Green City Market at Lincoln Park Is A Great Neighborhood Resource Hidden In Plain Sight
The last couple of years I find myself cooking and entertaining with friends and colleagues more frequently in home settings. That does not mean that I don’t still love eating out, after all I don’t have to do the labor, especially the dishes, but eating in or making something to share has become more important to me the last few years.
Green City Market is open year round with a dedication to local vendors and local farms from IL, MI, WI, and IN overwhelmingly. Many of the vendors provide organic and/or Integrated Pest Management goods. And every time I go I linger. All. Year. Round.
The varieties of potatoes and apples and brassicas on offer from fall through spring never fail to intrigue me. There are also hen and duck eggs available to purchase as well as mushrooms, meat, poultry, and cheese.
Watching the array of fruit that arrives as spring turns to summer causes me to spend large amounts of money to eat them to hand and make jam. I generally avoid seconds for fruit preserves and pickled/fermented vegetables. But goodness, later in the season when the black caps, cherries ( including the difficult to ever find in stores sour variety) arrive I lose my mind. And then the sweet corn follows along with the pickling cukes and zukes if you don’t blink and miss them. Yes I have some preferred farmers that I check in with on when the produce will show up (field/harvest reports) with start and end dates.
Additionally there are chef demos that feature produce available that day at the market. One of our GNRs still features a stand at the market for all things pie at Hoosier Mama Pie Co. And no I did not forget the hedonistic well loved gathering for the market with the annual chef-driven BBQ.
Here's what folks have said on the board:
Vital Information:
We missed the first couple of weeks of Chicago's Green City Market, but it took only one visit to convince me that it is better than ever. From its start, Green City has included vendors selling produce both organic and unique. That makes it a very good farmer's market. Yet, it did not stop there. Over the last few years, Green City has added several vendors offering local, organic meats such as Piedmontese style beef. And we are not talking a few chickens and a bunch of eggs. One could get bratwurst made from Illinois pork, bacon, parts including liver and kidneys, heritage turkeys, etc. More, more, more. A couple of years ago, Traderspoint, an organic dairy based in Indiana began offering their freakishly good milk and yogurt. Kennyz:
The scones from Hoosier Mama Pie are fantastic.
I always get there between 6:45 and 7:15AM, mainly because that's when you get to walk around with so many of the city's best chef's and see what they're buying, and hear what questions they ask the farmers. At that hour it's also much less crowded, parking's easier, and Mint Creek hasn't run out of what are the best eggs at the market.OldTownFoodie:
I can't even begin to tell you how excited I am to go on Saturday! I'm planning on starting a new tradition this year where I will hit up the market on Saturdays and cook dinner for the whole fam Sunday nights. We'll see how many drunken nights of the in-laws I can take before I kill this "tradition."This place is a “jewel in the crown” of Chicago’s offerings of great food.
Green City MarketGreen City Market at Lincoln Park (outdoors)
1817 N Clark St.
Chicago, Il
Wednesday and Saturday Mornings
7am-1 pm (from May through the October)
Indoor Market
Saturday Mornings (see schedule, November-April)
Peggy Notebart Museum
2430 N Cannon Drive
Chicago, Il
Threads:
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