The Windmill Market has launched its blog!

We finally have a forum to share all our tidbits of info on local farmers, cool artists, the best sandwiches, an interesting article on green living, recipes from our Produce Club, or whatever else pops into Mac's brain! Stay tuned for all the info you never thought you needed to know...
Showing posts with label csa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label csa. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

Gulf Coast Newspapers: "Leave the shopping to the market"


Leave the shopping to the market
Windmill Market Produce Club brings together Baldwin County foods and local consumers
Friday, June 14, 2013
By Jill Clair Gentry Food editor people@gulfcoastnewspapers.com


Amy Ramagosa of Fairhope and her son Burke pick up their produce box at Windmill Market. Ramagosa says she loves teaching her son about different kinds of vegetables and how farmers grow food for their family to eat.


WHAT: Windmill Market Produce Club
WHERE: Windmill Market, corner of Equality and Bancroft streets in Fairhope
WHEN: Pickup is Mondays from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Fairhope and 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in Mobile
MORE INFO: Stop by Windmill Market, call 251-990-8883 or email Maggie Lacey at maggie@windmillmarket.org.

Imagine: you don't have to go to the grocery store every week. The fruits and vegetables you feed your family tonight were harvested earlier today. You're trying vegetables you never would have bought at the grocery store and discovering you love them. You save money on food and are eating more healthful meals.
This might sound idyllic, but it's is a picture of a real-life program available here in Baldwin County — Windmill Market's Produce Club.
Every Monday for the past two years, dozens of people have flocked to the market to pick up a box of fresh and seasonal fruits and vegetables, dairy, bread, meats and specialty items like granola, soap or coffee.
“It's a ready-made meal plan for the week,” says Maggie Lacey, manager of the Windmill Market. “You've got it all packed up and ready to go, and you've got recipes to get you started.”
And every item is grown or made locally.
“It's as fresh as produce gets,” Lacey says. “We talk to the farmers all week long. Sunday nights, they tell us what they've got, and they harvest Monday morning. There's almost nowhere you can go to get produce that fresh.”
Lacey says about 90 percent of the vegetables come from Baldwin County, but for some items, they work with farmers in south Mississippi, Georgia or Florida.


Thursday, July 28, 2011

NPR: CSA/Produce Clubs

We found this article on NPR.com and wanted to share- its a neat profile of a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). The author chronicles the excitement of cooking from a surprise box of fresh veggies, not at all unlike our own Produce Club here at the Windmill. 

Once difference with the Produce Club and a CSA, however, is that we contract with and buy from numerous local farms as opposed to just one (what you usually get with a CSA). This way you are supporting more small farmers in our area and we retain control the items we purchase so as to avoid a monotony of winter greens, an over abundance of potatoes, or a mountain the same crop week after week. 

We also include recipe ideas each week, as you have no doubt seen if you have spent any time on this blog. We also love to share recipes from our customers, so send them in if you have them!


Oh, The Things You Can Do With A Farm-Share Box
by NICOLE SPIRIDAKIS
June 8, 2011

I stared at the box brimming with vegetables, wondering what I'd gotten myself into. Unidentifiable greens, tiny round potatoes, a clutch of dirt-dusted, perfectly red radishes, a small container of wild strawberries — all this bounty was mine, if only I could figure out what to do with it.

For an urbanite such as myself, being connected to a farm brings a bit of the country into the city. It reminds me that there's a vast acreage out there not bound by concrete and tall buildings, helps me to eat with the seasons, and brings home how important it is to know the source of my food.