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Squash with Feta, Walnuts and Dill

And finally, an idea for turning that squash into a salad.

Raw zucchini is wonderful when sliced very thin, carpaccio-thin. In this recipe it’s topped with feta, dill, and walnuts for a Greek spin, but it would be equally delicious with shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano, basil, and pine nuts. Don’t be tempted to save time and toss the zucchini with the other ingredients in a bowl—it will turn watery, and won’t be nearly as pretty.

This recipe comes from the food blog, Once Upon a Chef.

Serves 4

Baked Squash Sticks and Sweet Onion Dip

This recipe came from King Arthur Flour. If you still have an onion from earlier this season, you’re golden. If not, Vidalias will still be at the market for a few more weeks.

Garlic Dill Pickles

Refrigerator dill pickles could not be easier to make. Last year when my garden was producing a huge crop of cucumbers, I made up the brine and refrigerated it. When I came in with my cucumbers-of-the-day, I would rinse them and put them into quart jars, add dill, etc. and fill the jar with brine. Tucked into the spare refrigerator to “ferment”, these pickles make half sours in a day or two, and full sours in a week. They’ll keep for a month or so, but really not much longer since they’re not processed. The nice thing is that you can just make up a jar or two. So if you want to give it a try, don’t worry about needing 3 pounds of cucumbers. Make up the brine and fill your jars with as many of this week’s cucumbers as you want to pickle. We’ll cross our fingers that there are more cucumbers in our future.

Cucumber Sangria

Let’s talk cucumbers. I’ve got two ideas for you. One drink, one pickle (see Garlic Dill Pickles).

From “The Deen Brothers Get Fired Up: Grilling, Tailgating, Picnicking, and More” by Jamie & Bobby Deen and Melissa Clark (Ballantine Books).

Serves 6

Roasted Sweet Peppers

When I see a bouquet of peppers like those in this week’s box, I’m so excited. You can eat them fresh, sliced into salads or stuffed with rice and cheese or grilled alongside a few links of Riverview brats. But that’s not my plan for those peppers.
I’m going to roast them. It’s a matter of a few minutes to turn those peppers into an ingredient that will flavor our meals for many weeks to come.

Sweet-and-Sour Veggie Pickles

If you have any leftover green beans from last week, they’d work fine in this recipe as well.

Adapted from a recipe that appeared in Southern Living

Makes about 8 cups

Marcella Hazan’s Tomato Sauce with Onion and Butter

I’ve seen this recipe printed in various places for many years, but have yet to try it. This weekend, that’s going to change. I was reminded of it this week on the blog Food52.

From Marcella Hazan’s “Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking”

Serves 6, enough to sauce 1 to 1 1/2 pounds pasta

Minestrone with Field Peas and Almond Pistou

Adapted from a recipe published in the New York Times: September 28, 2010.

Yield: 4 to 6 servings.

Shrimp and Southern Pea Salad

Now on to the real stars of this week’s box – the field peas.

You can use any southern pea in this recipe, but the cooking time will vary by variety and how mature the peas were when harvested. Our fresh pink-eye peas should cook pretty quickly.

Hands on: 20 minutes
Total time: 40 minutes
Serves: 4

Santa Fe Summer Pot

Or how about this idea for a dish that will use up some tomatoes and require no cooking (if you buy precooked shrimp)? It’s from “The Splendid Table’s How to Eat Supper: Recipes, Stories and Opinions from Public Radio’s Award-Winning Food Show” by Lynne Rossetto Kasper and Sally Swift (Clarkson Potter Publishers, 2008). The shrimp could be switched out for tofu, tempeh, chicken, meats or other fish.

Serves 4