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Radical Seasonality

GO BEYOND FOUR SEASONS

Each fruit and vegetable has its own season, with subtle shifts that happen every day. Follow their microseasons to unlock flavor at every stage.

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In season today

  • Arugula Rabe

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    • Grower

      Trini & Tim

    • Location

      Guinda, California

    • Seasonality

      February - March

  • Baby Rainbow Beets

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    • Grower

      David

    • Location

      Thermal, California

    • Seasonality

      January - March

  • Calamansi

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    • Grower

      Shaun

    • Location

      Reedley, California

    • Seasonality

      January - February

  • Cara Cara Oranges

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    • Grower

      Greg

    • Location

      Exeter, California

    • Seasonality

      December - April

  • Choi Rabe

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    • Grower

      Trini & Tim

    • Location

      Guinda, California

    • Seasonality

      February - March

  • Florida Pomelos

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    • Grower

      Various

    • Location

      Homestead, Florida

    • Seasonality

      January - March

  • Forced Rhubarb

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    • Grower

      Robert

    • Location

      Pudsey, West Yorkshire

    • Seasonality

      February - April

  • Fuerte Avocados

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    • Grower

      Jed

    • Location

      Exeter, California

    • Seasonality

      January - February

  • Mandarinquats

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    • Grower

      Shaun

    • Location

      Reedley, California

    • Seasonality

      January - April

  • Meiwa Kumquats

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    • Grower

      Armando and Letitia

    • Location

      Fallbrook, California

    • Seasonality

      January - April

  • Moro Blood Oranges

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    • Grower

      Shaun

    • Location

      Reedley, California

    • Seasonality

      January - April

  • Nagami Kumquats

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    • Grower

      Armando and Letitia

    • Location

      Fallbrook, California

    • Seasonality

      January - April

  • Nettles

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    • Forager

      Jeremy

    • Location

      Pacific Northwest

    • Seasonality

      March - June

  • Passion Fruit

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    • Grower

      Various

    • Location

      Homestead, Florida

    • Seasonality

      January - April

  • Pink Lemons

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    • Grower

      Jaime

    • Location

      Valley Center, California

    • Seasonality

      November - April

  • Radicchio Masera

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    • Grower

      Simone

    • Location

      Padua, Veneto

    • Seasonality

      January - February

  • Red Spring Onions

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    • Grower

      Javier

    • Location

      Carlsbad, California

    • Seasonality

      February - June

  • Sorrento Lemons

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    • Grower

      Sergi

    • Location

      Calabria, Italy

    • Seasonality

      January - August

  • Spigarello Riccia

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    • Grower

      David

    • Location

      Thermal, California

    • Seasonality

      December - March

  • Sugar Snap Peas

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    • Grower

      Chris

    • Location

      Lompoc, California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Three Cornered Leek

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    • Grower

      Foraged

    • Location

      Wild, California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Unwaxed Lemons

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    • Grower

      Greg

    • Location

      Exeter, California

    • Seasonality

      January - August

  • White Spring Onions

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    • Grower

      Javier

    • Location

      Carslbad, California

    • Seasonality

      February - June

Featured This Week

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EARLY

Minneola Tangelos
Grown by Greg in Exeter, California

Greg's Minneola Tangelos from Exeter are back. By leaving his fruit on the tree several weeks longer than most growers, Greg allows sugars to fully develop, creating an exceptionally balanced, bittersweet citrus that softens the variety's naturally punchy acidity.

Greg refuses to spray pesticides on any of his trees. Where many citrus groves look almost desert-like between their rows, Greg prefers to foster a natural ecosystem — leaving weeds, undergrowth, and pruning fragments to flourish at ground level. This living understory keeps Greg’s soil healthy and nutrient-rich, without the use of commercial fertilizers.

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PEAK

Three-Cornered Leeks
Foraged by Trent in Northern California

Three-cornered leeks are one of the more fleeting pleasures of late winter and early spring — and right now, just as their flowers begin to appear, they're at their peak.

Named for the distinctive triangular cross-section of their stems, these wild alliums follow a tight seasonal window. They emerge with the first warmth of late winter, grow quickly through early spring, and are gone by the time temperatures climb. They grow along hedgerows, woodland edges, roadsides, and field margins — often in overlooked patches that reward the attentive.

Every part is edible. The roots are mild and slightly sweet, similar to a spring onion. The leaves are softer and more balanced than ramps, with a gentle allium flavor that works well raw or lightly cooked. The flower stems, buds, and open flowers bring the most intensity — a bright, crunchy hit of garlic that makes them worth seeking out on their own.

Catching them now, in flower, means getting the full range of the plant at once — tender leaves still holding the sweetness of cool weather, and flowers just beginning to open with a sharper, garlicky punch.

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LATE

Iberiko Winter Tomatoes
Grown by José and Alejando in Almería, Spain

We're entering the final weeks of Iberiko Winter Tomatoes — and this late in the season, they're the best they've been. Deeper cold and slower ripening have concentrated their sugars, sharpened their acidity, and layered in an umami complexity that builds with every additional day on the plant.

These are nothing like the pale, mealy tomatoes that typically stand in for summer fruit in wintertime. But they're not trying to be summer tomatoes either. Iberiko are cold-weather tomatoes by design — grown specifically in winter, not in spite of it.

The secret is controlled hardship. José and Alejandro cultivate Iberiko on arid, sandy coastal soils where nutrients wash through quickly. They under-water using saline irrigation and keep their plants perpetually on the edge of stress — a balance impossible to maintain in summer heat, but one that the cold allows them to push further than ever. The results: thick, crunchy skin, dense flesh, and a flavor that is bright, acidic, and salty, with deep umami sweetness underneath.

Their wine-dark skins and moss-green collars conceal firm, low-moisture flesh that locks in flavor. When they do soften, they collapse into intensely rich sauces that need little more than good olive oil and a light hand with seasoning.

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Go Deeper

Voir tout

We exist to fix the food system.

People are more cut off from the origins of their food than ever. This makes flavor, nutrition and farming practices that protect the planet, almost impossible to find.

By working directly with growers, we create a more sustainable way forward for farming. By giving everyone the tools to understand the power of our food choices, we empower everybody to become drivers of change.

Now is the time for action. Join the food system revolution.

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Go beyond four seasons

Each fruit and vegetable has its own season, with subtle shifts which happen every day. Follow their microseasons to unlock flavor at every stage.

WHAT’S IN SEASON?

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Know where your food comes from

We know the name of the person behind everything we source. Recognize their growing artistry to find out exactly where your food comes from (and why that matters).

MEET THE GROWERS

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Make your diet diverse

Our growers work with varieties chosen for quality and nutrition, not yield. By selecting their crops you keep heritage seeds in play, add to ecosystem biodiversity and preserve unique flavors.

GO #OFFTHEPASS

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