Posts Tagged ‘Seattle Art Museum’

We Bid You Adieu.

March 6, 2011

The sun sets over Puget Sound and the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

It is with heavy hearts that we report that your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market will not be returning for a second season in 2011.  While the market was a great success in many ways in 2010, the current economic climate, and its effects on local governments and institutions, has left our generous hosts, the Seattle Art Museum (SAM), unable to afford to host us again in 2011.  Given that the Olympic Sculpture Park is home to many world-class works of art, SAM was required to provide additional staffing on market days, and that simply is not something it can afford in its budget in 2011.

Another spectacular view of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

That said, the Seattle Farmers Market Association thanks SAM and its capable and highly professional staff for all the support and generosity they gave us in 2010.  SAM truly is a class act.  Additionally, we would like to thank the crew at TASTE Restaurants & Events for their support and generosity as well, and for their great food made from farmers market ingredients, as well as their unwavering support of local farmers, fishers, ranchers and food artisans.  We would also like to thank the staff of the Olympus Apartments for generously providing off-street parking for many of our vendors during market hours, the Seattle Department of Parks & Recreation for helping us with special activities planning during the market, the chefs from the surrounding neighborhood who performed the best cooking demonstration series at any farmers market in the area, and the market vendors for bringing us the best Washington has to offer every week.

Chef Peter Levine of Waterfront Seafood Grill putting the finishing touches on his Seared Salmon with Panzanella. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Please note that we are investigating other opportunities to serve this part of Seattle in the future, and we will keep this blog, as well as our Facebook and Twitter pages, active for the foreseeable future.  Please stay tuned to these pages for information about what we might be able to offer you all in the future, and feel free to avail yourself of the many chef recipes and great photos and information still contained herein.

Thank you,

The Staff of the Seattle Farmers Market Association

 

Thursday, September 9th: Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Helps Wrap Up Our Inaugural Season!

September 9, 2010

The sun sets over Puget Sound and the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As the sun sets on the inaugural season of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market, let’s take time to celebrate and reflect upon an exciting first year of Belltown’s new, weekly grocery store. We enjoyed access to an incredible array of fresh, local food direct from the producers that would be the envy of people in most other parts of our country. We were entertained by music, dancing and cooking demonstrations by some of Seattle’s best chefs. We sampled Washington wines and enjoyed Market-inspired seasonal cocktails. And we did it all in one of the most beautiful places on earth — the Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park — surrounded by world-class art, the skyline of Seattle, Elliott Bay and Puget Sound, the Olympic Mountains and Mount Rainier. Honestly, I could not think of a more pleasant way to spend a Thursday afternoon in summer in Seattle.

Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant. Photo courtesy TASTE Restaurant & Events.

Our final cooking demonstration of the 2010 season features Chef Craig Hetherington of TASTE Restaurant at 5:30 p.m. today. I have had the pleasure of working with Craig for many years, and I can attest that there are few chefs as committed to using local ingredients on their menus in Seattle today as he has been to it for the nine years I’ve known him. Add to that his tremendous talent in the kitchen, and you have consistently delicious, guilt-free food. Stop by today for some great ideas for cooking local yourself, and if you haven’t treated yourself to TASTE Restaurant in the Seattle Art Museum on 1st Avenue, do it soon. You’ll thank me later!

New Moon cheese from Mt. Townsend Creamery. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Celebrate your access this summer to award-winning, local food. Like this New Moon cheese from Mt. Townsend Creamery in Port Townsend. It won First In Class in the Jack category two weeks ago at the 2010 American Cheese Society Convention & Competition held right here in Seattle.

Sausages from Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Reflect on all the recalls of contaminated factory-farmed meat and eggs lately, and that you are lucky enough to be among the few Americans who has access to meat, seafood, poultry and eggs from local family farmers and fishers — people who care deeply about the animals they work with and the people who eat them. Like Skagit River Ranch, which produces healthy, pastured beef, pork, lamb, chicken and eggs in Sedro-Woolley.

