The Weblog

This weblog contains LocallyGrown.net news and the weblog entries from all the markets currently using the system.

To visit the authoring market’s website, click on the market name located in the entry’s title.



 
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Dawson Local Harvest:  REMINDER! Dawson Local Harvest Market Closes @ 9pm!


Dawson Local Harvest for March 3rd

HI EVERYBODY!

Just a quick Reminder that The Market will close Tonight at 9 pm. Still plenty of time to order delicious Cinnamon Rolls with Sour Cream Icing, crispy Spinach or yummy Raw milk (for your pet, of course).

Thanks

Alan Vining
Market Manager

Russellville Community Market:  RCM Order Reminder


Russellville Community Market closes at 10 p.m. this evening – be sure to place your order!

Pick up is Thursday at All Saints Episcopal Church on Phoenix from 4 – 6:30 p.m.

See you on Thursday!!

Russellville Community Market

FRESH.LOCAL.ONLINE.

Cape Locally Grown:  An EGGstatic welcome to Cackleberry Acres!


10% off Cackckleberry Acres Eggs This week!

Their New Hampshire Reds and Cinnamon Queens hens produce large to extra large brown eggs. The hens are cage free and enjoy grazing. They are fed conventional grain.

Champaign, OH:  A Change Would Do You Good


A change,
(A change would do you good)
Would do you good,
(A change would do you good)
I think a change,
(A change would do you good)
Would do you good.
(A change would do you good)
(Sheryl Crow)

So, lately, I have been revisiting all of my favorite female artists from back in the 1990s. Totally on replay, morning, during my baking, in the evening when I am making dinner.

They were a soul, rocking, bluesy group. They came before the next wave of Britneys and the 2000 girls of song.

Back in the 90s, I had my little sidekick, my daughter, and she would bop along on my hip, in our little beach town that we loved so much, and we would visit the beach, the museums, the festivals, the shops, and I raised her on these women of the musical 90s, on Grateful Dead, on The Stones, just about anything that wasn’t baby related.

I still remember her little blonde head, bopping along, singing one of Jewel’s songs, as she entered her little preschool.

I love those memories, I loved the spirit of the girl rockers in that time frame, and I love the message of this song, as I apply it to our little market of love, right here, online.

Sometimes, a change will do you good. Making a change in your eating, shopping, spending, is always a good plan, a bit of a jumpstart to your health, your soul, your whole feel good aura.

How about going in for a change, this week? Order something, or a whole lot of somethings from our market? You’ll never know if you like us or the products, until you try us.

Come on…the change will do you good…

XOXO,
Cosmic Pam

GFM :  Kidding Season on the farm


Forgive me, but it is kidding season on the Farm, and things are kind of wild here.
Then there is spring planting to be prepared.

Enjoy what are vendors have to offer.

Thanks and Good Eating,
Judy

Greener Acres Farm:  Last Minute Addition -- EGGS!!


Just Added — EGGS!!

We just added a new grower and new product.

Welcome Deb & Ralph Rispoli of Rispoli’s Produce.

We have been marketing with Deb & Ralph for many years and found them to be great mentors and remarkable farmers.

Try some of their farm fresh, free- range eggs.

Miami County Locally Grown:  Tonight's featured vendor? Sugar Grove Maple Products!!


If Braden Fisher is cooking down his sap to produce maple syrup when you step out of your car at Sugar Grove Maple Products, your senses are sure in for a treat. I thought I’d walked into a candy kitchen – the cooking maple syrup smells so rich, and so sweet, you can almost taste it. I was instantly sorry we didn’t have more maple trees on our own farm, or a fresh batch of pancakes!

And I was shocked by his infrastructure… the romanticized picture in my mind was of old-fashioned buckets on the trees collecting sap, and a simple pan heated with woodfire, not the super-efficient tubing collection system through the trees and sleek, ultra-modern, diesel-powered evaporator and reverse osmosis (What word do I need here? It’s not a filter or extractor, right?!) he could adjust with the touch of a button. With reverse osmosis, he can remove 80% of the water from the sap before he ever begins to cook it into syrup… the essence of efficiency!

When he said this had been a hobby for ten years, I wanted to laugh – other people call collecting stamps, reading, or knitting a hobby, not this kind of massive annual undertaking. Collecting and processing 20,000 gallons of sap from 1,000 trees? I think we’re all glad Braden is so committed to his “hobby”!

At the family farm on State Route 41 just west of Troy, it all began when Braden, then in high school, learned the art of maple sugaring from his cousin in Indiana. With a convenient location on a high-traffic road, and more than a little determination, his first year saw him collecting sap with buckets, stoking his fire with wood, and cooking down the sap in a 2 foot by 5 foot pan… and one year the old-fashioned way was enough! Enter a new evaporator, the tubing pipeline to collect the sap from the trees, and Braden was on his way to becoming the area’s go-to maple syrup producer!

