Squash and green chile casserole
Caprese Sandwich With Arugula And Olive Spread
Chez Panisse’s Potatoes and Onions Roasted with Vinegar and Thyme
Squash and green chile casserole
Caprese Sandwich With Arugula And Olive Spread
Chez Panisse’s Potatoes and Onions Roasted with Vinegar and Thyme
This week’s share includes Shishito peppers (a mildly spicy frying pepper), which can be an excellent addition to a stir-fry or even a scramble. They also excel on their own, done in a simple tempera or pan fried/charred in olive oil and finished with a nice flaky salt. These peppers are occasionally spicy; but mostly they have a bright, green, mild flavor. A shishito side dish can accompany curry, steak, or a spicy cucumber salad. The share also includes Shiso, used throughout Asia both medicinally and as an herb, especially popular in Japanese, Korean, and Southeast Asian cuisines. In Virginia it is known as Perilla and is a native plant that is common throughout the Piedmont. On our farm we have the green variety and it grows on the edges of wood lines and in other slightly shaded areas. The wild variety is not as pungent as some cultivated types, but it is still amazing used in herb salads, spring rolls, and even granita; pair it with thai basil and you will not be disappointed. Check out the recipe below and enjoy the share……Autumn & Brian
Andy Ricker’s Tam Taeng Kwaa (Thai Cucumber Salad) From ‘Pok Pok
Cucumber, Scallion & Shiso leaves Salad
Japanese Eggplant With Chicken & Thai Basil
Shiso Granita – Japanese Farm Food by Nancy Singleton Hachisu
15 green shiso leaves
¼ cup granulated sugar
Place the shiso leaves in a medium-sized bowl or 4-cup Pyrex measuring cup. Heat the sugar and 3 cups water to boiling in a medium saucepan, stirring the sugar to dissolve. Pour the boiling sugar water over the leaves and steep until cool. Set a strainer over a plastic container large enough to hold 3 cups and strain out the leaves. Cover and transfer the shiso-flavored sugar water to a freezer shelf. Let sit, undisturbed, in the freezer for 1 hour. Remove to the countertop, open the lid, and gently stir in the crystals that have formed on the perimeter. Repeat this operation every 30 minutes, breaking up any larger crystals as you go. The finished granita should be flaky. Serve alone in a glass bowl or goblet. This is also wonderful served alongside Fig Ice Cream and Plum Sorbet. Keeps frozen for several weeks.
Vietnamese Salad Rolls (Gỏi cuốn)
When we make these we let everyone prepare their own and it makes for a really fun meal activity. As the recipe states, you can substitute various herbs’ we particularly like thai basil and shiso together. We will add carrot, cucumber, daikon, long bean, scallion, and sometimes substitute shredded pork or shrimp for tofu. For dipping sauces we use a traditional Nuoc Cham and peanut sauce (recipes below).
Nuoc Cham –Hot Sour Salty Sweet by Jeffery Alford and Naomi Duguid
1/4cup fresh lime juice
¼ cup fish sauce
¼ cup water
2 tsp rice or cider vinegar
1 Tbls sugar
1 small clove garlic, minced
1 bird chile, minces
several shreds of carrot (optional)
Combine all the ingredients in a bowl and stir to dissolve the sugar completely. Serve in small condiment bowls. Store in a tightly sealed glass container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days (after that, the garlic starts to taste tired).
Vietnamese Peanut Sauce –Hot Sour Salty Sweet by Jeffery Alford and Naomi Duguid
¼ cup dry roasted peanuts
2 scant Tbls tamarind pulp, dissolved in 2 Tbls warm water or substitute 2 Tbls tomato paste
2 tsp peanut oil
4 cloves garlic, minced
3 Tbls fermented soybean paste (tuong in Vietnamese; dao jiao in Thai)
1 cup water
1 ½ tsp sugar
1-2 bird chiles, minced
Generous squeeze of fresh lime juice
Place the peanuts in a food processor or large mortar and process or pound to a coarse powder; set aside. If using tamarind, press it through a sieve; reserve the liquid and discard the solids. Heat the oil in a wok or skillet over high heat. Add the garlic and stir-fry until it is starting to change color, about 15 seconds. Add the soybean paste and the tamarind or tomato paste and stir to blend. Stir in ½ cup water, then stir in most of the ground peanuts, reserving about 1 Tbls for the garnish. Stir in the sugar and chiles. Add up to ½ cup more water, until you have the desired texture: a thick liquid, pourable but not watery. Serve in small condiment bowls, warm or at room temperature, squeezing on the lime and sprinkling on the reserved peanuts just before serving. The sauce will keep in the refrigerator for 3 days or in the freezer for 1 month. Reheat it in a small pan and simmer briefly before serving.
