Visitors Flock to Farmers Market in Folsom, Thursday Evenings

Visitors flocked to the changed Thursday Night Market in Folsom last night, with entertainment, craft booths and something everyone has been asking for – a larger Farmers Market.

Farmers had a wide variety of locally grown produce and locally grown or processed food products. On the Brenner Ranch stone fruits booth, I found peaches, nectarines, apricots, grapes, cherries, nuts and blueberries. Snow’s Citrus Court had a great range of bottled gourmet products including a marinade, infused oil, stir fry, zesty orange vinaigrette, orange balsamic vinaigrette and Mandarin Orange Ice Cream Topping. – see the video below.

Nod Neleh had beautiful organic swiss chard, herbs, including purple basil, lavender, rosemary, pineapple sage and lemon balm, plus raspberries, summer squash, yellow squash and straight neck squash, acorn squash, zuccini, live growing red romaine lettuce, endives, cilantro, sweet basil and indian corn, sweetcorn, lemon cucumbers, scallop squash and red raspberry plants. WOW, what a selection!

Renee Charleston, from the Charleston Lavender Farm at Colfax brought several varieties of lavender, including lavender bouquets and neck wraps. That was followed by a great kitchen selection of beatiful large, sweet strawberries, raspberries, carrots, beets and broccoli.

Next, was Monica with Calolea extra virgin olive oil from Loma Rica, between Marysville and Grass Valley, off Highway 20. She had award-winning extra virgin olive oil, three infused oils, garlic, maya lemon and orange, plus white balsamic vinegar and dark balsamic vinegar.

Then, there were many beautiful flowers, from a garden in Sacramento, plus mexican zuccini, bok choi and baby bok choi, cilantro and garlic – I bought some last week, and it was great!

Carol Orlando from the House of Bread again had a wide range of beautiful breads, made in her “make from scratch bakery,” using only unbleached and unbromated white flour – no chemicals. Breads included blueberry crumble, sourdough, apple cinnamon squirrel – the very popular top seller, cheese breads including jalopeno jack, garlic cheddar and basil parmagian. There was the traditional jewish Chahalah and sliced breads including bavarian rye and grandma’s white, plus pumpkin, banana, lemon and carrot bread.

Coffee Pot Ranch from Sheridan, CA, brought their premium cuts USDA Inspected Meat. They raise everything they sell, which includes center cut loin chops, boneless loin roast, spare ribs, breakfast sausage and pork cube stew meat for kabobs.

Mary Bruno from Granite Bay brought her Santa Ana Coffee, produced on her sister-in-law’s farm in Santa Ana. There was dark roast, that comes as whole bean or ground, breakfast blend, which is a lighter roast and for real coffee enthusiasts, green beans.

Camelia from Twin Peaks Orchards, near Newcastle, brought beautiful fruit from her family’s orchards, which they have farmed since 1912, when her grandparents came to California from Japan. She brought a nice selection of stone fruits – nectarines, peaches and apricots, plus squash. Camelia said “A new addition to our farm is a certified food processing facility, where we’re able to use all of our fruits in preserves, salsa and baked goods, including pies, mini-pies and tarts.”

Some of the farmers told FolsomLocalNews that the local restaurants are ordering from them because of the top quality.

So we invite you to come down to the Folsom Thursday Night Market next week – and every week – to get your local fresh produce.

Hot this week

Did David Wineland and Serge Haroche Steal Idea For The Nobel Physics Prize?

Dr. Omerbashich says the Royal Swedish Academy is a Crime Scene and he has the proof that Nobel laureates stole his discovery.

New Approaches to Disaster Relief Challenges

Disaster relief has always been a challenge. NASA, Google,...

3 Legitimate Money Making Methods to Supplement Your Income

In a perfect world, when your landlord raises your...

2016 Predictions by World Renowned Medium and Psychic Lindy Baker

World renowned medium and psychic Lindy Baker is interviewed by The Hollywood Sentinel, discussing psychic power, the spirit world, life after death, areas of concern in 2016, and much more.

Digital Coupon Customers Spending More Than Double At Stores

A new study shows that customers who use digital coupons go shopping more for groceries and other household goods more often and spend more on their shopping trips.

Olivia Ramirez Smith and the Business of Reconnecting Women to the Earth

For more than two decades, Olivia Ramirez Smith has answered one question through books, films, retreats, and The Mother Earth Effect LLC: what would happen if women simply touched the ground again?

Why Tracking Your Net Worth Monthly Changes Your Financial Behavior

The Observer Effect in Personal Finance People often use the...

How Singh Law Firm’s Cross-Border Practice Is Redefining Mid-Market Counsel

A boutique firm with national reach is changing what mid-sized clients expect from outside legal

Australia CGT Tax Changes Threaten Investment Confidence, Young Investors

Australia’s CGT tax changes may hurt young investors, shares, crypto and small businesses as Treasury modelling faces criticism.

What Actually Works for Healthy Weight Loss in the Australian Market Today?

As an Australian, there is no lack of information...

Wind Farm Decommissioning Liability: Bird-Safety Research Raises Bigger Rural Question

Australia is studying how to reduce wind-farm bird deaths, but rural landholders still face unanswered questions over turbine foundations and cleanup costs.

California’s Long Vote Count Reshapes Major Races as Hilton Presses Election Changes

California’s long vote count has reshaped major races, pushed Raman into the LA runoff, and fueled Steve Hilton’s call for election changes.

Related Articles

Popular Categories