Not long after her oldest child was born, Tricia Cornell decided it was time to get serious about vegetables. She and her husband, Bruce Manning, were splitting a CSA (community-supported agriculture) share with friends, but week after week, Cornell was dismayed to realize their fresh produce was languishing in the vegetable crisper and ultimately going to waste."I would see the stuff I wasn't using rotting away. It was criminal," said Cornell, who lives in Minneapolis. "I decided it was time to get things in hand. From that point on, I started planning all of our family meals around the vegetables we were getting every week."
A happy consequence of Cornell's decision is that Nora, now 9, and brother Arlo, 7, have become world-class vegetable eaters, without coercion.
"Are there vegetables they don't like? Sure. I wouldn't say I've sold them on Brussels sprouts. I serve them what they like -- my son will always eat green beans," she said. "Plain and simple is best for kids."
About a year ago, Cornell, a former editor at Minnesota Parent and regular contributor to the Heavy Table online food magazine, discovered she had accumulated 75 recipes she routinely made with the vegetables from the family's CSA share. This revelation was the launching point for her new cookbook, "Eat More Vegetables: Making the Most of Your Seasonal Produce" (Minnesota Historical Society Press, $27.95).
A seasonal turn
Since the family began purchasing its June through October CSA produce from Hog's Back Farm in Arkansaw, Wis., almost 10 years ago, the weekly deliveries have become an interesting way for Nora and Arlo to mark time seasonally.
"In June, they know I'll be making a lot of the lettuce rolls they love since we can easily get several heads of lettuce in our box each week," said Cornell.
For some families, the subject of vegetables can be tricky -- mostly if kids refuse to eat them -- but Cornell advises parents to just relax.