Tomatillos or Sungold Cherry
Heirloom Sauce Tomatoes
Middle Eastern & Italian Eggplant
Cubanelle & Seyrek Peppers
German White Garlic
Summer Squash
Yaya Carrots
We are finally getting into harvesting most of the Summer crops, better late than never. Remember how we wrote about our tractor being out of commission in April and being very short on help this season, well the affect of those things are being felt right about now. It meant we planted a lot of our Summer crops 1-3 weeks after we intended too and then some of our Spring crops came and went quickly, leaving us with some limited diversity right about now. All of this coupled with that 14-day stretch of hot weather in mid-July, compounded the issue. The hot weather ripened all the fruit set on tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, squash, etc very quickly; but it paused flowering. Finally this past week, with some much needed rain and cooling temperatures, we are seeing a lot of plant growth and flowering meaning the plants are getting into their groove. We are also seeing really extensive bug pressure this year, really since late spring, but right now crops such as our bean successions, late cucumbers, and squash are suffering a bit. The main effects are damaged or deformed pods or fruit and pretty stressed plants, yielding very small volume. Having less labor means more weed pressure and this leads to an increase in bug pressure, as they are attracted to the weedy environment. We are also seeing intense worm pressure on our greenhouse starts for our fall crops. While they are in the greenhouse this problem can be manageable; but once out in the field it can be somewhat devastating. Every fall we struggle with worms (army and cut worms) and aphids, so we try to be diligent and aware from the start. With last week’s cool Summer temperatures, we were able to get a head start direct seeding our first fall succession of beet, carrot, dill, and cilantro, so that feels good. Beginning this week, we will direct seed and transplant crops every week for harvesting in the late summer through next spring. Our first radicchio starts are looking great, and the fennel and cooking greens are close to ready to go into the ground. In addition we were able to get some Sorgham Sudan cover crop planted, also a little late, but a necessary aspect of our crop fields long-term soil health; which directly effects the plants.
This week’s share is meant for cooking, like cooking on the stove. The first of our tasty sauce tomatoes, paired with mild peppers, garlic, some summer squash, and lots of eggplant. So don’t avoid making a delicious fresh pasta sauce, a ratatouille, an eggplant parm, or whatever you are feeling. We included carrots, in case you needed a fresh grated salad, try the classic french carrot salad recipe below, its tasty. Enjoy the share…..Autumn and Brian
Chicken Cacciatore with Cubanelle Peppers
French Grated Carrot Salad with Lemon Dijon Vinaigrette
Caponata from The Kitchen Garden
Lots and lots of olive oil
1 cup chopped onion
1 head garlic, chopped
1/2 tsp chili flakes or fresh hot peppers, to taste
1 pound peppers, cut into large chunks
1 pound eggplant, cut into large chunks
1 or 2 ripe plum tomatoes, chopped
salt & pepper
1 Tbsp sugar
1 Tbsp red wine vinegar
1 Tbsp capers
3 Tbsp chopped Kalamata olives
Few sprigs chopped basil and parsley
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Heat about 4 Tbsp olive oil in a heavy pot or Dutch oven with a lid that can go in the oven. Sauté the onion and garlic until soft. Add the pepper flakes and peppers and sauté over medium heat 5-10 minutes. Add eggplant and sauté another several minutes. You may want to add more oil to make sure everything is generously anointed. Add the tomatoes. Cover the pot and put it in the oven to bake for 20-30 minutes. Everything should be very, very soft. Season with salt, pepper and the other seasonings. Adjust sweetness, salt and acidity to taste. Serve it warm on fresh crusty bread or at room temperature the next day. Makes a great pasta sauce, too. (The original version contains chunks of celery, too. If you like celery, you can add it when you add the tomatoes.)
