Support Your Local and Regional Growers, Save Cash
Posted: Friday, August 22nd, 2008 by RobAnd, by market I don’t mean a trip to the nearest strip-mall supermarket with cart corrals, though I shop at Giant and Safeway like everyone else. It was walk-to-market day. I work from home one day a week, and every other Wednesday I’m afforded the luxury of my own private branch office in Catonsville, MD. Not only to I get to save 20% on my commuting fuel consumption, I can walk or ride to somewhere interesting on our “main street” at lunch time.
Every Wednesday morning, from May to November, we have a local farmers’ market. It’s small, it’s in the community center parking lot, but it’s better than just about any grocery store’s produce department. All vendors must grow or produce for themselves all of the goods they sell. No “faux-farmers” offloading trucks of greenhouse tomatoes from produce distributors; these folks grow it, care for it, pick it, and truck it to your community. We use the farmers’ market a lot. When I’m home on Tuesdays instead of Wednesday, Theresa makes the trip to gather the goods.
Today’s catch was excellent – August is a peak harvest month for vegetables here in the Mid-Atlantic. The early ripening tomatoes are tailing off and the late ripening ones are in full swing – Romas and cherry varieties produce prodigious yields throughout the summer starting in July. Summer squashes are piled high, in beautiful condition, and dirt cheap. Yellow crooknecks and zucchinis share a season, for the most part, and they produce like crazy all at once. The ones pictured above weigh about a pound and a half a piece and were in the huge “Take my squash, please!” bin at 3 for $1.00.
Cantaloupe and eggplants of all sorts are in full swing. The melons, heavy and sweet smelling, were piled high at a buck each, and the large eggplants were going for 75¢ apiece. I bought two of each. Roasted eggplant is a great diet food – filling and low calorie, it soaks up other flavors with aplomb and has a savory sweetness of its own.
Some of the specialty items can get a little more pricey, but I’d much rather pay a local organic farmer $4 for a carton of beautiful, unblemished fingerling potatoes than $5-6 for a half-dried-out pint in a gourmet market. I didn’t get any dairy or smoked fish this week, which kept me from a lot of the higher costs. A pint-sized mixed variety of yellow, orange, red, and purple cherry tomatoes cost me all of $3. A plastic package of not-quite fully ripe Mexican grape tomatoes runs $2.50 at the supermarket – you do the math.
Roma tomatoes were on the list, and there were some beauties for $2 a quart – firm and fleshy but sweet. I breeze by the heirloom vegetables every time I’m there without buying. I must commit some sort of foodie heresy by saying that I really don’t taste the big deal. Maybe it’s just this one vendor picking early to get the premium prices these rare fruits demand. Of course, this makes me want to experiment with growing them myself.
Then there’s the bread – I spare no expense with the bread. If I could eat enough of the stuff in a week, I’d drop a double-sawbuck here every time I walked by. Today, though, it’s just a loaf of crusty Italian bread with rosemary. The baker at the market is Atwater’s – one of the premier bread makers in Baltimore, perhaps even in the region. Their artisanal breads are hand-formed, baked locally daily, and use locally sourced ingredients, including organic flours. Besides the gorgeous loaf shown here, they offer a rustic wheat loaf, a round boule with kalamata olives, another sourdough boule with cranberries and toasted walnuts, and dense, chewy whole grain raisin-nut bread. If bread is the staff of life, Atwater’s whittles a hell of a stick. $5 a loaf, on average, which is a steal for handmade goods of this quality, and they also offer pre-made soups and locally produced cheeses.
When all was said and done – I had two shopping bags full of goodies holding somewhere between twenty and twenty-five pounds of food. In the process, I spent about $22. Much of it was organically grown, all of it produced within about an hour’s drive, and all of it at the peak of freshness. I mean, just look at those plump, almost translucent cherry tomatoes in that picture.
Find a market in your area – if you can walk or bike to it, even better. You’ll directly support people who need your patronage to earn their living, and you’ll be rewarded with top of the line ingredients for your kitchen. Take reusable bags and paper sacks with you – that way you won’t be bringing home a wad of plastic film bags, destined for the landfill. If you walk, consider a canvas tote with comfortable handles. If you bike, saddlebags, bike baskets, and backpacks will help with your haul.
Linkin’ it up for y’all:



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kerry said,
August 23, 2008 @ 11:08 am
Some people say their farmer’s markets are expensive, which is really too bad. Ours is reasonable, although not always cheaper. Still I’m willing to pay for local.
Hey, I’m hosting a Farmer’s Market Report. Maybe you’d like to submit this post? Come on over and check it out: http://toeverymeal.blogspot.com/2008/08/farmers-market-report-august-23rd.html
Rob said,
August 23, 2008 @ 11:39 am
I think that people complain about market prices because they are buying local produce the way they buy supermarket produce. In other words, buying what they want rather than what’s local and in season. When the tomatoes, eggplants, squash, and melons all come ripe in force, prices drop because there’s a lot of supply. People don’t understand that anymore, because they’re so used to buying produce out of season from growers thousands of miles away.
Thanks for your comment! Paid a visit to your blog. There are more and more of us out there trying to spread the word that good food is within anyone’s grasp.
kerry said,
August 29, 2008 @ 5:05 pm
Thanks for submitting your post. I’ll have this week’s Farmer’s Market Report up tomorrow by 10AM. Hope to see you then!