Rainbow chard from Oxbow Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Tired of produce that is shipped an average of 1,500 miles to get to your local Big Box grocery store? Fed up with it turning to mush in your fridge in just a few days, because it was harvested so long ago? We’ve answered that problem, too, with the freshest local produce direct from the farmers who grew it, usually within 24 hours of harvest. Good luck finding rainbow chard, like this from Oxbow Farm, any fresher anywhere else. Just look at the cuts on those stems. They cannot be more than a few hours old, and they have not even begun to brown.

Cherry tomatoes from Summer Run. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Ain’t it great to have access to tomatoes that taste like, well, tomatoes? In heirloom varieties developed over centuries to serve many functions in your kitchen? Of course it is! Just check out these beautiful cherry tomatoes from Summer Run Farm. A-friggin-men!!!

Dinosaur Egg pluots from Tiny's. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And fruit. Fresh, juicy, delicious, tree-ripened and brought to us by local family farmers at its peak. Washington enjoys almost an embarrassment of riches when it comes to tree fruit, which begs the question, why the heck would we be eating stuff imported by ship from Chile and New Zealand — taking weeks to get here and traveling thousands of miles — when you can enjoy this amazing array of fruit from right here? Like these locally-developed Dinosaur Egg pluots from Tiny’s. I mean, seriously, think about it. You never even heard of a pluot in a Big Box store until recently, because they finally realized what we’ve been enjoying for years at farmers markets. Farmers markets are where the innovation happens, and where the heirloom crops are preserved!

Gluten-free breads from Platypus Breads. Photo courtesy Platypus Breads.

And where else are you going to find this incredible gluten-free artisan bread from Platypus Breads? Maybe at another one of our farmers markets, but nowhere else. This stuff is moist and full of flavor, terms rarely associated with gluten-free bread. And don’t forget Grateful Bread Bakery, which offers artisan bread, cookies, croissants, bagels and more!

Saffron from Phocas Farms. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

How about local saffron? Seriously. This saffron is grown in Port Angeles by Phocas Farms. It is fresh and brilliantly flavored, and it is only traveling a few miles to get to you, not thousands of miles from Iran, from where over 70% of the world’s saffron comes.

Dante's Inferno Dogs. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Looking for a quick snack? We have that covered, too. Grab a dog or a local, Cascioppo Brothers sausage from Dante’s Inferno Dogs. They’ll dress it the way you like it to stave off that hunger until you can get home with your Market goodies to make a fabulous dinner for yourself.

Keith from Finnriver. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Hard cider and local grain. We’ve got that, too! Finnriver Farm from Chimacum brings it to us every week. And they’ve got freshly milled flours, too. Did you know that flour is really only good for about two months after milling before it begins to break down nutritionally and eventually go rancid? I recommend you toss that old flour in your cupboard, and come down to your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market today to get some fresh, local flour.

Our own (well, not really) Farmers blimp. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

So come celebrate and reflect upon your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market today, and stock up while you can. And if we’re lucky, we’ll get another visit from our very own (well, not really) Farmers blimp that flew over us last week. (I guess they got the dates wrong.)

Remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now!pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market.

Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market: Feeding the Body & the Soul!

Thursday, September 2nd: Chefs Brian McCracken & Dana Tough of Spür Gastropub, Finnriver Hard Cider & Flour @ TASTE & A Beautiful, Warm, Sunny Afternoon!

September 2, 2010

Chefs Dana Tough (left) and Brian McCracken of Spür Gastropub. Photo by Kristin Zwiers, courtesy Spür & The Spellman Group.

The inaugural season of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market is winding down. After today, we’ve got just one more week. And these two last weeks are going to rock, just like the first seven did. For instance, today, we feature a cooking demonstration at 5:30 p.m. by Belltown’s own Chefs Brian McCracken & Dana Tough from Spür Gastropub. Come watch and learn as these rising stars of the kitchen have some fun with what’s fresh today at the Market.