Italian & Middle Eastern Eggplant
Red & Orange Slicing Tomatoes
Swiss Chard or Chioggia Beets
Summer Squash & Zucchini
Seyrek or Shishito Peppers
Fennel or Dill
Scallions
Chopped Roasted Beet and Blue Cheese Salad
Roasted Eggplant Fennel Pizza With Whipped Garlic Feta
Sautéed Zucchini with Ginger and Dill
Layered Eggplant, Zucchini and Tomato Casserole
Fusilli Pasta With Chard And Eggplant
Zaalouk (Spicy Eggplant Salad) The New Book of Middle Eastern Food by Claudia Roden
1 ½ lb eggplant, peeled and cubed
5 cloves garlic, peeled
salt
3 large tomatoes (about 1 ½ lbs)
4 Tbls argan oil or mild extra-virgin olive oil
2 Tbls wine vinegar
½ tsp harissa or a mixture paprika &ground chili pepper
1 tsp ground cumin
½ cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
Boil the eggplants with the garlic in plenty of salted water, in a pan covered with a lid, for about 30 minutes or until they are very soft. Drain and chop the eggplants and garlic in a colander, then mash them with a fork, pressing all the water out.
Put the tomatoes in the emptied pan and cook over low heat for about 20 minutes, or until reduced to a thick sauce, stirring occasionally. Mix with the mashed eggplants and the rest of the ingredients and add salt.
Variation: Add the juice of 1 lemon (instead of the vinegar) and 1 tsp ground caraway or coriander.
The last few weeks have been extremely busy. We are in Summer harvest mode, even though many of the crops were planted a bit late. Our first succession of tomatoes, including the Sungold cherries, and the romano beans are in full swing and doing lovely so far. These types of crops take a lot of time to harvest and must be harvested more frequently, so our week begins to look much different with at least one crop harvested every day. Over the next few weeks we will see eggplant, peppers, and okra come into full swing as well. In the mean time we have gotten all the garlic and onions cured or dried back and are beginning to clip them (from there necks) and move them from the barn into long-term temperature controlled storage. Our potatoes are ready to be harvested and cured for long-term storage as well; this happens when the greens fully die back and the potato skin becomes more firm, the difference between a “new” potato and a mature potato. We have cleared all our cabbages from the fields and are beginning to bulk our beets, so we have some storage crops through the summer heat.
At the end of June we began our first wave of fall seedlings, things like fennel, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and an assortment of bunching greens. This week we begin the second wave with lettuce, radicchio, escarole, frisee, chard, and beets. This means we are less than four weeks away from beginning our fall plantings. Since you are still getting some of these crops in your weekly shares it may seems unremarkable; but for us this is the long game for fall and winter crop diversity. With the waning daylight hours, getting the timing right to grow healthy plants to maturity takes considerably more finesse. In addition we have to watch the heat, be mindful of pest issues before they explode and irrigate non-stop. This is the beginning of our busy period and a lot of it does not pay off until November, December or even into the New Year. But right now you probably care only for tomatoes; which makes sense because it is tomato time and boy do they taste good right now. Check out the recipes and enjoy the share……Autumn and Brian
Grilled Calamari + Green Beans with Sun Golden Tomatoes + Tons of Herbs
Green Bean & Napa Cabbage Salad
Sesame Carrot and Cucumber Slaw
Sweet-Vinegared Daikon and Carrots – Japanese Farm Food by Nancy Singleton Hachisu
1/3 cup organic rice vinegar
1 Tbls organic granulated sugar
1 cup julienned daikon (1 ¾” thin matchsticks)
1/3 cup julienned carrots (1 ¾” thin matchsticks)
½ tsp sea salt
Zest from 1 yuzu or ½ Meyer lemon cut into fine slivers
Heat the vinegar and sugar together in a small saucepan over low heat to melt the sugar. Cool to room temperature before using.
Keep the daikon and carrots in two separate bowls. Sprinkle the daikon with 2/3 of the salt and the carrots with the remaining salt. Massage the salt in gently and let sit for 10 minutes before squeezing out the excess water and dropping into a clean medium-sized mixing bowl. Toss the daikon and carrots with the slivered yuzu or meyer lemon zest and cooled sweet vinegat. Chill for 1 day before serving.
Napa Cabbage Salad with Sesame Seeds – Japanese Farm Food by Nancy Singleton Hachisu
half a napa cabbage
½ Tbls fine sea salt
2 Tbls mild citrus juice (yuzu, Seville orange, Meyer lemon)
2 Tbls rapeseed oil
1 Tbls unhulled sesame seeds
Slice the cabbage crosswise into fine strands and toss lightly in a large bowl with the salt. Measure the citrus juice into a small bowl and slowly whisk in the oil to emulsify. Pour over the cabbage, mix gently to distribute the dressing. Toast the sesame seeds over medium-high heat in a dry frying pan until they are fragrant and start to pop. Toss into the salad and serve immediately.
