Here is a visit to the farmer’s market with my Mom!
Growing up, my family was all about great food. My mother was a wonderful cook and an even better baker. She always baked for the weekend just in case guests stopped in and they always did. We were lucky if something baked on Saturday had leftovers on Monday for my school lunch.
My mother loved farmers’ markets. You could get home-butchered and smoked meats, fresh-baked goods and local produce. We would set out at 7:30 a.m. on a Saturday and come home hours later with bags and bags of wonderful stuff.
Our conversations always went something like this:
Mom: Kathleen (she always called me by my given name) are you ready? I want to get there before the old ladies squeeze all the produce. (The term “old ladies” always meant women other than herself. She was known to sneak a squeeze herself but only when necessary. That was different from other old ladies who squeezed indiscriminately.)
Me: I’m on my way. (Ok, I was still in bed but was thinking about getting up. I was the chauffeur as my mother hated to drive more than 2 miles.)
Mom (in the car): How does my hair look?
Me: Lovely but does it matter? Who is going to see you at the farmers’ market? (My mother always dressed up to go out. She didn’t own pants until she was in her sixties and never wore jeans.)
Mom: You never know! Sometimes the church ladies are there. (I have no idea who the church ladies were but we lived in fear that they would see my mother without every hair in place.)
Mom (at the market): Look at the baked goods. Should we get muffins or buns or rolls?
Me: It doesn’t matter to me. (In a minute all three were purchased and placed in the cart. Anything still warm was scooped up too.)
This would go on and on. We would buy bacon and smoked pork chops, chicken and roasts, nuts, crazy-named cheeses, olives and pickles, all sorts of fruit and lots of vegetables.
The best part was coming home and “tasting” everything. My mother never stood on protocol when it came to food. We ripped the bags open and sampled the food sometimes with our coats on. Warm bakery items were gone in a few bites with regrets that we didn’t get more. All right, I confess, sometimes the warm bakery items didn’t really make it home intact (or perhaps not at all).
We always bought more than we needed or could reasonably consume. Food was cheaper back then and we shared with others.
We ate well all week. There was no peanut butter and jelly sandwich in our family. You could have home-smoked pink bologna with white specks for lunch slathered with home-made sweet-hot horseradish mustard (guaranteed to clean out your sinuses) on some wonderful foo-foo bread. How good is that? Or maybe some salami made by the Amish farmers – yum!
This was all before saturated fat was discovered and ruined our eating habits.
Occasionally I still go to the farmers’ market but it isn’t the same without her. I never inherited her concern about dressing up to shop or having every hair in place! Those judgmental church ladies must be long gone.
Photo credits: Header is from the West Palm Beach farmer’s market. Yummy looking buns by Lowell Mariannika and horizontal shot of bakery case by annpar. Both courtesy of Flickr.
We have several great farmer’s markets in the area. And a truly wonderful bakery with lots of samples. I often take my grandchild, buy a loaf, and then we eat one or two slices in the car. Yum. Happy New Year.
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Thanks! Hot, in the car is just wonderful.
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I walk up to the Culver City farmers’ market almost every Tuesday afternoon… I always buy too much fresh produce as it all looks sooooooo gooooooood! I cook it, freeze it in small batches so I always have something just a defrost away. Recently I discovered chicken sausages that are cooked as I wait with mounds of onions… I’m making myself hungry!!!!
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You are making me hungry and I can’t get there from here! At least not by walking.
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Kate if you knew how much we love bologna sandwiches!!!! And we rip up bags and sample all the stuff too! And your Mom loved the 5 &10!!!! Love this post about your Mom. My memories of my Mom are very strong at Christmas… every day really. She loved Christmas, she was like a little kid during the holidays.
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My Mom’s thing was to bake for Christmas. She made me do the house decorating but no matter what, she baked wonderful stuff. I still miss her.