Sparkling hard cider from Finnriver Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Today, in TASTE Restaurant & Events‘ Liquid Lounge, you will have a chance to taste some of the amazing hard cider produced in the old world way by Finnriver Farm. Finnriver is one of the many great Washington farms who sell each week at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Also today in the Liquid Lounge:

  • Wine Tasting: Terra Blanc Sauvignon Blanc, 2007; Milbrandt Vineyards “Traditions” Chardonnay, 2007; Buried Cane Cabernet Sauvignon, 2007; Tranche Cellars Barbara, 2005.
  • Tiffany’s Farm-to-Glass Cocktail: Roasted Heirloom Bloody Mary.

Finnriver whole grains & flours. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Finnriver Farm will also be featured at TASTE Restaurant & Events’ food booth today. Finnriver produces grain, which they mill into fresh flour that TASTE will use in today’s menu:

  • Grilled Panini with Summer Run heirloom tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, basil pesto. Served with a potato and corn salad.
  • Lucy’s Farm-inspired Doughnut - S’more doughnuts – honey red wheat doughnut filled with chocolate marshmallow, featuring Finnriver flour and Skagit River Ranch eggs.

Seastack from Mt. Townsend Creamery. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Mt Townsend Creamery, from Port Townsend, which sells its cheese right here at your Olympic Sculpture Park, won First in Class for its Seastack cheese in the Soft Ripened category at the 2010 American Cheese Society conference & competition held here in Seattle this past week. Come sample it today, and bring home what the rest of the world is raving about!

Fresh Frasier River sockeye from Loki Fish. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

The boys at the helm of the boats of Loki Fish have returned now to Washington waters after a successful summer of fishing in Alaska. The are currently fishing for Frasier River sockeye just south of the Canadian border, and some of that fish may be available to us fresh today!

Red Zebra & Black Zebra tomatoes from Billy's. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Billy’s has entered into its second big wave of great heirloom tomatoes. Check out these gorgeous Red Zebra & Black Zebra tomatoes, and they have many others, as well. We may even get to taste a few of them during the cooking demonstration today!

Catalina Plums from Collins Family Orchards. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And how about these beautiful Catalina plums from Collins Family Orchards. Collins has a number of plums, apples, peaches and other orchard goodness now, great for that waning taste of summer!

Remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now! pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market.

Thursday, August 26th: Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata, Cippolini Onions, San Marzano Tomatoes, Gluten-Free Scones & Safe Local Eggs!

August 26, 2010

Chef Brandon Kirksey of Tavolata, well, doing something other than cooking at another cool Seattle park. Photo courtesy Ethan Stowell Restaruants.

Chef Brandon Kirksey is the man at the kitchen helm of Ethan Stowell’s North Belltown eatery, Tavolata. And today at 5:30 p.m., he will perform a cooking demonstration right here at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market.

Also today at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market:

  • SAM Performs: Dancing til Dusk with Tumbao and salsa dancing, 6 – 9 p.m. in the OSP Amphitheatre.
  • TASTE’s Wine Tasting: Adelsheim Auxerrior (very limited) 2008; DiStefano Sauvignon Blanc 2009; Elk Cove Rose; &Ash Hollow Nine Mile 2005.
  • TASTE’s Liquid Lounge: Tiffany’s Farm-to-Glass Cocktail – Gingered Berries.

San Marzano tomatoes from Pipitone Farms. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

San Marzano tomatoes are prized for their dense flesh and deep, rich flavor. If you’ve ever been to a Neapolitan-style pizzeria, odds are the sauce on your pizza was made from these tomatoes. They originate from the rich, volcanic earth near Naples, Italy. These San Marzano tomatoes are grown by Pipitone Farms in the rich volcanic soil of the Wenatchee River Valley.