Zucchini & Summer Squash
Russian Kale or Swiss Chard
AC Chaleur & Mountain Rose Potatoes
Butterhead & Summer Crisp Lettuce
Red & Orange Slicing Tomatoes
Candy or Tropea Onions
Fennel or Broccoli
Genovese Basil
Tomato, Summer Squash, and Caramelized Onion Gratin
Fennel Salad with Red Onion, Tomato, Orange and Lemon Thyme Vinaigrette
Anchovy, Little Gem, and Tomato Salad
Tiella di patate, cipolle e pomodori (Potato, Onion and Tomato Casserole)
Tendersweet Cabbage
Red Ace & Chioggia Beets
Sungold Tomatoes, Red Radish, & Broccoli (2 of 3)
Suyo Long & Slicer Cucumbers
Purslane
Scallions
Dill
So many new things this week; our tendersweet cabbage, sungold tomatoes, and purslane, it is a sign that Summer has begun and it has, happy Summer solstice to you all. In case you are unfamiliar with purslane, it grows wild in many areas on our farm and amongst our crops. This green is widely used throughout the Middle East. The leaves and tender stems (not main stem parts) can be eaten simply dressed with salt, lemon, and olive oil or used in a multitude of ways. Check out this article with many recipes 45 Things To Do With Purslane or check out the recipes we have highlighted below. Enjoy the share……Brian and Autumn
Cucumber, Onion And Purslane Salad
Salade Khorfeh – Shirazi Style Purslane Salad
Cowtown Coleslaw – adapted from A Cowboy in the Kitchen by Grady Spears & Robb Walsh
serves 4 – This peppery slaw is colorful and has a zing to it.
4 cups julienned Green Cabbage (can mix in about ¼ red cabbage too)
1 large or 2 small carrots, peeled and julienned
3 jalapenos peppers, stemmed, seeded, and julienned
1 Tbls fresh chopped dill
3/4 cups mayonnaise (preferably Dukes)
1/3 cup malt vinegar
1/3 cup sugar
1 Tbls freshly squeezed lime or lemon juice
kosher salt to taste
freshly ground pepper to taste
Place all of the vegetables in a large bowl. In another bowl, whisk together the mayonnaise, vinegar, sugar, and lime juice. Pour the dressing over the vegetables, season with salt and pepper, and toss to combine. Set aside in the refrigerator until serving time. Its best made and served on the same day.
Salata Arabieh (Arab Salad) – The New Book of Middle Eastern Food by Claudia Roden
Serves 4 – In this most common of Arab salads, all the ingredients are cut very
small. Do not prepare it too long before serving, and dress it just before
serving.
1 small head romaine lettuce
1 small red Italian or mild white onion or 5 scallions
1 small-med cucumber
2 tomatoes
4 radishes, thinly sliced
2 Tbls chopped flat-leaf parsley
2 tsp chopped fresh dill or chervil
1 Tbls chopped fresh mint
3 Tbls extra-virgin olive oil
Juice of 1/3 lemon
salt and pepper
1 small clove garlic, crushed
Shred the lettuce, chop the onions finely, and cut the vegetables into tiny
dice, using a sharp knife. Put them in a bowl with the radishes and herbs. Make
a dressing with oil and lemon juice, slat and pepper, and garlic if you like.
Pour over the salad and mix well.
New Cabbage with Scallions – The Taste of Country Cooking by Edna Lewis
The first time we would cook and serve our newly grown garden cabbage was on a wheat-threshing day. We would cut up many heads and cook them in a large iron pot with liquid from the pork shoulder and a small amount of fat for seasoning. Cabbage cooked that way was a hearty fare, good sustenance for hardworking men. We children usually had the food that was left over from the midday meal that night for supper and thought it was just great. No other food in the world seemed to have quite the good flavor of what was left over from a wheat-threshing dinner.
