and Cultural Center. Fresh fruits and vegetables every Monday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., June through October. 1005 North Railroad Avenue, Española, New Mexico. Blog Editor: Marguerite Kearns.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Friday, October 19, 2012
2012 Market Contests and Fun
WINNERS: ESPAÑOLA FARMERS’ MARKET
THIRTEENTH ANNUAL
BIGGEST VEGETABLE & BEST POEM CONTEST
October
8, 2012
Vegetable Judge:
Deborah
Begel, Writer, Radio Producer, Gardener
Poetry Judge: Beata
Tsosie-Pena, Santa Clara Poet, Community Gardener
BIGGEST HEIRLOOM
SQUASH & WATERMELON
First Place: Elefio
Montoya, Chimayo
Second Place: Elias Gomez, Alcalde
Third Place Melon: Patrick Tafoya,
Santa Clara
BIGGEST
PUMPKIN
First Place: Ross
Vargas, La Madera
Second Place: Jose
Velasquez & Josie Gallegos, Velarde
Third Place: Tranquilino
& Floraida Martinez, Rio Lucia
GIANT
OVERSIZED PUMPKIN
First Place: Patricio
Pacheco, Nambe
BIGGEST
CHILE
First Place: Luz
& Leonard Lopez, Nambe
Second Place: Isabel
Martinez, La Puebla
Third Place: Vanessa
Gonzales, La Puebla
BIGGEST or
SMALLEST APPLE
First Place: Gene
Lopez, Lyden (smallest)
Second Place: Rudy
Cordova, Hernandez (biggest)
Third Place: Larry
Jaramillo, San Pedro (smallest)
BIGGEST ROOT
VEGETABLE
First Place: Eufelia
Martinez, La Puebla (onions)
Second Place: Lawrence Campbell, Alcalde (radishes)
Third Place: Mary
Campbell, Dixon (onions)
ODDEST VEGETABLE
First Place: Steve
Jaramillo, San Pedro (twinned carrot)
Second Place: Sostenga,
Espanola (dried sunflower head)
Third Place: Beata
Tsosie-Pena, community garden (hermaphrodite blue
corn tassel)
WILD CARD
VEGETABLE
First Place: Antonio
Velasquez & Rosa Espinosa (white
& red corn)
Second Place: Floyd
Gonzales, La Puebla (baskets of tiny vegetables)
Third Place: Guadelupe
& Luis Manuel Ojeda, Santa Cruz (white corn)
BEST POEM
First Place: Isabell
Cortez, La Tierra Montessori School
Second Place: Corrina
Shoemaker, La Tierra Montessori School
Third Place: Hope
Orange, La Tiera Montessori School
Honorable
Mention: Kateri
Pena, Espanola
Sunday, September 30, 2012
The 2012 Vegetable and Poem Contest and MORE!
The Española Farmers Market is hosting its Thirteenth
Annual Biggest
Vegetable & Best Poem Contest on Monday,
October 8, 2012. The big vegetables will be displayed all morning and the
selections of winning vegetables and poetry will be announced at 1:30 pm.
Ribbons will be awarded in several categories: biggest pumpkin, biggest
heirloom squash, biggest root vegetable, biggest apple, biggest chile, oddest
vegetable and wild card vegetable. Archeobotanist Glenna Dean will be the judge
for the vegetables. Former Santa Fe poet laureate Joan Logghe and Santa Clara
poet Beat Tsosie-Pena will read the winning poems in the children’s poetry
contest. Dexter Trujillo and students will be baking all afternoon in our horno. Copies of the
2011 A Farming Chapbook will be available free to participants on the Contest Day. Winners of
this year’s contest will appear in the 2012 Chapbook next season.
Our October 8th Contest
Day is also a regular Market Monday, 10 am- 5pm. The Market is located at 1005 N. Railroad Avenue. Visitors can find
heirloom squash, pumpkins, apples, onions, late tomatoes, chile, horno-roasted
chicos, and other treats. Children will be able to select a book from our free Kids’
Book Exchange. Join your neighbors and friends at the Española Farmers’ Market enjoying the fine produce, the award-winning vegetable
giants and the children’s poetry. The Market continues through October 29th. Every Monday is a special
day at the Market!
For information: Sabra Moore @ (505) 685-4842
www.espanolafarmersmarket.org
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Veggie and poetry contest coming up!