Farm fresh eggs from Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Tired of hearing about the recall of 500,000,000 eggs produced by tw0 (yes, just two) industrial egg factory farms in Iowa? Wondering where you can get safe, healthful eggs from happy, healthy chickens? How about getting your eggs directly from the farmers at Skagit River Ranch, right here at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. They are certified organic, from pastured chickens that get to spend much of their days outdoors, scratching in the dirt, eating a natural diet, and hanging out with roosters. I’ve been to the farm. I know.

Sunburst squash from Alvarez Organic Farms. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Gotta love how beautiful sunburst summer squash in the evening summer sun is, eh? And it tastes wonderful, too. I like grilling them. How do you like them? Well, however you like your summer squash, Alvarez Organic Farms has the perfect squash for you. They grow about 20 varieties of it!

Blueberries from Jessie's Berries. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Blueberries are rocking right now, like these beauties from Jessie’s Berries. I love blueberries simply in a bowl with some fresh heavy cream over them. On the other hand, they freeze really well, and really easily. Just wash them and spread them out in a baking dish and put them in your freezer. Once frozen, pour them into a zipper-lock freezer bag and enjoy them with your steaming hot oatmeal or pancakes all winter long!

Cippolini onions from Oxbow Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Another prized crop of Italy are these cippolini onions from Oxbow Farm. These onions caramelize like no others. Think of all your recipes that call for caramelized onions, and apply these onions to them. Yeah, baby.

Gluten-free peach scones from Platypus Breads. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

On a gluten-free diet? Well, there’s no reason you should suffer without scones, right? Platypus Breads has you covered with gluten-free peach scones. And they’ve got a great selection of gluten-free breads, too. Moist and flavorful. Really. Enjoy bread again!

Rainbow chard from Summer Run. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Summer Run always has incredibly gorgeous produce. This image of their rainbow chard is particularly spectacular. All that fabulous color means a whole lot of awesome flavor. And chard doesn’t get any fresher than this! Just look at the cuts on those stems. They haven’t even begun to brown. Fresh.

Remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now! pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market.

Thursday, August 18th: Chef Ba Culbert from Tilikum Place Cafe & A Look At Our Food Artisans!

August 19, 2010

Chef Ba Culbert of Tilikum Place Cafe foraging for mushrooms in the Cascades. Photo copyright 2009 by Ashlyn Forshner.

Chef Ba Culbert of Tilikum Place Cafe will be performing a cooking demonstration today at 5:30 p.m. at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Ba regularly works with lots of local, seasonal ingredients at her restaurant, making her perfectly suited to give us great ideas on how to work with the fresh, local goodness found throughout the Market.

Sunset August 12, 2010 at Olympic Sculpture Park, with a crescent moon and Venus over the Olympic Mountains. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Though most folks have left the park by sundown, we are still packing up each week, and we get to take in all the glory of the park at dusk. Take this view from just last week, with a red sky silhouetting the Olympic Mountains across Puget Sound, a spectacular crescent moon, and you can just make out Venus at the top of the photo straight up and just to the left of the moon.

Sausages from Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Skagit River Ranch in Sedro-Woolley produces some of the best meat, poultry and eggs you will find anywhere. Find just about any cut you fancy of their pastured pork or grass-finished beef, and get great bacon, ham and an amazing selection of sausages, including my favorite sweet Italian sausage in town.

Fresh, handmade pastas from Pasteria Lucchese. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Pasteria Lucchese makes handmade pastas and amazing desserts and sauces so good, many folks in town, including me, are downright addicted to them. In fact, their Trofie pasta with Norcina sauce, a creamy pork sauce, is on my menu for dinner tonight!

Whoopie Pies from Cupcuke Luv. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Speaking of addictive, have you tried a Whoopie Pie, or anything else for that matter, from Cupcake Luv? Holy flippity-flop, they’re good! And they make their goodies using lots of local ingredients, like the flour that comes from Washington’s own Shepherd’s Grain cooperative.

Seastack from Mt. Townsend Creamery. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Mt. Townsend Creamery takes rich, fresh, Olympic Peninsula cows milks and turns it into several varieties of cheeses, from fresh to aged, with one to please every palate. I love their Fromage Blanc on a Grateful Bread bagel with some Loki Fish salmon lox, and their Seastack (above) is nothing short of the stuff of legend.