When I visited recently to see his process in action, he was constantly and capably working, fine-tuning this, adjusting that, moving here and there… it was all I could do to be relatively quiet (believe me, a herculean feat), so floored I was by the art unfolding before my eyes that I asked only one million questions. It cracked me up that he was so calm and nonchalant about what to me was the neatest thing I’d see in some time.

Like so many agricultural productions, the maple syrup process is severely affected by the weather – changes in barometric pressure can fluctuate daily or hourly, and hinder production. So much thought, planning and care goes into Braden’s syrup, and you can taste not only the quality but the effort it’s production demands.

You couldn’t find a lovelier personality than his mother, Marilyn, who is a familiar face at the Cherry Street farmer’s market with Braden’s syrup and sugar along with her scrumptious confections, of course made with maple!

In addition to the virtual market, Cherry Street, and their farm store, you can also find his syrup and sugar at the Covered Wagon farm market, Dorothy Lane market, Bodega in Tipp, and Whole Health for the Whole Family in Troy.

We are undoubtedly lucky to be in an area able to support such a plethora of delicious, quality products… Home Grown Great, indeed!

And a very HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Joan Buehler, the lovely wife of Phil, who many of you know to be the amiable jokester with the wonderful freezer van, bringing down the family’s beef and pork products to you each week. A hearty THANK YOU for letting us borrow Phil not only each Tuesday, but especially on your birthday :-)

All our available products can be found at www.miamicounty.locallygrown.net

Fresh Harvest, LLC:  Fresh Harvest Order Reminder!


To Contact Us

Fresh Harvest, LLC
Link to Fresh Harvest
Email us!
Tallahassee May
tally@wildblue.net
JohnDrury
john.drury@att.net

Recipes

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Market News

Hello!

There are still some great veggies available on the Market. Carrots, lettuces, radishes, and spinach! Get your fresh veggies, eat healthy and keep those winter blues and sickness away! Also, stock up now on meats and eggs!

We will be taking next week off of deliveries. We will continue on an every-other-week schedule. Our next delivery will be on March 15th.

Thank you so much for all your support!

See you Wednesday!
John and Tallahassee


Coming Events

We thank you for your interest and support of our efforts to bring you the healthiest, the freshest and the most delicious locally-produced foods possible!

Yalaha, FL:  Order now for March 4th Produce


Order now through March 2nd for March 4th pickup.

Send me a message if you are interested in Getting Channel Catfish.

Let me know if you are interested in Shiitake Mushrooms. They should be listed soon but if you let me know, I may be able to fill orders even before the new farm gets listing.

If you want Living Trays of Sunflower shoots, Pea shoots, or micro greens please let me know as I need time to grow them for you. Currently I can do Pea shoots, sunflower shoots, radish, arugula, and Basil micro greens and wheatgrass in full trays, 1/6th trays or 1/8th trays. I can also do radish in smaller containers. In trials are Beet micro greens. If you have any particular requests, let me know I’m happy to grow to order.

Sign in to order. https://yalaha.locallygrown.net/market

You have to sign in to see the add to cart button. Then click the add to cart button on the items you want to buy. Remember you need to check out before your order will be placed.
Remember to let me know when you want to pick up on Sat. (If I don’t send you an e-mail confirmation of your order and pick up time, please make sure you checked out and completed your order.)

Green Fork Farmers Market:  Weekly product list


Dear Green Fork Farmers Market Customers:

Here’s what’s available this week:

Vegetables—Spinach, kale, arugula, green garlic, swiss chard, japanese turnips with greens, collard greens, lettuce, bok choy.

Eggs—From free range hens on pasture.

Herbs—Cilantro, parsley, and turmeric.

Honey—Local and delicious!

Meat—Pastured beef, chicken, and lamb.

Olives and Olive Oil—Direct from the organic grower in California.

Fermented foods—Okra and jalapenos.

Salsa—Made with locally grown and organic ingredients.

Crafts—Natural, handmade soy candles scented with pure essential oils (no toxic chemicals!)

Place your order now, then pick up and pay on Wednesday from 4-7 pm at Nightbird Books in Fayetteville.

You can also check out a selection of locally grown and handmade goods at the market on Wednesday.

We look forward to seeing you!

Green Fork Farmers Market
Wednesdays 4-7 pm
Indoors, Year Round
Inside Nightbird Books
205 W. Dickson St.
Fayetteville, AR

To place your order, click on the link below to enter the website. Sign in as a customer, then click on the icon next to each product you wish to order. Proceed to checkout, review the list to make sure it’s correct, then scroll to the bottom and click on Place This Order. Make sure you receive a confirmation email—-if you don’t, your order was not processed. Payment is at the market pickup with cash, check, debit/credit card, EBT, and Senior FMNP coupons. Ask about our doubling program for EBT and SFMNP!