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I know Kate.. about the “miss her” part. My Mom loved to bake too and I can still see her in one of her cute aprons bent over in front of the stove with the turkey baster.. in fact I have a picture of her.. 🙂
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This made me smile, not to mention hungry. I love the idea of old ladies squeezing all the produce. It also must have been generational because my mother never went anywhere either unless dressed to the nines…God forbid she forgot her lipstick…Cherries in the Snow, by Revlon.
Sweet piece there, Kathleen 🙂
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Thanks! My Mom wasn’t big on makeup but she did lipstick. I don’t remember the color or brand. Probably something from the 5 & 10. You can imagine her dismay when I got into mascara and eye shadow and all that scary makeup!
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I bet you were very glam…
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I loved reading your memories of visits to the Farmer’s Market with your mother, Kate. I could probably write something similar about me and my mom, but our visits are to Walmart each Saturday. She likes Walmart for some reason. 🙂
Merry Christmas to you and your family.
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My mother loved our local 5 & 10. They had a snack bar and after browsing for a couple of hours we would have lunch there. It was a wonderful outing. My mom would like Walmart. Lots of stuff and inexpensive.
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I remember going to Woolworths with my grandmother, she loved the snack bar. 🙂
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We went to JJ Newberry’s (not sure if that was just a local store) but there was a Woolworths in the nearby city with a pizza bar! Our home meals were so healthy it was always a treat to eat at a snack bar. Hot dogs or burgers with fries, yum!
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There were no farmer’s markets when I was growing up; but then, nearly everyone I knew had a garden of her own to “shop” in. These days, I’m a farmer’s market shopper whenever I can find one. Or a roadside stand — I love those, too.
The Church-ladies are still there (and always will be) in various judgmental guises; but you’re too cool to be bothered by, or even to notice, them! 🙂
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OMG! The church ladies are still there? What will they think? 😃
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I love farmers markets, although in our area many of them have turned into mini-craft fairs that also have food. It’s nice to be able to talk to the vendors about their produce – I often end up trying things that would have intimidated me in the supermarket – like dragon fruit.
It appears that you were well-compensated for your chauffeur duties!
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Some places give samples. I’m all about samples. I have found a few new loves through a taste. The vendors at the farmers market changes but around Thanksgiving they have a huge craft show in the adjacent building. Lots of stuff!
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A wonderful recollection to read. You’re mother sounds like the real deal. And thanks for the unintended West Palm Beach suggestion. We’ve been disappointed with the offerings so far in our area, so now I want to look into that one. Very helpful!
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Let’s hope their vegetables are as good as their pictures!
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I love Farmer’s Markets ~ especially the cheese, the bread, and the produce. Sounds like Tess knew how to squeeze joie de vivre out of her visits.
You might enjoy this post, Kathleen:
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Market visits are an experience all their own. There is nothing like it. Because of it’s limited days, I throw caution to the wind and buy whatever looks good and that’s a lot of stuff.
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We bought the most beautiful bok choy and swiss chard on Saturday. It couldn’t have been fresher unless I’d harvested it myself.
And our favorite vendor gave us adorable reindeer pops ~ chocolate with pretzel antlers.
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Reindeer pops? Sounds lovely!
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They look like this . . .
http://www.ohnuts.com/blog/reindeer-oreo-cookie-pops/
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I never went to a farmer’s market with my mom. Every sweet treat was homemade. However, I do remember saturated fat (especially in PA Dutch liverwurst) and in real beef gravy. My Mom finally started wearing pants in the 70s but she never owned jeans either. She was quite a seamstress and I think of her every time I thread my sewing machine. I enjoy your recollections.
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My mom baked a lot but she did like buying stuff at the market.
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I love me some Tess Tales in the morning. Nothing better than testing the loot with your coat on, that’s when things taste the best!
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We would act like a pack of starving wolves!
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I liked this post until I got to the saturated fat part. 😦
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I’m so sorry. Saturated fat is the tasty part. I am waiting for the day they say they were wrong and fats are good for you!
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For the last few weeks and up to New Year’s I am pretending they are good for me. 🙂
So tired of only picking things off the veggie trays. 😦
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I know! There are things out now that you won’t see all year.
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