Eating in Season in Connecticut
Eating seasonally in Connecticut means letting the calendar — not the grocery store — drive what's on your plate. As part of the Northeast, Connecticut's growing year follows a specific rhythm: Short to moderate growing season (120–200 days depending on latitude). Strong fall season — apples, cider, and pumpkins. Maple season in early spring.
Connecticut's signature local foods — oysters, apples, sweet corn, shade tobacco, and maple syrup — define the peak-season high points at farmers markets and farm stands across the state. Growing conditions: moderate, averaging 155 to 200 days depending on coastal proximity. Last spring frost typically lands late April along the coast to mid-May inland; first fall frost arrives early October inland to late October along the coast.
What June Tastes Like
Early summer brings the first real abundance — strawberries, peas, lettuce, new potatoes, and the first tomatoes and sweet corn at the tail end. This is peak planning season: what you eat fresh now is what you'll be preserving for next winter.
Why it matters
Eating seasonally isn't just an aesthetic. Food grown in peak season tastes better (a July tomato at a farmers market is not the same food as a February grocery-store tomato), travels shorter distances, and supports the local growers in your region. The calendar below is a practical tool — bookmark it and check back as seasons shift.