Honey from Sweet As Can Bee. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Sweet As Can Bee works with numerous organic farmers along the fertile western slopes of Washington’s Cascade Mountains to help pollinate their crops. Their bees then create amazing honey from the pollen they collect. Try out their different flavors and see what you like best. It is said that local honey can help alleviate many allergies.

Jerry Baxter from Got Soup? Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Jerry Baxter, owner of Got Soup?, creates delicious fresh soups every week from local ingredients, most of which he finds at local farmers markets. And don’t think that summer is the wrong time of year for soup. During the hot summer months, Baxter makes a wide variety of wonderful and refreshing cold soups to cool you down. Are you a vegan or gluten sensitive? Got Soup? always has something for you, too.

Josephines and Fruit Pocket Pies from Hot Cakes. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Hot Cakes is the brainchild of former Theo Chocolate chocolatier Autumn Martin. She makes these incredible little chocolate cakes in jars you just set in the oven, and a few minutes later, you’ve got molten chocolate deliciousness. She also makes these rich and scrumptious Josephines (above left) and the newly introduced Fruit Pocket Pies. Yummers!

Herbed Chicken Salad Sandwich was last weeks offering by TASTE. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And, of course, there is always our Market partners, TASTE Restaurant & Events, which rolls out a different Market inspired sandwich each week, filled with tasty ingredients from Market vendors.

Remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now!pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market

Thursday, August 12th: Chef Peter Levine from Waterfront Seafood Grill, Wild Salmon, Gluten-Free Bread, Kimchi, Heirloom Tomatoes & Something Called A Cherry Plum!

August 12, 2010

A spectacular smoky sunset as viewed from the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market on August 5, 2010. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

As we packed up your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market at the end of the day last week, we were treated to the positive side of the smoky haze drifting down from British Columbia: a spectacular red sunset! I know, photos rarely do sunsets justice, but even so, this image serves as a reminder of just how amazing a location the Olympic Sculpture Park is for a farmers market. We have world class art, like The Eagle, we have Elliott Bay and Puget Sound, and we have the Olympic Mountains and the summer sun. Awesome!

Chef Peter Levine from Waterfront Seafood Grill on Pier 70. Photo courtesy Mackay Restaurants.

And this week, we have Chef Peter Levine from Waterfront Seafood Grill on Pier 70 performing a cooking demonstration at 5:30 p.m. under the red tent, next to The Eagle. Waterfront Seafood Grill calls the Olympic Sculpture Park its front yard, with Elliott Bay its back 40. It is the single closest restaurant to the Market, and Chef Levine serves up some great food there in a dining atmosphere that is as classy as it gets around these parts, right down to the lounge pianist who plays everything from Gershwin to Led Zeppelin.

Amy from Loki Fish holds wild Keta salmon. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Being a seafood kinda guy, I expect Chef Levine will be cooking up some fine wild Alaskan salmon from Loki Fish today. Loki Fish is based at Ballard’s Fishermen’s Terminal, and they fish in both Alaskan and Puget Sound waters during the summer. They handle their fish very carefully, which means you get some of the finest salmon you’ve ever tasted. And they’ve got great smoked salmon, salmon patties, salmon sausage, salmon roe, canned salmon and more!

Gluten-free breads from Platypus Breads. Photo courtesy Platypus Breads.

Are you looking for gluten-free bread? Well, we’ve got Playtpus Breads right here at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market, and I will use two words to describe them that most folks wouldn’t dare use to describe any other gluten-free bread: moist and flavorful! I kid you not. So there’s no need go without great bread for dinner, just because you can’t deal with the gluten.

Fremented kimchi from Firefly Kitchens. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Today, we welcome Firefly Kitchens to your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. These folks absolutely rock the fermented local vegetables. They’ve got kimchi, classic sauerkraut, red sauerkraut and a little thing they call ying-yan made from carrots and ginger. This stuff is amazing, and it’s alive, too, so it’ll cure what ails you while pleasing your palate.

