Tag Hub

produce guide

56 guides

Guides tagged produce guide.

Fresh sugar snap peas, snow peas, and shelling pea pods on a rustic farm table.
Produce Guide

Peas

Peas are a short-season spring crop where freshness matters. Shelling peas, sugar snap peas, and snow peas all taste sweetest soon after harvest and cook very quickly.

Red, French breakfast, daikon, and watermelon radishes with greens on a rustic farm table.
Produce Guide

Radishes

Radishes are crisp, peppery roots that arrive early in the growing season and return in fall. They are excellent raw, quick-pickled, roasted, or served simply with butter and salt.

Mixed summer and winter squash arranged on a farm table.
Produce Guide

Summer Squash

Summer squash includes yellow squash, crookneck, straightneck, pattypan, and related tender-skinned squashes. It cooks quickly, spoils faster than winter squash, and is best when picked young.

Whole and cut watermelon with red and yellow flesh on a rustic farm table.
Produce Guide

Watermelon

Watermelon is peak-summer fruit with a short window for the best local flavor. A good melon feels heavy, sounds full, and has a creamy field spot where it rested on the ground.

A mix of fresh apples — red, green, and yellow — displayed at a farm stand.
Produce Guide

Apples

Apples are one of the most versatile produce staples — available from late summer through spring storage, with variety differences that actually matter for how you cook with them.

A stem of fresh basil with multiple leaf pairs, bright green and fresh.
Produce Guide

Basil

Basil is the signature summer herb — bright, aromatic, and versatile. Growing it at home is the easiest way to have a good herb on hand, but local farm basil at a farm stand beats supermarket plastic-pack herbs by a long way.

A cluster of red, yellow, and green bell peppers at a farm stand.
Produce Guide

Bell Peppers

Bell peppers are the same fruit at different stages of ripeness — green is unripe, red is fully ripe, and yellow and orange fall in between. That distinction explains nearly everything about how they taste and how to use them.

A cluster of deep blue blueberries with frosty bloom and a green leaf.
Produce Guide

Blueberries

Blueberries are one of the more successful summer fruits — they store well, freeze perfectly, and the local varieties have a depth of flavor supermarket berries rarely match.

A bunch of fresh carrots with green tops still attached, on a wooden surface.
Produce Guide

Carrots

Carrots are one of the most reliable local-farm vegetables year-round — harvested in fall and stored through winter. A fresh-pulled carrot from a farm stand tastes nothing like a supermarket bag carrot.

An ear of sweet corn with green husks pulled back showing yellow kernels and corn silk.
Produce Guide

Corn

Sweet corn is a time-sensitive crop — the sugars in the kernels begin converting to starch the moment the ear is picked. Local corn eaten the day of harvest is a different vegetable than supermarket corn shipped from days away.

A cluster of fresh cucumbers with bright green skin at a summer farm stand.
Produce Guide

Cucumbers

A good cucumber from a local farm in midsummer — thin-skinned, cool, and snappy — is a different experience from the waxed, seedy cylinders shipped year-round at supermarkets. Knowing what to look for makes the difference.

Bundles of fresh herbs including basil, parsley, and thyme at a farm stand.
Produce Guide

Fresh Herbs

Fresh herbs are the fastest way to transform a dish. A handful of basil, a few sprigs of thyme, or a tablespoon of chopped parsley changes a plate in a way that dried herbs simply cannot replicate — and local farms grow varieties that never appear in supermarket bundles.