1 2-pound head new cabbage
1/3 cup tender green scallion tops, cut into ¼” slices
2 cups boiling water, or preferably stock from boiled pork shoulder
3 Tbls freshly rendered fat from bacon or ham
salt and freshly ground pepper
To prepare the cabbage, trim away the outside leaves and cut the head into quarters. Cut away the core, leaving just enough to hold the leaves intact. Place the pieces of cabbage in a bowl of cold water for about 15 minutes or so to wash out any dust or bugs, particularly if it has come straight out of the garden. Remove, drain in a colander, then place in a 3-quart saucepan and add the scallion tops to give added flavor and color. Pour the boiling water or stock over and toss the cabbage with two spoons to make sure that each piece is scalded. Add the fat so that it coats the cabbage, then turn the burner low so that the cabbage boils briskly but not too rapidly for 25-30 minutes –any longer and the cabbage will become too soft and its taste will change. Drain. Toss the salt to taste and a good grating of freshly ground pepper to heighten the flavor. Serve hot.
Fresh Garlic
Arugula or Salad Mix
Zucchini & Summer Squash
Young Fennel
Swiss Chard
Frisee
Basil
Crazy past week with lots of rain, almost 4
inches over the course of seven days and yet everything looked like it needed
it. The grass in our fields changed color to a vibrant green over night and it
wasn’t until the final storm what we saw any standing water. We anticipated
splitting cabbages or rotting daikon, so we bulk harvested everything that was
ready. We did not anticipate the grey cool weather slowing the growth in our
early Summer crops; but hey we will take the Spring like temperatures for one
more week before the Summer weather sets in. Overall it was a very good week
aside from the Friday afternoon realization that we had lost 450’ row feet of
ready to harvest carrots due to rot. A combination between the variety, the
large size of the carrots, and our heavy clay not well draining soil set in
some serious quick rotting at the base of the root. This was set to be our best
carrot production in the Spring to date and in the coarse of 3 days we lost 35%
of our Spring crop. This is a great example of the ever-shifting reality on a
farm. We had no idea this was a concern, in that this has never happened before
to us and we have had much wetter springs seasons in the past with no rot like
this. But that is the point, this end result is based on the conditions of
these carrots form start to finish. The greatest thing about farming, its never
dull and we are always learning.
On a positive note, Basil is finally here and although the plants looked dismal
when planted (due to field prep issues and planting 3 weeks late), the planting
is now looking vibrant and growing strong thanks to the extremely wet past
week. Fresh Garlic is also included in this week’s share. Fresh means it is not
cured, which is when the garlic plant dries back; the neck seals up and all the
layers around the cloves turn paper dry. Cured garlic is stable for many
months, whereas fresh garlic has a month or so. The flavor is slightly less hot
and a bit subtler and it does not need to be peeled, the outer skin falls away
when you separate the cloves. Check out the recipes and enjoy the share……Autumn
& Brian
Provençal Zucchini and Swiss Chard Tart
Rainbow Chard with Lemon, Fennel, and Parmigiano
Mussels with Fennel and Lovage
Fried Zucchini Slice with Yogurt – The New Book of Middle Eastern Food pg.86 by Claudia Roden
For this Arab and Turkish way of serving zucchini, the vegetables may be deep fried, grilled, or broiled.
1 lb Zucchini, cut into slices lengthwise
Olive or vegetable oil
Salt
1 ½ cups plain whole-milk or thick strained greek-style Yogurt
Deep-fry the zucchini in hot oil till lightly browned, turning the slices over once, then drain on paper towels and sprinkle lightly with salt. Alternatively, brush the slices with oil and grill or broil them. Serve hot or cold with yogurt spread over each slice.
Variations: The yogurt may be flavored with crushed garlic, mint, or dill.
Aliciotti Con L’Indivia (Anchovy & Frisee Casserole) – Tasting Rome by Katie Parla & Kristina Gill
This dish is (one) of the most iconic in Roman Jewish cuisine and was a Ghetto staple, likely influenced by the seventeenth century sumptuary laws that limited the types of fish Rome’s Jews were permitted to buy. Brilliant in its humble simplicity, its peasant origins don’t mean this casserole lacks flavor or depth. You can top it with fine or coarse bread crumbs if you wish or omit them altogether, placing the focus on the slightly bitter greensand the flavorful fresh fish.
Sea Salt
1 large head Frisee
3 Tbls Extra-virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
1 pound fresh anchovies, cleaned and filleted
½ cup seasoned bread crumbs
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Brings a large pot of water to a rolling boil over high heat. Salt the water. When the salt has dissolved, add the frisee and blanch until tender, about 1 minute. Drain, squeeze, and set aside.
Pour half the olive oil into a round 12”baking dish. Layer half the frisee in the bottom of the dish. Season generously with salt & pepper, then cover with half the anchovies, arranging them in a radial pattern. Repeat the frisee and anchovy layers once more. Sprinkle breadcrumbs evenly on top, if desired, then with the remaining olive oil.
