Where you will find fresh Produce, Families and Music.
Click on photos to enlarge, also enjoy the video below.
My View of Life on the Dock
Where you will find fresh Produce, Families and Music.
Click on photos to enlarge, also enjoy the video below.
Don’t forget that the Farmer’s Market is happening today 3:30–6:30pm! The peaches have been amazing the last few weeks and you know they’re good when your two-year-old could care less about ice cream and throws fits for peaches. That’s what I’m saying! Juicy, dripping, delicious, better than ice cream fresh fruit. Isn’t it amazing that they just hang there on trees waiting to be picked by our favorite local farmers?
Join the Farmer’s Market and get yourself a neat little sticker like this and feel all squishy inside (like a peach) knowing that you’re supporting your local people:
“FIND YOUR ROOTS!”
Squish! Peachy Keen…
Tried any maple cotton candy lately? What about marinated lupine bean and hummus spread? Not to mention all the fresh peaches, apricots, and delicious produce feasts! Rob and I split a mushroom Puff Tart and two cold, local (Charlestown) Sodas for a late lunch. YUM!
Joey was at the Framer’s Market having fun cutting a symbolic ribbon with the Mayor etc…nut I caught him doing an interview, he never stops…
Emily Currier and Steve Parkes swing by to talk about the new season of Cape Ann Fresh Catch Community Supported Fishery. Several new developments make this season different than last year.
Click here for the HD version if you have a speedy internet connection or the video below if your connection is slower.
The new season is open for signups before May 1 and you can sign up directly with an easy-pay system right on the CapeAnnFreshCatch.org website.
Video below
Thanks for watching
The next-to-the-last Farmer’s Market was pretty chilly, and people were stocking up on the veggies and fruits. Barb Jansen and friends sounded great. One more week, and I hear the Seafood Throwdown will be a battle! 
1. Just because it’s less money doesn’t mean it’s a good deal i.e. the mess with Comcast. We went back to Verizon today. Yippee!
2. You can lower your cholesterol and blood pressure with fish oil, flax seed oil, and a little help from prescriptions. My cholesterol went from 256 to 146 and my BP went down 40 points.
3. Cycling ( I made it around the island yesterday), kayaking (Kylie and her dad’s first time out), and the beach are great ways to spend summer in Gloucester especially when you have grandkids who like to do the same things. Cooking baby beets from the Farmer’s Market when we only had bottled water to wash the “red” out was a tasty treat!
4. You don’t have to spend a cent to have fun here.
5. Summers in Gloucester are way too short.
6. I love Gloucester despite the fact that fall is coming.
7. I love Joey in spite of the fact that he pushes me almost to my limit.
8. I love Joey because of this.
9. I learned that I am a lousy videographer.
10. I learned that I keep meeting the “funnest” people right here in G-Town!!
Big hugs and kisses to all of you!
Last week while I was shopping at the Farmer’s Market, I sampled some of Pam’s Black Bean Salsa. I’m not a big salsa fan, but I love black beans and corn. It was delicious!
I had spent my limit, so put off buying some until this week when I got more stuff from the local farms and picked up a pint of the salsa (after, of course, trying another sample!)
I was starving when I got home and wanted something quick and easy. I threw some gound turkey in to start. I had no idea where I was going with it, but I often do that hoping for inspiration!
I had just gotten a bunch of veggies at the market, so I sliced up zucchini and summer squash and dumped that in with the turkey. Usually I’ll use diced tomatoes for a base for sauce, but this time I used 1/4 cup of the salsa. No other seasoning was needed.
It was excellent! And to add to the meal, I steamed an ear of the best, freshest corn on the cob!
Absolutely yummy! And everything except the ground turkey came from the Farmer’s Market!
If you’ve made a meal primarily from foods bought at the market, feel free to send them in to us! Thanks!
What Up Homie?, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
You just have to go check it out. The positive energy is off the charts. Tons more pics over the next few days.
For all past Farmer’s Market posts click this text
Cape Ann Farmer’s Market Sticka!, originally uploaded by captjoe06.






Terry Greel At The Farmer’s Market, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Women Chefs Rule Seafood Throwdown Finale!
Gloucester, MA – What started as a one-time event took a life of its own during this year’s Cape Ann Farmers’ Market. The Seafood Throwdown, designed to raise awareness in our community about the ecological and economic benefits of locally caught seafood became a mainstay of thisyear’s Farmers’ Market. But this Thursday, October 9 marks the lastday of the Cape Ann Farmers’ Market’s 2008 season and Seafood Throwdown’s finale. In celebration, a couple of talented women chefs will put their cooking talent to test – and taste!
The two chefs cooking this week are Miranda Mello, a personal chef, and Melissa Hunt, owner of Sugar Magnolia’s on Main Street. In addition, this week’s event will bear a few surprises for the participants and the volunteers who have made the events such a success.
As a big supporter of farmers markets, local foods and organic farming, Miranda Mello brings her love for earth friendly life styles to the Seafood Throwdown. A native of Cape Ann, she currently works as a private cook and a server at Passports restaurant. She enjoys creating new dishes, and learning about new foods and styles of cooking. She says she finds the most satisfying dishes are those in their simplest and natural form.
Melissa Hunt and her husband Peter run Sugar Magnolia’s. She’s been working in the restaurant business since she was fourteen years old. A native of Gloucester, Melissa and Peter ran their own catering business out of their home and worked at a yacht club in Marblehead until the spot on Main Street opened up and Melissa brought her taste for traditional cooking to Gloucester. That was six years ago and the rest is part of Gloucester’s culinary history.
Our judges this week are Patrick Noe and Margot Lord.
Patrick Noé is an instructor of culinary arts at Quincy High School where he has served as a member of the
faculty for six years. Before becoming a full-time teacher, Noé worked for twenty years as a restaurant chef in and around Boston. His is best known as the chef-owner of Café Celador in Harvard Square. From 1994 to 1999, Noé served a menu of French bistro-style food, and Café Celador was named Best French Bistro by
Boston magazine. Noé has worked as a restaurant and menu consultant and has taught cooking classes at a variety of venues: Boston University, The French Library, Boston Center for Adult Education, and in private
homes. Born in France and still a frequent visitor to that country, Noé credits his French-Catalan grandmother and his Parisian father (also a restaurateur) for his never-ending search for the perfect meal.
A trained chef, Margot has worked in various restaurants in the Boston area. Most recently, Margot created all the prepared food at Ned’s Groceria on Gloucester’s Washington Street.
Click The Picture To View The Interview