Heirloom tomatoes from Summer Run. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Summer Run always has the most beautiful organic vegetables, and these heirloom tomatoes are no exception. And, of course, what’s better than the brilliant colors these heirloom tomatoes have to offer is their spectacular flavor. Few things make people long more for summer than fresh, vine-ripened tomatoes. Well, it’s time, people!

A local bee visits the lavender at Floating World Lavender. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Floating World Lavender Farm from Sequim has a relatively short fresh lavender harvest each year, and we are enjoying the fruits of that harvest right now. Their lavender is so fragrant that it always attracts all the local honey bees in the neighborhood, like this one burrowing around in it recently. So brighten up your home with some fresh lavender today, and make it smell wonderful in the process.

Cherry plums from Tiny's. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Cherry plums? Yup. Not so much a hybrid, the name is a reflection of this plums tiny size. Some of them, at their peak of ripeness, actually take on a hint of fresh coconut in their flavor. You’ll find them at Tiny’s. And here are some other things you’ll find today:

SAM presents Jovino Santos Neto, performing hot Brazilian Jazz for a summer night, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. in the OSP Amphitheatre. And in TASTE’s Liquid Lounge, they’ll be tasting out the following wines:

  • Mirth Chardonnay 2009
  • Terrapin Cellars Pinot Gris 2008
  • O ‘Reilly’s Pinot Noir 2007
  • TASTE’s own Masterpiece Red.

And don’t miss Tiffany’s Seasonal Cocktail today: Blueberry Cobbler.

And remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now!pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market!

Thursday, August 5th: Chef Paul Rosquita from TASTE Events, Melons, Bagels, Provolone, Donut Peaches & A Rainbow Of Carrots!

August 5, 2010

Chef Paul Rosquita from TASTE Events. Photo courtesy TASTE Restaurant & Events.

It’s another deliciousness and fun packed Thursday at your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Check out another great cooking demonstration under the red tent, next to The Eagle, at 5:30 p.m. today — this week featuring Chef Paul Rosquita of TASTE Events, one of our partners in presenting you this Market. Also, enjoy the music of retro-pop band Curtains for You, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. in the Gates Amphitheatre, presented by SAM. And the wine tasting in TASTE’s Liquid Lounge this week features:

  • Mountain Dome Sparkling Rose
  • TASTE’s own Masterpiece White
  • Cadaretta SBS
  • Foris “Fly Over” Red

Fresh cantaloupes from Alvarez Organic Farms. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Melons are in! Alvarez Organic Farms has the first melons of the season, in the form of cantaloupes and watermelons. Woohoo! Just imagine all the juicy, sweet, sloppy goodness in your future. Oh, they have sweet corn, tomatillos, eggplant and fresh shallots, too, and much, much more.

Fresh bagels from Grateful Bread. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Grateful Bread has great bagels. I recommend them eaten with some of fromage blanc from Mt. Townsend, a red onion from Alvarez, some tomatoes from Billy’s and some coho or keta lox from Loki Fish. A little slice of Brooklyn heaven right here in Belltown! Oh, and Playtpus Breads is back this week with gluten-free breads!

A rainbow of carrots from Oxbow Farm. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Oxbow Farm is famous for its carrots. They grow some of the best you will find anywhere. Sweet and crunchy, and in a rainbow of colorful varieties, these are the carrots we live for. And they grow all manner of other spectabulous veggies, too.

Provolone and Jalapeno Buttery from Estrella Family Creamery. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Estrella Family Creamery returns today after their one-week 25th Wedding Anniversary hiatus. They have a lot of great, award-winning cheeses for you to enjoy, like this beautiful provolone, or this tangy, peppy Jalapeno Buttery. Stop by for a taste. Like their shirts say, “It’s all good!”

