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Posts Tagged ‘Tammy Wolfe’

Please enjoy this thoughtful reflection on the 2012 farmers’ market season by Tammy Wolfe of Sun and Moon Creations.

With the birth of my new business, Sun and Moon Creations, came my introduction to the vendor side of the farmers’ market.  It has been an interesting journey for me.  Not only have I been selling my soaps and other SMC products, but I’ve also sold a few things out of my garden and strengthened my resolve to become a better gardener.

My observations at the farmers’ markets this summer taught me to look at my food in a new way.  These local, hard-working people grow vegetables and fruit in the soil of their own land, work that ground every day and and care for those plants with the kind of passion that only gardeners can appreciate.  No matter what kind of weather nature throws at them, they do the best they can with a few seeds and a few acres.  This year the harvests weren’t bad, but I’m sure some years are much worse. They come to the market every week, often with children in tow, sit for hours under a canopy on the hot summer afternoons with the fruits of their labor – organic tomatoes, beans, onions, peppers, etc., and often leave with very few dollars in their pocket and a good bit of produce that was picked, polished, and artfully displayed in beautiful baskets – yet did not sell.  I’ve heard many customers look at their displays and stick their noses up saying things like, “I can get bigger ears of corn at the super market for a lot less.”

Then I look at the weekly flyers for discount grocery stores and bulk warehouse stores and see prices that no farmer could compete with.  However, I wonder if people realize that with those cheaper prices they are getting a product that was grown somewhere far away from GMO’s, sprayed with herbicides and pesticides, picked before maturity, shipped to our local stores (which used thousands of gallons of fuel), and cannot compare in taste or quality to the delicious, organic produce grown from local farmers who care as much about the land as they do the products they grow and sell.

What I didn’t grow myself this year I was able to buy from my fellow vendors at the markets.  I’m sure I paid a little more money for some things than I would have at my local grocery store, but knowing the food on my table came from local people just like me who are trying to earn a living by the sweat of their brow and yields of their land gave me great satisfaction.  I bought as much as I could and canned, froze, dried like crazy in effort to save enough to get my family through the winter without having to buy it from the store.  I’ll look for bargains elsewhere, but not in the food I put on my table.

Next year we plan to double the size of our garden.  I plan to support my local farmers’ as much as I can by buying from them what I do not grow myself.  Buying from those vendors means supporting small local businesses with strong values and quality products.  And when I see those ads for ridiculously low produce at discount grocery stores, I’ll remind myself what a treasure we have on the tables of the farmers’ markets.

 

This article was originally written and posted by Tammy Wolfe on Tammy’s Blog on Monday, October 15, 2012. Tammy is a professional photographer, makes organic handcrafted soaps, is a home gardener, a free-range flock owner, a wife & mother and somehow manages to find time to attend both the Juniata and Hollidaysburg Farmers’ Markets each week. Thanks for supporting local farmers and artisans in the Southern Alleghenies Tammy!

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I know it sounds like a new dance craze, but Gazpacho is actually a refreshing chilled summer soup!  Gazpacho is a wonderful side dish for summer cook outs, it would be a great addition to Sunday brunch, or even a quick and healthy lunch after a hot day in the sun. Since this soup is served chilled it is refreshing, hydrating, and full of vitamins and nutrients that have not been altered through the application of heat.  This is a great dish for this time of year in the Southern Alleghenies since tomatoes, cucumbers, sweet peppers, onions, jalapeno peppers, garlic and basil are all in season.  Stop by your local farmers market and pick up the ingredients to try this refreshing soup today!

