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Tomato plant at Urban Oaks with a touch of late blight. Still standing ... so far.

Tomato plant at Urban Oaks with a touch of late blight. Still standing ... so far.

Latest victim on the late blight front is the Tomato To-Mah-To Heirloom Tasting Feast, which had been scheduled for August 23. Slow Food Connecticut, which has sponsored the event for its eight years said aside from soaked ground at Upper Forty Farm in Cromwell where it’s usually held, it’s not clear that either host farm – Upper Forty or Urban Oaks in New Britain is actually going to have any tomatoes.

Part of a now empty row at Urban Oaks where tomato plants had been. They were yanked after developing late blight.

Part of a now empty row at Urban Oaks where tomato plants had been. They were yanked after developing late blight.

This week, Mike Kandefer at Urban Oaks showed me some gaping holes on his farm where his much-heralded organic tomatoes used to be. “We have late blight big time,” he said. “I’ve pulled up four rows of tomatoes already.

“Some spots have it, some spots don’t. The place I got it of course is closest to somebody who has a garden on the other side of the fence.”

He’s also got a little on his plants in the green house – so even that’s no guaranteed hedge against it. He’s still smiling – but with tomatoes as his biggest crop, he’s definitely concerned.

I’m being optimistic,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll get something out of them.”

Kathryn Caruso at Upper Forty said so far no late blight, but she is fighting a host of other maladies related to loads of rain and little sun. The tomatoes are running very late, she said. “I don’t expect to have a big crop this year at all. Mother Nature’s the boss this year.

“I’m looking forward to next year,” Caruso said.

Slow Food Connecticut said it’s establishing a Tomato Fund to be split between Urban Oaks and Upper Forty. Donations are tax deductible and should go to: Susan Chandler, 1870 Asylum Avenue, West Hartford, CT  06117.  Note “Tomato Fund” on the memo line.

Still Happening Despite the Weather

The Connecticut Wine Festival at the Goshen Fairgrounds this weekend. More than a dozen Connecticut vineyards are participating. Did you even know there were more than a dozen Connecticut vineyards?

Taste of Hartford is hanging in for an extra week. You can continue to pay $20.09  for a three-course meal at 32 area restaurants through August 9.

The Celebration of Connecticut Farms
at Graywall Farms in Lebanon on September 13. It’s an absolute who’s who of farms, chefs and restaurants in the state. More on that in the coming weeks.

From Appel to Zinc

Denise Appel

Denise Appel

You think it’s easy to run a farm-to-table operation like the one at Zinc in New Haven? Take a stroll with owner-chef Denise Appel as she figures out how what’s in front of her at the farmers’ market can be what’s in front of you at dinner. Read about it in my story in Sunday’s New York Times Metropolitan section:

Farmers’ Market Mania

The official count is 123, but I wouldn’t hold the Agriculture Department to that. They might have missed a farmers’ market or two. No matter how you count them, there are a lot.

Jeez, there are only 169 cities and towns in the state.

All of which begs the question — are we at critical mass yet? I mean how many farmers’ markets can the state handle?

“Well Rick thinks that every year,” said Ag Department marketing representative Linda Piotrowicz of her fellow rep Rick Macsuga. “It’s anybody guess. Rick has said many time he thought we were maxed out many years ago and we still get more every year.”

It might be the family thing Piotrowicz surmised – markets with activities, themes, entertainment, ways to make a day of it. Sunday markets also seem to have some kind of magic to them – scooping up vendors who are otherwise tapped out on the more popular market days like Saturdays and Fridays.

Coventry, which opened last year, started the trend attracting record crowds. It has activities at each market – this week is Frugal Frolic – doing more with less. There are craft vendors and it’s all on the grounds of the Hale Homestead.

“You get people to make a day of it, or part of a day,” Piotrowicz said.

New and notable this year:

Hill-Stead Farmers' Market July 12.

Hill-Stead Farmers' Market July 12.

Hill-Stead: Sundays on the grounds of the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington. With guest vendors and activities, uber-vendors like Wave Hill and Bantam breads, and George Hall farms. They also snagged first-time vendor Tulmeadow Farm – which of course is known for its ice cream, and it’s now the only place to get Urban Oaks products other than at their New Britain farm. Market manager Peggy Hall said about 1,100 people showed up for the first market July 12. “All the stars were aligned,” she said.

Chester: Sundays, on that cute strip of downtown. Features music and events and many of the top market vendors in the state. In an effort to get top quality meats and seafood, market manager Nancy Freeborn picks up scallops from Stonington Seafood harvester, making the market one of the few places you can get Bomster scallops other than at their dockside facility in Stonington. And they’re also picking up meats from Soeltl Farm in Salem. “We just liked the idea of Sunday being a quieter day,” Freeborn said.

Bozrah: Friday evenings at Maples Farm Park. Mostly vendors from the immediate area.

Wethersfield: Thursday evenings in Historic Wethersfield.

It’s looking like a few of these have the momentum to join the ranks of the big boys.

New Haven Farmers' Market, Wooster Square.

New Haven Farmers' Market, Wooster Square.

Those would be markets like New Haven run by the non-profit CitySeed. These are some of the largest markets in the state, which through go to great lengths to help lower income people shop there.

Westport got so popular it’s had to move this year from the parking lot of the Westport Country Playhouse to the parking lot adjacent to the Woman’s Club. There are usually cooking demonstrations and other features.

Litchfield Farm Fresh Market, July 4.

Litchfield Farm Fresh Market, July 4.

The Litchfield Hills Farm Fresh Market has moved from Friday to Saturday this year and is packed with chef demos, kids activities, and all manner of entertainment.

If none of these are convenient, interesting, or fill-in-the-blank, there’s now a county-by-county farmer’s market guide the Connecticut Department of Agriculture website under publications. Or use the Buy CT Grown link here or on this website for a fully interactive way to figure out how and where and when to buy fresh anything in Connecticut.