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This Week’s Box Featuring Kabocha – Week of November 15

November 15, 2021 by Amy Buglione

This week we have Kabocha from Aloun Farms

Kabocha is a variety of winter squash, often referred to as a Japanese pumpkin. It’s sometimes described as a cross between sweet potato and pumpkin in flavor and texture. It’s sweet taste, velvety texture, massive offering of nutritional benefit and versatility, make it a prized staple vegetable in Japan. You can substitute it within recipes that call for acorn and butternut squash or pumpkin. Most forward nutritients are beta carotene, vitamin C, iron, and potassium with smaller amounts of B vitamins, folic acid and calcium.

How to select a Kabocha:

The two things to look for are weight and color. Skin should be a rich, deep green and it should feel heavier than expected. Ripeness is indicated by golden speckling and stripes on the exterior.

How to prepare Kabocha:

Carefully slice the entire squash in half, keeping in mind that it’s dense and might be difficult to cut. Like other squashes, you’ll want to scoop out the pulp and seeds, leaving the meat behind. From here you can slice it into wedges for roasting, simmering, pureing, or baking. You can also grate it to add texture to breads or other baked dishes and desserts. The skin is ok to leave on.

What else is in the bag?


Bell Peppers
Sugarland

Green Beans
Ahiki Acres

Kabocha
Aloun Farms

Lettuce
Kunia Country Farms

Rambutan
OK Farms

Sweet Potato
Twin Bridge Farms

Veggie Meal Kit Recipes:

Try out these recipes!

Butternut Squash (Kabocha) Mac ‘n Cheese
Yard-long Beans with Kabocha and Coconut Milk

Filed Under: This Week's Bag Tagged With: eat in season, eat local hawaii, farm to table, green beans, grown in hawaii, hawaii csa, hawaii farmers market, hawaii recipe, kabocha, lettuce, local recipes, oahu csa, oahu farm, oahu farmers market, rambutan, support local hawaii

This Week’s Box Featuring Avocado – Week of October 25

October 25, 2021 by Amy Buglione

This week, we have Avocados

Now sometimes lovingly known as the avo, avocados are divided into three categories: West Indian, Guatemalan, and Mexican. Thanks to cross-pollination, however, there are hundreds of hybrids with varying characteristics, and in the islands, trees produce some of the biggest, best avocados in the world. Here’s why: The microclimates and supreme soils result in larger fruits with larger amounts of healthy oils, like polyunsaturated fatty acids, minerals, and nutrients.

Hawaii’s main avocado export is the Sharwil (a cross between Mexican and Guatemalan types)—but only recently. Just within the past five years, the United States Department of Agriculture lifted an embargo from 1992, which banned this island cultivar from reaching the mainland. Prized for its buttery flavor and small pit, this breed of avocado grows especially well in the Kona district of Big Island. But different regions bear different fruit—so there’s plenty to choose from.

Avocados are a source of vitamins C, E, K, and B6, as well as riboflavin, niacin, folate, pantothenic acid, magnesium, and potassium. They also provide lutein, beta carotene, and omega-3 fatty acids. Avocados contain high levels of healthy, beneficial fats, which can help a person feel fuller between meals.

Preparation

How to cut or slice avocados in half:

  1. Be sure to fully wash before cutting or slicing.
  2. Place the avocado lengthwise on a secure surface.
  3. Hold the avocado securely with one hand, and slice slowly down the center lengthwise around the seed, starting at the narrower end.
  4. Holding the avocado in the palm of one hand, use your other hand to twist and rotate the two halves apart.
  5. Use a teaspoon to remove the stone from the center of the avocado. Use a dessert spoon to scoop the whole avocado flesh out from the shell if required. Cut into slices, chunks, or mash with a fork.

 

 

What else is in the bag?


Avocado
Kamaaina Land Nursery

Bok Choy
Kahumana Organic Farm & Cafe

Green Onion
Ho Farms

Lettuce
Kunia Country Farms

Pineapple
Maui Gold Pineapple Company

Rambutan
OK Farms

Try out these recipes!

Avocado Banana Bread
Leafy Green Sesame Salad

 

Filed Under: This Week's Bag Tagged With: avocado, eat local hawaii, farmers market, fresh food, hawaii avocadoes, hawaii csa, hawaii farms, hawaii food, home delivery, oahu farmers market, oahu healthy food, support hawaii

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