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Hi! My name is Margot. My blog is about the things I love to do. That could be what I'm reading, places we visit, my family, food, or whatever else is happening. I hope you'll stay and visit a while. Contact me by email: joyfullyretired (at) gmail (dot) com.

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Forever

The Sense of an Ending

Wish You Were Here

A Moveable Feast

Clarissa

The Odyssey

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Need Help At the Farmers Market?

I think of myself as a savvy shopper of fresh vegetables and fruits. After all, I tell myself, I’ve grown most of these items. I should be able to tell when a tomato will have that perfect “from-the-garden” taste. But, I’ve been wrong. I also find the farmers market full of vegetables and fruits that I’ve never tried before.

Just last Sunday I purchased a tomato that tasted as bland as the ones I buy at the grocery store in January. I also have some little green and yellow squashes I’ve never cooked before.

What did I do? I did what I always do when I have questions:  I ask what books could help me find the answers. I found a huge array of resources. Fortunately, there are many people around the world who are a part of the “Eat Local” and “Slow Food” movement. It’s helped spawn a wide number of new books. Let me show you a few.

Fresh from the Farmers’ Market (Reissue): Year-Round Recipes for the Pick of the Crop by Janet Fletcher.

The author guides shoppers through the market, sharing tips on selection and storage as well as advice from the farmers themselves. Readers can turn peak-season produce into delicious eating year-round. This very useful cookbook is a celebration of market bounty with luscious color photographs. Among the 75 tempting dishes are Fingerling Potato Salad With Fennel, White Peaches in Raspberry Wine Sauce, Apple and Dried Cherry Crisp, Radicchio With Raisins and Pine Nuts, and Penne With Broccoli. Sauce. Each delicious soup, salad, entree and dessert makes the most of the season’s best.

Simply in Season Expanded Edition (World Community Cookbook) by Cathleen Hockman-Wert, Mary Beth Lind.

This cookbook makes an occasion out of the season itself. . . In many ways, this cookbook is also a theology of food. It reminds us with every page the meaning and place of food in our lives. (Farmer’s Independent Weekly)

An essential kitchen companion for all of us who love to get our food from our own backyard, local CSA or farmers market–and always need new ideas. This is a book I will turn to over and over again. They’ve put the recipes in the most organized, easy-to-use cookbook I’ve seen. (Catherine Walthers, author)

I love this cookbook. It not only contains a diverse variety of recipes, but it is chock-full of information about using fresh, local, and seasonal foods. (B. Smith, lifestyle expert)

Farm to Fork: Cooking Local, Cooking Fresh by Emeril Lagasse

In this new book, Emeril Lagasse continues his lifelong commitment to using fresh, local ingredients in his restaurants and home kitchen. He has spent the past thirty years building close relationships with farmers, fishermen, and ranchers. Farm to Fork is his guide to help you explore the great local bounty through fifteen flavorful chapters—sweet summer in “The Three Sisters: Corn, Beans, and Squash,” juicy “Berries, Figs, and Melons,” sublime naturally raised meats in “Out on the Range,” fresh catch in “Fresh Off the Dock,” and home canning tips from “Home Economics: Preserving the Harvest.”

Fill your basket with the ripest ingredients from every season at the markets (or your backyard garden) and dig into delicious recipes such as Sweet Potato Ravioli with Sage Brown Butter, Cheesy Creole Tomato Pie, Honey-Brined Pork Chops with Nectarine Chutney, Watermelon Rind Crisp Sweet Pickles, and Rhubarb Strawberry Crisp. Even learn how to make your own cheese and pasta at home. Emeril shares his love for fresh from-the-fields foods—and the heritage of the artisans who bring them to the table.

There are so many more books to choose from. These are the three I’ve narrowed my shopping to. I’d love to know of resources you have used. Please share in the comments section.

(I did all my shopping at the Amazon.com store. Product descriptions of the books came from Amazon. I am an Amazon Associate.)

Talking about food is a regular feature on my blog and others as well. Visit Beth Fish Reads for other bloggers who are participating in Weekend Cooking.

15 comments to Need Help At the Farmers Market?

  • It can really be hard to pick out great produce – I find melons to be particularly difficult. All of those books sound wonderful.

  • Our local produce stands pretty much stick to the old basics but we’re still delighted to see them open for the season. Off today to buy the first sweet corn of the summer. Ymmm!

  • I’m so glad to hear I’m not the only one who has selection failures! What really irritates me is that I always seem to pick out the eggplant that is rotten inside – how do I do that? And tomatoes – it’s so sad! Generally I ask the salesperson to pick them out for me. Then at least if they’re green or mushy it’s someone else’s fault! :–)

  • I definitely need to get one of these books. For every fruit or vegetable I know how to choose there are 3 more that I am clueless in choosing correctly.

  • GREAT selection of books in a category that I did not even know existed! Thanks so much for this practical reading recommendation :)

  • These three are new to me, but I have lots of vegetable and farmers market cookbooks. I think any or all of those would be great. Simply in Season is the one I most want of these. Frankly, I don’t think you can wrong with any book that tells you how to pick/buy, how to store, and how to cook.

    Easier than typing them out, take a look at this WC post for some vegetable cookbook titles.

  • love the sound of all those books and we’re looking forward to visiting farmer’s mkts as we travel. Our grand-daughter doesn’t own a cookbook — she has her laptop on the kitchen counter and the other night looked up a recipe for dinner. Worked well — dinner was good — and I occasionally use the Internet too ;>) (even for recipes) but gosh I think the younger generaation is missing something by not having their favorite cookbooks at hand.

  • Those books all look great. I have yet to find a really tasty tomato this season!!!

  • I read and enjoy your blog regularly. Regarding the award you received, I thought you might want to read this http://bibliophilebythesea.blogspot.com/2010/07/something-about-this-stinks-2010-top-50.html

    :)

  • I must check out those books. I think they’d be quite helpful. I’m never sure what to buy.

  • those books all look interesting, each in their own way.

  • Great selection of books. I’m a huge fan of food and sustainable living reading, so I’ll have to add these to my list. I’m especially interested in Emeril’s new book.

  • Cerrin

    lol I just buy from scent…lol If it smells tight to me then I buy it lol

  • I just printed out that sweet potato ravioli recipe online – I have been wanting to try those since I saw them somewhere out to eat. Now I just need to convince Andy to make them for me ;0)

  • I love the trend of eating more fresh and local products – and farmers markets this time of year are wonderful. Unfortunately, I have to drive an hour to get to one, but worth it. Thanks for the book recommendations. When it comes to gardening, I’m a total failure, so I don’t know much about selecting fresh fruits and veggies.

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