October 8: Thirteenth Annual Biggest Vegetable & Best Poem Contest on Columbus Day. Horno demonstration for baking squash with students & others. Stop by the market to pick up rules for entering the giant vegetable or poetry contest. Past editions of A Farming Chapbook are available for purchase every Market Monday. All participants are included
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Enter your photo to win a $200 prize and your photo could be featured in a 2012 acequia calendar published by the NM Acequia Association. Deadline: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5th. This includes ancient engineering features and characteristics of the past - old structures like a wooden canova (flume) for example; old tools; or machinery, illustrating the acequia landscape from a historical perspective. Acequias Present: Photos in this category can include the more contemporary features of acequias and the acequia landscape including greenhouses, or new construction projects. Acequias Future: Be creative with this category. It's meant to be a chance to provide an optimistic view of New Mexico acequias in the future. For example, a photo of youth planting the fields would represent the future of acequias. Youth:This category is specifically for photos submitted by youth (up to age 20). We encourage our youth to participate by submitting acequia photos following the past, present, and future themes. Submissions must be submitted electronically in high resolution JPEG format. Please email photos to quita@lasacequias.org and include the following information: Name of photographer, Acequia, NameRegion (if applicable)Town,County,Photo Description. Participants are limited to one photo per category.
MEANWHILE, PRODUCE IS AS RICH AND LUSH AS EVER AT THE ESPANOLA FARMERS MARKET.
MEANWHILE, PRODUCE IS AS RICH AND LUSH AS EVER AT THE ESPANOLA FARMERS MARKET.
FOR YOUR INFORMATION: The Congreso de las Acequias
is the state-wide governing body of the NM ACEQUIA ASSOCIATION, comprised of regional
delegates across the state. The annual meeting is held in the fall of
each year to pass resolutions that guide the strategic direction of the
NMAA, and to elect the eleven-member Concilio. More folks are joining each year who are dedicated to the cause. The NMAA hopes
to continue building the movement throughout the state, protecting our
land and water resources for future generations of acequia farmers and
ranchers.
The 2012 Congreso de las
Acequias, "New Mexico Centennial: Acequias Past, Present, and Future"
will be held at the Lodge at Santa Fe on Saturday, November 17th. Mark your calendar!
Monday, September 10, 2012
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
LABOR DAY FREE CHILI ROASTING
Espanola Farmers’ Market will be hosting our annual
Labor Day Free Chile Roasting on Monday September 3rd, 2012. Any
fresh chile purchased at the Market on Labor Day can be roasted
free. We will also have a table with samples of local varieties of heirloom chile
and stories of how the farmer obtained her/his seeds and their favorite methods
of preparing and eating chile.
Students will be helping set up displays and serving as guides to
visitors wishing to sample the varieties of chile during this Labor Day
holiday event.These students have been participating throughout the summer in Cooking
Up Traditions, learning with mentors Dexter Trujillo, Norma Navarro and
Brenda Coriz how to prepare fresh foods in the horno or how to identify
and cook wild foods such as quelites (lamb’s quarters), as well as
helping weed and plant in the Wildflower Garden. Cooking Up Traditions
has been funded by Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area (NRGNHA) and Farm
to School.
Chile roasting will go on all day during Market hours, 10am until
5pm on Monday.
Starting at 1pm,
the Market will host the first annual CHILE FEST - a
Traditional New Mexico Green Chile Cook-off, in conjunction with íEl
Tiempo! Nuevo México. Judges will award 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place for the
best traditional green chile in New Mexico! Contestants must bring
their chile to the Market by 1pm. Judging will take place at
1:30. Entries must consist of a crock-pot of green chile (with or
without meat) picked and roasted from this year's crop. Only traditional chile
is allowed, no Big Jim, Española Improved or any other corporate developed or
commercially sold hybrid can be entered. GMO Chile is strictly
forbidden!For official rules and to register to enter CHILE FEST 2012,
please go to: www.eltiemponm.org
Or go to: https://www.facebook.com/events/306816042750066/
íEl Tiempo! will also have an information table about the current threat of Genetically Modified Chile. Visitors can enter to win an íEl Tiempo! beautiful Traditional Chile bumper-sticker or sign a petition to keep New Mexico's chile GMO free! The drawing of winners’ names will be at 5pm on September 3rd.
Labor Day September 3rd is also a regular Monday Market,
with a wide variety of fruits and vegetables for sale, as well as horno
bread, USDA-certified grass-fed lamb, jams, pastelitos, chicos,
dried blue corn, local soaps, and other tasty delights. Children can select a
free book from our Kids’ Book Exchange. Espanola Farmer’s Market
is open twice weekly, including Friday from 2-7pm.