Haricot Verts from Stoney Plains. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

I love haricot verts green beans (the ultimate in redundantly named vegetables!) this time of year, like these from Stoney Plains. I saute them with bacon from Skagit River Ranch and some pearl onions, if I can find them. Yummers!

Donut peaches from Collins Family Orchards. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Finally this week, it was during the summer of my first year as Executive Director of the Washington State Farmers Market Association back in 1999 that I was on a trip to visit the brand new farmers market in Yakima. I was staying at this lovely bed & breakfast on a farm in Naches, and the farm was one of the first few farms to be licensed to grow this new peach called a donut peach. The farmer, still looking for a market for his peaches, sent me home with a box of them. Boy, howdy! I was in love, and I’ve been in love with them ever since. See, I have always been one of those wusses who doesn’t like to deal with all that juice pouring all over me while eating peaches, and the special nature of donut peaches and their tiny pits meant I could enjoy an amazing peach with only a fraction of the mess. I brought home a bunch of these donut peaches from Collins Family Orchards the other day, and I am in peach heaven right now. Makes me think how that Presidents of the United States of America song is passé now that the peaches come to us in the city. No need to move to the country to eat a lot of them anymore.

And remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now!pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market!

Thursday, July 22nd: Space Needle Chef Jeff Maxfield, Sweet Corn, Wild Alaskan Salmon, Artisan Bread, Tomatoes & More!

July 22, 2010

Chef Jeff Maxfield (on right) of SkyCity at the Needle. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Chef Jeff Maxfield of SkyCity at the Needle will help us launch Week 2 of your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Jeff will perform a cooking demonstration at 5:30 p.m. under the red demo tent at the north end of the Market, next to The Eagle. Come learn great ideas for cooking up local deliciousness from the chef who’s office has the best view in Seattle.

Just a sampling of what Loki Fish has to offer. Photo copyright 2009 by Zachary D. Lyons.

We welcome Loki Fish to your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market this week. Loki is based at Ballard’s Fishermen’s Terminal, and they fish in the cold waters of Alaska and Puget Sound for some the best salmon you will find. They catch all five major species of Pacific salmon, and they offer it up in all sorts of ways, from fresh-frozen fillets to smoked to jerky to spreads, patties and sausages, and even Ikura, or Keta Salmon Roe, the Northwest’s own native caviar.

Sweet corn from Alvarez Organic Farms. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Alvarez Organic Farms is located in Mabton, near Sunnyside, in the Yakima Valley. It is the hottest area in Washington in the summer, and the result is great, hot-weather crops, like this first-of-the-season sweet corn. They also have some of the first eggplant of the year this week, too, and don’t forget that they offer Washington’s only fresh, local peanuts — the best you’ve ever tasted.

Chef Lucy Damkoehler cooks for an attentive crowd, with Elliott Bay in the background. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

If you missed opening day festivities last Thursday, you missed scenes like this, and I don’t just mean the stellar cooking demonstration by Pastry Chef Lucy Damkoehler from TASTE Restaurant. I mean the scene in the background — Elliott Bay! Yes, your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market is surrounded by spectacular views, and it is filled with brilliant art. And now we’ve added a fantastic Thursday Market to the mix. And the best part is, if you did miss opening day, we’re going to repeat it all again today, and every Thursday! How sweet is that?

Beautiful artisan bread from Grateful Bread Bakery. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Grateful Bread offers up wonderful artisan breads, like these above, as well as delicious pastries, cookies, bagels, scones and more. But last week, they sold out fast, so make sure you get there early to pickup your loaf for dinner, and a bagel or scone for breakfast tomorrow, too!

Belltown's own farmers market. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Yes, this is Belltown’s own farmers market. And just look at this incredible scene, with all the farmer tents in the foreground, lining the Park’s Z-Path, and all the high-rise residential buildings of North Belltown in the background. If you go back and  look at the very first post to this blog in February, you will see a photo taken from this same vantage point, just sans Market. Wow, isn’t it amazing how much the Market adds to this seen?