Bake for 20 minutes, or until the top is golden. If there is any water in the dish when you remove it from the oven, drain it off. Cut the casserole in wedges and serve warm or at room temperature.
Napa Cabbage
Daikon Radish
Candy Spring Onions
Suyo Long Cucumber
Escarole or Bibb Lettuce
Red Gold New Potatoes
Yaya Spring Carrots
Russian Kale
Cilantro
This past week was very productive and we have been so happy to finely get some rain after almost nothing for 4 weeks. We harvested 65% of our garlic crop, the German White variety just before the rain came. This year’s crop looks wonderful and we think it will cure very nicely. We are waiting on the German Red variety as it is maturing 2-3 weeks slower and hopefully this rain will help it gain some size. We also harvested one variety of our storage onions, the Red Creole, and will continue harvesting onions over the next few weeks. We began digging our earliest variety of potatoes, the Red Gold, this past week and are excited to include them in this week’s share. As we stated when the CSA season began we are very understaffed this year and in April our main tractor broke down for 3 weeks, so we have been in a constant catch up mode since mid-May. We are beginning to see the weeds out grow our hoeing and hand-weeding efforts, this rain will definitely compound this. We are also a bit behind on planting our watermelon, some of the sweet peppers, and latter successions of tomatoes, basil, and cucumbers. But on the bright side the okra, corn, and beans are all in on time and coming along nicely. In the next few weeks you will see the first basil, cherry tomatoes, and beans coming on in your shares , so Summer is on its way.
This week’s share has the perfect mix for making Kimchi, if that is your thing. If it’s a first time for you, check the recipe below and follow the directions, especially regarding the Korean chile powder and rice flour (check Tan A or New Grand Mart for these ingredients). This is the first time you are getting Napa (or Chinese) cabbage, which can seem enormous and overwhelming, so we have included many recipes. It stores well for many weeks in your refrigerator’s crisper drawer in a plastic or protective bag wrapped tight. It is a great addition to stir fries, tempera, soup, pickles, or slaw. This is also the first of the cucumber, a often seen crop of the Summer. The variety you will get this week is Suyo Long, a very long, thin, crinkly looking cucumber, with thin skin and small seeds. It is not necessary to peel and does not get bitter. We love thinly slicing and adding to salads or immersing in vinegar for a quick pickle snack. Check out the recipes below and enjoy the share…..Autumn and Brian
Yam Khai Dao (Fried egg salad) – Pok Pok by Andy Ricker
You must find some thai chiles and celery leaf to make this recipe.
Tricolor Vegetarian Salad with Yuzu Recipe: Daikon, Cucumber & Carrots
Crunchy Thai Salad with Creamy Peanut Dressing
New
Potato Tempura – Japanese
Farm Food by Nancy Singleton Hachisu
½ lb medium-sized potatoes
Best quality rapeseed or peanut oil
½ cup unbleached cake flour
½ cup cold sparkling water1
8 tsp fine white sea salt
3 ice cubes
organic soy sauce for dipping
Cut the potatoes into ½” wedges (measured on the thick side). Drop the potato
pieces into a small pot of salted cold water. The potatoes should be covered by
about 1”. Bring to a boil over high heat and cook until the centers still have
some give but the outsides are soft. Drain and cool.
Line a cookie sheet with a thick layer of newspaper and top with a layer of
paper towels. Set next to the stove. Over low heat, warm 4” of oil in a
medium-sized heavy, stainless steel saucepan. Whisk the flour with the
sparkling water and salt in a medium-sized bowl. Take out two pairs of long
cooking chopsticks or tongs. Use one pair to dip in the batter and one pair to
remove the tempura from the oil. Increase the heat on the oil to about
medium-high; the oil should not be smoking. Test the oil with a drop of batter
before starting. It should sizzle and immediately form a small ball as it hits
the oil; but should not brown. Adjust the oil temperature as needed.
When the oil is hot, drop the ice cubes into the batter and stir once. Add 5 or
6 pieces of potatoes at a time to the batter. Pick up one piece at a time, let
the excess batter drip off, and slip into the hot oil. Roll the tempura pieces
gently as the batter turns a pale (slightly) golden color. When all sides are
cooked, remove to the prepared cookie sheet. Continue cooking until all pieces
have been fried, but (if possible) serve each batch immediately. Dip in fine
white sea salt or soy sauce before eating.