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23 results in Produce for "Matanuska Valley vegetables"
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ProduceMixed Vegetables
Knowing how to cook a mix of vegetables well — whatever you have on hand — is one of the most practical skills in the kitchen. The key is understanding density, heat, and timing, not following a specific recipe.
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ProduceMixed Seasonal Vegetables
Cooking with whatever is in season locally — rather than building a recipe and then hunting for ingredients — is how home cooks ate for most of human history. It is also how you get the best-tasting food for the least…
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ProduceCarrots
Carrots are one of the most reliable local-farm vegetables year-round — harvested in fall and stored through winter. A fresh-pulled carrot from a farm stand tastes nothing like a supermarket bag carrot.
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ProduceBeets
Beets are sweet, earthy root vegetables that store well and come with edible greens when freshly harvested. They roast beautifully, pickle easily, and add color to salads, grain bowls, and simple sides.
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ProduceHow to store carrots
Carrots last longer than many vegetables, but they still do better when you store them dry, cold, and without their tops attached. A little prep at the start makes a big difference.
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ProduceWhat is a bell pepper and how to use it
Bell peppers are crisp, sweet, and versatile enough for both raw snacking and cooked meals. They are one of the easiest vegetables to keep in regular rotation.
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ProduceWhat is a carrot and how to cook it
Carrots are one of the most flexible root vegetables because they can be eaten raw, roasted, sauteed, simmered, or grated into both savory and sweet dishes.
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ProduceWhat is broccoli and how to cook it
Broccoli is one of the most useful vegetables to know because it can be roasted, steamed, sauteed, stir-fried, and eaten raw with very little fuss.
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ProduceWhat is cucumber and how to use it
Cucumber is one of the simplest fresh vegetables to use because it needs so little cooking and pairs with almost everything. The key is knowing when to keep it raw and when to pickle or blend it.
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ProduceWhat is onion and how to use it
Onions are one of the most useful vegetables in the kitchen because they work as both a base ingredient and a finished component. Learning a few onion styles makes everyday cooking much easier.
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ProduceWhat is zucchini and how to use it
Zucchini is one of the most flexible vegetables of summer because it cooks quickly, works with many flavors, and fits both simple sides and full meals.
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ProduceCabbage
Cabbage is one of the most useful local vegetables because it is affordable, sturdy, and flexible. It can be eaten raw, sauteed, roasted, braised, or fermented.
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ProduceHow to make fresh produce last all week
Most produce spoilage comes down to a handful of avoidable mistakes. These storage habits will get you through a full week of fresh vegetables and fruit with far less waste.
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ProduceWhat is corn and how to cook it
Fresh corn is sweet, juicy, and easy to cook when you stop treating it like a special-event vegetable. It works on the cob, off the cob, and in a range of simple summer meals.
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ProduceThe best way to store potatoes, onions, and garlic
Potatoes, onions, and garlic all need cool, dark, and dry conditions — but keeping them together or in the wrong spot cuts their storage life dramatically. Here is what actually works.
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ProduceAsparagus
Asparagus is one of the first serious vegetables of spring: quick-cooking, delicate, and best when it is handled simply. The main skill is knowing how to choose fresh spears and stop cooking before they go soft.
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ProduceMushrooms
Mushrooms are savory, quick-cooking, and useful across seasons. Button, cremini, portobello, shiitake, and oyster mushrooms all brown best when they are kept dry and given enough pan space.
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ProducePotatoes
The variety of potato you choose matters far more than most recipes acknowledge. A Russet, a Yukon Gold, and a waxy red potato behave completely differently in the same preparation — and a freshly dug new potato from a…
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ProduceSpinach
Spinach is one of the most nutritionally dense vegetables at any farm stand, and one of the most season-dependent — spring and fall spinach is sweet and tender, while summer heat pushes it to bolt and turn bitter.…
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ProduceSweet Potatoes
Sweet potatoes are a fall and winter staple with genuine variety differences that most cooks never discover. From the familiar Beauregard orange-fleshed type to Japanese purple varieties, the range in flavor and texture…
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ProduceWhat to do with extra cucumbers
When your farm box or garden produces more cucumbers than you can eat fresh, there are a handful of practical ways to use them up before they go soft.
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ProduceHow to store fresh corn
Fresh corn is best when you treat it as a use-soon vegetable. Refrigeration helps, but the real secret is simply not waiting too long.
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ProduceOnions
Onions are both a base ingredient and a vegetable in their own right. Yellow, red, white, sweet, and storage onions each bring a different balance of sharpness, sweetness, and keeping quality.