The Veggiana Monologues

I’m not a vegetarian, but I do like vegetables.

A few years ago when I lived in Nottingham I decided on a plan to increase the quantity and quality of the vegetables I was eating by ordering a weekly box of from an organic supplier. The one I picked there was River Nene who provided very good stuff all year around. When I moved I had to cancel the arrangement, and I remained predominantly inorganic while I was renting a flat here. When I finally managed to buy a new house and move in, though, I looked to reestablish the regular deliveries. I was pleased to find a company called River Ford, which is kind of affiliated to River Nene, and which undertakes deliveries of organic produce in the Cardiff area. I’ve been getting a box from them regularly for a few months now, and I’m very happy with the quality.

There are several reasons why I get my vegetables this way.

First and foremost, organically grown vegetables definitely taste far nicer than the bland varieties carried by most mainstream suppliers, including both supermarkets and local greengrocers. Once you’ve tasted how carrotty a carrot should be you’ll never want to eat one of those supermarket ones that look too orange to be true and have no flavour at all.  This applies not just to carrots but to most vegetables; fresh organic ones are so much better. Although, strictly speaking, they are not vegetables, organic mushrooms are particularly good. I often get the huge flat portobello variety which are absolutely delicious and are very easy to include in all kinds of dishes.

Some supermarkets do carry organic ranges but the prices are astronomical, and they are often shipped in from all around the world. That brings me to the second point which is that all (or virtually all) the vegetables I get in my weekly box are grown locally. They’re correspondingly fresh and the environmental impact of bulk transportation is also lessened.

Third, the nature of the scheme is that all the vegetables are seasonal. I think it’s quite sad that people have largely forgotten about the passing of the seasons by virtue of the fact that you can get strawberries all year around in Sainsbury’s. I think it’s have a bit more respect for the passage of time and enjoy the correct food when it happens to be ready. You wouldn’t want to have Xmas dinner every day, so why not be prepared to wait until October to eat fresh sweetcorn?  To every thing there is a season. There’s always something yummy to eat if you’re prepared to be imaginative with your cooking.

And that’s the final point. I have a standing order for a small box of vegetables every week costing about £10. The composition varies from week to week and with the time of year. The company does email and post on its website the contents of the following week’s boxes, but I generally don’t look at it. When the box arrives, it’s usually a mixture of staples (potatoes, carrots, onions, etc) plus things that are not so familiar, and that I’ve often never cooked before.  If it hadn’t been for the veggie box, I would probably never have found out about how to cook chard, romanesco, jerusalem artichokes and celeriac. I look forward to these surprises. Not knowing exactly what’s coming forces me to cook new things, and if I don’t know how to cook them there’s always google.

Of course, the summer salads and lighter things have now finished and, with winter coming on, there will be more root vegetables. I think the heavier vegetables tend to put some people off a bit, but there’s enough variety to keep it fun. Last week’s box contained a nice swede and leeks (of course, I’m in Wales) among other things, but I’m really looking forward to cauliflower and parsnips which should be ready soon.

Each box looks like a lot of food, but I always manage to eat most of it. I have to admit that not all my culinary experiments are successful, but more often than not I am pleasantly surprised. I tried curried beetroot a few weeks ago, with more than a little trepidation. It turned out to be absolutely delicious, even if I did have to ad-lib a bit with some of the ingredients. The only drawback was an unexpectedly colourful trip to the lavatory the next morning…

Anyway, if anyone is thinking of taking the plunge I’d thoroughly recommend them. You don’t have to buy vegetables the way I do it. You can do one-off orders or you can order specific things rather than set boxes.  They do meat and poultry too, but you have to buy a relatively large amount and I don’t eat enough meat to make it worthwhile. I also have a splendid butcher around the corner from me and tend to buy enough there to satisfy my carnivorous side.

I thought I’d break my own tradition and have a peep at what Tuesday’s box has in store. Here we go:cosmos potatoes, red onions, carrots, cauliflower, bunched beetroot, sweetcorn, butternut squash, cavolo nero

Hang on a minute. Cavolo Nero? For a moment I thought it was a black horse from Italy, but  a quick google and I learn that it is Black Kale. Sounds nice. The carrots are always tasty and as I’d hoped the cauliflower is coming through now. I thought the sweetcorn might be finished, but there’s more on the way apparently. Butternut squash is quite trendy these days.