Late Summer Gazpacho

3 lbs. of tomatoes, peeled, seeded, chopped
2 c. tomato juice
2 c. cucumbers, peeled, seeded, chopped
1 c. red, orange, or yellow pepper, chopped
1 c. red onion, chopped
2-3 small jalapenos, seeded and minced
2-3 cloves of garlic, minced
1/4 c. extra virgin olive oil
Juice from 2 limes
1 Tbs. plus 1 tsp. balsamic vinegar
1 Tbs. plus 1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
1/2 tsp. ground cumin
2 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 tsp. ground black pepper
1/4 c. basil leaves, chiffonade

Combine all ingredients except basil in a large pot and stir.  Remove a cup or two of the mixture and blend on high speed in a blender, then return to pot.  Cover and chill for 2-8 hours.  Serve with basil as garnish.

This recipe comes from Tammy Wolfe of Sun & Moon Creations. Tammy is one busy lady: she makes and sells all natural soaps, fragrances and home and body care products at the Hollidaysburg and Juniata Farmers Markets, is a wedding photographer for and part owner of London Wolfe Photography, a gardener, a mother, and she raises laying hens too! Thanks for the great recipe Tammy!

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Michael Pollan, in an essay for the New York Review of Books writes about the market atmosphere that farmer’s markets and consumers create for themselves.  “One sociologist calculated that people have ten times as many conversations at the farmers’ market than they do in the supermarket.  In many cities and towns, farmers’ markets have taken on the function of a lively new public square.”

I went to www.localharvest.org to find our “lively new public square”  locations and hours of business.  I found Altoona Farmer’s Market,  Juniata Farmer’s Market, Friday Farmer’s and Flea Market, the Hollidaysburg Market and a new one opening in Claysburg today.

Each year there are more of these colorful little tent cities with their own eclectic array of vegetables, along  with some new twists.  Farmer’s markets now carry cheese, meat, soap, flowers and baked goods.  There are free wine tastings and workshops on a variety of topics.  On Thursday I decided to see if I could buy everything I needed to make a big pot of fresh vegetable soup.  My experiment took place at the Juniata Market.

Kathy Dibert had corn picked that morning. Check One.   She also had fresh lettuce for the beginnings of a salad.  Kathy is a vendor at Juniata and  Hollidaysburg and she’s been instrumental in bringing together vendors for the new Claysburg Market.

Participating in a farmer’s market isn’t as easy as setting up a tent and putting fresh vegetables out on a table.  Rita Resick and Rick Stafford make the trip from Somerset County to Juniata Market.  They estimated they spent about five hours picking their vegetables and a total of  four hours travel time.  They sold me fresh green beans and onions.  Check Two and Three.

They weren’t the only traveling vendors.  Austin and Anthony Rice sell their cheese in Juniata,  Boalsburg and Ligonier.  They have a lot of cheese to be sampled and it’s all made at their family farm in Williamsburg;  Clover Creek Farm.   Check Four  They had meat for my soup.  Check Five.  Next in the line of vendors,  was the Bee Kind Winery from Clearfield.   With the proper identification, customers can taste the wine.   The wine list includes a Rails to Trails red.  Bee Kind Winery makes a donation to  Rails to Trails with every bottle sold and what’s vegetable soup without a little wine?  Check Six.

Mike and Amy Friday say the first question a customer asks is “Did you grow this yourself?”  Then as they complete their transactions, they pause to chat.  Mike offers free gardening advice and recipes using his fresh produce.  He says his most popular vegetable is tomatoes.  Check Seven.

John Hirt was selling my favorite newly- dug red potatoes in two pound boxes.   Check Eight.

On Katherine Forsht‘s table were enchanting bouquets of flowers in pint Mason jars.  Check Nine. Her flowers made the perfect table centerpiece, but she told me her best sellers are her home-made dog treats.

Right next to the Bee Kind Winery tent was Tammy Wolfe who makes her own soap, scented with essential oils and minus the chemicals incorporated into commercial soap.  I know it’s a stretch, but I’m making Tammy’s soap my Check Ten.  You know how hard it is to get the smell of onions off your hands!

 

This article written by Teresa Futrick of Tyrone, PA and was originally published in the Altoona Mirror on Saturday, July 28th. Teresa has been around farming and gardening all her life and likes everything about it — even weeding.

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