Information:
(505) 685-4842
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Interesting Facts to Consider
The number of farmers' markets in New Mexico has grown from 39 to 61 since 2005. Gross sales were $6 million in 2011, up from $3 million in 2007. Federal funding of $130,000 in FMPP (USDA Farmers Market Promotion Program) has helped over the past six years. From the newsletter of the Sothwest Marketing Network.
Also of note: From now through April 2013 there are four training sessions of the Southwest Grassfed Livestock Alliance throughout New Mexico. For more information: grassfedlivestock.org
November 14-16, 2012. Quivira Coalition's 11th annual conference. "How to feed nine billion people from the ground up." Albuquerque, NM. For more information: quiviracoalition.org
Also of note: From now through April 2013 there are four training sessions of the Southwest Grassfed Livestock Alliance throughout New Mexico. For more information: grassfedlivestock.org
November 14-16, 2012. Quivira Coalition's 11th annual conference. "How to feed nine billion people from the ground up." Albuquerque, NM. For more information: quiviracoalition.org
Monday, August 13, 2012
Support your local chile grower
As we carry locally-grown chiles home from the Española Farmers Market this season, treasure them, freeze them, plan meals around them. Why? Because our vendors deserve appreciation for the hard work that goes into setting up a booth at the market during the height of the season. Also, the New Mexico Chile Association is concerned about the declining availability of fresh, pure state grown product. Our chiles are so good that others want to imitate them. Here's the background. And make sure you get your family's supply for the winter.
Watch for announcements of chile roasting at the Española Farmers Market. Photo: Chile roasting in years past have brought crowds to the market.
Photo:
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Great Summer Projects Funded by NRGNHA
Espanola Farmers’ Market is
a seasonal weekly market open every Monday from10am-5 pm mid-June
through October. We also host a Friday afternoon market from 2-7pm
during the height of the harvest. Farmers come from Santa Cruz, Chimayo,
Peñasco, Nambe, Abiquiu, Velarde, Chile, Tierra Azul, Chamita,
Cuyamungue, Lyden, La Puebla, Taos, Kewa, Hernandez and other
communities to sell their fresh produce including a wide variety of
heirloom and traditional vegetables, fruits and herbs. Espanola Farmers Market has received two grants from Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area (NRGNHA).
The first grant in 2010 was for the construction of an horno, a traditional clay oven, within the Market’s Wildflower Garden area, a community flower garden with eleven oval flowerbeds. Dexter
Trujillo from Abiquiu worked with five local students to construct the
horno throughout several consecutive Monday Markets. The students made
over 300 triangular shaped adobes from the clay rich soil found at theMarket site,
then worked with Dexter to construct the horno and apply a finish coat
of mud plaster. The horno construction attracted a variety of visitors
and volunteers during each work day, watching, helping mix mud or lay
adobes, or sharing stories about how their grandmother or another
relative used to bake food with this clay oven.
This year the Market received another grant for a Cooking Up Traditions project. This series of cooking demonstrations is funded for the 2012 season through NRGNHAand Farm to School with in-kind matching provided by Espanola Farmers’ Market. Each
week during ten Market Mondays students will cook a variety of foods in
the horno and also learn about preparing dishes with wild plants or
other vegetables under the tutelage of Dexter Trujillo, Brenda Coriz,
Norma Navarro or other cooks. We hope to continue developing the use of the horno and
to honor and nurture a variety of land-based traditional practices with
these cooking demonstrations. There are a variety of wild food plants
already growing in the Garden including quelites,
purslane, wild licorice as well as an abundance of wild dye plants.
Traditional gardens have often included both wild and cultivated foods
as well as outdoor methods for cooking or preparation. We plan to cook
bread, chicos, pies, squash and other foods, utilizing the nearby NNMC Commercial Kitchen for food preparation & the horno for
baking. Students will learn about how to use a traditional oven and how
to identify and prepare traditional food. Customers will also benefit
from seeing the horno used and sampling foods. On the Chile Roasting Day, various farmers will prepare displays from their farms and identify the variety of heirloom chile they grow. Visitors can have any chile purchased at the Market that day roasted free. One of the cooks will also be roasting chile in the hornoand
offering tasting samples. We will have musicians performing throughout
midday to add to the celebration. The project will culminate in a
potluck feast on the last Marketday in October.
Española Farmers Market schedule for August!
August 3: Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
August 6: Regular Market Monday + students & others explore Wild Plants in the fields & in the farmers’ stalls + cooking quelites
August 10: Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
August 13: Regular Market Monday
August 17: Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
August 20: The Market Is Corny. Celebrate the arrival of fresh corn. + students & others do a Roasting Chicos Demonstration in the horno. Shop for freshly-made chicos, posole, fresh corn.