And more beetroot. Ah well. At least this time I won’t think I’m suffering from internal bleeding.

10 Responses to “The Veggiana Monologues”

  1. Yum!!

    It really is amazing, the difference in taste. There is room enough for a garden where I live, so the past several years vegetables have come straight from the earth. The taste is incomparably fuller and I’m certain the nutritional value is superior, to store-bought.

    The winter and early spring months are always a problem, though. Our climate here is much like England’s. Greenhouses would probably extend the growing viability of the seasons, but we haven’t tried it yet.

    You’ve inspired me to look for a box-shipping grower of more local produce to round out availability in the off-seasons. It’s most certainly worth the effort.

    I’m also looking forward to the surprise experimentation you described. 🙂

  2. Peter- ribbolita with your cavolo nero. Tuscan bread soup. Awesome. -A

  3. Anton Garrett's avatar
    Anton Garrett Says:

    Peter,

    Why not take the next step and grow your own? Having moved to a rural village after 50 years as a townie and taken up gardening, I can assure you that home grown tastes better even than the ill-defined word ‘organic’. (Ever come across inorganic food??) I’d do my own animals too, including humane slaughtering (I have sympathy with the don’t-eat-if-you-won’t-kill-it argument) but I’m away too often.

    If you’re too busy then you can hire a gardener to do it for little more than the cost of your present weekly basket; and you can pick up gardening tips on any week you work side by side with him. That’s how I’ve been learning. And if society collapses, you still have a food supply…

    BTW all the stuff about country people not speaking to you until you’ve been there 20 years is rubbish, at least in North Shropshire. Perhaps it helps that it’s a genuine rural economy, too far away from any big city to be a dormitory and not a tourist area.

    Anton

  4. telescoper's avatar
    telescoper Says:

    I only have a small garden, so even if I grew some vegetables in it I’d still have to buy most of mine. It’s also difficult to produce stuff all year around without a lot of space. If I had more time I’d get an allotment, but that will have to wait until I’m retired!

    My next door neighbour in Nottingham, Trevor, grew his own tomatoes in a greenhouse. Their taste was spectacular, far better than shop-bought…
    I also had a cherry tree and windfall cooking apples from another neighbour’s tree. I have gorgeous blackberries in my new garden, but will have to think carefully about planting other stuff.

  5. Well, potatoes are very easy and very hearty. You can store them for a long time, too. Squashes come later in the season, and are also very easy. They aren’t exactly space-efficient, though.

    Carrots can grow very late, even into the first parts of winter, and they’re also very easy. Radishes, too – though rotate where you plant them from year to year.

    I have terrible luck growing onions, and sadly, I love them most of all. Small green onions seem far more hearty.

    Growing some rosemary bushes is nice – they never die. Mind the blackberries or they’re take over the house; sweet, insidious and unrelenting things that they are.

    I started by just throwing one little group of potatoes out there one year. And every year after, the garden expands. Just throw something out there for next season. You’ll love it. Promise.

  6. I’m just starting to have had enough of the sweetcorn too. See my latest post for tonight’s recipe! Still organic boxes are great. I like the challenge and we discovered you can curry beetroot too. Delicious 🙂 Mark’s right about rosemary, grows like a weed and cheers everything up. I like it with spuds.

  7. telescoper's avatar
    telescoper Says:

    The Cavolo Nero was delicious, although I didn’t follow Andrew’s suggestion. The slightly bitter tang seemed to suit game so I had it with roast partridge. This week I have red russian kale, which is similar (at least morphologically).

  8. Great blog entry ..,

    You mentioned Riverford which makes me think that you might be interested in this beautifully photographed feature about the farm.

    http://www.riverford.co.uk/flash/about_riverford/

    THANKS

    Benjamin

  9. […] if the weather wasn’t enough, my weekly veggie box arrived this morning with further evidence of springtime. After a steady supply of winter vegetables […]

  10. […] deliveries of fresh organically-gown vegetables direct from a farm via company called Riverford. I blogged about the the reasons for doing this some years ago, including the […]

Leave a comment