The first weeks of a seasonal summer CSA farm share are like the Spanish Inquisition: no one ever expects it, and by it I mean all the greens. You sign up for a summer share and you're thinking tomatoes, corn, cucumbers, zucchini. Those crops are all heat-loving summer crops. What is ripe in August is not what is ripe in June. In June, because what is ready was started weeks/months before in the cool spring, so you get greens. Arugula, beet greens, cabbage, collard greens, mustard greens, salad greens, spinach, Swiss chard, turnip greens, and kale, kale, kale. (See the Visual Recipe Index by Ingredient for ideas!)
It took me a while to embrace the greens, I admit. Oh, not the salad mix, or spinach, those are pretty easy to love. And Swiss chard is home and mother to me as I grew up eating it from our backyard garden. My trouble with spring greens is this: while I like cooked greens, by May/June I'm craving light, fresh fare, not long-simmered flavorful "pots of greens" goodness.
Yes, I could put the greens up to enjoy in winter soups. But it's not even summer yet, and I'll be getting more greens at the end of the CSA season as the weather turns to fall. I needed to find ways to enjoy my spring greens NOW.
My current obsession is sautéed beet greens and spring onions seasoned with sherry vinegar and topped with a sunny side up egg. On rainy days, and we've had a few, we're enjoying a Finnish summer soup with kale. In the meantime, however, it's time for a Friday Night Pizza Night and this time, I bring you a basic kale pizza dough. [Does my use of the term basic mean that in the future there will be another type of kale pizza dough (link to Spicy Kale Pizza Dough)? Why yes, yes it does. Clever reader, you.]
Not interested in kale on a pizza? Try my Visual Pizza Recipe Index for other ideas!
Not interested in kale on a pizza? Try my Visual Pizza Recipe Index for other ideas!