Sungold cherry tomatoes from Stoney Plains. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Tomatoes are coming into season all over Washington now. Like these incredibly sweet Sungold cherry tomatoes from Stoney Plains. One of the quickest tomatoes to bear fruit, Sungolds are one of my favorite tomatoes. I can eat them like candy. Very sweet, low acid, they will never last long enough for you to get them into a salad, unless you buy a second pint, and even then I bet you’ll eat them all right out of the container.

A mix of six different berries from Jessie's Berries. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Berry season is just plain off the hook right now. And the proof is in this basket of berries from Jessie’s Berries. Currently, they are harvesting blackberries, blueberries, boysenberries, loganberries, marionberries and strawberries. Wow! Pickup a pint of cream from Golden Glen Creamery, and you’ve got dessert. Put in a little more effort with some flour from Finnriver Farm, some eggs from Skagit River Ranch and some butter from Golden Glen, and I can see a pie or a crisp in your future!

Certified organic chickens from Skagit River Ranch. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Speaking of Skagit River Ranch, they’ve got plenty of certified organic, pasture raised beef, pork and chicken (above) for your dining pleasure. Can’t you just smell it cooking of your grill on your deck right now? Of course, when your neighbors all ask you where you got that amazing smelling meat or chicken, you tell them, “at our Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market, every Thursday from 3:30-7:30 p.m.!”

And remember, this blog is your source for all things Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. You will learn about what’s in season; the people and businesses that produce it; what chefs will be performing cooking demonstrations from week-to-week; recipes from those demos and our vendors; and so much more. Each week during the Market season, one or more articles will be posted here, and each week the What’s Fresh Now! pages in the upper right-hand margin will be updated to let you know what all you can expect to find this week at the Market. So check back often, subscribe to the RSS feed, and then come visit us at your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market!

Wine Tasting & Jazz during the OSP Farmers Market

July 22, 2010

TASTE's Liquid Lounge hopping on Opening Day. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

Your Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market is not merely the best new place to get great local food direct from the producer.  We’ve got lots of other great stuff going on to make your Thursday nights this summer the best ever. For instance, at TASTE Restaurant & Evetns’ Liquid Lounge, in PACCAR Pavilion, you can grab a flight of Washington wines, or a specialty cocktail inspired by, and infused with, fresh, local ingredients, pull up a chair in the sun (or shade), and watch the Market action while enjoying a break from it. Plus, you get the best view of the Park, Elliott Bay, Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains bathed in warm summer sun as it slowly descends on the western horizon.

Live jazz Opening Day in the OSP Amphitheater. Photo copyright 2010 by Zachary D. Lyons.

And you can grab a snack and pull up some grass in the sun in the OSP Amphitheater and enjoy live music and dancing every week, sponsored by the Seattle Art Museum. And don’t forget our great lineup of top Seattle chefs who will be performing cooking demonstrations under the red tent at the north end of the Market, next to The Eagle, every Thursday evening at 5:30 p.m. So head on down to your new Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market this week for an evening that will nourish the body and the soul.

TASTE Pastry Chef Lucy Damkoehler Kicks Off Cooking Demonstration Series

July 14, 2010

Pastry Chef Lucy Damkoehler of TASTE Restaurant at SAM will perform a cooking demonstration at 5:30 p.m. on July 15th. Photo courtesy of TASTE Restaurant & Events.

Lucy Damkoehler, Pastry Chef of TASTE Restaurant at the Seattle Art Museum, will help launch the new farmers market at the Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park on Thursday, July 15th by performing the first in a series of cooking demonstrations at the Market. All cooking demonstrations during the 2010 season will occur from 5:30-6:30 p.m., and are designed to share with Market shoppers simple, fresh and delicious ideas for preparing meals with the bounty to be found at the Market.

Chef Damkoehler is just the first in a star-studded lineup of great chefs from the neighborhood surrounding the Olympic Sculpture Park Farmers Market. Take a look at who else will be cooking for you this summer:


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