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Hi…

..and welcome from The Local Growers.

Here you will find the stories about those individuals who grow food and make products locally.

These are some of the people I’ve met while looking for good foods - locally grown foods.

I know their journey. It’s one I experienced growing up on our family farm in West Central Minnesota. That farm was diversified. In other words, we raised several things - crops, hogs, dairy and chickens.

Our meals featured the garden produce my mom harvested, canned and froze and the meat, eggs and dairy products we raised.

It was wholesome food!

While I don’t live on that farm anymore, I am always on the search for locally grown foods. I invite you to join me in this great journey.

Let’s go!

A rhubarb with rhubarb?

A rhubarb with rhubarb?

I honestly have no rhubarb with rhubarb.

This wonderful plant makes delicious desserts and has some great savory qualities, as well.

But it does have a bit of an identity crisis going on, I’ve learned. When I googled to see if it’s a fruit or a vegetable, the response I got said for culinary purposes it’s a fruit. In the next sentence, however, it said this perennial vegetable….

Go figure.

Fruit or vegetable makes no difference, really. It is, for many, a great springtime addition to both desserts and savory dishes.

I LOVE LOVE LOVE rhubarb crisp. Okay, I love it a little too much. And, at this point in my COVID-15 journey (you read that right, I have COVID-15 which is the same as Freshman 15 where you usually gain 15 pounds your freshman year in college…well, I have gained weight (I won’t say how much) during stay-at-home)).

Given the fact that I’m trying to lay low on sweets (Notice I said trying), I searched for savory recipes and found a number of them. Several were recipes for cherry-rhubarb sauce.

This recipe has two cups of red onion in it, so it definitely is a sauce for a meat dish. I had some thick sliced pork chops, seared them and put them in a crock pot topped with the sauce and I added some rosemary. While my son prefers his meat plain so he can put on his own hot sauce or ketchup, I truly enjoy a nice savory sauce. I liked this recipe and I hope you do, too.

This is an example of the versatility of rhubarb.

Oh, and I got my rhubarb at Ida Valley Farm’s stand at the Alexandria MN Farmers Market. Rhubarb is one of those great seasonal finds right now.

Here’s the recipe:

Rhubarb Cherry Sauce

2 large red onions, coarse chopped (2 cups)

1/3 c. cider vinegar

1/3 c. dried cherries

1/4 c. packed brown sugar

1/4 c. water

1 Tbsp. lime or lemon juice

1 tsp. grated fresh ginger or 1/8 tsp. ground ginger

3 c. fresh rhubarb cut into 1/2 inch pieces or 3 c. frozen, thawed and drained rhubarb

-In a medium saucepan, combine all ingredients except for rhubarb. bring to a boil, reduce heat and cover and simmer 25 minutes, stirring occasionally.

-Add rhubarb, cover and simmer 10 minutes then uncover and simmer until thickened, about 5 minutes, or 5 to 10 minutes more if using frozen.

-Let cool. Store covered. Can be in refrigerator up to 1 week. Makes 2.5 cups.

Good as a sauce for meat i.e. the pork chops I made. Good with rosemary added in the crockpot process.

Meet The Redhead Behind Redhead Creamery Cheese

Meet The Redhead Behind Redhead Creamery Cheese

The Farmers Market is open! The Farmers Market is open!

The Farmers Market is open! The Farmers Market is open!