August 24: Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
August 27: Regular Market Monday.
August 31: Friday Afternoon Market, 2-7pm
Monday, July 23, 2012
Specials at Friday Markets!
Don't forget the Española Farmers Market on Fridays from 2-7 p.m. This week, and every other week, you can find grass-fed lamb.
Monday markets are at the same time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday markets are at the same time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Monday, July 2, 2012
Take a look at our Española Farmers Market photo gallery
Saturday, June 30, 2012
The word is getting around!
The Rio Arriba County web site has featured the Española Farmers Market for growing stronger and continuing its strong presence in the region. Follow the link.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
JULY MARKET SCHEDULE FOR 2012
July 2: Independence Day at the market + students & others do a Baking Demonstration in the horno + Music
July 9: Regular Market Monday. Look for the jams, jellies and baked goods produced by the Espanola Farmers’ Market Jams & Jellies Coop.
July 16: Regular Market Monday + students & others do a Baking Demonstration in the horno
July 20: First Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
July 23: Market Treasure Hunt & Kid’s Day Hourly Treasure Hunt. Children win prizes for finding the glittery carrots, apples, squash or other fake vegetables hidden in the growers’ stalls + + students & others do a Baking Demonstration in the horno.
July 27: Friday Afternoon Market: 2-7pm
July 30: Regular Market Monday.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
June 11th is market opening day!
The 2012 season for the Española Farmers Market runs from June 11 through October 29, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. And get ready for Friday afternoon markets which start July 20 and run through September 21st. It's going to be a great season!
Sunday, June 3, 2012
We're getting ready for the opening of the Española Farmers Market. The ground is being prepared. The farmers are busy.
And now you can subscribe to our blog. Click here and give us your email.
And then visit our new Española Farmers Market platform at: espanolafarmersmarket.org
Friday, April 6, 2012
Sweet red onions in your salad: Coming soon!
If you're thinking about the opening of the Espanola Farmers Market already, you aren't the only one.
Soon the land will be prepared for the growing season. This year we'll be upgrading our outreach with a new web platform to show off our photos of people, food and fun. The new online garden will be tilled and seeded until the opening of the market in mid June. Here's the web address so you can check in and see how things are progressing: espanolafarmersmarket.org
We'll still post on the blog: espanolafarmersmarket.blogspot.com
You'll get more information, great photos and connection than ever before. See you this summer! Meanwhile, imagine fresh northern New Mexico sweet red onions in your salad.
Soon the land will be prepared for the growing season. This year we'll be upgrading our outreach with a new web platform to show off our photos of people, food and fun. The new online garden will be tilled and seeded until the opening of the market in mid June. Here's the web address so you can check in and see how things are progressing: espanolafarmersmarket.org
We'll still post on the blog: espanolafarmersmarket.blogspot.com
You'll get more information, great photos and connection than ever before. See you this summer! Meanwhile, imagine fresh northern New Mexico sweet red onions in your salad.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Chile Bowl Cook-Off: March 31st
For those of us with chiles still in the freezer, mark the calendar for the 6th annual Espanola Valley Chili Bowl Cook-Off on March 31, 2012, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Santa Clara Casino Special Events Center. Enter for red chile, green chile or salsa, for prizes and trophies. Tickets: $10 for adults and $3 children, ten and under. Call 505-753-4956 for more information.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
ESPANOLA FARMERS MARKET SEASON APPROACHING: WHAT'S NEW!
Cooking Up Traditions demonstrations:
The Espanola Farmers' Market will host several cooking-in-the-horno food demonstrations throughout the summer, thanks to a grant from Northern Ro Grande National Heritage Area (NRGNHA). We will also have demonstrations identifying wild food and dye plants growing in our Market Flower Garden and a tasting of local heirloom varieties of chile as the season unfolds.
The Espanola Farmers' Market will host several cooking-in-the-horno food demonstrations throughout the summer, thanks to a grant from Northern Ro Grande National Heritage Area (NRGNHA). We will also have demonstrations identifying wild food and dye plants growing in our Market Flower Garden and a tasting of local heirloom varieties of chile as the season unfolds.
Gardens:
Start looking in May for new plantings in the eleven wildflower ovals of the community garden facing the street. Last year, many customers took home donations of amaranth,cosmos and marigold seeds. We are also starting community vegetable gardens in the back fields and have a core of five gardeners ready to plant in late spring. Watch the blog for a listing of possible student employment in these fields as summer nears.