Asparagus season is another of my favorite times of year.  I make plans for asparagus soup, roasted asparagus, asparagus tarts, and many other delights, but my bunches never make it beyond a quick steam and a splash of lemon juice.  It just seems silly to do anything more with something so perfect as it is, don’t you think?

Sweet, fat strawberries from Kernan Farms at the Abingdon Square Greenmarket

It’s strawberry season!  I feel as though James should be making strawberry rhubarb pies (he has a special magic with pies), but the strawberries are so sweet and delicious that it is impossible not to eat them all straight from the container.  Kernan Farms out of Cumberland, NJ brought these plump, luscious beauties to the Abingdon Square Greenmarket on Saturday.  Once we polished off this batch, we got some more on Monday at Union Square.  Can’t wait for Wednesday’s market!

Ash-e-reshteh, Persian New Year's Soup, (Photo credit: Jennifer Martiné © 2009)

Earth Day is just around the corner, and Chef Louisa Shafia, author of Lucid Food:  Cooking for an Eco-Conscious Life , which I reviewed last week, has generously provided a seasonal recipe for “Ash-e-reshteh, a Persian New Year’s Soup with Beans, Noodles, and Herbs.”  You can find the fresh ingredients at your nearest farmers market – check GrowNYC for a listing of locations and dates for all the markets around the city.  As for the spices, which you can get at your local grocery store or herb shop, just remember how far they’ve traveled to get here, and enjoy every bite!

Ash-e-reshteh – Persian New Year’s Soup with Beans, Noodles, and Herbs

This countrified soup is often served in late March for Norooz, the Persian new year. With beans, vegetables, noodles, and yogurt, it is a meal in itself. If you can’t find fava beans, use limas. Start this recipe the night before to soak the chickpeas, kidneys beans, and fava beans. Boil them in a pot with four cups of water for one minute, then turn off the heat and add a splash of apple cider vinegar. Cover the pot and let them soak overnight.  Serves 6 to 8

1/2 cup chickpeas, soaked overnight in water to cover

1/4 cup kidney beans, soaked overnight in water to cover

1/2 cup dried fava beans, soaked overnight in water to cover, or 11/2 cups frozen lima beans

3 yellow onions

7 tablespoons olive oil

5 cloves garlic, minced

1 teaspoon ground turmeric

1/4 cup dried lentils

14 cups vegetable or chicken stock

Salt

1 large handful fresh mint leaves, torn into pieces

6 ounces thin egg noodles or linguine, broken into thirds

1 bunch leafy greens, stemmed, and coarsely chopped

1/4 cup fresh dill leaves, minced

1/2 cup fresh cilantro, minced

1/2 cup fresh flat-leaf parsley, minced

2 cups plain yogurt

Dice 1 of the onions. Heat a large pot over medium-high heat and add 4 tablespoons of the olive oil. Add the onion and sauté until lightly browned, about 5 minutes. Drain and rinse the chickpeas, kidney beans, and fava beans, and add them to the onion along with 4 of the minced cloves of garlic, the turmeric, and lentils. Sauté for 1 minute, then add the stock and bring to a boil. Boil the beans, covered, for 1 hour. Tilt the lid so the pot is partially covered and simmer, stirring occasionally, for 11/2 hours. Season with salt.

Slice the remaining 2 onions into thin half moons. Heat a sauté pan over high heat and add the remaining 3 tablespoons olive oil. Add the onions and fry, stirring frequently, until the onions are brown and caramelized. Add the remaining garlic and the mint and sauté for 1 minute. Season with salt and set aside.

Add the noodles to the soup and cook until tender, 6 to 8 minutes. When the noodles are almost done, add the leafy greens and the fresh herbs and cook for 2 minutes.

Serve with a large dollop of yogurt and a few tablespoons of the sautéed onion mixture.

(Reprinted with permission from Lucid Food: Cooking for an Eco-Conscious Life by Louisa Shafia, copyright © 2009. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Random House, Inc. Photo credit: Jennifer Martiné © 2009)

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Luscious radishes from SS&O Farms at the Greenmarket at 175th Street.  This is the place to go for mounds of cilantro and a huge selection of hot peppers!

Are you ready for summertime?!

A lot of people think the farmers markets shut down for the winter.  Most of them do, but seventeen Greenmarkets are open each week, and Community Markets is partnering with the Makers Market at the Old American Can Factory to hold an indoor farmers market in Gowanus starting this weekend.

I love the markets in the winter: I feel like some kind of pioneer, bundling up first thing in the morning when it’s 22ºF outside to go out for provisions.  (When it’s warm outside, it’s “food,” but when it’s freezing, it’s “provisions.”)

James and I went to Abingdon Square for apples from Red Jacket Orchards to make applesauce tomorrow.  Since it wasn’t too windy out, we continued on to the Union Square Market to see what wintery things are on offer there and to take a picture of a perfect pretzel from Martin’s Pretzels for the book (which is in its final stages).

What caught my eye?  Wool!  And not scratchy, rustic wool, but soft, rich, lustrous yarns that would set any knitter’s heart aflutter.  In addition to offering beautiful “artisanal sheep’s milk cheese,” 3-Corner Field Farm had buckets of luscious undyed yarn from their sheep.  This weekend they also had sweet, tiny baby hats.  Catskill Merino Sheep Farm offers a wide variety of meat products from their herds, and they also have a full spectrum of colored yarns.  You can’t miss their tent – it’s the one with the bundles of yarn hanging all around it.  They offer undyed and hand-dyed yarns in four weights.  I picked out a skein of the heaviest weight undyed yarn to make, oh, something deliciously soft and cozy.  I can’t wait to start knitting with it.  (I’m no master knitter, but my sister-in-law Judy and I just got some great new needles at Purl in Soho.)

In addition to fine yarns, there are things at the markets that you really want because it’s winter, primarily delicious, steamy, hot apple cider dipped out of huge pots on hotplates.  Root vegetables abound, and grainy breads are irresistible.  I loved the Garlic Raspberry Jelly from Berkshire Berries.  Not only is it a beautiful, translucent pink color, but it satisfies both sweet and savory cravings.

And then there’s the gallon and half-gallon bottles of Deep Mountain Maple Syrup from Vermont.  That should get me through the next week of winter!

Welcome to Markets of New York City!

I visited the amazing, fun, gritty, tasty, and incredibly rich markets of New York City over the past year, took 6,000 photos, and wrote a guidebook, “Markets of New York City; A Guide to the Best Artisan, Farmer, Food and Flea Markets,” coming June 2010 from The Little Bookroom.  I have launched this blog to accompany the guidebook, and also to continue to support the markets every day by sharing information and experiences with fellow market enthusiasts.

And there are a lot of wonderful markets in the city!

There is a growing passion for handmade, locally grown, and repurposed/reloved items these days, and I daresay New York is at the epicenter.  The Council on the Environment of New York alone holds over 50 farmers markets each week in the five boroughs.  There are flea markets selling unusual treasures in parking lots and garages.  As for artisan markets, I can barely keep up with the new ones that are opening all over town.

A lifelong market shopper, I aim to provide a place where people can find out about these markets, go enjoy them, and tell their friends all about them.  The blog features the markets themselves and the individuals at the heart of the markets, be they beaders, butchers, beekeepers or Bakelite experts.

I am thrilled to be launching the blog during the holidays!  I made a commitment to buy all my gifts at the markets, and I have never had more fun during the insane and crowded holiday shopping season.   Please sign up for the forthcoming newsletter emails and follow Markets of New York City on Facebook and Twitter too!

Thank you and Welcome!

Karen Seiger

Market Enthusiast, Author, Blogger