Special Events & Announcements
Winter Urban Gardening Classes
Did you resolve to get your hands dirty this year? Learn winter pruning, urban composting, or spring vegetable gardening at one of several upcoming workshops at Garden for the Environment. See the complete list >
Nextcourse Kids Cooking Class Series ~ Starts January 23
Nextcourse, a nonprofit that aims to improve the health of San Francisco communities by inspiring people to purchase, cook, and eat locally-produced foods, introduces two new series of classes just for kids. Starting next Tuesday, talented culinary instructors will teach these hands-on Kidscourse classes at the professional kitchen of Traci Higgins, chef/owner of Lilah Belle's. Proceeds from the classes will directly support Nextcourse's nutrition education and leadership development work with youth in low-income communities.
Kitchen Table Talks: Urban Homesteading ~ January 19
This monthly conversation series about the American food system takes on urban homesteading. Homesteaders Kevin Bayuk of the Urban Permaculture Institute, Heidi Kooy of Itty Bitty Farm in the City, and Davin Wentworth-Thrasher of the Ecology Center of San Francisco will share their experiences, insights, and ideas. Join the conversation at KTT’s new, permanent location: Viracocha, 998 Valencia Street, in the Mission. RSVP required. Email ktt@civileats.com to reserve your seat or leave a message at 925.785.0713. Read more >
Testing ...1...2...3
Last fall, Point Reyes Farmstead Cheese Co. — best known for its artisan blue cheese — branched out. At their farmers’ market stand, the company introduced a fresh mozzarella, followed shortly by a young farmhouse gouda.*
“We’re experimenting, and trying lots of different recipes,” says Lynn Giacomini-Stray, one of four sisters who run the small cheese company with their father. Every experiment yields a 20-pound wheel of cheese, so Point Reyes Cheese Co. brings it to the market, where shoppers expect a constantly shifting, seasonal array of options. Loyal customers can then act as a ready-made focus group. As Lynne put it, “the farmers' market is really important to us as a venue for feedback.” When the weather began cooling off, for instance, the fresh mozzarella stopped selling as quickly. “We realized that it’s a warm weather cheese,” says Lynn, “so we’ll be bringing it back in late spring.”
Point Reyes Cheese Co. is one of a number of farms and artisan ventures that have used the market as a testing ground. Cowgirl Creamery is also currently testing out a new cheese; they have a name, "Wagon Wheel," picked out, but they're not officially calling it that yet. Instead, they send it home with shoppers using batch numbers, so they can get feedback on slightly different versions of the recipe.
How sweet is too sweet?
When John Driver first brought his “CandyCot” apricots to the market a few years back he had just started raising a number of single-tree varieties he’d brought back from Central Asia. John wasn’t sure what would sell, or how eaters would take to the fruit, so he tried them out on Ferry Plaza customers.
“[Farmers' Market feedback] really changed or mind about what we thought would work,” says John. “We knew we had intensely flavored fruit and we thought they’d be too far outside the apricot mainstream.” Of the many varieties they brought, two, named Anya and Yuliya, were especially popular; now they’re the backbone of the business. “We chose the varieties we planted commercially based on what the customers told us,” John adds. “So we’re very grateful to have had that opportunity.”
The accidental brand
When Joe Hargrave applied to start a stand at the Thursday market last July, he planned to base it on the Spanish fare he served in his restaurant, Laïola. Then one day a lightbulb went on.
Since 2008, Joe and his wife Sara Deseran had been scheming about ways to open a taco truck that used sustainable ingredients, but they set the idea aside when the recession hit. A weekly gig at the Ferry Plaza — and the loyal audience that came with it — promised a way to try out the concept without a lot of overhead. And the rest, as they say, is taco history.
The couple launched
Tacolicious and the discerning Thursday lunch audience responded positively. “Thursdays became the highlight of my week,” says Joe. And for good reason. “The crowd is there for the flavors. So I was inspired to work with different chiles, and to get creative with the tacos, working in things like a chorizo-potato and tongue.”
Soon tacos infiltrated Laïola, where Joe and Sara instituted a special taco night every Tuesday. It was such a success that the pair decided to transform the whole restaurant, closing down for a few weeks near the end of the year to re-shape the interior and finalize the menu. “Californians just really dig Mexican food. And the tacolicious menu has a more playful tone," says Joe. "I can take the food seriously, but in a less formal context.”
The new bricks and mortar Tacolicious opened earlier this week, with a name Joe acknowledges wouldn’t have been his first choice (it came about spontaneously when a friend heard they were starting a taco stand and exclaimed, “tacolicious!”). "We wanted to change the name," says Joe. “But so many people have seen it at the farmers’ market and they remember it; so the brand just kind of stuck.”
*Both of Pt. Reyes’ cheeses will be back for another round of customer feedback later this spring.
Market Update
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This is the most up-to-date information about which sellers will be attending the market as of Friday. If there are no changes to a seller's status, they will not be listed. You'll find a list of which farmers regularly attend each market here. Please understand that there are often last-minute changes—it's the nature of farming!
Saturday, January 16
Returning: Hare Hollow
Out: Flatland Flower Farm, Happy Quail Farm, Knoll Farm
Tuesday, January 19
Returning: Bella Viva Orchards, County Line Harvest, Four Sisters Farm, Frog Hollow Farms
Thursday, December 21
No changes
Seasonality Synopsis for January
Returning and plentiful this month (weather willing):
Grapefruit, root vegetables, chicories, cruciferous vegetables, kumquats, lettuces, Asian greens, fennel, cabbages, nettles, sunchokes, pea sprouts, green garlic, blood oranges, collard greens, cherimoyas, tulips, flowering branches, winter squash, onions, spinach, Meyer lemons, radishes
Winding down/limited supply:
Potatoes, eggs, Brussels sprouts, avocados (apples and pears are also available in limited quantities from cold storage this time of year)
Farms returning this month:
Brokaw Nursery
Vendor and value-added items not to be missed:
Dried tomatoes from Everything Under the Sun, hot pepper flakes from Allstar Organics, Meyer lemon yogurt from St. Benoit Yogurt
Featured recipes for December
Green Garlic Soup from Erica Holland-Toll, formerly of Lark Creek Inn
Capunet- Piemontese Cabbage Rolls from Staffan Terje of Perbacco (December 13, 2008)
French Toast with Lemon-Ricotta Filling and Fresh Citrus Compote from Thy Tran


